The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Monday, March 2, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 106 USPS 650-640
$3 million cut proposed for KU's '82 budget
$3 mm Legislators ignore pleas by Regents
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
The Board of Regents, waiting for a compromise, has turned a cold shoulder to the Legislature.
The board's coolness has escalated since the Senate Ways and Means Committee ignored the board's plea to restore the cgov. John Hancock, the commissioner at least, the committee voted for even more cuts.
"We do not plan to place ourselves in any compromise positions at all." Regens Chairman Bernard Franklin said in defense of the board's tactic of making only one effort to persuade lawmakers to restore Carlin's cuts. "If there is an issue, we are going with the Legislature, and not with the board."
The board appeared before the joint meeting of the House and Senate Ways and Means Committees in January to ask for a 10 percent increase in operating budget funds, a 10 percent increase in operating budget funds.
THE SENATE COMMITTEE, on the other
hand, followed the wishes of Chairman Paul Hess, R-Wichita, last month, and cut faculty pay request from the governor's recommended 8 percent. The governor also paid from his recommended 6 percent to 5.5 percent.
In addition, the committee voted to support a 15 percent average increase in tuition. The cuts totaled $3 million, but if the extra tuition money could end up losing $3 million, the Regents could end up losing $3 million.
John Conard, executive director of the Regents, and Richard Von Ende, KU executive secretary, sat stoically at last month's meeting committee performed the budget-cutting operation
"The Legislature randomly picked figures without looking at the needs of higher education." Franklin, who thought the committee would endorse the governor's budget.
IF THE COMMITTEE would have cut the budget with a promise to try to increase it the following year, the Regents would have talked about a compromise this year. Franklin said.
Hess, who said the Regents had an opportunity to speak before the committee took action, said the cuts were part of a goal to trim $25 million from the governor's $2.78 billion budget. To help achieve that goal, Hess drew up $100 million hit with included all major Regents budget requests.
"I want to leave this session with a conservative nocturne." Hess said.
HE SAID THE STATE needed to start saving money in anticipation of cuts in federal funding.
But three other appropriations bills that went through the Senate last month were cut back more, after the committee trimmed the governor's requests.
The board warned the Legislature that without a comprehensive increase, the schools would lose the good professors.
Franklin said the Regents' tough position on the budget probably would not cause problems.
But Franklin said, "I don't think a large percentage will leave."
HE SAID THE board's silence was not total, because the Regents were still talking to individual lawmakers, as well as faculty members to find out where both sides stand.
"I think the faculty knows that they have the support on this issue and others like tenure." Franklin said. "We are very much concerned about their bottom dollar."
The committee will start budget hearings for each campus Thursday.
As far as issues on individual campuses, Franklin said the Regents would let the legislative liaison from each university handle talking to legislators.
State Sen. Billy McCray, D-Wichita, a member of the KU budget subcommittee, said the subcommittee's preliminary report was finished, and the uncommented comment until the report was finalized.
Berman: Cuts hard to control
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
Shielding the KU budget from a flash-happy Legislature will be next to impossible this session, according to former Sen. Arnold Berman. Lawrence.
"What I have found from sitting on the Ways and Means Committee is that if appropriations measures are not amended in the committee, have little chance to be changed on the floor."
Berman, a Democrat who lost the 1980 election to Jane Eldredge, said that any local opposition to the $3 million KU budget cuts would be naturally stunted because there were no local legislators on the House or Senate Ways and Means Committees.
"When I was in the Senate," he said, "I was on both the Ways and Means Committee and the Senate/House Appropriations Conference that gives final approval on all budget matters and I believe that my record spoke for KU. For the delegation this year, however, it will be harder for them to help the University without anyone on those committees.
BERMAN SAID that another problem facing KU and the rest of the Kansas Regens universities was the relatively little power that those school's home lawmakers had in the Senate.
"If one examines the home districts of the 40 senators," Berman said, "one will find that only six or eight members represent the institution's home areas.
"I think that this is one of the fundamental problems facing those legislators today and I think that the results from this lack of representation is obvious thus far."
A further look into the number of legislators from the Regents school's areas shows that outside of Wichita, only one senator and two commissioners are on the Ways and Means Committees.
Berman said that he would not include Wichita legislators as supporters for the Regents schools action.
"The Wichita delegation has different priorities than a delegation from say Lawrence would have," Berman said. "Because the city is larger, Wichita State is a smaller element in the city's economy and is therefore of lesser importance to them."
A WICHTH legislator has been one of the mover's movers behind the cuts. Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita and chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, has said that the Regents budget cuts were all part of a plan to since 52 million from Gov. Carol's proposed state budget.
See BERMAN page 7
Joe S. Hicks
ROB POOLE/Kansan staff
Eugene Clark stands outside the Sprague Apartments, a complex that houses retired KU faculty. Clark, the manager, is the only resident who has not taught at the University.
Retired KU faculty consider Sprague Apartments home
By KATHY MAAG
Staff Reporter
The iron-barred bridge leads from the serenity of Danforth Chapel to the locked doors, rape lights and gates at the Sprague Apartments for retired KU faculty.
Screams and cheers from the basketball game at neighboring Battenfeld Scholarship Hall echo along the hushed halls of the senior citizen apartments.
Sprague Apartments houses 14 retirements, ranging in ages from 78 to 165. Complete with a nurse, the living arrangement is unique, and the faculty are based in the country for retired college instructors.
"There's a long waiting list to get in here," 81-year-old manager Eugene Clark said. "These people worked for the University for 40 or 50 years and are now teaching for a fraction of what professors get now."
"They stay here until they can't take care of themselves, then they go to a relative or a nursing home," Clark said. "Sometimes they die right here in the building."
BUILT IN 1960, the 10 apartments are owned and rent-subsidized by the Kansas University Endowment Association. Tenants pay $100 a month for a $250 apartment.
"They're on a fixed income. They earned this privilege."
A young nurse and her graduate-student husband, Mr. and Mrs. David Benz, live in the
"We have a fine arts teacher who taught music on The Hill for 30 years," the white-haired manager said. "She hears the scrambled music on the stage, she hangs halls and says the kids will be deaf soon."
basement apartment. She is on duty for medical care if needed by the residents.
Familiar surroundings and campus programs are two advantages of the apartments. But music and noise from the scholarship hall's and sometimes create problems, residents said.
FEARFS OF VANDALISM and theft prompted
laptops to install double locks and rape
lights a year ago.
"We've always had a nurse or a therapist to look after us old people," Clark said. "If someone's hurt or not feeling well, she'll fix us up right up or get us into the hospital."
The locks and gates prohibit intruders from entering the building. Clark locks the door and the base, and then locks it again.
Clark is the only non-faculty apartment resident. He retired in 1964 from Kansas Power and Light and traveled around the country until accepting the job as manager in 1975.
"I think kids are silly nowadays. I'm of a different generation. I have nothing against them."
Weather
CLOUDY
"we needed to keep the kids from running in and out," he said. "Vandalism is still terrible but we can work with them."
"I've heard they're going to build some ad-
sense SENOPAGE5
Prof attacks academic standards at KU
Tonight it will be increasingly cloudy and tomorrow it will be mostly cloudy with a chance of rain possibly mixed with snow. The high tomorrow will again be in the mid-40s. The low tonight will be 25 to 30 degrees.
It will be partly cloudy today with a high in the mid-40s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Winds today will be light and variable from the East to the northeast at 5 to 15 mph.
By KATHRYN KASE Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Leland Miller, professor of occupational therapy, claims that in the fall of 1977 his department disenrolled his laboratory class and assigned the students to another instructor for grading, all without consulting him.
In the wake of a Faculty Council academic standards resolution, a KU professor has charged that past activities by the Occupational Therapy Department illustrate there are few academic standards at the University.
"It it a notice on stop day that all of my students in my Kinesiology lab class were disenrolled, assigned to another class and given A's," he said.
"It was in that time when students were listened to, no matter what they said," Miller said. "I was never allowed to confront我 in front of them, even though it seemed that if you're accused, you're guilty."
THAT HAPPENED, Miller said, because a group of students complained to Joane Wryrick, the department chairman, about him.
After four years, Miller's questions may finally be answered. A subcommittee of the Tenure and Related Problems Committee plans to mediate his grievance this semester. Miller adds that the hearing has been a long time in coming.
The problem, Miller said is that the department grievance policy accommodates on-going staff.
WYRICK'S DISENROLLMENT action was the result of a very strong complaint by students, James Moeeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said. Moeser is involved because the Occupational Therapy Department was in the School of Fine Arts in 1977.
"The basic issue here is whether the administration here can, just by administrative fiat, take over the grading of a course," he added. "Because the process, without due process, disenroll a class?"
Miller's claims, however, are not without dispute.
"The students charged unfair grading on his part," Moeser said. "These students were set to graduate and they feared grade reprisals. This action allowed another faculty member who was impartial to grade them, as Lunderstand it."
1ms solution, implemented by Wryk, was also according to Ronald Gauldard, then vice chair of the committee.
"She violated no policy that I know of." U.S. ambassador now president of Trinity College in San Antonio, where she works.
"Neither the department nor the other person who ended up grading the course got in touch with me to find out what grades I gave during the course," he said. "The grade sheet was never forwarded to me I guess they sent me a memo to it he who gave the grades to the class."
But Miller asks if an ethical rule was broken.
WYRICK SAID she could not comment on
"The basic issue here is whether the administration here can, just by administrative fiat, take over the grading of a course. —Leland Miller
Miller's allegations because of the impending meditation.
"I do not want to in any way jeopardize the hearing," she said. "I sure it would be hard."
"As of fall 1977, any student who had a concern could go to the department chairman and ask what rights they had," she said. "If they had a real grievance they could then go to the University ombudsman or a grievance committee."
But Wryk did elaborate on the department grievance policy that Miller says favors
"It if went to the grievance committee, the faculty member would be notified."
"When these grades were submitted, I wrote a formal letter to the registrar's office and I got zero response," Miller said. "Dean Moeser, who was head of the Fine Arts Department, which Occupational Therapy was under at that time, said that he felt the matter had been resolved and that it had been resolved satisfactorily."
Moeser said that he did not remember telling Miller to forget the matter, but Moeser added he did not want to comment extensively on the issue.
students could just complain to the dean, Wryrick said, and the faculty member would not be notified for fear of grade reprisals against the students.
IF A FACULTY member wished to resist department action taken after a student complaint, the faculty member could follow the procedures of the faculty and staff handbook, Calgaird said.
MILLER SAID HE then went to Australia on a leave without pay and while there, wrote to Ambrez Sarteks, the president of the KU College of Engineering, the American Association of University Professors.
"I might violate the confidence of several of the students who were involved in it at the time," Moeser said. "I really don't want to comment."
"His official response was, 'Why don't you forget it?' " Miller said. "I'd like to say I haven't been a member of the AAP since then."
But Saricks said he told Miller to consult the Tenure and Related Problems Committee.
"I did tell him that while he was in Australia, there wasn't much to be done," Saricks said. "But I wrote to him along the line, that as I saw the situation and as the Faculty Code was then, TRP was the body to consult."
Calgard was the next person Miller wrote.
Cigarld was the next person who woke. He said he could tell me when it until I was ready, "Mother said, 'I wait said.'"
Calgaard said the problem with Miller's grievance was that there was no procedure to
"You will find no policy cover to cover it unless one has been written in the last 20 months that I've been gone," he said. "It's a rare set of circumstances."
WHEN MILLER returned from Australia a
wife with whom he consulted William
Ballour, University ambassador.
"He referred me to Francis Heller, who was head of the Tenure and Related problems at UNESCO."
But because it was summer session, Heller told Miller there were too few committee members in Lawrence to deal with the grievance. By fall, the committee was directed. Margaret Gordon, professor of welfare, and action was finally taken, Miller said.
"Towards the end of last semester I was notified that a special committee under Paul Jess (professor of journalism) was looking into it," Miller said. "Jess told me he was very interested in this case because there was no procedure to cover it under the old system."
This semester the University approved a new faculty grievance policy. Miller's case is being reviewed under the old policy, Jess encounters the incident occurred under the old system.
"He said to me, 'yours might be the first and the last case under the old system.'"
JESS SAID HE could not comment on the
See STANDARDS page 5
Shankel to outline athletic investigation policy
By DAN BOWERS
Staff Reporter
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel will release a statement today addressing allegations of shady activity by the university.
Sankuel said last night that University officials had been examining the charges, made last month by the Kansas City Times, as well as those from other cities, that may be vulnerable to abuse by individuals.
"I intend this statement to express the procedures we have used to investigate the concerns that have been expressed about academics at the University," he said.
The statement will be addressed to faculty, staff, students and alumni groups Shankel said.
Shankel has asked Athletic Director Bob Marcum and George Worth, chairman of the
University Senate executive committee, to sign the statement.
Marcum has indicated he would sign the statement, Shankel said, but Worth is reluctant.
"I don't think that my signature belongs at the bottom of the statement."
"I think it's a good statement, but it describes action he, as chancellor has taken, or directed others to take." Worth said.
Worth said he agreed with what the statement said, but that it was a statement, Shankel, as chancellor, should make independently. Marcum was unavailable for comment.
KU officials have not viewed the charges as a problem unique to the athletic department, but
The statement addresses allegations made in a Feb. 6 article in the Times that cited questionable recruiting practices, grade changing and shuffling athletes through easy
as a slap in the face to the entire University's academic standards.
Worth said he thought Shankel's statement, and a resolution adopted last week by the Facultral Board, would be more effective.
"We need to work together on this," he said. "And I support him fully."
At its meeting last Thursday, Faculty Council passed a resolution that stated its opposition to the compromising of KU's academic standards, or to any interference with those standards by individuals or groups inside or outside of the University.
The council also approved a statement proposed by Lawrence Sherr, professor of business and math, which asked the chancellor to examine how the council reported to the council the findings of the inquiry.
Shankel said that the allegations were being looked into and that he should be able to report the results to the council by the requested April 2 date.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 2, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
'Scopes II' trial scheduled today
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In a trial that has drawn national attention, Christian fundamentalists today challenge the state's right to make Charles Darwin's theory of evolution the sole basis for teaching biology in California public schools.
They demand that the State Board of Education revise its guidelines for science instructors to allow teachers to present theories that the world and life were created by supernatural acts. They assert these theories have a scientific basis.
The trial has won the nickname of "Scopes II" in California legal circles after the classic courtroom confrontation between science and religion in
The California attorney general's office has called in prominent scientists such as astronomer-author Carl Sagar and Stanford University Nobel Prize winner Arthur Kornberg to defend its teaching standards, although it is not yet clear whether they actually will testify.
Attorneys on both sides, however, insist it won't be another Scopes trial and maintain the issues are different.
"We are not trying to sneak the Bible into the public schools," said Sacramento attorney Richard Turner, who represents the fundamentalists.
Freighter sinks; crew still missing
JUNEAU, Alaska—A Coast Guard search plane yesterday criss-crossed the icy North Pacific in search of 22 crewmen who abandoned a burning sinking South Korean freighter 90 miles west of Attu at the end of the Aleutian island Chain.
The Coast Guard held out little hope that any could have survived in the near-freezing water.
One crew member drowned Saturday and three were rescued by passing Soviet ships. One survivor died aboard a Soviet vessel, but the other two were recovered.
All but three of the missing men were seen last in a lifeboat that later was found emry in swells as high as 25 feet.
The drama began late Friday night when the Dae Rim, the South Korean freighter, transmitted a "mayday" radio message, saying it had been on fire for three hours. The message said the fire began in the No. 2 hold and spread to the No. 1 hatch.
A later message said the fire had reached the ship's fuel tanks and was out of control, prompting the skipper to make an urgent plea for assistance.
A Navy plane arrived near dawn and reported the fire had spread to the 3 hold. However, the South Korean crew reportedly brought the blaze under control later in the morning, and all seemed well until the sailors suddenly went over the side in the afternoon.
A Coast Guard C-130 aircraft intended to check the condition of the freighter at daybreak and to continue searching for the missing men.
Nicaraguan smuggling questioned
MANAGUA, Nicaragua—Top members of the leftist Sandinista government admit arms may have been smuggled from Nicaragua to leftist guerrillas in El Salvador but offer conflicting versions about efforts to stop the smuggling.
One Western diplomatic source said he had no doubts the Sandinistas and Communist Cuba were involved in the arms smuggled but it had been clear that they weren't. "They were trying to kill me," she said.
"My estimation is that they have stopped the traffic" because of the Reagan administration's rush to support the Salvadoran government and the failure of a five-day Salvadoran guerrilla offensive launched Jan. 10, he said.
In interviews during the past week, Sandinista officials acknowledged weapons may have been smuggled from Nicaragua to neighboring El Salvador but said it probably was the work of individuals within the government and not of the government itself.
Interior Minister Tomas Borge, considered the most powerful official in Nicaragua, said, "You have to consider the great sympathy there is here for the Salvadoran people. If we jailed all the sympathizers of the Salvadorans, we would have a million and a half prisoners."
Borge said the Managua government's policy always had been to stop the arms shipments. He said his troops arrested 10 Salvadorans in northern Nicaragua four months ago in connection with arms traffic and training of guerrillas.
Delegates seek Iran-Iraq solution
BEIRUT, Lebanon—Iranian revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhullah Khomini yesterday told a ranking Islamic delegation seeking an end to the Iran-Iraq conflict that it must "sit in judgment" and determine the aggressor in the dispute.
After the meeting with Kohmini, Yasser Arafat, delegation head and head of the Palestine Liberation Organization, was quoted by Tehran Radio News Agency on Wednesday.
After spending two days in Iran, the eight-man group arrived late yesterday in Bagdad for talks with Iraq officials on ways of ending the 161-day war.
Before leaving Tehran, Habib Chatti, secretary-general of the Islamic Conference Organization, said the delegation would analyze and assess the situation.
Chatti told Tehran Radio that the delegation had not yet proposed a solution for stopping the fighting but that "after visiting Baghdad, we might see."
The official Pars news agency called Khomeini told the Islamic leaders, "If you have goodwill and come here to put out the fire, then you must listen."
Poland launches rationing program
WARSaw, Poland—The government approved meat and sugar rationing yesterday and launched a campaign to curb a growing alcohol abuse problem.
Under the rationing, the first in Poland since the 1950s, a person will be allowed to buy 2.2 pounds of sugar a month for the next seven months and between 4.4 and 10 pounds of meat a month, depending on the person's age and occupation, from April 1 until the end of June.
The rationing plan was one of the first proposals made by the new government of Fremier Wojtech Jauzelski in a bid to put the faltering and weakening system under control.
In an attempt to tackle another problem affecting the economy, the government announced a campaign against alcoholism.
The official Pap news agency said government statistics showed that 4.5 million, or about 1.2 million and about 1.2 million out of a work force of 12 million, or 10 percent, were drained.
Jersey Odzowski, Roman Catholic deputy premier, said consumption of alcohol last year was estimated at eight liters a person. The trend is not expected to change much in the foreseeable future.
The government said prices of vodka would be increased and the number of stores selling liquor reduced.
Rifle misfires after Reagan passes
WASHINGTON - A Secret Service agent's riff accidentally discharged inside a metal carrying case yesterday after the motorcycle taking President Obama into the lobby.
No one was injured, although several frightened bystanders reportedly fell to the ground at the sound of the shot.
Dick Hartwig, Secret Service spokesman, said the incident occurred two or three minutes after Resgan had left the National Presbyterian Church.
Hartwig said the rifle was in a metal storage case at the time of the misfire. The officer, who was not identified, was standing watch on a building fire.
The President and first lady Nancy Reagan were driven to and from the church service in a covered, bullet-proof limousine.
The spokesman said the incident apparently was a "weapon malfunction." He said an "in-house inquiry" would be held to determine what happened.
The Kansas Supreme Court heard arguments Friday to overturn the first-degree murder conviction of a former teacher. The court was assisting the suicide of the victim.
On the Record
Camille Nobe, a Shawnee County public defender, urged the court to reverse the June 1980 murder conviction of the woman, Kateble Cobb, because she said the lower court made several procedural errors.
The case could set a legal precedent in Kansas. The state law on assisting suicide has been on the books since 1982, and never been a case to test the statute.
Cobb, who had been a close friend of Davis for five years, said during her trial that Davis had planned to kill himself with an overdose of cocaine and killed his girlfriend asked her to accompany him if his attempt proved to be unsuccessful.
Cobb faced the first-degree murder charge after Henry Davis of Lawrence was found dead last winter of a gunshot to the head.
Nobe said that Davis told Cobb to
She said that Davis never intended to kill himself but wanted someone else to kill him. She noted that Cobb was the person responsible for the injection that cried into the vaccine.
use a gun to kill him if the cocaine did not work.
THE WEEKEND in Lawrence was "fairly quiet" with no reports of major crimes, according to the Lawrence Police Department.
The seven-member state court is not expected to issue a decision for several weeks.
A THEIF TOOK a gold necklace Thursday at Tainque Tangine Center, 2449 St. W., when the owner was there and said, The necklace was valued at $450.
Sally Pokorny, an assistant Shawnee County district attorney, argued that the case was indeed a murder case.
IN ANOTHER TREFT, someone took two envelopes lying on a counter at Anglers Unlimited, 1449 W. 23rd St. NJ. The envelopes contained almost $400.
CONVERSE
GET INTO THE SWING OF THINGS
Raquetball Mixed Doubles
Entry deadline: 5:00 March 4
208 Robinson
Play begins: Sat, March 7, 10 am Robinson Raquetball Courts
For more information call Recreation Services
864-3546
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The Panhellenic Association and the Interfraternity Council are sponsoring a blood drive March 24-36 in the Kansas Union.
Sign-ups for donors will be tomorrow and Wednesday at residence of Hollyhawk Christian Mass Union. Satellite Union, fraternities and sororites.
The "Jayhawk Fight For Life"
Groups sponsor blood drive
Former jaundice or hepatitis patients cannot give blood, according to Jo Beyers, American Red Cross volunteer. Nine million pounds must weigh at least 10 pounds.
Nurses are needed to help take medical histories in the Blood Bank. They can contact the Panbileni office, room 119B in the Kansas Union.
drive last fall exceeded its 700-pint goal by 42 pints.
--this Tuesday from 7-9 Adm. $3.00
Spring Formal Rush March27,28,29
Registration:
February 23-March 24
Council Office or call 864-3559.
Register in the Interfraternity
Booths will be set up in Oliver,
Templin and JRP on
March 10,7-9 p.m.
There will be a $10 registration fee.
Place a Kansan wanted Call 864-4358.
What's happening at the
Pladinum
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University Daily Kansan, March 2, 1981
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 2, 1981
Large tax cuts unwise
Picture, if you will, this scenario:
Massive tax cuts, beginning in the summer of 1981, combined with consistent trimming of the federal budget in 1982 and '83, make the economy by 1985 almost a paradise.
Unemployment's down to 6 percent, inflation's even less than that, a mild 5 percent . . . and the cat's in the cradle and strawberry fields forever.
Such is the scenario painted by some of President Reagan's closest economic advisers. One of the most essential elements of their projected economic recovery would be immediate and sizable tax cuts—the subject of this page today.
The problem with tax cuts at this time is that they might be inconsistent with current economic goals. After all, the administration's biggest push appears to be a balancing of the federal budget. But does it make sense to decrease revenues at the same time expenditures are being decreased? If they're decreased equally, the deficit stays the same.
Reagan advisers point out that the proposed tax cuts shouldn't decrease government revenues, they'll just slow the current rise in tax rates. But other economists argue that some economic proposals, such as the one for increasing capital investment write-offs, could wind up costing the federal government up to $50 billion in lost revenues for fiscal year 1982—revenues very much needed to contain the traditional annual deficit.
In essence, massive tax cuts are pretty much an experiment, with the average American being the guinea pig.
As far as experiments go, it's unlikely that Congress will give Reagan the same free hand to experiment with the nation's economy as it gave Franklin Roosevelt in 1933. Times simply aren't as bad.
Such an experiment would assume that people would use the extra income after tax breaks to save and invest. Supply-side economists argue they'll also work harder and produce more. But how much correlation is there between increases in pay and greater productivity by workers?
Adding to the problem is the specter that many people, if given more money to take home from their incomes, wouldn't squirrel it away or play the stock market game, but instead would pour out into the stores and shopping centers to spend it—thereby sparking more inflation.
Rather than pushing unwise tax cut bills through Congress at this time, President Reagan should concentrate on harnessing federal spending, which was his number one priority during the campaign anyway. First let him prove to the nation that economic woes can be remedied by containing federal spending; if and when that is proven, perhaps then he may proceed into this other unknown path, the path of massive tax cuts. One experiment at a time is enough.
SUPPLY
SIDE
SWEETS
A PEPPY SNACK
Tax cuts good way to begin revitalization of economy
Up and at 'em!
The other day I took a walk to a nearby city park to learn of my latest assignment from headquarters. When I arrived, I strove over to the trash can next to the park bench across the street and found a chittering children were frolling and, as usual, pulled out the secret tape recorder.
What was not usual, however, was the assignment that it contained. It was an
ERIC
BRENDE
1970
assignment more important, more challenging than any I had ever been given as a member of the Mission Impossible troupe. It was an assignment whose mere mention was impossible.
It was the assignment to get the president's tax cut passed.
The tape began innocently enough: "Good morning, Mr. Brende."
But soon, that calmly detached announcer's voice would get down to, shall we say, the brass tax of the matter. "The principal difficulty with the Kemp-Roth cut bill, which our man in Washington -code name 'Rawhide' - recently proposed to Congress and the nation in a nationally televised debate, is that the opposition be passed when the opposition can truthfully label it as 'inequitable' and 'gamble?' "
My high-level intelligence source continued, "Yes, it is true that, as Senate minority leader Robert Byrd put it, Kemp-Roth is 'inquitable', insofar as rich people will save more dollars as a result of it than poor people. Be advised, however, that rich people will actually save a lower percentage of their income than poor people.
"And yes, it is true that, as AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland phrased it, the constitute a high-risk gamble for the future of America," insofar as the supply-side economic theory on which they are based has never fully been tested.
"The task at hand, therefore, is to persuade the members of Congress of this fact. The task will be a formidable one even though they, of all people, should know that tax-cutting can have very desirable economic effects if only they would pay some attention to the results of any of the tax cuts they have passed in recent times.
"Take the capital gains tax decrease of 1979. A high capital gains tax had been imposed on business in 1969. Shortly thereafter, the number of new companies entering the stock market took a drastic plunge. Whereas in 1969 there were 698 new stock offerings, by 1979 there were 995 new stock offerings months of 1980, after the tax was lowered from 49 to 28 percent, the number of new stock offerings immediately shot up to 89. And the country was in a recession at the time.
"The joyous economic bounty reaped from such business starts and expansions that resulted from tax cuts was twofold. First, they increased the size of the stockpile of goods available to consumers, thereby decreasing their cost and, in turn, inflation.
"Second, they increased the number of available jobs, thereby decreasing unemployment. Indeed, 85 percent of new jobs come from new small businesses.
"Ironically, although opponents of the presently proposed tax cut measures call them 'unfair' to the poor, it is the poor who will benefit more than anyone else from their effects. This is because it is the poor who are hurt most by inflation and unemployment.
"And at any rate, healthy business activity, such as that spurred on by the 1979 capital reform, is clearly the stuff of which our 'land of opportunity' has been made. Such stuff is the best example of supply-side theory in effect.
"What's more, whereas liberal members of Congress who savaged opposed the 1979 tax cut had predicted that it would decrease government tax revenues by $1.7 billion, the lowered tax rates actually increased what the Treasury took in by $1.1 billion. Lower tax rates that reap higher tax revenues is an added feature of supply-side economics.
The University Daily KANSAN
"Kemp-Roth, another supply-side measure, would have the same bountiful effects as the 1979 one, only more so. The only difference is that it would achieve those effects through less direct means. Instead of returning money directly to business, it would return it to private individuals, who would then invest in business. Here lies the 'gamble', for it is known how many recipients will invest their newly acquired funds. Those who would choose simply to spend the money would be helping to refuel the fires of inflation.
“And 'Rawhide' is having enough trouble making headway with the bill the way it stands. Though recent polls show that the popularly supported ‘tax-revolt’ he is leading a 3-to-1 backing among the populace, the ruling political group he is trying to topple remains unshakable. The Washington liberal group and its members are armed with the devastating verbal darts ‘inequitable’ and ‘risky’.
"Thus, your mission, Mr. Brende, should you decide to accept it, is to pose an IRS investigator and threaten to perform tax audits on the entire financial histories of the various congressional leaders who now oppose the bill.
"Ideally, Kemp-Roth would be targeted only at those best disposed to invest the funds—namely, the rich—but such a measure would be politically unthinkable.
I casually crunched off the stalactite of frozen perspiration that encrusted my face and upper torso, now knowing that passing through a window would be terrifying. After all, intelligence itself had told me so.
"This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck."
(USPS 699-840) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas $25 for a year in Douglas County or six months of a year outside the county. Students submit addresses to $22 for a year in Douglas County or six months of a year outside the county. Postmaster: Send changes of addresses to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas,
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Tax cuts not quite richly deserved
President Reagan's long-awaited budget proposal should have been a crowd-pleaser.
He promised tax cuts, an eventually balanced budget, higher employment and longer inflation.
budget, higher employment and lower inflation.
And who could argue with him? Anyone who doesn't like tax cuts doesn't like chicken on Sunday.
However, it seems that some are protesting a proposal, but it's not that they don't like chicken.
Last month, Reagan proposed that the federal government cut personal income tax a total of 30 percent in four years. The plan would make it easier to fund projects for businesses to write off capital investments.
Reagan's tax package should make him a man with some circles, but his plan does have drawbacks.
For example, the provision for business tax write-offs heavily favors the auto, steel and rubber industries--big businesses that make big capital investments.
On the other hand, smaller businesses don't spend much money on capital, but create nearly 90 percent of all new American jobs. Reagan's tax cut could leave them in the cold.
There are similar inequities in the proposed personal income tax reduction.
As far as the Reagan administration is concerned, all income tax reductions are equal, but, in absolute terms, some tax cuts are more equal than others.
By 1984, the proposed tax cuts would save a family that makes $200,000 a year about $11,000. A family earning $30,000 a year would save $1,038 in the same period.
Theoretically, most taxpayers will save or invest the money they are granted after April 15. But anyone with a knowledge of human nature will be deposited at the nearest shopping center.
In that case, the tax cuts would stimulate ination, not private investment as the Reagan administration had done.
The tax cuts also would immediately decrease
the amount of money in the Treasury. Eventually, Reagan says, the increased productivity of tax-reliable firms, will refill the nation's coffers.
But in the meantime, the government will have less money to spend on its programs, including
MARY CATHERINE MCKAY
VANESSA HERRON
social services, foreign aid and energy con-
trol. He's good at building a cut-out back in his plans for a balanced budget.
Everyone likes a balanced budget. But the budget and tax cuts the president has proposed to achieve that end seem to imply that human beings, particularly the poor, are less important than cheerful quarterly reports and a macho military. This implication is disturbing.
Of course, it could be argued that in the long run, the tax and budget cut will serve the public purpose.
According to supply-side economics, the coordinated cuts in taxes and government spending are the key drivers of growth.
After the tax cuts, businesses and individuals will have more money to invest, the gross national product will increase and everyone will be happy.
Ideally, economists say, only the upper and upper-middle classes should be granted these tax cuts, because they are more likely to invest in business.
In other words, "Them that has, gets."
The only thing wrong with the theory of supply-side economics is just that—it's a theory. At the moment, it exists only on the chalky blackboards in our own classrooms, the economists cannot agree on its long term effects.
For example, the plan could lead to prosperity.
as Reagan believes. In his speech, he predicted that 5% and unemployment would fall to 8.5 percent.
Or else, Reagan's four-year plan could lead to the vast inequalities of wealth that existed before the depression. Before the stock market crash, comparatively wealthy Americans were lightly taxed, and were free to invest and build at will. However, no one but those fortunate few, and possibly today's supply-side economists, would call pre-Depression America a utopia.
Spending on education, energy, and conservation would drop. Fewer people would benefit from social services like welfare, Medicaid, and the food stamps program. And for at least a year, the unemployment rate would rise.
Even though the long-run effects of Reagan's proposals are unclear, the short-run effects are often small.
The immediate, tangible effects of Reagan's tax and budget decreases will be an increase in human suffering. But this probably is not a good thing. The increased size of bell-shaped curves and the greater good.
Perhaps, as many conservatives say, some of the people who would be affected are shiftless, tobacco-sitting slackers, but most of them probably are not.
Reagan's proposals have just been introduced in Congress and many legislators predict that the president will soon pass them.
So the ensuing months should give Americans a chance to re-examine their values and the
Granted, the welfare state is in serious trouble, both financially and administratively, but cutting taxes and federal funding is not the best answer. It's just the fastest answer.
A few bad report cards from economists should not lead Americans to change their economic policies.
As Reagan says, the nation may in an economic crisis, but at this point, we also seem to be confident.
Letters to the Editor
Parking policy must be determined in fall
Last fall, subcommittee meetings and full board meetings on rules and regulations were well advertised to all board members, which include four from each of the faculty, classified staff and students. Any board member had written comments about changes to the existing rules and regulations.
To the editor:
In response to the Feb. 13 article on parking and traffic policy authored by Tim Sharp and a subsequent unsigned editorial that appeared in the Sharp presented a rather unbalanced version of the program, which the Traffic and Traffic Exis is charged by the faculty SenEx to complete all major business by mid-March. The major charges include recommending appropriate changes in rules and regulations; providing for two fiscal years from now and pre-assigning parking permits to faculty and staff.
To complete these charges, along with other normal business coming before the board by mid-March, requires close eye to see that we are implementing academic year. To maximize the accuracy of budget forecasting, we wait for actual figures from the fall semester. This means that deliberation on rules and regulations must be done in the fall semester before assignment following in the spring semester.
Finally, David Kersley's claim that the Parking Services 1980 account balance went
Ste
case sp
the meet
his com
for $555,407 on June 20 to $556,408 on July 31 is not correct. His erroneous interpretation of the budget figures was carefully pointed out to him some time ago by Don Kearns, director of Parking Services. The account always declines during this period of time.
Harold L. Yarger
Chairman, University Parking and Traffic Board
Statement clarification
To the editor:
The dissent probler
I would like to join Britta Schmidt (letter to the editor, Feb. 24, 1981) and others in being "outraged" at the statement inaccurately attributed to me by the Kansan on Feb. 12. I did not say, nor do I believe, that the AEC Proficiency Test is "something that any U.S. born 5-year-old can pass, and many 3-year-old."
Elizabeth F. Soppelaa Director, Applied English Center
It is apparent that some false impressions of the Lawrence Community Theatre were created by Amy S. Collins' article entitled "The theatre series combines area talent."
"If m have r the me the R Respoi
If m to the mittee Wyr
First, the Lawrence Community Theatr-
ultizes talent from both the University and the
State Theater.
Not children's theatre
Second, the Lawrence Community Theatre does not "cater" to any specific regular patronage. Its season of plays are selected to provide a wide range of theatre experiences for both patrons and participants. Audiences are regularly drawn from not just the "Lawrence community," but "the University" and other nearby communities as well.
Third, the Theatre's seasons have yet to include any children's shows per se. Instead, it has tended to mix some productions having little or no connection to mature productions that appeal to mature individuals.
If you have any doubts, a complete list of its productions since 1977 are: "The Secret Affairs of Mildred Jaundal"; "Only an Orphan Girl"; "The Bat"; "8 Rooms Riv Vu"; "Vanities"; "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof"; "Knock Knock"; "Play it Again, Sam"; "Flesh, Flash and Frank Harris"; "The Silver Whistle"; "Same Time, Next Year"; "110 in the Shade."
And its March production this year will be "Murder in the Cathedral." Anyone who asserts that the Lawrence Community Theatre's "annual series . . . often consists of a few children's shows" hasn't been paying attention.
Wayne Derx
Treasurer, Lawrence Community Theatre
Senior facilities analyst, facilities planning
University Daily Kansan, March 2, 1981
Page 5
Standards
From page 1
case specifically because he was a member of
the committee he did outline what
the committee's responsible for.
"The mediators have no power," less said.
"The only power they have is moral suasion."
The parties of mediation is to bring the disentaining parties together to resolve the matter.
"If mediation is successful, then the parties have resolved the problem," he said. "Then the mediation committee makes a report to the board of trustees and Resapositions Committee."
If mediation is unsuccessful, the case goes to the Tenture and Related Problems Committee.
Wrick and Moeser are defenders in the
case and it is because of them, Miller claimed, that the hearing is being postponed.
"A month ago Paul told me, 'I'm forming a committee, and that he'd be on the committee. Balfour would be on the committee and the committee would be on the committee.' Miller said, "I nominated Carl Leban, but Wryk and Moeser had the right to veto my nomination and they veted it."
GIL, DYCK, DEAN of admissions and records, could not identify who signed the grade sheet for Miller's Kinesiology lab that semester.
"I can't tell you officially who signed the grade sheet," he said. "The privacy act protects both the students and the professor." Duck did say that each grade sheet must be
"As far as I'm aware, the grade sheet turned in for this course was signed by the professor." Dyck said. "Somebody else could have signed it, but they'd have to sign all of the grade sheets for every course the professor taught."
signed by the professor who taught the course.
process but the screen does not
Dyck did say that each grade sheet must be
As for the grading procedure, Moeser said he was sure the substitute instructor had access to the course grades from that semester.
"I don't know what method was used to determine the final course grade," he said. "I imagine the course grade could be based on the final because it was a comprehensive final. Of course, I really don't know how it was graded so I really shouldn't say."
BEYOND THE grading procedure, the department action affected his pay raises, Muller said.
"I didn't get any pay raise the year it happened," he said. "Now, take the raise I could have gotten this year and multiply the years I have left until I retire. I had about 20 years left at that time. I can't tell you the exact amount of what the pay raise might have been, but I'm sure that action cost me thousands of dollars."
In the meantime, Miller said his dignity as a scholar and an instructor had been broken.
"One hundred percent of the research and development grants I've applied for have been denied by the department." he said.
Seniors
Page 6
ditional refinement. "fair comments." Clark said,
"bona fide do, it. a wonderful idea."
The oldest resident and "mayor" of Sprague Apartments, Ruth McNair, is practically a permanent fixture. The 67-year-old former biology instructor moved into the building in 1984.
"All of us here in the apartments have had homes in Lawrence," McNair said. "As we got older, it was hard for us to maintain big houses, so we moved here."
"It's a lovely location and we can still see the students and feel a part of them."
She has made friends with many of her scholarship hall neighbors and with her fellow
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الجامعة منيرية المدرسة البريطانية الاولى المضبوط في إيران
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التاريخ : 17 / 11 / 1964
يبين بأنه درج العلوم الإنسانية الدكتور بالجامعة بتاريخ ٢١/١١/٠١٩ هـ تاريخ الوقت المحدد في الحيقة الداخلية الدكتور بالجامعة بتاريخ ٣/٣/٨٠٦ هـ تاريخ الوقت المحدد في الحيقة الداخلية الدكتور بالجامعة بتاريخ ٣/٣/٨٠٦ هـ
الطلاب ٣/٣/٨٠٦ A
الطلاب ٣/٣/٨٠٦ B
ووضعنشان سنوياً كمبيوتر سري أول كتابة كلمات وصف :
درجة الحاجة إلى العلم الإنساني الأول بحفظه في المركز الذي يُقبل منه بعد فترة عصره على حفظه في المركز الذي يُقبل منه بعد فترة عصره على حفظه في المركز الذي يُقا
وبناء على صياغة الفقرة السابقة من سؤال نسبة الى البحث والمصدر فإن ربنا عندها علمه أن البحوث والتدريس بالفقرة السابقة كانت في الأراضي الاجتماعية :-
(1) تستخدم الكلمة المنطقة صيغة الكلمة المنطقة صيغة وينطبقها على الكلمة المنطقة صيغة, كلمات وفي الصفحة
إلا أنك تنظم الاسم مناظرا بالأرقام العناصرية
الإمارة المغربية المنطقة بيئة القرن العشرين
ركبة الإمارات عقدة
وذكر في هذا الفصل جواب سؤالات أخرى صلب .
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Page 6
University Dally Kansan, March 2, 1981
On Campus
TODAY
A SYMPOSIUM OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC LECTURE by Richard Reber will be at 10:30 a.m. in the Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy.
A SYMPOSIUM OF CONTEMPORARY CONCERT will be performed at 8 p.m. in the United States.
BENJAMIN TILGHMAN will speak on the "Philosophy of Art: Thirty-two Years of Theory and Definition" at 3 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW
PERSONNEL SERVICES "improving communication training session will meet from 6-8pm"
SYMPHOSIS OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
LECTURE WITH Karel Hural at 10:30 a.m. in the
museum of the Contemporary Music Series.
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER
SEMINAR on an "Introduction to Time Sharing"
in the Auditorium of the Computer
Facility
THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 n.m. in the Forum Room of the Room.
OPENING RECEPTION FOR KU THEATRE DESIGN EXHIBIT, "Backstage Up Front" at 6:00 p.m. in the Gallery of the Union. The exhibit continues through March 28.
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION STUDENT ORGANIZATION LECTURE will feature H. R. Turbell speaking on "The Legal Aspects of Organization" at 7 p.m. in the Forum room of the Union.
CENTER FOR EAST ASIAN STUDIES COLLOQUIUM ON ASIAN SECURITY PROBLEMS the presser Janantah Pollack on behalf of the president at 7:39 p.m. in the Room Council of the Union.
SYMPOSIUM OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
CONCERT/WORKSHOP will present Katherine
Petrete on "A Workshop on Process Music" at 8 p.m. in the Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy.
LINGUISTICS COLOQUY will present Kenneth Miner on "Noun Incorporation as Evidence for Early Syntax: A New Approach" at 8 p.m. in 2017 Blake Hall.
WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS will sponsor Shirley Domer, program director for KU Adult Life Resource Center, on "The Dual Career-Style Workshop" at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union
THE DEATH AND DYING SUPPORT GROUP sponsored by the St. Lawrence Catholic Center will meet at 7 a.m. at the St. Lawrence Center, 1831 Crescent Rd. Everyone is welcome.
THE CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSE will have a weekly biology study at 7:30 p.m. at 118 Indiana Street.
THE TAU SIGMA STUDENT DANCE CLUB
will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson.
The local group is one of 4,500 member clubs of Toastmasters international, a non-profit, educational organization. Toastmasters in 84 countries are concerned with developing leadership and learning skills, according to Catherine Ogilvie, Bartlesville, Okla., junior.
The Lawrence Toastmasters Club No. 1814 sponsored a demonstrational meeting last week in response to student interest in organizing a campus-based club.
Ogilvie was instrumental in organizing the demonstration. She said that she and several other KU students had become interested in the possibility of starting a University-oriented club because of the benefits offered by the international organization.
The demonstration was representative of a regular Tostamasters Club meeting, Kay
Toastmasters try to organize club
She said that the basic purpose of the meetings was self-improvement.
"Many people have said that they have gotten more out of participating in their club meetings than they did out of university-level speech classes," Farmer said. "We practice both improptus speaking and formal speech-making. Many of the members find that their daily one-on-one communication skills are improved also."
About 20 people attended the demonstrational meeting, including the Lawrence club members. Ogilvie said that an organizational meeting for the new campus club was scheduled for 7 p.m. March 4 in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
The campus-based club was temporarily named the Jayhawk Toastmasters Club of KU. Membership in the new club will be open to all KU students, faculty and staff.
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From Staff Federal added a r terpretatic
Joiner r
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University Dally Kansan, March 2, 1981
Page 7
Judge rules no equal funding
From Staff and Wire Reports
Federal District Judge Charles W. Joiner has added a new wrinkle to already confused interpretations of Title IX.
Joiner ruled last week in Detroit that public schools did not have to provide equal funding for men's and women's athletic programs unless the sports in question received federal money.
Word of the ruling spread slowly until this weekend, and KU athletic officials said yesterday that they were still unaware of the decision they made. The team interleague athletics, particularly at KU.
TITLE IX is a 1972 federal law prohibiting sex discrimination of education.
Joiner's interpretation of Title IX is the latest of few rulings against Title IX and could be the precedent necessary to enable a successful class action suit against the federal law by the National College Athletic Association. Such a case would require a assignment in Kansas City, Kan., federal court.
Kansas City, Missouri, rest and recall.
The NCAA has maintained in the suit that
nearly all large athletic departments receive no federal funds and that the federal government should not dictate how the departments spend their self-generated funds.
Steve Hattchell, assistant commissioner of the Big Eight Conference, said Joiner's ruling could have been lifted verbatim from the suit filed by the NCAA.
Many supporters of women's athletics are alarmed by the new ruling by Joiner. The director of the Women's Law Fund of Cleveland said the ramifications may be disastrous.
Earlier rulings on Title IX had stipulated that athletic departments must divide total expenditures for all men's sports by the total number of male athletes and spend the resulting amount, multiplied by the number of female athletes, for women's sports.
Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics who filed a complaint against KU's funding of women's athletics with the Department of Education (then Health, Education and Welfare) in 1978, said she was not pleased with the ruling.
Banks' complaint of alleged discrepancies in funding for men's and women's sports at KU helpprompt a November investigation into the results of that inquiry have not been released.
"This sounds to me like a delay tactic. One would assume that it would have come out much earlier if it was valid." Banks said. "It all sounds bad, but it's good for the impression especially. I'm not holding my breath."
Banks said she doubled the ruling would be unheld, however.
"I just can't imagine that ruler will hold up under appeal," she said. "Even if the ruling could be maintained, which I doubt, you would have to prove that not a penny went into any athletic facilities or programs. Are any federal agencies constructing Allen Field House or Robinson?"
Neither Bob Marcum, athletic director, nor Vicki Thomas, University general counsel, could be reached for comment on how the ruling would affect the status of the investigation of KU athletics.
Berman said that last year, when he was on the Senate Ways and Means Committee, the mood in the Statehouse was not as inclined to across-the-board budget cuts.
One of the specific major improvements approved by the Senate Ways and Means Committee last year was the funding for the Haworth addition. This year that money has disappeared.
Berman
"In every instance," he said, "it seems like we enriched the appropriations suggested by the governor last year. I can't think of any item that was submitted last year, but it is not the same year."
"One would have to be kidding to say that all of this cutting up the budget was not because of the strong opposition to the proposed severance tax," Berman said. "It has certainly been the reason for the tough approach taken on the KU budget."
From page 1
THAT TOUGHER approach, mixed with the poor representation on the fiscally important Ways and Means Committees, adds up to a weak
chance to amend the budget proposals, Berman said.
"Fundamentally there is nothing that the local delegation can do about the budget until it reaches the floor," he said. "Then all that they can do, if they are of that mind, is offer amendments and I don't feel too confident that such action will carry on the Senate side."
STATE SEN. Jane Eldredge said that she agreed with Berman that any attempt at amending the budget would be difficult. She said, however, that she would try anyway.
"I don't know what my amendment on the Regents budget will be," she said, "but I plan to push for one. I will decide on the amendment just before I bring it up by Wednesday or Thursday."
V
Figure Salon
Eldredge said that she had gotten support for an amendment from senators from the other universities' home districts, but that they said they were not going to introduce other amend-
"It is going to be hard to get this through." Eldredge said. "But it is about all that I can do."
COMPLETE FITNESS PROGRAM
842-2323
Open 9-9 Mon.-Thurs.
9-3 Fri., 9-12 Sat.
2500 W.6th
Look Terrific
With Our
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Tanning Program
Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
SR
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Mick's Bicycle Shop
1339 Massachusetts
7:00 March 2
Softball Officials Meeting
The University Daily
156 Robinson Center
864-3546
STANLEY
KANSAN WANT ADS
9R
Call 864-4358
For more information call Recreational Services 864-2546
CLASSIFIED RATES
Q
15 words or fewer .. Each additional worb
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
units two three four five six aix seven eight nine ten
$1.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $6.00
$8.25 $10.50 $12.75 $15.25 $19.00 $22.75 $26.75 $31.75 $36.75
FOR RENT
Female roommate for 1 bedroom in 3 bed-
room house, Spacers. Facility, AC, semi-
furnished, and nice roommate $117 + 1/2
stillies. 841-1810.
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
TIBURON TOWNHOUSES are new, in ap-
laureate, and one-of-a-kind rooms. Furnished or unfurnished, on 3 bedrooms starting at $45 per month. Must be at 16th and Energy. 841-10-3844.
Starting at $89 per month.
HANOVER PLACE NOWHOUSES: Available immediately. New and contemporary.
Available within wishing district or KU, and district. Will leave at 8412-172 or 842-4455. $-10
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
accessed from the website www.advertisement.com/448-0388.
YOU'RE OUT!
Employment Opportunities
Bass Player urgently needed to complete British rock-oriented band. Contact Jade Gursel 1-379-5523 3-6
Earn Extra Money for Spring Break. Clip
Newspaper items for cash. Send long SASK to
Rick, P.O. Box 514, Stillwater, OK
-3-5
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED COUPY SURVIVOR, no more. Lake Champlain Work. Housework, home repair, carpentry, woodworking. $150 weekly for the couple. Living quarters provided. your own furniture. June 1 to August 12 as later (your choice) Later resumes. Please contact final reference fees. to: Cocepent, 1008 Sutton Drive, Lawrence, KS 60728. No phone. #354-938-5725.
TRAVEL CENTER
ENTERTAINMENT
Domestic & International Reservations
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
160 W. 23rd St (by Petrus)
9:00 5:00 F.M. 9:30 20:00 Sat
- Airline * Escorted Tours
* HotelResort * Skip Packages
* Car Rental * Group Rates
* International Student Specialists
Room for rent in nice house next to campus.
Excellent kitchen facilities. Call 842-
5152 or 841-9536 after 7:00 p.m. 3-3
**AIRONZA STREET DUPLICES** Available
bathroom study room, range refrigerator, dryer,
central air conditioning carpet & rugs,
center air conditioning $300 - utilities. Call 843-750 -370.
3 Bedroom Townhouses. Units available for lease until May. Others available for sum-mer rentals. Appliances, pool. You'll like our looks. Southern Rustic parkway Townhouses, 26th and 41st streets.
For spring and summer. Naimish Hall of Arts offers a variety of advantages of an apartment. Good food and plenty of it. Weekly meal service to clean up after your activities and much more. If you're looking for a home or if an apartment is too small, call us a call: NAIMISH HALL, 1800 Naimsh Hall Drive, D43-28.
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute walk to campus, 1821 Tennessee, $270 rent + utilities, $42-4822. 3-4
FOR SALE
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
For roommates, features wood burning fireplace,
washers/winter hooks. Fully equipped
daily at 2000 hours phone 862-579-3015
website www.princeton.com phone 862-579-3015
2 bedroom, attached garage home, 2621
Mountview. Fenced yard $290.00 mo. Available now. 843-0570, 843-6011. 3-3
3. be townhouse for rent now in Pine Haven
4. buy a new car, or lease w/weather & dreser, close to shopping
nance. We pay water $50 per person due
to our business or married. No pets. Call 831-214-04
Capital Apt 163. Unfurnished studios 1, & 2 bdrm. apts. available. Central air. wall-to-wall quiet location 25; blocks south of Fire Place 484-9703 at 3:30 a.m. anyweekends.
3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplaces and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W.
6th. 843-733-73
Studio available for sublease starting March,
at Trailrider. Call 843-733-333.
3-3
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5, 843-3228. tf
Apartment for lease immediately. Serious upper class/grad students or KU employees may be admitted from Kansas to Union. $15/month. No pets. Refs'ref required. 841-3826 after 5. 3-3
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Makes sense to use them 1). As study
makes sense to use them 2). As study
gain inspiration, the New Analysis of
Critic, the Bookmasters, and Oread Book
Citer, The Bookmasters, and Oread Book
Sublease 1 bd w/study all utilities paid ex-cept lights, bus route, convenient location 842-4461, 841-8552. 3-3
For renti, 2 bedroom Appt. air cond., 3 blocks from campus. Call 749-3489 after 6. 3-6
Guitar—Yamaha acoustical with hard shell case. All perfect, excellent action. Call 842-2853 before it's sold. 3-3
Stereo Pre-amp-Bestial "Phase Lineae"
model. 4000. Extensive noise production and peak expanding circuitry performance for design.
Hardy and Murray.耳鸣器 482-353 before its sold.
Alternator, starter and generator spool-alarm.
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 812-549-3065,
www.automotive-electrical.com
Opticsion Micro System Attu & Turbo
5812.01600.0010.0000
Muscets must: 841-865-300 and make
5-2-2-2
For Sale—'75 Cutlass Supreme. Excellent condition. PB, PS, Auto-Trans. A/C. Low mileage. Call 841-2916. 3-2
67 Camaro. Excellent condition. 76,000. Jesse
sen speakers, $1,450 or best offer. $64-1612.
3-2
1980 MGB, canary yellow; 4,800 miles; priced to sell. 1-234-220; 3-3
BSTYX Tickets for sale. Five tickets to the
BSTYX Show at 7:45 p.m. at 719-803-4500.
2:30-4:30 pm.
Custom 200 Bass Amp and Bottom, Vintage,
JBL Speakers 175 w/cover 814-247-522, 3-2
Bass guitar
$400 new, make offer. 841-1007) Ray 34
Acoustic guitar
$500 new, make offer. 841-1007) Ray 34
Moped - 1980 Vespa Brave Super Deli
250 mpg. 130 mg. $650 new,
845 741-837-214
3-4
Grandma Gramida Gita 72 4-dose 4-lipid
Radio Gramida player many extract, xerox
Radio Gramida player
Pair Justin Women's cowboy (7) *g* lbs.
New design on top, sleeve-out-ups.
Originally $15; $40 or best offer. Heavy
weight. Medium, quilted jackets. 3-4
780 Eae
FOUND
Mens 19" Giltme bicycle, custom built
$150.00. Call, 861-2815. 3-6
A ring near Potter's Lake Call 842-5900
weekends or weekends to identify.
5 month old black dog in Villez Square
Wearling coat. Call 841-347-
keep trying
old key found in Woolrdrift Aidortium
gold after Woodstock movie. Call 749-2598-3-4
CRUISERS. CLUB MEDITERRANEAN SALE, 500-348-2761. Training Office, Personnel, Coaches, Europe. Send $ 99 to $ 149 for $ 149 handling for CLUB MEDITERRANEAN WORLD. 152 Box 602, Berenice. 3-6
OVERSEAS JOBS~JUNES/year/year
Europe, S. Amer, Australia, Asia. All beds.
$100-$200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free inf.
lite LCC Bag 01-SI1 Coral Diar Ma 32
inf.
SUMMER RAFTING JOBS! $1,200-$3,600
Training provided! Grant application
INFORMATION GUIDE to WHITENATER,
BOX 60125, Sacramento, CA 93586. 3-6
Full or part time help wanted. Combinatian dancers & waitresses. $10 hour per hour. Nude dancing $7.00 per hour. Your choice. Good Time! Nice to work with. Hwy 49, 373-9790. $-24
TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES,
you will need to provide
experiences with us, as a public service.
nursing home residents? Our customer co-
mmercial provider needs you to
Nursing Homes (KINH) needs your help and input on nursing home conduct and
administration. You will be part of
the residents. All names and correspondence
to you must be submitted to:
913-842-3088 or 843-7107, or write us:
M.S. St. Ml. # 4. Lawrence, Kansas
us. 660 215-2300
Could YOU USE SOME EXTRA MONEY?
a second income? If so, we can help For
sale of computers. We have stamped envelopes to Job.Tech. Associates.
235 Fireite 2, Lawrence K. 65044. S-6
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF accepted for the Summer Orientation student advertisement in today's paper or come by Strong Hail. An equal opportunity enrol-
Summer youth care employment for pool and canoeing instructions LIFESTYLE GROUP, LPN, RNT, EMT. Assistant Cook, Craft Director, Baking Assistant, Mindful Writing, Riding Assistants. Mint Job! Write or call Kaw Valley Girl Scout Club 723-218-9055 application. Equal Opportunity Employer
World's Largest Business needs you! Stay
in the know of all new developments.
Envelope: Frank Jones 3328
Mailbox: Richard Cohen 3328
Postmaster: Johnny Patterson
LOST
*Lost-plastic case, front and back in bright*
*acrylic matte; mid-wed. 18. Call Lori S. 843-392-
843-1119*
Would desyly appreciate the return of my
mail on Saturday night Feb. 12, *Roll*: Caillou *Kevin* 73.
MISCELLANEOUS
Used and batted golf clubs and bags,
and other equipment.
16.49 inches, open 17 lpm.
5-8
NOTICE
SKI WINTER PARK/MARY JANE SPRING
BREAK with SKI e-4. 5 skijacks, lift
tickets from Mesa Park. $129.
capitation cost: ONLY $229. Mar. 13th,
18th or 23rd.-drive. Write SKI e-4. 1607
$300. Mar. 13th or 23rd.-drive. Write SKI
$868 ask for Darryl. Three day Eenter trip
to Keystone Arapahoe Bain $200. If
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
tf
841-4821
Recourse & Portfolio Photographs, Institu-
tion B. W Swell Studio, T49-1611 8-11
d. B W Swell Studio T49-1611 8-11
Engagement portfolio of quality only a
small fraction of all data in the
statis can afford. Swelch Svensk 749-1611.
I tried to get to Huwaiu over spring break before we went back to work. The betterwinter appreciated PO, the more they were on vacation.
Want to be a Priest? Sister? Ages 20-507
Société Nigrae Gonzaga University
Spokane, WA 98643
Senior portrait special, studio taken with a Kodak Portraiter 400. Ground area of 4-1/2 x 3-1/2 ft. Swivel床. 789-161-791.
Green's The selection of award-winning wines and import beers Green's Liquor, 802 W. 23rd St. 841-2277 3-3
GAY & LESBIAN PEER COUNSELING:
A friend is ready to listen. Referrals through
phone or email to 864-3506 or Head-
quarters at 891-2345
3-3
SPRING FORMAL BUSH MARCH 27, 29 and
AUGUST 13, 2016
Register in the Interfaith Council Office of
Chicago, Illinois. Register in Oliver, Tampa, and JRP on March 10,
7-9 p.m. there will be a $10 registration
$24-9
"BE INVOLVED"
I'm driving to and from central Florida Spring Break. Went someone to share gas and driving. Call Bill 749-2506. 3-2
HEADACH, BACKACH, STIFF NECK,
LGP LAINT? Quality Carechure Practice &
its benefits. Dr. Mark Johnson 843-856 for
consultation, accept Blue Cross & Lon-
get.
Yes Yeah & Leaking. Thanks for the great
tips to try at Day at Pertina a little longer.
Maybe they'll play with us on Sunday?
Barry, What is involved music? Lawrence
Arts Center Sat., March 7, 8 p.m.
3-6
Want to go sking Spring Break? $18 per night—walking distance from village and Gondola. Booking for 2 Jibbs. Guaranteed. Certified details call 749-0329 forask. D-3-9
BISH! It's done! It's done! Now for some
fun, let's go inside the room.
—JAY'S— We remember you’re numb
SERVICES OFFERED
Tutoring Math 00-800, Phx$ 100-600, Bus$ 384, 804, 806, Call 843-903, tf
808, 807
Muffy. We have the best and most beautiful relationship in the whole world, and I never worried about anything. You know how I feel about you, you know how I feel about me, even though no one see me at all makes it what makes it even more special. Remember, like I've never known or loved another, I don't describe the feelings we have for each other. And I would go to any length to let you know how much I love you. I want you to know that anytime you reach for me, you'll find me there. Love you. *Yours truly.*
JOB RESUMES prepared by a local personnel professional. Call Career Development Associates. 841-5664. 3-6
The Harbour Libes has one dollar pitcher
downtown, for some cheap beer and cheap chill
down. For more expensive drinks, go to
wheel
Do you have a mechanic that is as comfortable in the pits at Watkins Glen as he is working on your Sports Car?
We Do!
wheel
ar racing and repair
843-7095
26th and Iowa
Drop off services. Drop your laundry off and we will wash, dry, hand and fold your laundry for only $80 per load. Ask about our morning service fees from 6:30 to 9:45. Ask about our sending service fees from 9:45 to 12:30. 843-7974
Electrolux-The Only Authorized Service for Lawrence. Located in Lawrence, supplies parts, free pick-up & Delivery on repairs. Or ask to see the New Olympics team. Call us at 800-483-448 or buy Phone #800-483-448. -3
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476.
Experienced typed-term papers, thesis,
mice, electric "IBM Selectric" Proofreading,
spelled corrected 843-9534. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mice. IBM correcting selective,
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2510. **tf**
Experienced K.U. typist. IBM Correcting
Suliticive Quality work. References available.
Sandy, evening and weekends. 748-
8918.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast-
reliable, accurate, IBM plca/elette, 842-2507
evenings to 11:00 and weekends. 1f
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. tf
RESUME - RESUME - RESUME - Professional
R-sum - Preparation and Printing Encre
Copy Corp. 25th and Iowa. 820-2011. tt
824-754 or 843-2671. tt
842-2001
For Your Letter Objections
ENCORE COPY CORPS
-Holiday Holder 842-2000
Experienced typist-books, thes, term paper,
dispersitions, etc. IMS correcting Silecric.
Terry evenings and weekends.
BUSINESS REVIEW PROFESSIONAL
Dial
Fast and clean typing. Call anytime 841-
6846. 3-4
TYPING: All kinds. Experienced quality work on IBM Selectric. Contact Chris. 841-3451. 3-4
Closest thing to printing=IBM Executive typing. Reasonable rates. Call Bill #82- 8772. 3-5
Female roommate wanted to share 2 BR apt Free rent till March 1st. Near KU. Must tolerate smoking Call 749-0272. 3-2 two卧室mate not a non-studiung,宿舍 nursing
WANTED
2 housemates need a non-smoking, studious female. 3 br. $83 + 1/3 utilities. 841-9779. 3-3
GOLD. SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings,
Wedding Bands, Silver Coins, Sterling. etc.
We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or
542-2986.
Female: roommate wanted for Jayhawk Tower Apt. $98.50/month (utilities paid) Call 749-2489
Christian woman seeking other Christian women to be in charge of undergraduate who has not yet experiented motherhood. Will only take 48 minutes of your time. Call Anne M. 48-23-9150.
Roommate male or female to share 3 bdr.
house close to campus $100/mo. + 1/3 uss
talk 843-2645 at 8:00 pm for Matt 3-3
Roommate wanted preferably gyr or at least open minded. Apt. available immediately. Stadium Apts 1125 Indiana 219 or call 841-128 and leave message for Doug.
Female roommate to share extra nice furnished 2 drdr. 2 bath duplex $115 + 1/2 ull. Call 841-8390. 3-13
Bass player urgently needed to complete British rock-orientated band. Contact Jade Gurse 1-379-SS23. 3-6
Tutor for Math 102. Cheap rate wanted.
Call Dianne at 864-6743. 3-6
The University Daily
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, March 2, 1981
'Hawks finish in 2nd-place tie, draw Cowboys
By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Editor
Has the Kansas men's basketball team peaked at the right time or has the homecourt advantage been more obvious than usual in its last two games?
It doesn't make any difference because Saturday's victory over Oklahoma State was one of the first round of the Bier Eight postseason tournament.
Never again this season will the Jayhawks have to face the opposition's fans on the opposition's floor. Saturday's victory gave the Jayhawks a 8-5 Big Eight record, good for a three-way State loss to the St. Louis State fail to a 8-4 and fifth place.
The three-way tie for second place brought about a draw for tournament seeding and the luck of the draw gave KU a quick match against Oklahoma State. The Big Eight 46-43, Saturday for the Big Eight championship and won the right to play
2-12 Iowa State in the first round. Kansas State, also in the second-place tie, will play 40 Oklahoma. Nebraska, the third-second team, will host Colorado. All games will be Tuesday evening.
Kansas certainly hopes to duplicate Saturday's effort. The Jayhawks shot 54 percent and by as much as 20 points in the second half. The game was KU's second consecutive blowout and proved that his team is peaking at the right time.
"I think we're in a good frame of mind to do well," he said.
"We're delighted to be playing at home. We fell one game short of our goal, which was to be 20-4 and that would have given us a piece of the title also. But I think we're ready for the next games."
"We're playing very good basketball now. We've had great play from our backcourt all season and tonight was no exception."
backcourt was an important part of Saturday's game. 6-foot-3 Matt Clark, one of the Big Eight's scoring leaders all season, scored only 15 points.
Leroy Combs, the Cowboys 6-foot-8 forward. Combs scored 27 points against KU from his baseline position earlier this season.
Stopping part of Oklahoma State's
"Clark recognized that we were on
More importantly, when Clark got the
BIG EIGHT POST-SEASON TOURNAMENT
FIRST BOUND GAMES
Oklahoma State (8-6, 18-8) at Kansas (9-5, 19-7)
Colorado (5-9, 15-11) at Nebraska (9-5, 15-11)
Oklahoma (4-10, 9-17) at Kansas State (9-5, 19-7)
Iowa State (2-12, 9-17) at Missouri (10-4, 2-18)
SEMIFINAL GAMES
SEMIIFAL GAMES
Winner of MU-1OAE vs. NU-Okiahona State
Winner of K-State-OU vs. Winner of NU-CU
All games are tomorrow night. Toptip will be announced. Seminials and Saturday Eight Recordings by regular season recorders on parentheses. Big Eight Records follow by regular season records on parentheses.
ball in his high post position he was forced to pass. His passes often went back out to the point rather than to
him and passed it back out," Owens said. "We were just trying to recognize where he was."
KU's 8-9 center Victor Mitchell is still luring with a knee injury and played only 14 minutes Saturday, but his substitute, 8-8 forward John Crawford, and his left wing, Kwon got a low-scoring but productive game from 6-7 forward David Magley.
Crawford hit 6-of-10 field goals and three free throws for 15 points and, most important, grabbed 12 rebounds. Magley had 10 rebounds and 3 assists. 6-10 center Art Housey had 12 points on 6-of-9 shooting. All have been key players in the last two games and will be Tuesday, Owens said.
"Magley was a complete player, not hitting as well, but he was penetrating and passing well," Owens said. "When he's playing well he makes our whole team the best around. He did just about as on the boards today as we could have wanted."
"John has been playing very well and Art is maturing along with the team."
OKLAHOMA STATE (18-8)
MN MT FG PF REB A PP TF
Wright 20 3-11 0-4 12 0 2 6
Jacobs 28 3-11 0-4 15 0 2 8
Coppe 40 3-10 0-4 12 0 2 8
Hannon 40 3-10 0-4 12 0 2 15
Hannon 40 3-10 0-4 12 0 2 15
Shahan 10 2-4 0-4 1 1 2 4
Shahan 10 2-4 0-4 1 1 2 4
Nutt 18 0-4 0-4 2 1 1 4
Stuhlman 18 0-4 0-4 2 1 1 4
Stuhlman 18 0-4 0-4 2 1 1 4
Andrews 1 0-2 0-4 0 1 1 8
Andrews 1 0-2 0-4 0 1 1 8
Rockefeller 47 27-12 1-4 20 11 11
MIN MN PG FG FT FEB A PF TP 2
Magley 17 5-8 1-4 10 10 3 1 2
Houston 17 6-9 0-1 14 10 3 0 12
Houston 17 6-9 0-1 14 10 3 0 12
Guy 7-9 7-11 6-1 2 5 0 3 17
Guy 7-9 7-11 6-1 2 5 0 3 17
Mitchell 14 0-1 2-4 2 2 1 1 2
Mitchell 14 0-1 2-4 2 2 1 1 2
Neal 13 1-4 1-4 2 1 1 2 5
Neal 13 1-4 1-4 2 1 1 2 5
Korek 1 0-0 4-0 0 0 0 0 4
Thorpoon 1 0-0 4-0 0 0 0 0 4
Thorpoon 1 0-0 4-0 0 0 0 0 4
Knight 1 0-0 4-0 0 0 0 1 0
Knight 1 0-0 4-0 0 0 1 0 0
OLIHASTA MA 12-59 16-22 41 13 18 00
TOURS 200 32-39 16-22 41
OKLAHOMASTATE
KINGAR
Attendees
Officials: Mayfield and Leimback
Technical Foals: none
Attendance: 15.542
Hogan's world-record run in 440 paces track team to title
For a spinner still in need of work, KU's Deen Hozan did not do too badly.
By PAUL D. BOWKER Sports Writer
Hogan, a junior, set a world record in the 440-yard run Saturday as the Jayhawks successfully defended their Big Eight indoor championship at the Bob Devaney Sports Center on the University of Nebraska in Lincoln.
Hogan, who has suffered two ham-
hair injuries this season, won the race
in a record-world record of 47.30, eclip-
son for the No.1 pick in the NASCAR
Bert Cameron of Texas E-PASS.
KU captured its second consecutive conference championship and its fourth in the last five years with 86 points, then lost Nebraska, which finished with 86.
The Jayhawks were not assured of a first-place finish until they won the mike relay and Kansas State's Doug Lythek and theuhaskers for first place in the pole vault.
Rodney Bullock, who finished second with a time of 47.75.
"I knew what I had to do at this
time," he said. "If I didn't
quity now, I wouldn't do it."
KU's winning time of 3.119 in the mile relay set a conference championship meet record, breaking the records of 3.127, set by Nebraska in 1978.
Hanson qualified for the national
championship at 3½% in Fridays' final of the long jump.
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It was Nebraska that gave the Jayhawks a few nervous moments.
"It's the first time I ever had to win one on the last jump," said Hanson. "It feels great."
"I was pretty well in control the whole way. I felt pretty good. I took off hard, hoping to on. I wanted to break the field house record."
Senior sprinter Mike Ricks and junior long jumper Mark Hanson both qualified for the national championships at the meet.
"I'm still having problems with turns." Hogan said after the record-setting performance. "I need more hard work, to prepare for the NCAA.
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Ricks, defending national champion in the 600-yard run, qualified during Friday's preliminaries. He posted a time of 1:08.97 in the race, the best time of any Big Eight runner in the event this season. However, it was not good enough to break his conference record of 1:08.
Hogan, who reinjured a hamstring muscle two weeks ago at the Los Angeles Invitational, was named
The Jayhawks won five of the meet's 17 events and scored points in all but two.
outstanding performer of the Big Eight championships.
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Hogan, the fourth fastest quarterrimer in the nation last year, took the lead at the beginning of the race and never lost it, beating out teammate
Kansas State finished in third place with 68 points and Iowa State settled for fourth with 63. Oklahoma State followed with 62, Missouri with 55 and Colorado and Oklahoma finished in a last-place tie with 47.
One of Luis Burunel's most recent films is also one of his lightest, an attack on rationality demonstrating the absurdity of people who anslave themselves to be human beings. Brally, Monica Vitti, Michel Piccoli. "Watching Burunel his work is a exhilarating blood sport." Jay Cocks, Time, (104 min.) Color, French exhibitions.
SUA FILMS
Monday, Mar. 2
The Phantom of Liberty
Tuesday, Mar. 3
Roberta
(1935)
Murder at the Vanities
(1932)
Two early thirties musicals, Roberta is the Kern-Hambach operetta, illuminated by the presence of Fred Astaire and Bing Crosby. Dunne and Randolph Scott star in this long-unseen musical. Murder is a musical mystery set backstage at East Carnegie Hall. Jack Oakie, Kilty Kerilson and Donald Meek. Among the musical numbers is a graphic pre-Code ditty called "Sweet Holly," with Mitchell Maloney (8:59pm) BW; 7:30.
Unless otherwise noted; all fixtures will be shown at Wooded Auditorium in the West Room, 10th Floor, Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday. Tickets are $2.00. Tickets available at the $3.00 sae Union, 4th level, information 864-0010. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
THE CASTLE TEA ROOM
phone: 843-1151
BOKONON
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Summer Orientation Program 1981 STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
. . . leadership abilities
knowledge of University programs & activities
interpersonal communication skills
. . . enthusiasm about program
student in good academic standing and returning to KU for Fall 1981 term.
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS
AVAILABLE IN ADMISSION & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL
APPLICATIONS DUE BY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25.
an equal opportunity employer
Operation Friendship provides a relaxed setting where fruitful communication can take place between students from the U.S. and those persons coming here from other countries. There is meaningful sharing of ideas, customs, languages and even recipes.The organization provides foreign students with the opportunity to improve their English and ease their adjustment and it increases the U.S. students' worldmindedness and knowledge of other cultures. For everyone it provides new friends and a fun time together.
Put your college education to work in the great Paper Airplane Fly-Off's Fri., March 6th, 7:30, Kansas Union Ballroom - Beer will be sold.
Pizza Delivery
Mondays at the Center,1629 W.19th
call 841-8001 for information Funded in part from the Student Activity Fee
the great PAPER AIRPLANE FLY-OFF'S $10.00 First Dollar
$10.00 First Prize
Classes:
Distance
Time aloft
Most original design
A ten dollar first prize will be awarded
in each class and non-cash prizes to 2nd and 3rd places. There is a $1 basic entry fee ($2 after March 4th) for one class and 25c for each additional class. Entries must be made from 8½" x 11" paper, register and pick up a copy of the rules in the Aerospace Engineering office 2004 Lea.
Sponsored by the AIAA
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The acader those f Del Shl Univer The acader by a faculty educat
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, March 3, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 107 USPS 650-640
Shankel reaffirms academic policy for athletes
By KATHRYN KASE Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas is requiring that academic standards for student athletes match those for other KU students, Acting Chancellor Del Shanahan, yesterday in a letter to the University community.
The letter, which outlines efforts to ensure academic equality, addresses concerns raised by Kansas State Times story and by KU faculty members about the quality of athletics educations. Shankel said.
But the letter did not address the separate administrators were conducting into the Tufts.
"We are taking other steps in looking into a few of the particulars expressed in the Times"
SHAKENL DECLINED to say who was involved in the investigation or how it was being conducted.
Dionysio Kounas, associate professor of history, has not been interviewed. by the investigating team, Shankel said. Kounas was a student and professor who steered athletes into easy courses.
Shankel would not say when the team would issue a report on the Times allegations.
"We will issue one as soon as we're sure of our facts," he said. "We will probably have something to say around the time the Faculty Council wants their report."
SHANKEL SAID he issued the letter to publicize KU's academic standards.
Court, William W.
Last week, the Faculty Council requested that
Shankel respond to the Times allegations by
April 20.
"I think we all have an obligation to all students to make sure that the academic staff
dards at the University are upheld," he said yesterday from Dallas, Texas.
Shankel, also a professor of microbiology, is attending the American Microbiology Society's symposium.
The University has taken five steps to ensure academic quality and equality, according to
The first was to establish the Commission on the Improvement of Undergraduate Education. Formed last fall and headed by Deanell Tacha, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, the commission will review academics and make a report this spring, Shankel said.
"The commission is a general commission charged with the broad responsibility to look at any areas where we can improve the quality of education at the University," Tacha said. "We're looking at the totality of the academic program."
TO REVIEW ATHLETES and academics in particular, the second step has been to form an athletic Academic Standard Review Board, the letter said. Shankel said the board is investigating allegations.
The board was formed by the Office of Academic Affairs last fall, not to review the
See ACADEMICS page 5
Committee keeping quiet on campus investigation
By BRAD STERTZ
Staff Reporter
The staff of the House Ways and Means Committee has found that only one of the 12 alleged state university athletic fund abuses requires further study, the committee's characterization.
State Rep. Mike Hayden, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee and R-Atwood, would not, however, disclose which Kansas city law violated the law had by misusing state funds.
"We ran through a list we were given by our coach, and I saw that looks illegal, so we are still looking into that."
"The rest of the complaints just washed out. Some of them were matters for the NCAA to deal with, some were just bad judgment and some of them were simply not violations of the law."
ALTHOUGH HAYDEN would not say whether an investigation had taken place at the University of Kansas, she took Loewer to the University of Kansas, then carried off a "mimpost-post audit" investigation at KU.
ronman, the minority leader on the committee, said he had found out that Hayden had enlisted the Legislative Post-Audit Office in the investigation through Richard Brown, director of the Post-Audit Office and an associate of Hayden's.
"The fact that this investigation is going on is not very well-known by the members of the committee." Hohman said. "It is something that Mike had asked Dr. Brown to run for him and, other than that, only a few people who Mike has told know what is going on."
State Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topeka and vice
cairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said that he did not know anything about the staff investigations other than what he had read in the newspapers.
Hohman, however, said that he thought Bunten knew more than he admitted.
"Those old boys are not going to say if or even how much they know about the investigations," Hohman said. "They want to be sure that they can make the schools look bad."
KU ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Bob Marcum said that he was unaware of any investigation on campus. He also said that he had never been charged by Hayden's staff on illegal uses of funds.
Most of the impetus behind these investigations, Hohman said, was provided by supporters of a KU budget cut who wanted to further undermine the University's reputation.
"Hell yes, that's what they are doing." Hohman said about Hayden and his supporters. "The more that they can erode the credibility of the University or universities, the easier it will be for them to encourage other legislators to keep or even expand the budget cuts."
Hohman said that by showing that the universities were up to no good, legislators like Hayden could make their peers believe the tools deserved punishment in the form of the cuts.
Hayden said he would not reveal details of the investigation because it was still under way. He said that he did not want to jeopardize his sources by giving out any more information.
Hayden's sources on the KU campus, Hohman said, include a "snitch," or an informant, who has infiltrated the University and is relaying information to Hayden.
Weather
CLOUDY
There will be increasing cloudiness today with occasional showers by this afternoon, according to the KU Weather Department. Today's high will be 47 degrees.
Tonight, there is a chance of rain possibly mixed with snow with a low near 38 degrees.
Tomorrow it will be cloudy with a 50 percent chance of precipitation. The high will be near 40 degrees.
Winds will be out of the east-northeast at 10 to 15 mph.
Higher and
Association
Conference
Forest
Tom Gleason, a candidate for Lawrence's City Commission rises to make a point at last night's Oread Neighborhood Association candidate forum, at the South Park recreational Center, 1141 Massachusetts street. Forum
SCOTT HOOKER/Kansan self
participants were (left to right): Pat Slick Neissbitt, Nancy Shontz,
Mike Allenbettz, Mike Amy; Nancy Hambleton and Barkley Clark.
See story page 5.
Officials await action on tenure bills
Bv DAN BOWERS
Staff Reporter
As two tenure bills filter through a House Ways and Means subcommittee, officials from groups skirmishing against the bills must be content with an uneasy calm.
Officials from the American Association of University Professors, the Board of Regents and the University of Kansas are awaiting word from the superintendent. All those who were assigned to the subcommittee last week.
“It’s a frustrating situation,” Dave Shulenburger, vice president of the KU chapter of the school district, told me taken away an opportunity we could to present our side. Right now, we just have to sit and wait.”
WILLIAM KAUFFMAN, staff attorney for the Regents, said that the subcommittee had taken no action on the bills that he knew of and that he had asked Harold Dyck, R-Hesston, chairman of the subcommittee, to contact him when action was to be taken.
later in the week to check the bills' progress and that he and others were prepared to provide more information opposing the bills.
The two bills, introduced by Rep. Joseph Hoagland, R-Overland Park, would give the Regents power over final tenure approvals and the disciplining of faculty members
Kauffman said that he planned to contact Dyck
Kaufmann said last night that Hoagland had submitted to the subcommittee a modification in the rule.
UNDER THE PRESENT ON, the Regents would be required to hear any complaints against a faculty or staff member of a Regents school and to take appropriate action. This may take the form of a hearing or a dismissal of the complaint.
with Hoagland's modification, Kauffman said, the Regents would still review all claims, but could refer them to the proper governing bodies on campus.
The University then would make recommendations to the Regents on what action should be taken.
Kauffman said that while the modification
improved the bill's original form, it still "raises considerable concerns."
"The bill would allow any individual to file a claim with the Regents," he said. "It's a position that's rather unique, because the employer (the university) does not receive the complaint."
SHULENBURGER SAID the bills have been developed by a Legislature that misunderstood University actions following a goodwill trip to Sweden in 1978 by Norman Fortner, professor of social welfare.
rre said that some legislators had the "misconception that the faculty blocked action in the Forer matter."
The Faculty Council committee on tenure and related problems acted properly in its refusal to hear the case last spring. In other cases, charges were levied against the faculty member in question.
Sulenburger said he was confused by the motive behind the bill. He said he thought the legislators would be interested in holding someone responsible in cases involving faculty
See AAUP page 5
Wavelengths titanium yield new art form
The image shows a person working on a piece of material, likely metal, in a workshop setting. The individual is focused on their task, holding a tool and writing or drawing on the material. In the upper left corner, there is a close-up inset showing the hands of the person as they work on the material. The background is blurred, suggesting an industrial or workshop environment.
By ANNIKA NILSSON Staff Reporter
He paints with electric paint brushes on thin metal plates. He produces colors ranging from golden brown to light purple.
The artist, Bill Seeley, Grand Rapids, Mich., graduate student, paints by producing an extremely thin, transparent layer of oxide on titanium metal.
The color phenomenon is much the same as what happens with a thin layer of oil on water or glass. The oil molecules move across the surface.
"There are no colors involved," he said. "It's all done with wavelengths."
Bill Seely, Grand Rapids, Mich., graduate student, creates pieces of art and jewelry by using electrodes to oxidize a titanium片. space-age
in a so-called SEELEY STARTED working with this new technique about a year ago as a master's project in the design department.
metal burn color ranges from gold to purple depending on the amount of metal used. See the image for a close-up of a finished piece of metal in the inset photo. Seen displays a close-up of a finished piece of metal.
Normally titanium is used in the aerospace industry when a light and strong metal is needed. Titanium is almost as light as aluminum and almost as strong as steel.
Seeley calls titanium painting a meeting of art and technology.
SEELEY USEs a painthrub to apply electrolytes to titanium and sodium phosphate and detergents.
"My thesis should be the first one in this country on the metal," he said.
"I make contact with the metal and oxide starts forming," he said. "It starts with a yellow and as the oxide layer gets thicker, it changes the effect on light."
By applying different voltages for different lengths of wires they produces colors from all of the spectrum.
Seeley said he first got interested in using
"I pretty much started to read the Encyclopedia Britannica," he said.
titanium for art when a friend gave him some pieces of the material. At first he didn't know
So far, he has made mostly jewelry but he is starting to experiment with paintings.
ONE OF SEELEY'S problems is that the titanium producing industry is not set up to deal with individuals. He said that when he wanted to buy titanium for his paintings, he had to buy a 19-pound piece that was 1,700 feet long.
seseet has his graduate show in December and is now working on his thesis.
And between making titanium paintings and
workshops, it gives workshops in the
art and design departments.
he said that he was not sure what he was going to do after leaving KU but that he wanted the industry to fund him to set up work shops and produce more paintings and jewelry.
Senate reduces funding requests to fit allocation
Three Student Senate committees last night began the laborious process of cutting $39,511 in funding requests to fit $22,014 the Senate allocates to student organizations.
The three committees hearing last night's
affairs and Cultural commissions Services, Academic
Affairs and Cultural committees Services.
The committees also will hear requests from groups tomorrow and Thursday. Next week they will deliberate on the request to the Senate. The Senate will vote on the recommendations March 24 and 25.
STUDENT SERVICES heard requests from the KU Committee on South Africa, Friends of Headquarters Non-Traditional Student Black Student Union and KU Weather Service.
KU Committee on South Africa requested $220
for photographic photo and rental. In the
nose, the nose is a photographic photo.
Friends of Headquarters a 24-hour crisis intervention center, made the largest request, $13,086.75. Last year, the organization received an additional $3,294.43 in fall supplemental budget hearings.
the group requested the increase to cover
ramping costs and the increased increases for the
director and bookkeeper.
BLACK STUDENT UNION requested
$78,087. 04,144 increase from its last year's
amount.
John Lamb, Student Services Committee mem-
bers wanted $1,100 to pay for film
cut from theaters.
Lamb said that Senate bought two films for BSU last year with the condition that they charge a 50-cent admission. This year they have shown free films.
See HEARINGS page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Weinberger asks for defense hike
WASHINGTON—Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger plans to ask congress to boost military spending by $38 billion, the highest peacedeclaration budget since World War II.
The Pentagon's budget proposal for fiscal years 1981 and 1982 will include funds for a new manned bomber, a nuclear cruiser, a nuclear attack submarine, and a nuclear missile.
It will also include money designated for reactivation of the New Jersey and Iowa battleships and the aircraft carrier Oriskany, they said.
Defense is the only budget that has been increased under the Reagan administration's plan for the economy.
About $4.6 billion may be chopped from the total proposed amount, however, to reflect savings programs initiated by the Fontagon. The sources said that would mean a final figure representing a $33.8 billion increase over the past year is requested by the Carter administration for the fiscal years 1981 and 1982.
Weinberger will present his revised budget to Congress tomorrow.
The revisions, with their expected savings, would add $7.4 billion to the $196.4 billion budget for fiscal 1928, the sources said to the $196.4 billion budget for fiscal 1928, the sources said.
Haig to visit Middle East countries
WASHINGTON—Secretary of State Alexander Haig will visit four Middle
America states and a Canadian province to undertake a fundamental
assessment of U.S. policy to ward the Arab World.
Reporters were told that Haïg would visit Israel, Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. The trip, which begins April 5, has not been officially announced yet.
Haig is known to believe that the Carter administration left U.S. policy toward arab world in shrades and that a major rebuilding job, especially with regard to Iraq, would have been accomplished.
The Saudis are believed to have been shaken deeply by the fall of the shah in Iran and the United States' inability or unwillingness to help him. The Saudis also have expressed the belief that the Carter administration was completely complacent about the growing Soviet presence in the Horn of Africa.
Reporters were told there would be a greater emphasis on strategic concepts and on persuading the Arab world that the United States has a consistent and coherent policy for dealing with the Soviet advances in the area.
U.S. increases aid to El Salvador
WASHINGTON—The State Department, after a day of deliberating with congressional leaders, announced yesterday it would increase sharply the number of people who could vote online.
The announcement means the number of U.S. military advisers will reach 84. The Pentagon said five additional Navy advisers arrive in the country year after year.
The advisers will be armed and ordered to defend themselves if attacked, but they will not be involved in combat patrols, the announcement said.
Financial assistance will be increased by another $23 million to help El Salvador buy helicopters, vehicles, radar and small arms.
The department said congressional approval, under the War Powers Act or foreign assistance legislative restrictions, would not be required.
In announcing the U.S. aid increase, the department spokesman said the equipment was needed because of the possibility of another left-wing of the administration.
The statement pinned the blame for the rising military needs on "Cuba and other communist governments" that have infiltrated "massive amounts of money."
Earlier in the day, Secretary of State Alexander Haig told reporters that Nicaragua, the most frequently used infiltration route, had ledged to stop the arms flow and that the United States was watching carefully to determine whether that promise was being kept.
South Africa ousted from debate
UNITED NATIONS—The U.N. General Assembly, complying with a demand by black African nations, voted overwhelmingly yesterday to oust Swaziland.
The United States, Canada and most Western rations voted against the proposal, which passed 112-22 with six abstentions. Immediately after the motion passed, the delegation from South Africa, which controls Namibia, walked quietly from the assembly hall.
South African Ambassador J. Adrian Eksteen denounced the decision to silence his delegation as a "travey of justice."
At the request of black African nations, the assembly convened earlier in the day for a four-day debate on Namibia. But it met only briefly and adjourned when Cameroon challenged the South African credentials.
The Credentials Committee voted 6-1, with two abstentions, to deny Pretoria a place in debate. The United States cast the only negative vote.
The assembly then reconvened and voted to accept the committee's reconsideration of the nominations of South Africa in view of its policy of anarchism, or racial discrimination.
The decision does not mean expulsion from the United Nations, which can only be decided in the Security Council, where Western nations have veto power.
Pardon granted to 5,200 Koreans
SEOUL, South Korea—On the eve of his inauguration to a seven-year term, President Chun Doo Hwan yesterday granted amnesty to more than 5,200 convicted criminals and government critics—the largest mass pardon in Korean history.
The amnesty takes effect today, when Chau takes the oath of office before 9,000 supporters and foreign representatives during a lavish ceremony at the palace in Nanjing.
Chun ordered the clemency for the 5,221 convicted criminals and political dissidents to expire in a "grand national recounting" in the U.S.-aligned framework.
The amnesty will affect many involved in anti-government demonstrations after the assassination of President Park chung-hee in October 1979 and others imprisoned for dissident activities in the 1960s and 1970s under Park's rule.
The order did not mention dissident leader Kim Dae-jung, whose death sentence for treason was commended to life imprisonment by Chun just because of his imprisonment.
WASHINGTON—The National Commission on Air Quality told Congress yesterday that the 1970 Clean Air Act has significantly improved the atmosphere but recommended some of its pollution cleanup deadlines be scrapped.
Clean air deadlines may be dropped
The commission, which spent the last two years working on a Clean Air Act, clean health, no cost, should govern the establishment of public parks.
But the 13-member panel said the act's complexity, spotty enforcement, litigation and problems in cleaning up car exhausts prevented some cleanup efforts.
The commission recommended that Congress drop the act's compliance deadlines for reducing pollution in areas still below federal air quality standards and end the current system of budgeting the amount of new regulations permitted in mostly rural areas that already have acceptable air quality.
The recommendations contained several concessions to the allying U.S. automakers, including a proposed relaxation in the carbon monoxide
Alum pledges pass goal in telephone campaign
Amid ringing bells, empty pizzeria boxes and persuasive conversations, thousands of KU alumni names lay on tables.
It was like a game show. Bells rang, workers totaled money and the players raced toward a goal.
The place was the office of the Kansas University Endowment Association and the event was the fund National Telephone Campaign,
Laurie Mackey, Endowment Association director of public relations, said the campaign was a success. She told reporters that 50,000 and the amount pledged was 843,795.
Mackey said those contacted were alumni had not pledged money to the University since July.
She explained the finds didn't directly support KU academic programs. She said they were used to fund academic scholarships, loans and library purchases.
From Feb. 15-25, 10 fraternities and sororities divided into teams of five and
Kappa Alpha Theta was the winning sorority with $4,506 and Sigma Phi Epsilon was the winning fraternity with $2,270.
competed in the number of pledges they could recruit.
"Alums seem to have a soft spot in their heart for the real student on the Hill," she said. "For them, KU has some kind of magic about it."
She explained that just hearing a voice from Lawrence caused people to pledge.
"Now they have a responsibility to show them that they're not gonna we'll probably bear from them."
Mackey noted that KU was among the top 10 highest endowed state schools in the United States.
Mackey said she believed that once alumni had given to the University they were more likely to give again.
KU welfare classes to be extended in KC
Mackey emphasized that the purpose of the Greater University Fund was not to solicit large gifts, but to increase the number of alumni supporting the University.
KU'S School of Social Welfare will expand its undergraduate program to the University of Kansas Medical Center beginning next fall.
The School will offer the same social work degree that is available on the Lawrence campus.
Rick Spano, director of the undergraduate program for the School of Social Welfare, said the School hoped to attract students who were currently attending community colleges and those people already working in the field without college degrees.
Spano said it had taken about two years to complete preparations for the new program. During that time the School conducted a feasibility study in the Kansas City area for the program.
School faculty and students contacted the area junior colleges and surveyed the student population
in Johnson and Wyanette counties
Spano said. They also worked with
the junior colleges to prepare their
classes for the necessary prerequisite courses.
Students are admitted to the School at the junior level, therefore they would have to complete their prerequisite work elsewhere.
The decision to initiate the program was made by a council of social welfare students and faculty. Spano said they received the support of the department, but did not receive additional funds for the program.
"We will simply re-allocate our existing funds,"he said.
One-third of the school's total allotment for the undergraduate program will be used for the Kansas City pogram and the other two thirds will go to the Lawrence program, Spano said.
On Campus
TODAY
THE 1851 SYMPOSIUM OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC will present a concert workshop at 10:30 a.m. and a concert at 2:20 p.m. in Swarthowlet Recital Hall a coffee break at 4 p.m. in Murphy Lounge and a lecture with music at 8 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art.
PERSONNEL SERVICES "IMPROVING COMMUNICATION"
TRAINING SESSION will be from 8:30 a.m. until noon in 1024 Carrubish-O'Learv.
THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
An opening reception of the KU Theatre Design Exhibit,
"BACKSTAGE UP FROONT" will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Union Gallery.
THE STUDENTS' ANTI-NUCLEAR ALLIANCE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union.
THE BIBLICAL SEMINAR will meet at 7 p.m. to discuss Romans, Chapter 6, on "Grace" at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
A BIBLE STUDY SPONSORED BY
THE SALT BLOCK will meet at 7:30 d.m. in Parlors A and B of the Union.
THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will present the films "The Matter With Me," "Black History; Lost, Strayed, or Stolen," and "I Have a Dream" at 7 p.m. in the basement of Lippincott Hall.
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER
CENTER will present a seminar on
“Introduction to Time-Sharing” at noon
of the computer Service Facility
Auditrium.
THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION STUDENT ORGANIZATION will present a lecture by H. R. Turnbull on "THE LEGAL ASPECTS OF MAIN-STREAMING," at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
THE CENTER FOR EAST ASIAN STUDIES COLLOQUIUM ON ASIAN SECURITY PROBLEMS will present a lecture by Jonathan Pollack on "China and the Security of Asia" at 7:30 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union.
THE LINGUISTICS COLLLOQUY will present Kenneth Miner on "Noun Incorporation as Evidence for Early
Syntax: A New Approach" at 8 p.m. in 207 Blake Hall.
WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS will sponsor a meeting at 7:30 p.m. on "Dual Career-Family Lifestyles" in the Pine Room of the Union.
THE CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSE will meet for its weekly Bible study at 7:30 p.m. at 1116 Indiana.
THE DEATH AND DYING SUPPORT GROUP will meet at 7 p.m. at the Crescent Road. The group is centered by the St. Lawrence Catholic Center.
THE TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 240 Robinson.
TOMORROW
THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S CENTER will present a lecture "Single Parenting" at 7 p.m. at the Hilltop Child Development center
LA MESA ESPANOLA (SPANISH TABLE) will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 3069 Wescoe. All native Spanish and Spanish students are welcome.
THE LAWRENCE COALITION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE will present a lecture by Roger Fischer on "The Limited Role of Finder in Conflict Resolution" at 8 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union.
THE CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER SESSION will be guided by Thomas Merton's meditation 'Sentences' at the Ecumenical Christian Milette College.
THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINAR ON PRAYER will discuss "Pray Without Ceasing" at 4:30 p.m. at the Christian Ministry Centennial Church Christian Ministries.
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THE SYMPOSIUM OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC CONCERTS will be at 2:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. in Swarthout Rehital Hall. A coffee with Karel Husa as guest of honor will be held at 3:30 p.m. in Murphy Hall Lounge.
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Make YOUR appointment to give March 3,4. Off Campus students main floor of Kansas or Satellite Union. University living groups see your representative.
1.35
More than twice the n will part Language Garinger, laboratory.
KU BLOOD DRIVE MARCH 24-26
"We first and 600 stu of the proj just expe Lawrence, areas to be
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"Schools Manhattan registered with the r have regis students."
The Nationa sponsor Equal Night.
Proce given ters, w to chap spokest vesterd
"The entertain public Lawrer be a fu a chan a good
sponsored by KU Panhellenic & Interfraternity Council
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University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981 Page 3
1,350 to attend Foreign Language Day
More than 1,300 high school students, twice the number originally expected, will participate in KU Foreign Language Day this Thursday. Ermal Garinger, director of KU's language laboratory, said yesterday.
"We first estimated that between 200 and 600 students would take advantage of the program," Garringer said. "We just expected students from the Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City areas to be here.
"Schools as far away as Wichita, Manhattan and Pittsburgh have pre-registered with us. We're very pleased with the response. About 40 teachers have registered more than 1,350 of their students."
would probably not cause any serious problems.
Garinger said the additional students
"We have to add additional class rooms for the in-class observation part of the program. Originally we had planned on using two Spanish classes and one each of French and German," he said.
"The afternoon cultural presentation will probably be moved from Woodruff Auditorium to the Ballroom in the hotel, but that shouldn't be a problem.
KU's Foreign Language Day is part of National Foreign Language Week. Garinger said that the week was in response to a 1980 study by a presidential commission that reported there was a "scandalous incompetence" in foreign language skills and training in the United States.
Activities for the KU event include:
displaying shoes and fencing
Activities for the KV Event include:
• A morning slide show and foreign language rally at Hoch Auditorium.
- High school students will sit in on University foreign language classes.
- Garinger said that the Foreign Language Day activities had a dual role.
- A cultural program including skits, folk dances and other entertainment native to foreign countries. This Summer program is in the Ballroom at the Kansas Union.
"This is to promote the study of foreign language in area schools, and incidentally, to promote the KU foreign language departments," he said.
NOW will sponsor benefit concert
The Lawrence chapter of the National Organization of Women is sponsoring a benefit concert for the Rights Amendment Thursday night.
Proceeds from the concert will be given to national NOW headquarters, where they will be distributed to chapters in unrattified states, a spokesman for Lawrence NOW said yesterday.
"It the concert will be a purely entertainment event," Clare Novak, public relations officer for the Lawrence NOW group, said. "It will be fun for people, but also a chance to contribute something to a good cause."
Featured performers at the concert will be Pam Lewis, a local singer; Holly Fischer and Annie Steward, a Kansas City, Mo., duet; New Reflections Through Women's Eyes, a Kansas City, Mo., group; and the Golden City Women's Bluegrass band, a Topeka group.
The concert will be held at Off-the-Wall Hall from 8 to 12 p.m. Tickets are $3, and are available at the Commission on the Status of Women office, B114 Kansas Union, or at the door on the day of the show.
The Lawrence chapter of NOW will also be co-sponsoring an ERA
petition drive March 4-6, Novak said.
"In conjuncture with the concert," Novak said, "the Commission on the Status of Women and our group are seeking signatures in support of the ERA movement in unrattained states."
Three more states are needed to ratify the ERA amendment before it becomes part of the Constitution, Novak said.
"Illinois, Missouri, and North Carolina are all states that could swing either way now," Novak said. "We plan to send our petition to unratified states to let them know that ERA is still an important issue.
City sues for faulty warning system
The City of Lawrence has filed a suit against an alarm systems company for the replacement of an alarm system failed to work during a fire last month.
In a petition filed Friday, the Housing Authority of the City of Lawrence said that Security Control Systems, Inc., 1811 St. Andrews Dr., installed a faulty fire protection and warning system in Babcock Place, 1709 Massachusetts St.
Babcock City is a low-income apartment building and government office.
The petition said that when a small fire broke out at Babcock Place Feb. 13, the alarm system failed to function. An inspection by the fire prevention department later revealed several defects in the system.
The petition said that "the wire used
in the system was smaller than appropriate; the control box was not new, but approximately five years old; the system required two control boxes instead of the one used; and the zones had been shorted across."
The Housing Authority demanded that Security Control Systems immediately repair the defects in the system. However, at the time of the filing, the system had still not been repaired.
On the Record
LAWRENCE POLICE are investigating the theft Sunday of two speakers, valued at $100, from Julie's Restaurant, 3214 Iowa St. The thieves unlocked the rear door of the restaurant to take the speakers, police said.
THEIVES TOOK a car stereo system,
valued at $170, and several cassettes,
valued at $180, from a truck purchase.
For $240, it would be Sunday.
A THEIF STOLE a 1975 Suzuki
motorcycle Friday from the parking lot of Jayhawker Towers, police said. The motorcycle was valued at $600.
THIEVES BROKE into a glass display case in the Visual Arts Building in early February and took some copper etchings, KU police said yesterday. The etchings were on loan from the Fine Arts Gallery of Bosnia, Herzegovina, Sarasova and Yugoslavia in New York.
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Come watch two nationally ranked teams. The Big 8 Champions lady 'Jayhawks' against the Kansas 'Chairmen', No.4 in the nation, in a benefit game for the Kansas Easter Seals Society. Sponsored by the Ramada Inn and The University of Kansas students concerned with disabilities.
62
Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Fifty years ago today, Congress adopted "The Star-Spangled Banner" as the American national anthem. The United States finally got its theme song.
In triumph doth wave
Apparently there wasn't any great need for an official national song before 1931. And if it weren't for professional sports and late-night television sign-offs, the anthem itself would probably long ago been lost in obscurity.
The national anthem has come under a lot of criticism in that 50 years. After all, few Americans seem to know the words to the first stanza, and fewer still know there are three other stanzas to the song. It's been criticized as illegitimate, because the music was taken from the British. (But then, so was the country.)
And "The Star-Spangled Banner" seems curiously out of tune with modern values. We like to think of ourselves as a peace-
loving society (despite our internal crime problems), so this blatantly warrior militar ballad rubs us the wrong way. In 1981, it's hard to justify lyrics like, "Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just," and, "The terror or flight, or the gloom of the grave."
But then, national anthems tend to be like state songs—in a word, poor. The good anthems, like "God Save the Queen," are usually copied by other nations; we have our own cloan of it in "My Country 'Tis of Thee." Another good one, "Marseillaise," is already taken, and it's in French anyway.
As for the music itself, it's practically unsingable.
As a nation, you take what you can get. The one we have isn't perfect, but we can rest peacefully in the knowledge that no other country on earth is likely to steal it away from us.
Broad stripes, bright stars sparked Key's famous poem
The noise of the crowd quietens, and as if by some foreknown signal, you stand to face the flag
A band strikes up the first few chords, a lump forms in your throat, tears well in your eyes. Then, as that familiar tone rings out across the crowd of people, you join to sing the song immortalized in history—"The Star-Spangled Banner."
Today, March 3, is the 50th anniversary of the official adoption of "The Star-Spangled Banner"
PETER
SOMERVILLE
as the national anthem of the United States. Of the various national songs sung by Americans, "The Star-Spangled Banner" is officially recognized as the national anthem, although "America the Beautiful" and "My Country 'Ts of Thee' among them—are hardly less popular.
The origins of the "Star-Spangled Banner" go back to the year 1814 when British troops occupied Washington D.C. and were burning the Capitol, the executive mansion (later called the White House) in September 1814 the British fleet was anchored in Chesapeake Bay off Baltimore, MD, after the attack on Washington. A physician, William Beans, had been taken prisoner by British troops, and attorney Francis Scott Key was invited by friends to negotiate for Beans' release.
With a note from President Madison, and accompanied by Col. J. S. Skinner, a government agent for the exchange of prisoners, Key sailed down the bay by sloop, under a flag of truce, to meet the British fleet. The two were courteously received, and the release of Beans agreed upon. But as the fleet was about to sail up the Patapsc River to bombard Fort McHenry, the Americans were detained, first on the H.M.S. Surprise, and then on a supply ship.
During the night of Sept. 13-14, Key remained on deck anxiously watching the bombardment of Fort McHenry through the mist and drizzle. at daybreak he could see the U.S. flag flying above the fort, and, intensely moved, he began to write the words of his poem. Key would certainly have sung that line as his poem would eventually be sung by millions of Americans as their national anthem.
Over the years "The Star-Spangled Banner" has undergone revision at one stage the third time. It was published in 1950.
timent--but the song still remains one of the great national anthems.
The question as to how the tune came to be adapted to the poem is bogged down in polemics. It is known, however, that the first printing of the poem does identify the tune to be used. "To the song of the Anacreontic Society of London, a social, musical and masonic club that met at the Crown and Anchor Tavern. Although it was an English drinking song, the popular success of the tune was extraordinary; it was sung in all parts of England and can be found in early American songbooks.
The final two lines of each stanza have a delightful ironic twist in their reference to the Star-Spangled Banner triumphing "o'er the land of the free and the home of the brave." One line speaks to the Southern slave and the native American fetish upon hearing the words to this patriotic song.
And it is surprising that atheist and humanist pressure groups have not seen fit to have had the final stanza erased from the anthem. After all, the references to "the power that hath made and preserved us a nation" and "in God is our trust" must surely send a chill of regulation down the spines of certain members of the community. Here again we see enter the debate of whether history has been properly handed out what history has handed out to them. Perhaps that stanza has been left alone out of apathy—or because it has been overlooked by never being sung.
The love of one's country has been always among the strongest of human emotions. Some people feel it more strongly than others, but it is an emotion most keenly felt when traveling or living in distant parts of the world away from one's homeland. It is perhaps one of the sturdiest feelings that a person has of collective and confidence—and essentially an expression of faith in one's country.
The American nation is formed from a melting pot of different nationalities, so it has been the symbols of unity—the flag, the concepts of freedom and democracy and the national anthem—that have bound people together and molded the American identity.
Those who favor the adoption of "America the Beautiful" as the American national anthem oppose "The Star-Spangled Banner" for a number of quite legitimate reasons; it is too hard to sing; the tone is that of an English pub song; and it glorifies war. But "The Star-Spangled Banner" was used in the United States national anthem. It was born amid the turnol of a revolution that gave this country her independence, and what better song is there to celebrate America's coming of age?
SAY, DIDN'T WE
BUMP INTO THIS
GUY IN VIETNAM?
EL SALVADOR
WRIGHT ©1981 MIANNINGS
Preparing for the El Salvador War
Old Doc Reagan figures America is ailing, and alley pleasing. Why, America's boys succumbed to the Reds in Vietnam, despite the nobility of their cause. Now the whole country's soldiers are dying from bad doctor care. Good doctor thinks the problem is in our heads, what those Eastern doctors call psychosomatic illness. After all, we still have as many bombs as we used to. So Doc Reagan has spun us up a fine home remedy. We're going to try it again, and we're going to send our boys to El Salvador.
America's political future is in a quandary. And, like Vietnam, it is feared that Communist-type nations will gain a strangle hold of the area. Cuba allegedly has shipped arms to the Marxist revolutionaries who held the guerrilla movement. As White House Press Secretary Mike Huckabee said, "We have clear evidence of catching China's hands in the cookie jar." Tsk, tsk.
Oh yes, we should bear in mind the succession of ruling military juntaes, which have asserted their ways ever since 1932 when 30,000 peasants were killed in an uprising. Just last month, the military government of political strife, U.S. officials say the murders were committed equally—roughly 50-50 by both the government and the guerrilla opposition. But the Catholic archdiocese in San Salvador claims that the government is responsible for assassinations. Amnesty International agrees.
Why is Doc Reagan concerned about tiny El Salvador, fourth poor nation in the Western Hemisphere? Well, like Vietnam, it is situated in a hotbed of public unrest. Central
What's the trouble with El Salvador? We've been sending them money and arms and military advisers for near 31 years now; you'd think they could keep in line. Well, we may have to learn to handle them. El Salvador's work force is unemployed or underemployed. Or maybe it's that the wealthiest 5 percent of the population holds 21 percent of the national income, while the rest hold 19 percent. And then there's the malnutrition which affects one-fourth of the children under 5.
Never mind that El Salvador's repressive government is butchering its citizens. The
KEVIN MILLS
1
Reds are moving in, and Doc Reagan wants them stopped. It's the traditional narcissistic American world view—us versus them. Our only concern about the Salvadorans is that they happen to live in El Salvador. It was the same situation in Vietnam, Americans versus Reds, and only after the war ended did we realize that the war had been fought between the Vietnamese. American involvement only complicated what was a civil war.
It's ironic that the American interest in El Salvador, as seen by the doc, is a purely defensive one. Ironic because the Salvadarons are seeking basically the same economic justice that prompted the American revolution. We know why they deny it; Salvadarons the same basic principle which we hold so dearly in our own country. Ironic because our defensive secrecy in El Salvador
will only be perceived in the long run as an offensively attack at bolstering American coloni-
Whether or not the guerrillas are receiving arms from Cuba and other Soviet-bloc nations is irrelevant. The guerrilla effort comprises not only Marxists but social democrats, moderate reformers and Catholic church leaders as well. The doctor's prescription of more military aid is suspect when one considers the number of Salvadorean soldiers who have defected to the insurgency. It is also possible that communism versus democracy, but repression versus freedom. If Cuba wants to eliminate the reppressive status quo, why don't we applaud their efforts rather than oppose them?
Doc Reagan would insist, of course, that the Cuban and Soviet influence would not stop with the overthrow of the current regime. And he probably would be right. But the issue to be resolved is no longer a military one once the revolution has failed or succeeded. It is a political one, and the decision rests with the Salvadoran people, not the American military. Doc Reagan has forgotten the story of the Ugly American.
And consider the Soviet reaction to American military involvement. The Soviets are already running scared, what with their tenuous grasp over their satellites having weakened and their own internal economic problems. They are struggling to survive, not thrive. Doe Reagan's tonic might be just the thing to make the Soviet Union reach for the nuclear trigger.
The doc is right; America is ailing. But it is ailing from within, not in El Salvador. Doc Reagan needs to make a few local house calls before he takes on the world. Maybe he should start at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Physician, heal myself.
Nation should prepare better for oil cutoffs
Bv JOSEPHS. NYE
New York Times News Service
CAMBRIAGE, Mass.—There is a good chance that a significant interruption of the international oil supply will occur in the next few years. It has happened twice in the last seven
MARKLEY THE POLICONER AHEAD
CHOP
TAXES
years. A year-long loss of Persian Gulf oil could devastate the world economy, create havoc in financial markets, and possibly lead to armed conflict. Yet, few of our long-term policies such as price decontrol, conservation subsidies and subsidies for fuel conversions and synthetic-fuel programs will help us secure our shorter term vulnerability. The danger is frightening, and we are not adequately prepared.
Contingency plans have limited value, because the sequence of events leading to a sudden curtailment of the oil supply cannot be confidently predicted. Any crisis will be clouded by uncertain and incomplete information. It is not profitable, therefore, to develop precise plans for managing a crisis. But there are two good ways for potential crisis managers to prepare for an emergency. One way is to encourage speculation on the questions that will be asked, the information that will be sought and the early decisions that must be made. This "gaming" leads to the following crisis checklist.
A command-and-control structure should be established. This requires a presidential directive creating a clear structure for handling emergency communications if the group hasn't worked together in advance, it may not work efficiently in a crisis. It must discuss procedures and contingencies to make sure that emergency communication channels are working properly the first hours will be getting and giving information.
Congressional involvement should be planned. This means identifying which senators and congressmen will be involved early in a crisis-massing procedures and plans with them in advance.
Emergency procedures with allies should be set up by designing liaison personnel to ensure that communications will be rapid. One possibility is to arrange to have officials flown to the site on short-haul flights, given to when and how to involve the international Energy Agency, known as the IEA.
Intelligence agencies must be required to develop the key questions that must be asked early in a crisis. Good answers will require that intelligence resources be properly allocated now. In addition, data must be collected to provide early alert of a crisis.
Plans for handling the oil market should include procedures and legal authorization to affect existing stocks, including a plan for using our strategic petroleum reserve. Because government allocation of petroleum has made past shortages worse, a market price for价钱 tax rebates is a better alternative than rationing.
A
Public education about oil threats and crises must be increased. Information should be disseminated in advance to Congress and the news media. The public needs to know the threat that oil interruptions pose to the Western alliance and the importance of the IEA as an energy equivalent to NATO. Security is not only a military matter.
A high official should be responsible for keeping emergency preparations flexible. Exercises involving top officials can help to identify factors that will determine the length and extent of interruptions and the need for further studies or preparations.
Planners should envision where we would want to see the international oil system ending up if an earthquake or hurricane strikes.
This, or a similar, checklist ought to be refined immediately, there is real chance that it needs
KANSAN
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University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Page 5
Academics
From page 1
Times allegations, Tchaa said, but to determine whether athletes received the same academic recognition.
Tacha said her board had not met since the most story was published, but she did speculate that she may be the next one.
"We will probably look into the quality of academics that are available to the student athlete," she said. "We will be making certain that the institution is carrying out the various responsibilities it has regarding eligibility and certification."
The University's third step is to require that regular standards be followed in course selection, class requirements and evaluation for student athletes, the letter said.
"I have had several meetings over the past few weeks with administrators." Shankel said, "We felt there was some indication that the regular channels have not always been followed."
THE STATEMENT in Shankel's letter ensures that academic departments will continue to follow the correct procedure, as they do now. Robert Cahill executive vice chancellor, said.
The fourth step is to improve communication with prospective student athletes about the importance of the game.
The targeted improvement does not mean a communication problem exists, Tacha said.
The University's final step has been to ask deans of schools and their facilities to examine academic programs to ensure integrity, equality and availability for all students, the letter said.
"This will be a formal request I will be making to the deans of the schools about their academic
programs," Shankel said. "I think this is primarily a matter for the deeds of the colleges and schools to look into to determine whether students are equal and programs are available to all."
SHANKEL SAID that Bob Marcum, director of athletics, has agreed to co-sign the letter. But Shankel said he had decided to issue the letter with only his signature.
Marcum confirmed that he had agreed to sign the letter and said that academic departments should review academic practices. He said his department was investigating the Times allegations about Big Eight Conference rules violations.
"So far, we have not found any," he said. "We are all working very closely on that and I'm certain if there are any abuses, we will uncover them."
George Worth, Senate Executive Committee chairman, will also asked to sign the letter, but not the e-mail.
EVELYN SWARTZ, president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, expressed reservations about the meaning of the five steps.
Worth explained that the letter should have been issued by the Acting Chancellor.
"I'm all for it," Worth said. "How could anybody be against it?"
"I think we have to see what the specific implementation really means before we go any further," she said. "The important thing here is that athletics is not the tail that wags the dog."
From page 1
"But if anyone can bring the charges, then you don't have anyone to hold responsible for the crime."
AAUP
members and that the current regulations hold the Chancellor responsible for such action.
SHULENBURGER SAID he thought legislative confusion may have arisen because disciplinary procedures in the Regents schools were being compared with the Legislature's enforcement procedures, which were radically different.
"An individual member can file charges against any other member," he said. "Persis file, prosecute and judge each other. It may be dif- ficiated them to conceive the system in the University."
He said that the Legislature had a committee to hear charges against legislators.
He said that legislators viewed the tenure and related problems action as a failure to meet responsibilities and they felt the solution was to institute a new procedure.
Both Kauffman and Shulenburger said the best argument against the bills was to demonstrate the administrators' responsiveness to suspicions of staff and possible violations of faculty regulations.
Shulenburger said he thought that if the Legislature was made aware of the universities' actions in complaints about faculty, their fears might be reduced.
"If the University shows they're responsive, it the Regents show they're responsive, it may take the motivation behind the bills away," Shulenburger said.
KU Weather Service requested $1,234.84 to pay operating costs for two weather forecasting service machines. Last year they additional $43 budget hearings, and an additional $50 in the fall.
Non-traditional Student Organization requested $175.1. Last year they received $620.
Hearings
From page 1
CULTURAL COMMITTEE heard requests from Arab Student Organization, KU of Doha Dance
ArabStudent Organization requested $560. The football club requested $488 and the square dance club requested $432.
Academic Affairs heard requests from four groups.
They were:
* German Club, requesting $1,285.
- Gerhard Clin, requesting $300.
* Alpha Gamma Rho, a jewelry and metallmithing group, requesting $894.
* KU Biochemistry Club, requesting $300.
* KU Chemistry Club, requesting $275.
It also cut Alpha Gamma Rho's request by $104,28.8 the group requested to buy tools.
Psychology Club's request included $220 for advertising. The committee reduced this to $80.
Seven groups did not show up to present their research at the week. They will be recounted later this week.
FOLLOWING THE presentations, the committee voted to cut $475 for travel expenses from Canada.
The following reporters worked on this story:
Karen Schlueter, Rob Stroud and Lynn Cannan
List of finalists for chancellor to be released
The list of the five final candidates for the KU chancellorship will probably be sent to the Kansas Board of Regents by the beginning of March, 2013. Enide, KU executive secretary, said yesterday.
"The committee's work is essentially finished," he said.
"There are some more things that have to be done, but I expect the list will be sent by the beginning of next week." Von Ende, also a Chancellor Search Committee member, said.
Von Ende would not say whether the five candidates were already determined.
The new chancellor will probably be announced at the Regents regular board meeting this month, according to John Conard, Regents executive director.
Von Ende did not know if the chancellor-elect would be present at the March 20 Regents meeting.
"It all depends on the new chancellor's commitments at that time, I would imagine," he said. "The last president the Regents selected, Jim Appleberry at Pittsburgh State University, was there when they announced his selection. If it is if the new chancellor will be there this time."
The BLACK STUDENT UNION will hold an informational meeting for those interested in running for the following offices:
PRESIDENT
VICE-PRESIDENT
CORRESPONDING SECRETARY
RECORDING SECRETARY
TREASURER
PARLIAMENTARIAN
Place: Kansas Union - Governor's Room
Time: 6:00 p.m.
Date: Thursday, March 5, 1981
For more information, contact the Black Student Union B113, Phone 864-3984.
Funded by Student Activity Fee
Registration:
Spring Formal Rush March 27,28,29
February 23-March 24
Register in the Interfraternity
Council Office or call 864-3559.
Booths will be set up in Oliver,
Templin and JRP on
March 10,7-9 p.m.
There will be a $10 registration fee.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Breaking away
Lakes offer students water fun during break
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
For KU students looking to spend spring break in the Lawrence area, Clinton and Perry reservoirs—helped by unseasonably warm late-February temperatures—are beckoning for
Clinton, after almost four years of filling, is now "only about eight inches down" from what it should be at this time of year, according to Mike Ensch, the reservoir's chief ranger.
"We've got a very wide variety of Kansas game fish, for those who like to do that," Ensch said. "We've got northern pike, walleye, bass and smallmouth bass, and many others."
THE RESERVOIR'S deliberately slow fill rate helped to nurture the development of the game fish, Ensch said. Immediate filling of the reservoir would have caused lake-bottom organic materials, normally used for shelter by the fish, to decompose rapidly. Hardier fish such as carp would have dominated the lake if the reservoir had been filled quickly, Ensch said.
"We had fishermen on this lake early this January," he said. "Then the lake froze over for awhile—about three weeks—and the minute we were out, people calling back out, wanting to fish again."
Bloomington East, Clinton's main campite,
currently offers 350 camping pads, 202 having
"some form of water and electrical hookup."
Ensch said. Located between the northern and
southern arms of the lake. Bloomington East will eventually have 1,000 camping hookups.
"We already have a marina and a beach there," Ensch said. "We opened them last fall. They were first on our priority list. We've been doing most of our work over there."
CAMPISSES AT Bloomington East are $4 without a hook up and $5 with one.
"These are overnight charges," he said.
"Unless someone stays overnight, the facilities and
Ensch said that Bloomington West was also being whipped into summer sunrise.
"We've been clearing brush, doing some landscaping, setting out picnic tables and garbage cans," he said. "The contractor who did the original clearing and construction work around the lake would we weren't to work around the lake until he finished. He just completed the work last fall."
"We have space for about 25 campers there." Right now, what's out there is a parking lot and a washhouse. We hope to have a ball field and a picnic table, it will probably be next year before that's done."
ENSCH POINTS with pride to Woodridge
Park, on the reservoir's west side as being especially suitable for student use.
"It's really good for backpacking," he said. "There aren't any trails built yet, but one has been staked out by the Kansas Trails Association. It's purposely being kept in a native state; there's only one loop road, leading about 150 yards into the park."
Fishing and boating should also be good at Perry Reservoir this year, according to George Hathaway, Army Corps of Engineers manager of Perry's federally owned land.
"The federal facilities don't include hookups," Hathaway said. "The state park at Perry has them, but not us. We operate buildings with water supplies, showers and toilet facilities."
THESE FACILITIES will not open until April 15. Hathaway said.
"We wait until then because it's historically the last day that you can get freezing weather," he said. "If we had our stuff open and there was a freeze, it would cause a bit of damage."
Perry also has several beaches and two privately operated marinas, which the Corps leases.
"The marinas have a limited number of boat slips where you can dock your boat," Hathaway said. "They also have some pretty extensive dry-storage facilities."
Hathaway is anticipating a big summer crowd, given the recent unseasonably warm weather.
"We've got a nice place here," he said. "And,
in the face of a lot of visitors, we hope to keep it
there."
A water skier glides across the waters of Perry reservoir as the setting sun reflects off the surface. Soon students will head for area lakes as the temperatures become warmer.
Travel agencies urge students to start planning
By ROB STROUD Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
For students planning vacations during spring break, area travel agents have a bit of advice:
Plan.
During this peak travel time, discount air fares to such popular student retreats as Fort Llanderdaid, Padre Island and the Rockies where guests sell out more than two months in advance.
Students who still want airline tickets to these destinations might be able to find them, but at rates perhaps $200 more than at the lowest discount fares.
Another advantage of planning ahead is that airline prices increase by about 5 percent each month, but tickets bought before an increase are not affected by the raise.
Joa Missione, assistant manager of Sunflower
Travel Service, 709 Massachusetts St.
*A lot of students are saving the cost of airline
travel by driving to places like Florida, Texas and
California.*
BUT THE DEMAND for tickets to the perennial student favorites is down, according to
Flying to Padre costs about $300 round trip, but drives taking at 18 hours each way and $50 for a round trip.
A Fort Lauderdale trip costs from $222 to more than $450 in the air, depending on available discounts, and about $65 in gas for the 14-hour drive. Denver is about nine hours and $30 away by car, while round-trip airline tickets cost about $150.
BUS TICKETS cost the same as the least expensive air fares, although bus rides are usually several hours longer than the same trips. The bus fare to Lawrence to Miami takes 44 hours and costs $238.
Messinae said that while fewer students were flying to these places because of increasing
airline costs, overall interest in them seemed to be waning as students were looking for different
"I think a lot of students have been to Padre and Florida and are looking for something new," she said.
Two places that have rise in popularity have been Arizona and Mexico, she said. Cancun and Mazatlan have been the most popular Mexican destinations among students.
"We've sent a lot of them to Mazatian, maybe 22," she said. A seven-day package there, including air fare and hotel accommodations, costs about $360 at discount rates.
STUDENTS ARE probably too late to qualify for discounts now, even to more obscure vacation destinations. Messinae said. Most airlines require that tickets be purchased at weeks in advance to receive lower rates, which usually provide the same services as coach rates.
And while airline tickets are becoming scarce, students without reservations might also have difficulties finding hotel accommodations in prime vacation areas.
Double-occupancy rates at well-known hotel franchises, such as Ramada Inn and Best Western motel, are about 600 a night in vacation spots and vacancies are difficult to find.
Rooms for no more than $20 a night are usually available a few miles from the main tourist spots to the traveler who checks for them early in the morning.
Travel agents can attend to almost any vacation needs, including plane tickets, hotel reservations and car rentals, and their services are free to their customers.
But to find the best vacation discounts and the best accommodations, Messino suggests, travelers should make plans early-"and the sooner the better."
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Breaking away
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
JOHN M. HARVEY
Local businesses won't be affected by emptying town
By KIRK TINDALJ
By KIRK TINDALL
Staff Reporter
Staying in Lawrence over spring break is a little like going to a different town, the median age jumps 10 years, the traffic becomes almost nonexistent. The Zip machines actually have money in them.
Kawasan Life
Peace and quiet won't be a problem, but terminal boredom might. For those poor souls who aren't hitting the ski slopes, the beaches or hills tends back home, the diversion will be minimal.
There won't be any SUA movies over spring break, but local theaters will be showing some netflix.
The Kansas Union will be open from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. over the break.
"We gross just as much when the students are out of town," Flink said. "We don't get as many people to our midnight movies, but the regular shows still show a lot of people. I think the townies are afraid to go to movies when the students are "town."
For those who are going to use the time for studying, Watson Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The Granada Theatre, 1020 Mass., will still hold a performance unless it proves to be very unpopular.
The Hillcrest Theatres, 9th and Iowa, will be showing "Tess" and possibly "Scaners" and
The Varsity, 1015 Mass, will be showing
"Prizes for the month," starting, appropri-
ately, Friday the 14th.
The Luther Allison Band will play March 13 and Joseph will play on the next night. Lynch and McNeil will play on Sunday.
The Lawrence Opera House won't have any entertainment on weekdays during the break, because the production is running.
Clarence "gatemouth" Brown will be at the Opera House the weekend of March 20.
Both Gammon's and Sgt. Preston's will be open over the break.
According to Judy Jones, head bartender at placebo club's business actually improves over brew.
"It seems like a lot of locals start coming in when the students leave," Jones said. "I think the local people go out more when the students leave."
Harvey Goodwin, manager of Gammon's, said that his business was not affected by the students
"Students think they run this town, but they don't," he said. "When the students are gone, the locals pick up the slack."
Peggy Wessels, Springfield, Mo., demonstrates her skills with a Frisbee. With increasing prices of plane fares and gasoline, many KU students may find themselves in Lawrence with little else to do during spring break.
Students prefer sun to snow for spring break relaxation
By AMY S. COLLINS Staff Reporter
The warm weather hasn't been enough. Students are choosing sun over snow when it comes to deciding where to spend spring break.
Gene Wee, SUA travel program adviser said although all three trips were smaller than last year, the sun was a definite favorite.
"Both the Daytona Beach trip and the South Padre Island trip were more popular this year than the trip to Winter Park," Judy Werder, SUA travel board member said.
The number of students going to Padre Island and Daytona Beach total over 150, while the number returning to Padre Island is
WEE SPECULATED the economy and competition had a big effect on the decline in trip prices.
"People that aren't hurt by the tough economy, don't mind paying the money for the trips," he said. "But people are also shopping around for times and needs."
Werder said groups other than SUA were providing skids and suntrips and that SUA has had a problem with this.
"Trip competition really grown this year," she said. "Dorms used to come through SUA and are not."
Both Wee and Werder stressed the feeling of more independence that students seem to be asserting when deciding on trips. They said more people are going by car this year than on the SUA bus.
WERDER SAID THAT of the 84 people going to Padre Island, 44 of them were driving. SUA offers a reduced rate for people who drive themselves rather than take the bus. People who take the bus pay $219 for the trip which includes lodging and all the beer and soda students can drink on the way. For $106 students can drive themselves and lodge with SUA.
“This year people have chosen to drive themselves,” Werder said. “They can go at their own pace and split gas,” she said. “They’re also more free to move around when they get there.”
The Padre Island trip also includes a free shuttle to Matamoris, Mexico and a KU-KState informal volleyball game and beer bash during the week.
"With fueling stops and a breakfast stop in Dallas, it should take about 24 hours," she said. The group will stay at the Sandcastle Condominiums.
Rose Kue, trip director, said traveling time to Padre Island should take a full day.
ARE A TRUE
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Doug Shelton, Overland Park senior, hopes that a hat and a sign will help him find a way to Denver over spring break.
STUDENTS ON THE DAYTONA trip can expect a longer ride. Werder said the trip should take over a day and a half and the group will stay in the city for 5 days riding the bus $247 and for people driving, $127.
The most expensive trip turned out to be the least popular. As of December 23, the deadline to sign up for the trip, almost one no one had made reservations.
"There weren't even enough people signed up to take a van to Winter Park." Wee said.
He said to enhance reservations, SUA advised the trip on the Alken Field House session.
"The lack of snow had hurt the Winter Park reservations," he said. "Now there's plenty of
Werder said the trips were planned at least six months ago and reservations were made with hotels and condominiums on the basis of last years turnout. She said although trip participation declined in the past, offer trips next year. She said she believed the lack of participation to be a current mood.
"People are staying home and getting away from big trips," she said. "They are doing more independent things and planning more for themselves."
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Eight candidates attend forum
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
Of the eight City Commission aspirants present, Tom Gleason could be faulted least for ignorance of his surroundings.
"I hope this isn't regarded as too much of a home-court advantage," he said with a wide smile.
Gleason was speaking at last night's Oreat Neighborhood Association candidates' forum, which featured eight of the 13 candidates for the March 10 commission primary. Gleason is a past chair and current board member of the ONA.
The candidates--ranged from KU graduate student Patt Slick at one end of three cafeteria-style tables to law professor Barkley Clark at the other--presented a variety of reasons why they were running for the Commission.
SLICK SAID he wanted to "pay back" Lawrence for its citizens' kindness toward him.
"Of the 32 states I've lived in," he said, "this city is the nicest place I've seen."
Slick said he wanted to repay the city by serving it "for one term only—one year, or even two."
Candidate Scott Nesbitt said he had less altruistic motivations.
"You can call me a protest candidate," the bespectacled, blond 34-year-old businessman said. "I say
taxes, payrolls, meet deadlines and things.
"IF 1 OFFEND any current members of the Commission, it's intentional," he said, drawing scattered laughter from the approximately 60 people seated in the South Park Recreational Center.
Commissioner Barkley Clark, running for his third Commission term, was the forum's lone incumbent.
Commissioner Bob Schum, who is also running for re-election, is attending the National League of Cities game on Wednesday. D.C., and was unable to participate.
Clark, a Commission member since 1973 and twice the mayor of Lawrence, countered by saying he had made, over the years, "a fair investment of time in Lawrence government, a $24 million enterprise.
"I'm still fascinated by local government. I'm a professor of local government and local government law at KU," Clark pointed out, adding that he wasn't "about" his proximity to Lawrence's problems, even to the extent of being telephoned at 5 a.m. "about somebody's dog barking."
ANOTHER FORMER Lawrence mayor, 56-year-old Nancy Hampton, said she wanted "to take advantage of her age" and that she would be retiring in May from said she would be retiring in May from
her job at Design Build Architects,710 Massachusetts, regardless of the election's outcome.
"I'll elect, it'll mean that I won't
"If I am elected, I would also have
would have a much free time as I would have
had," she said, "but it will also mean
we serve without any ties to any
business."
Mike Amyx, a downtown barber, said his profession was one of his strong points.
"I'm always accessible," he said.
"Anyone can walk in my downtown barbershop. At my business at Ninth and Massachusetts, everybody comes in, and we discuss politics and have a good time doing it."
Hambleton, KU law student Sheri Dietz and Nancy Shontz were the panel's three women representatives. Two only women in the 13-candidate field
A question about what Lawrence would be like in 10 years set "protest candidate" Nesbit off on a pet pee—namely the city planners.
Nesbitt said that when he attempted to build a lawnmower storage shed behind his business at 538 W. 23rd St., the city planning staff, armed with Plan A, headed the project. The 98 is already adopted comprehensive guideline for future growth.
Sick, on the other hand, came out strongly in favor of planning as long as neighborhood plans took precedence over city plans.
KU law graduates find jobs despite economy
Law students who graduated from the University of Kansas in 1890 are finding employment despite a tight budget and to law school placement statistics.
"Law school is a grueling experience," she said.
Of the 179 graduates questioned, only 19 were out of work and not actively seeking employment, according to the report compiled by Maggie Cartart, a law professor for the KU School of Law. She said the unemployment rate was law.
After three years of intense schooling and several comprehensive tests, some law students just need to relax before taking a job, she said.
All 179 of the graduates responded to questions concerning their places of employment, types of employment and salaries.
The average starting salary of the 1980 graduates was about $21,000 a year. Eighteen of the graduates reported that they were making more than $25,000. The lowest salaries reported were $10,000-$12,000.
Of the 139 employed, 71 are practicing in law firms.
Many of the students remained in Kansas to practice. About 77 of them are working in various cities in Kansas with the greatest number working in Wichita. About 25 are practicing in the metropolitan Kansas City area.
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Alliance eases Indians' hardships
reorganizing and we'll be a stronger organization this year than last." Kreipe said. "Basically, the Alliance will be here for students who need financial aid information. We'll offer social events in the spring."
Many native American KU students who come directly from a reservation to the University face a discouraging combination of cultural alienation.
By PENNI CRABTREE Staff Reporter
"We're in the process of
"Indian students don't feel like they belong," Kreipe said. "They deal with other students who have stereotyped ideas of what an Indian student is as ridiculous as beliefs that Indian students need glasses or never have haverey."
Kreipe said that one of the main functions of the alliance would be to help Indian students deal with feelings of alienation.
"Even in the classroom, students have to deal with well meaning but perhaps insensitive people. One Indian student I know was really bothered by a professor who would address her in class as 'Preachers.'"
ANOTHER MEMBER of the Alliance said that Indian students, especially reservation Indians, were
not prepared to deal with the personal and school problems they encountered away from the Indian community.
"Indian students who come to KU from a reservation spend their first semesterwalkingaround in a daze," from Oklahoma City, Okla. said.
Learned, a member of the Arapaho tribe, said that one of the Indian students' worst frustrations was obtaining financial aid.
"It takes forever for grant money from the Bureau of Indian Affairs to get here, and then it takes forever to get your hands on it." Learned said. "They are so discouraged that they just go back to the reservation."
THE ALLIANCE HOPES to alleviate some of the Indian students' frustrations, Alliance member Steve Ramirez said, by preaching a focal point where students can meet and encourage each other.
Prof says garbage could heat campus
Trash may be the answer to KI energy problems.
According to William Smith, professor of electrical engineering, Biomass, which means burning paper and other discarded substances to generate a gas that replaces natural gas, would be economical way to heat the campus.
University a substantial amount of money". Smith said. "Since so much paper is used on a college campus this university also a constant energy source."
In January, Smith completed a status report that concluded that a bi-mass system could fit into KU's steam plant with only minor renovations, and that
the system would save the University
$330,000 a year.
Smillon said it was up to the Legislature to study, and that he could issue a motion soon.
"I'm sure the legislators won't make any decisions on the matter this week," he said. "Whether or not they ever wipe that off, I know. I'll just have to wait and see."
KANU begins annual drive for funds
Listeners flipping past 92 FM on the radio dial may hear a new sound this week.
Saturday began KANU's week-long
Cationism of excellence, an annual
fundraising event.
The purpose of the event, which is highlighted by special events and guest
appearances, is to raise $30,000 so the radio station can maintain a "margin of excellence," Al Berman, KANU development director. said.
"In order for us to offer distinctive
work, we ask for contributions.
Bernard and.
Funds raised during the campaign
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will be used to maintain and expand existing record and tape collections, to purchase outstanding programming and to create a development fund which programmers will use to produce new programming ideas and live events in the area.
As part of the campaign's special programming, Calder Pickett, professor of journalism and Dick Wright, KANU associate director, will present a special edition on the American past on the music of Broadway from 5:30 to 8 p.m. on Thursday.
"We also pay the salaries of our student staff members with these funds." Berman said.
Wright will close the campaign with a live rendition of "Nostalgia Ballroom," a program of big band jazz, from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Saturday.
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Volunteers will answer phones from 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. each day to accept pledges. Those wishing to contribute should call 864-5100.
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Berman said that the programming included six- to eight-minute pledge breaks each hour, with testimonials from KANU listeners.
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• adjust carburetor
• inspection operation of choke
• install new fuel filter
• check all underhood fluid levels
187
By KARI ELL Staff Reporter
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University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Page 9
187 mpg car eases gas woes
By KARI ELLIOTT Staff Reporter
A car that gets 187 miles per gallon.
Impossible? Not if you are driving the electric Comuta-Car by Commuter Vehicles Inc. of Sebring, Fla.
Although the car uses only electricity for power, the Environmental Protection Agency has rated the car as getting the equivalent of 187 mpg.
In Lawrence, Comuta-Cars are sold by Howard Smith of Smith Motors, 1233 E. 23rd St.
"With the price of gas jumping, I thought it would be a good idea to sell them," Smith said. "I first saw the car in Mechanix Illustrated."
"The Comuta-Car is the only electric vehicle on the market for less than $10,000. Most other cost between $3,000 and $5,000. That's not practical."
THE COMUTA-CAR, which is powered by eight six-volt batteries, costs between $5,400 and $8,300.
The top speed is about 40 mph and the range is about 40 miles between battery charges.
Equipped with its own battery
charger, the car's batteries are recharged by plugging a power cord into a standard 110-volt outlet. A 25-foot extension is standard equipment.
"All you need to do is plug in the car every night," he said. "It takes about six hours for a total charge and uses about 12 kilowatt of electricity.
"It costs about five cents a kilowatt hour or 60 cents a day. The initial investment is the largest expense."
ACCORDING TO Commuter Vehicles, replacing the batteries, which cost about $40 at Lawrence auto supply company, is a mile to the car's operating expenses.
Smith said one advantage to an electric car was the low maintenance costs.
"There's no radiator, carburator or anti-freeze," he said. "Every week you just put distilled water in the batteries."
"It has fewer moving parts and uses little oil," he said. "The major maintenance is the car's batteries."
This car requires much less maintenance than a conventional car, Braxton Crawford, spokesman for Commuter Vehicles, said.
Under normal conditions, the batteries should last from 12,000 to 18,000 miles.
ALSO. THE COMUTA-CAR has
passed the Department of Trans
portation's emergency Career grid
crashes into a wall at 30 mph, he said. Smith said a disadvantage was the car's limited range.
"Our car has passed the test where it
has just a spill at 20 mph," he said.
"This is an in-town vehicle for use on short trips like to the grocery store or delivery work," he said.
THE COMUTA-CAR does not have air conditioning because it would be too much of a power drain.
The insurance and license fees are about the same as for a subcompact car, Smith said. "The personal property tax is about $120 a year."
In addition to the eight batteries that power the car, it also has one 12-volt battery for electrical equipment, such as a charging port, turn signals and windshield wipers.
"As the price of gas goes up, sales go up as well," Crawford said.
Smith received his first shipment Feb. 20 and said that the public's interest in the car had been tremendous. "I sold one the first week," he said.
Crawford said sales nationally were doing well especially since oil deregulation and gasoline price increases.
ROB POOLE/Kansan staff
A man in a suit stands beside a small, modern car with a slanted roof and rounded edges. The vehicle has a grey exterior with black stripes along the sides.
Wherever electric cars go, they seem to always catch a curious onlooker, as it did here. The cars can be bought at Smith Motors, 1233 E. 23rd Street.
KANSAN WANT ADS
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Call 864-4358
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Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
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Employment Opportunities
Carn Extra Money for Spring Break, Clip
Newspaper Items for cash. Earbud long SASE
o Rick, P.O. Box 514, Stillwater, OK
4074.
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED COUPLE SORRY, no children to leave Champlin. Work. Housework, mowing, garrentry. Work. Job for 10AM-6PM on the 8th weekday for the couple. Living quarters provided you your chosen full-time home. August 12 or later (your choice). Later provide room and facilities including local references; to, Occupant, 1000 sunset Drive, Lawrence, KS 6044. No phone calls.
ENTERTAINMENT
Special- all 6% Beer 7:30 to 10:30 pm $5.00 per person or per group Thursday - Friday and Saturday Disney Non-drinkers welcome Open Mon - Sun 9:30 am - 6:00 pm Disney, Topka, K-B Club 2001-3-8
TRAVEL CENTER
TRAVEL CENTER
TAKING A TRIP?
Travel is Our Business.
The LOWEST FARES available!
As close as your phone . . .
Free services to students and faculty:
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W 23rd St. (by Pewhite)
9:00-5:00 M-F 9:30-2:00 Sat.
Bass Player urgently needed to complete British rock-oriented band. Contact Jade Gursa 1-379-5523. 3-6
FOR RENT
女性 roommate for 1 bedroom in 3 bed-
room house, Spacious, fireplace, AC, semi-
furnished, and nice roommates. $117 + 1/3
utilities. 841-1810.
**AIRIDON STREET DUPLXES Available**
*now perfect for a student at JOHN'S*
*dishwasher, dishwasher, washers, and dryer hookups, central air conditioners, laundry room, office spaces, no job*
*$300 - off; utilities.* Call 849-5730 or 824-
1633. **tf**
HANOVER PLACE TOWNHOUSES: Available immediately. New and contemporary.
+ 2 bedrooms are within walking distance
+ kitchen. Will seat 6.
841-1212 or 842-4455.
$ 10
TIBURON TOWNHOUSES are new, spacious and comfortable. Furniture is furnished. 2 on 3 bedrooms starting at $45 per month. Must be at 18 and Entrance: 818-500-1224 - 424-6453.
For spring and summer. Nalismith Hall offers you a home in an apartment. Good food and plenty of it. Weekly meal service to keep you active and much more. If you're looking for activities and much more. If you're looking for something you want, stop in or give us a call: Nalismith HALL. 1800 Nalismuth DOWN, 9f
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces, weather dryer, hookups, fully equipped bathrooms daily at 2200 or 866-715-3999 or information www.princetonplaces.com
Capri Apti. Unfurnished studios, 1 &
2 bdm rmb. avail. Central air. wall-to-
wall quiet location. 2b; blocks south of
France of Fraser. 484-793. 5:30 a.m.
weekend anytime.
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5. 843-3228. tf
3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W.
6th. 843-7333. tf
Newly-reneled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
Sublease 1 bd w/study all utilities paid ex-
cess of 4401-8461, road convenient location 3-3
4401-8461
Apartment for lease immediately. Serious upper class/grad students or KU employees. Account #1, book from Kansas University, $155/month. Req. G-3; reef's request, 841-3826 after 5.
3 br townhouse for rent now at Pine Haven
or call (801) 249-7565 to reserve a
m/wATER & drier store to close shopping
nances. We pay water $20 per person,
living or married. No calls. Call 801-
527-8277.
Room for rent in nice house next to campus.
Excellent kitchen facilities. Call 842-
5152 or 841-8536 after 7:00 p.m. 3-3
Studio available for sublease starting March,
at Trailrider. Call 843-7333. 3-3
804 Bath Sheet. If you are tired of spinetions and want a more comfortable bath, feature 3 be 'bath', 1 bath all appliances, at least two full baths, have openings for summer and fall. Call us to inquire about more information on our modestly priced bath sheets.
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute walk to Walnut Ridge. Tennessee. $270 rent.
Minimum credit score: 64282.
2 bedroom, attached garage home, 2621
Moundview. Fenced yard. $290.00 mo. Available now. 843-0570, 843-6011. 3-3
For rent, 2 bedroom Apt., air cond., 3 blocks from campus. Call 749-3469 after 6. 3-6
Five bedroom house close to campus available for summer leave. Carpet, modern appliances, air conditioning and laundry. Call Darliy 841-585-1400, 1407-Kentville
Summer sublease 2 bedroom, $1\frac{1}{2}$ bath at Heatherwood Apts. Rent + electricity. 841-7077 after 5.09. 3-9
Med. Center Round? Nice. 2-bedroom duplexes available for summer and fall. Carpet, A/C appliances, and parking. Call 1-9131-381-2876. 3-27
**western Civilization Notes. New on sale!**
Makes sense to use them — As a study makes sense to use them — As a study exam preparation, new book Analysis, new book Criter, the Bookmark, and Oread Book
FOR SALE
Guitar--Yamaha acoustic with hard shell
All perfect, excellent action. Call
842-2853 before it's sold. 3-3
Alternator, starter and generator specialist.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC; 843-9069, 3900
W. 6th.
STYX Tickets for sale. Four tickets to the March 16th show. Best offer accepted. Call Andy at 749-0675 at 4:00 p.m. 3-3
Pair Justin Women's cowboy (71) boots,
new, design on top, saddle-out uppers.
Originally $75. $49 or best offer. best
offers 82.50, qualified jacket; 82.5-
740 82E. See
Stereo pre-ampl-Beautiful "Phase Linear" model, 4000 Extensive noise production and peak exerting烀y烩y烀ry engineering烀y烩y烩 for crystal enamel before his lug. Hurry and call 842-3-3-41
1980 MGB, canary yellow; 4,800 miles;
priced to sell. 1-234-2320. 3-3
Fred. Grandara Ghia 77 II-4 door-4 speed standard trans, air conditioner + AM-FM Radio cassette player + many extras. 832-4822.
Moped—1980 Vespa Bravo Super Deluxe.
Almost new. 150 mpg. $650 new, asking
$475.81-287.78
3-4
Bass guitar and amp. Used 6 months. Cost $400 new, make offer. 814-6607 Ray. 3-4 Moned—1880 Vespa Bravo Deluxe.
Mens 19" Gillman bicycle, custom built
$150.00. Call 864-2815.
3-6
Gulfar Ventura 12-string. Fairly good cond-
tioned. $135 or less. 3-6
244-720, for jeff. 3-6
JEPS, CARS, TRUCKS available through government agencies, many sell for under $200.00. Call 621-941-8041 ext. 3085 for your directory on how to purchase. 5-3
1956 Chevy, two door post, 327 eng. must
have minor work $650.00. 843-8982. 3-9
FOUND
Gold key found in Woodruff Auditorium
after Woodstock movie. Call 749-2590. 3-4
a month old black dog in Village Square parking lot. Wearing collar. Call 841-7566 Keep trying. 3-4
Two walking leases on big dog dog-contact Kirk, Kannan News Room. 3-5
TI calculator and small circuit board, left at Room 3018 Learned. Please claim at above address. 3-5
Ring found in Robinson weight room Thurs.
night. Call 864-2836 to identify 3-5
Women's glasses without case at 9th and Emery. Call Rob at 749-2644. 3-5
Money found Friday morning in Spencer
Art Museum. Call Darryl t identify 3-55
Lost keys behind Haworth Hall. Call 843-
9363. 3-5
HELP WANTED
CRUIBES CLUB MEDIOAREANEAN, BAIL-
ING STRATEGY, Professional, Office Personnel, Counselor,
Society Director. Send BW EMAIL to CRUIBE-
WORLD, 152 Box 60129, Sacramento, CA.
ORGANIZATION: CRUIBES CLUB MEDIOAREANEAN
SUMMER RAPTING JOBBS! $120.-$3,600
Training providers $100.00 for APPLICATION,
INFORMATION. GUIDE to WHITEWATER
BUSINESS. SEGMENT B. Box 6019,
Germantown, Ca. 93808-36-4
Box 6019, Germantown, Ca. 93808-36-4
Full or part time help wanted. Combination dancers & waitresses. Costs vary. Weekly rent $40.00 per hour. Nude danceing $7.00 per hour. Your choice. Good Time Dancers 3-24 hours. Hwy 40, 379-9000. 3-24
Summer youth camp employment for pool and enoing instructors ITF internships (LPN, RN, EMT, Assistant Cook, Craft Director, UI Leaders, and assistants in hospitality) or Write or call Kaw Valley Girl Scout Council #713-109; for application. Equal Opportunity Employer.
COULD YOU USE SOME EXTRA MONEY?
a second income? If so, we can help! For details send $1.50 and/or resume to KS. Lawrente, Teach. Associates, B District 25, Lawrence KS 6604- 36-4
TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES
TO STUDENT NURSEMENT WITH us, as a public servant,
nursing home resident? Our consumer organization
has the KINH (KINH) needs your help and input on nursing home care and assistance to the residents. All names and correspondence
918-842-3088 or 843-7107, or write us:
918-842-3088, Maas St. #5, Lawrence, KY 74750
CRUIBES CULT MEDITERANEAN. SAIL-
ING. Clerk. Office Personnel, Counselors,
grantees, Office Personnel, Counselors.
European. Board of Trustees. handling for AP-
PLAN. CRUIBES WOULDWILD. 153 Box 60129. (6019)
CRUIBES WOULDWILD. 153 Box 60129.
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF
accepted for the Summer Orientation student
advertement in today's paper or come by
Strong Hail An equal opportunity to
Strong Hail
REGISTERED PHYSICAL, THERAPEAT
BEGIN OF a counseling session,
would require 8 hours of workings,
no evenings or weekends. Must have own car mileage
must be up to 50 miles per year to
easily provide in Kansas, interest in
working with hosts, is required
Visiting Nurses Aa. n. #843, for appraisal
for housing.
RADILOGIC TECHNOLOGIST Lawrence Lawrences will be working Friday and Saturday at the ARTBI Technologies Technology Will be working Friday and Saturday at the Personnel Management firm. He will be qualified handled handsfree to apply to apply to the Arthritis Research Institute, Marina Medical Museum 325 Main Street Lawrence, Lawrence, KS 66041. Cummings, Extr. 4-14
World's Largest Business needs you! Stay home-paid weekly. Free details. Enclose stamped envelope. Peggy Jones. 3228 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, Kansas 60044. 3614-7852
Part time person to work as an observer in process collection, for museum and collection, graphics, some typing, prefer Soph. Jr. Must be promise student. Will truth Hall Trish 645-690 Ext. 21 Hall Worthall Hall 842.
LOST
Would deeply appreciate the return of my black leather jacket. *luckily* Missing Saturday Feb. 21, Reward. Call Kevin 749-0225.
Lost, Brown-nuece, sweeter in Carrinh O'Leary or Weesco 2-25. Call 842-4549, no answer call 843-3521 and ask for Janice. 3-6
Lost-a very sinnential gold serpent neckpiece with seven little diamonds at Robinson's ginger boot room on Kill Williams at 843-560. Reward. 3-9
MISCELLANEOUS
Used and battered golf clubs and bass,
Wallpaper, window shades. Everything But
Ice, 616 Vermon, open tilt 7 pm. 3-6
NOTICE
SKI WINTER PARK/MARY JANE SPRING
Skiing, ski rentals, rented lodging and insurance,
ski resort passes, ski hire or 18th-32nd. Write Skis e.t.c. to 1800-
3200 or 18th-32nd. Write Skis e.t.c. to 1800-
3200 or 18th-32nd. Skies Rentals $498 for Darley. Three day Easter
travel from Chicago. Call (800) 567-2011.
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
TI-FR
843-4821.
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports. Custom made portraits, color. B.W. Swells Studio 749-1611. 3-11
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can give, at prices students can afford. Swells Studio, 749-1611. 7.11
NEED EXTRA CASH? Sell your old, gold & Diamonds. TOP prices for class rings, gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6377, 841-7476
Want to be a Priest? Sister? Ages 20-50
Contact Father Nigro, Gonzaga University,
Spokane, F92288
3-24
Senior portrait special, studio taken with a large selection of scenic background available. Swells Studio. 749-1611. 3-25
Green's. The selection of award-winning wines and import beers Green's Liquor, 802 W. 23rd St. 841-2277. 3-3
SERVICES OFFERED
GAY & LESIBIAN PEER COUNSELING: A FRIEND is ready to listen. Referees through KU Information at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345. 3-3
Tutoring Math 600-800. Phxs 100-600. Bus
384, 804, 803. Call 843-9036. tt
*sPIRNG FORMAL RUSH MARCH 27, 28, 29
Register in the Interference Committee
Office C-361, 865-SD, and JBP on March 10,
p.m. There will be a $10 register
paid.
HADACHIE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? QUALITY Careprotect II
its benefits. Dr. Mark Johnson 843-936 for
consultation, accepting Blue Cross & Lon-
lily.
JOB RESUMES prepared by a local personnel professional. Call Career Development Associates. 841-5664. 3-6
--wheel We Do!
Green's Tavern and Keg Shoppe KU ID
Price Cut. Mon-Thurs. Pitchers $1.25, 5 till
T: 7 frid. 2 till 4 Big Draws 50r. 3-12
Barry. What is involved music? Lawrence
Arts Center Sat, March 7 8 p.m.
3-6
Want to go skiing Spring Break? $18 per night—wildway distance from village Gondola in Steeple Rock. Guaranteed good time for calls 749-6829 or ask Dave. 9-39
The Harbour Lites has one dollar pitchers cheap beer and cheap thrills. 1031 Mass. 3-3
Do you have a Sports Car Mechanic that has been Factory trained?
At the Factory?
Looking for someone to come to CORNELL UNIVERSITY (NEW YORK) viability Spring Biological will pay for transport of harmless biological specimen. Call Sarah K453-6874
Harry, Harry Buit, you cute. Two years and a minor minute to our credit. Never would have made it without a lot of patience and a minor moment. We've provided 3-4 Love you always, Your Fidget.
DO YOU BELIEVE IN HUMAN RIGHTS?
Support the Equal Rights Amendment.
Pension. U.S.A. 3,4,6. 1 t-1am.
Status. Sponsored by Commission
The Status of Women.
wheel We Do!
to sports car repair and repair
wheel 843-7095
26th and Iowa
If you have ever been a victim of safety violations on one of the buses operated by the Lawrence Bus Co. especially on campus, please call me: 841-856-3-6
Droop off services. Drop your laundry on our balcony, outside or inside. We will wash, dry, hand and fold your laundry for only one hour each day. Ask about our mailing service. Mail to SAH. Ask about our sending service and free rides. Hits the airport. Check out our website.
3¢ self service copies now at ENCORE COPY CORPS 92th and ivory 842-2001
3¢
United States Military Academy
Air Force Academy
Four Seasons Resort & Spa
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Electrolux—the Only Authorized Service
Company for Electrolux appliances,
parts, supplies. Free pick-up &
D delivery on repairs. O ask for
inspection by your local home.
No obligation to buy. Phone #843-488-3
-401
Forget the handle of tax forms, let me do your taxes. Low rates, experienced Call Sabrina 749-5474. 3-9
TYPING
Experienced typist-term papers, thesis, thesis, electric BM Selecnt Proofreading, spelling corrected, 843-9554. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typet- thesis, dissertations,
term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectic.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310.
tf
Experienced K.U. typist, JB Correcting
Solicitec, Quality work. References available.
Sandy, evening and weekends. 745-
9818. tf
I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast
reliable, accurate, IBM plex elite. 842-2507
evenings to 11:00 and weekends. tf
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra,
841-4980. ttf
Experienced typist—books, thesis, term
papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting
Soleilite. Terry evenings and weekends.
843-4758 or 843-2971. tf
RESUME - RESUME - Resume - Professional
Corp. Corp., 25th and 84th, 842-3011,
ft TYPING. All kinds. Experienced quality
on IBM SIBetic Contact, Chris 842-
3011 or IBM SIBetic Contact, Chris 842-
3011.
842-2001
For Your Trying Odyssey
ENCORE COPY CORPS
owa— Holiday Plaza 842-200
Dial
Fast and clean typing. Call anytime 841-
6846. 3-4
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
nobleies, editions, self-correct Selective
Caller Eller or Jeannan 841-2172. 11
Closest thing to printing—IBM Executive twining, Reasonable rates. Call Bill 842-8772. 3-5
WANTED
2 housemates need a non-smoking, studious female. 3 br. $83 + 1/3 utilities. 841-9779.
3-3
Christian woman seeking other Christian women to be in her care. She has not graduated and has not yet experienced motherhood. Will only take 45 minutes of your time Call Nancy at 8:33-10:36
GOLD- SILVER- DIAMONDS. Class rings.
Wedding Bands, Silver Colons, Soreling, etc.
We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or
542-2688.
Female roommates wanted for Jayashwet
$85.00 salary (utilities paid)
Call 749-289-188
Roommate male or female to share 3 bdr.
house close to campus $100/m + 1.3 uls.
Call 843-2645 after 8:00 pm ask for Matt. 3-5
Roommate wanted preferably gay or at least open minded. Apt. available immediately. Stadium Apts. 1125 Indiana Itr 81 or call 841-124 and leave message for Doug.
Bass player urgently needed to complete British rock-oriented band Contact Jade Gursi 1-279-5523
Female roommate to share extra nice furnished 2 bdr. 2 bath duplex $115 + 1½ rent.
Call 841-8390. 3-13
Tutor for Math 102. Cheap rate wanted.
Call Dianne at 864-6743.
3-**
***
ORDER FORM
Roommate to share two bedroom furnished apt. on bus route near Gibsons, 842-6848
Wanted: Tutors for lower & upper level courses in the US, and MF 290. Interested applicants with a 3.0 GPA in the subject may apply to Supplementary International Services Military - 8-464-3717
The University Daily
The University Daily KANSAN
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ORDER FORM
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T!
If you've got it, Kansas classifieds can sell it! just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to: University Daily Kansas, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
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times
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times
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CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 inch - $3.75
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NAME: ___
ADDRESS: ___
PHONE: ___
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Editor
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Our five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been grips from coaches and fans, who would rather have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
ALL COMPLIANTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a 'second season,' another chance to win the NCAA's automatic spot for the Big Eight.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eight during the regular season. Oklahoma is third.
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the Jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys to back-to-back games presents some problem, but they advantages. KU's Head Coach Ted Owens said
"IT HELPS IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State," Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crowd tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response."
"it's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous roast team."
best Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that get the support that we get, and we will really need
The Jayhawks will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-8 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and is ready to hit him out of the startling lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 6-8 forward, both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NI and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"IVICIOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowbys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the NHL.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said.
"That's what's important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament (34), or not. In the third (34), it would be awfully quick for us to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAYHAWK NOTES; United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was; Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Joo Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darnell Valentine and Missouri forward Kevin Frater.
The second team was! Jack Moore, Nebraska;
Nekay, Kansas; State; Check Barnett,
Okay, Kansas.
Honorable note meant to Leroy Combs,
William M. Smith, and Jon Sun-
david, and Steve Stippenville, Missouri.
FIVE KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
last game in Allen Field House. KU's seniors are John Crawford, Art Housey, Booty Neal, Valentine and George Thompson.
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's first, round Big Eight season tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field, House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.00.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff time Friday are 7:06 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the game. The game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas state and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in coaches poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNWUIKERS, coached by former KU men's assistant Gary Pipkin, woe the meet with the FSU players.
"We were really happy." KU Assistant Coach Tina Hamilton said. "This was the best job in business," she added.
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . . they put in 120 percent. It was a total team effort."
Ten Big Eight records were set in the meet including Tudie McKnight's event-winning leap of 159 feet in the long jump. The mark qualified her to be a first round winner, which will be held March 13-14 in Pocatello, Idaho.
"I REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
Gwen Poess, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-game hurdle with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Alex Rodriguez in mark of 8.06 qualified her for the nationals.
Kansas finished on the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish
RESULTS
Pepin, who assisted KU men's coach Bob Timmons for three years, formerly coached HOU.
PEPIN SAID the Cornhushers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhushers had a good chance at winning the national title.
Long jump = 1; Tadie McKnight, KU, 19-3#; 2. Sharon Burril, UI, 19-3#; KM-Kungshai, KSU, 19-4#.
"They (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Oklahoma had, but we predicted that we would place third."
Distance Mendel Relay - 1. Oklahoma, 11. 48.75; 2. Colorado
11. 51.14; 3. Kansas State, 11. $3.08.
4 x 259 Relay -1. Nebraska, 1:39.0. 2. Kansas, 1:42.0. 3. Oklahoma, 1:42.0.
4 x 128 Relay -1. Nebraska, 1:39.0. 2. Kansas, 1:42.0. 3. Oklahoma, 1:42.0.
NILI Yard run--1 Diane Vetter, IJS, 2.30-4; 2 Tani Essington
NILI 2:23-03; 2 Catherine Gamer, IJS, 2.30-4
880 yard run -1, Maureen Houghton, U. 0:29, 7:69 - 2, Christine
MMcKeen, U. 0:99, 8:53 - Pam Schambul, U. 12, 14:27
60 yard handler - 1. Gwen Press, MU. 8.12. M.
KU. 8.06; 3. Barbara Veau, MU. 8.11.
**ABSTRACT:** This study investigates the effectiveness of a
combinatorial approach for identifying a one-
way model that can predict a tennis player's
scalability and accuracy.
80 yard datab -1; Mottore Orchie, NL 6/8, 6.0; 2. Felicia Moore, OU,
OU 94 yard datab -N; Mottore Orchie, NL 7/8
Mule run= Callee Cathe, OU, 47.56; 2. Carleen Thou, CU,
48.35; 3. Debph Cathe, KSU, 49.18; 4.
7.03: Nomura Mau, NU 7.07.
7.08: Kelley-Callee OU, 4:47.56. 2: Carlieen TH, CU.
3, 4, 5, 6, Desk PIN KSU 9, 10, 12
1:1, 1:2, 1:3, Tale Shelter, IU, 1, 12; 1:2, 0:1, Lance Lester, OI, 1:3, 1:2, Tale Shelter, NI, 1, 12A
8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2170, 2171, 2172, 2173, 2174, 2175, 2176, 2177, 2178, 2179, 2180, 2181, 2182, 2183, 2184, 2185, 2186, 2187, 2188, 2189, 2190, 2191, 2192, 2193, 2194, 2195, 2196, 2197, 2198, 2199, 2200, 2201, 2202, 2203, 2204, 2205, 2206, 2207, 2208, 2209, 2210, 2211, 2212, 2213, 2214, 2215, 2216, 2217, 2218, 2219, 2220, 2221, 2222, 2223, 2224, 2225, 2226, 2227, 2228, 2229, 2230, 2231, 2232, 2233, 2234, 2235, 2236, 2237, 2238, 2239, 2240, 2241, 2242, 2243, 2244, 2245, 2246, 2247, 2248, 2249, 2250, 2251, 2252, 2253, 2254, 2255, 2256, 2257, 2258, 2259, 2260, 2261, 2262, 2263, 2264, 2265, 2266, 2267, 2268, 2269, 2270, 2271, 2272, 2273, 2274, 2275, 2276, 2277, 2278, 2279, 2280, 2281, 2282, 2283, 2284, 2285, 2286, 2287, 2288, 2289, 2290, 2291, 2292, 2293, 2294, 2295, 2296, 2297, 2298, 2299, 2300, 2301, 2302, 2303, 2304, 2305, 2306, 2307, 2308, 2309, 2310, 2311, 2312, 2313, 2314, 2315, 2316, 2317, 2318, 2319, 2320, 2321, 2322, 2323, 2324, 2325, 2326, 2327, 2328, 2329, 2330, 2331, 2332, 2333, 2334, 2335, 2336, 2337, 2338, 2339, 2340, 2341, 2342, 2343, 2344, 2345, 2346, 2347, 2348, 2349, 2350, 2351, 2352, 2353, 2354, 2355, 2356, 2357, 2358, 2359, 2360, 2361, 2362, 2363, 2364, 2365, 2366, 2367, 2368, 2369, 2370, 2371, 2372, 2373, 2374, 2375, 2376, 2377, 2378, 2379, 2380, 2381, 2382, 2383, 2384, 2385, 2386, 2387, 2388, 2389, 2390, 2391, 2392, 2393, 2394, 2395, 2396, 2397, 2398, 2399, 2400, 2401, 2402, 2403, 2404, 2405, 2406, 2407, 2408, 2409, 2410, 2411, 2412, 2413, 2414, 2415, 2416, 2417, 2418, 2419, 2420, 2421, 2422, 2423, 2424, 2425, 2426, 2427, 2428, 2429, 2430, 2431, 2432, 2433, 2434, 2435, 2436, 2437, 2438, 2439, 2440, 2441, 2442, 2443, 2444, 2445, 2446, 2447, 2448, 2449, 2450, 2451, 2452, 2453, 2454, 2455, 2456, 2457, 2458, 2459, 2460, 2461, 2462, 2463, 2464, 2465, 2466, 2467, 2468, 2469, 2470, 2471, 2472, 2473, 2474, 2475, 2476, 2477, 2478, 2479, 2480, 2481, 2482, 2483, 2484, 2485, 2486, 2487, 2488, 2489, 2490, 2491, 2492, 2493, 2494, 2495, 2496, 2497, 2498, 2499, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2170, 2171, 2172, 2173, 2174, 2175, 2176, 2177, 2178, 2179, 2180, 2181, 2182, 2183, 2184, 2185, 2186, 2187, 2188, 2189, 2190, 2191, 2192, 2193, 2194, 2195, 2196, 2197, 2198, 2199, 2200, 2201, 2202, 2203, 2204, 2205, 2206, 2207, 2208, 2209, 2210, 2211, 2212, 2213, 2214, 2215, 2216, 2217, 2218, 2219, 2220, 2221, 2222, 2223, 2224, 2225, 2226, 2227, 2228, 2229, 2230, 2231, 2232, 2233, 2234, 2235, 2236, 2237, 2238, 2239, 2240, 2241, 2242, 2243, 2244, 2245, 2246, 2247, 2248, 2249, 2250, 2251, 2252, 2253, 2254, 2255, 2256, 2257, 2258, 2259, 2260, 2261, 2262, 2263, 2264, 2265, 2266, 2267, 2268, 2269, 2270, 2271, 2272, 2273, 2274, 2275, 2276, 2277, 2278, 2279, 2280, 2281, 2282, 2283, 2284, 2285, 2286, 2287, 2288, 2289, 2290, 2291, 2292, 2293, 2294, 2295, 2296, 2297, 2298, 2299, 2300, 2301, 2302, 2303, 2304, 2305, 2306, 2307, 2308, 2309, 2310, 2311, 2312, 2313, 2314, 2315, 2316, 2317, 2318, 2319, 2320, 2321, 2322, 2323, 2324, 2325, 2326, 2327, 2328, 2329, 2330, 2331, 2332, 2333, 2334, 2335, 2336, 2337, 2338, 2339, 2340, 2341, 2342, 2343, 2344, 2345, 2346, 2347, 2348, 2349, 2350, 2351, 2352, 2353, 2354, 2355, 2356, 2357, 2358, 2359, 2360, 2361, 2362, 2363, 2364, 2365, 2366, 2367, 2368, 2369, 2370, 2371, 2372, 2373, 2374, 2375, 2376, 2377, 2378, 2379, 2380, 2381, 2382, 2383, 2384, 2385, 2386, 2387, 2388, 2389, 2390, 2391, 2392, 2393, 2394, 2395, 2396, 2397, 2398, 2399, 2400, 2401, 2402, 2403, 2404, 2405, 2406, 2407, 2408, 2409, 2410, 2411, 2412, 2413, 2414, 2415, 2416, 2417, 2418, 2419, 2420, 2421, 2422, 2423, 2424, 2425, 2426, 2427, 2428, 2429, 2430, 2431, 2432, 2433, 2434, 2435, 2436, 2437, 2438, 2439, 2440, 2441, 2442, 2443, 2444, 2445, 2446, 2447, 2448, 2449, 2450, 2451, 2452, 2453, 2454, 2455, 2456, 2457, 2458, 2459, 2460, 2461, 2462, 2463, 2464, 2465, 2466, 2467, 2468, 2469, 2470, 2471, 2472, 2473, 2474, 2475, 2476, 2477, 2478, 2479, 2480, 2481, 2482, 2483, 2484, 2485, 2486, 2487, 2488, 2489, 2490, 2491, 2492, 2493, 2494, 2495, 2496, 2497, 2498, 2499, 2500, 2501, 2502, 2503, 2504, 2505, 2506, 2507, 2508, 2509, 2510, 2511, 2512, 2513, 2514, 2515, 2516, 2517, 2518, 2519, 2
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
Practice expressing thoughts and feelings clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work settings.
Saturday, March 7, 1981
10:00 AM - 1:00 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(Principalization required by March 6th)
For further information, contact the Women's Center at 844-3322
U56. 69:34 — Lunt Tucker, KU, 57:64
U56. 69:34 — Lunt Tucker, KU, 57:64
Melter, Oberle ... Merten, U33. 11:1 ... Nurmur Warmu
...
**Shot 34: 70.** L. Lerick Jones, KU. 35.10.
**Shot 34: 70.** Cecile Hessel, KU. 31-19; **Karen Wood**, NU.
302 yard field-d扎 | Mierlene Otley, NU, 33:11; Norm Murray, NU,
sput shot-1 | Helen Cauley, HU, 31:10; Karen Wernon KW,
sput shot-1 | Helen Cauley, HU, 31:10; Karen Wernon KW
High jump -1, Sharon Burrell, NU, 64; 2, Sally McCathy, OU, 5; 3, Shawn Curtain, KU, 54.
Penthaskan I - Catlyse Seybold, NU, 3.86; II - Kim Haggar, KSU,
3.78; Nancy Kauger, KNU, 3.70.
Two mile relay--1. Okahanna, 8.8.84, 2. Nebraska, 8.8.86, 3.
Iowa State, 8.8.84, 2. Nebraska, 8.8.86, 3.
State, 3:15.5.
Three run-up 1 - Kellie Catty, OU, 15:48.16; 2 - Dena Ganly,
OU, 15:48.16
Final team scores ... 1 Nebraska, 142; 16 Kansas, 31
4 Kansas, 7 Kansas, 5 Iowa, 10 Michigan, 18; 40
7 Kansas, 9 Kansas, 6 Wisconsin, 10 Kentucky, 18
CLEVELAND
Three mile run 1. Kelley Cailyn, OU 18.16.15; Dona Ganny, MU 16.09.37; 1. Wendell Sauer, MU 16.47.23
Women's swim team extends streak
- Free Racquetball
* Free Tennis
* Free Swimming
* On KU Location
* On KU Bus Route
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Claas Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
Monday-Saturday
91 New Hampshire
g am-5 pm
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its seventh straight conference crown. The Jayhawks finished with 749 points, well ahead of second place Oklahoma with 514 points. Missouri was third with 444, followed by Iowa State with 389 and Nebraska with 265.
Gary Kemp, coach of the KU women's swimming team, receives a champagne shower at Robinson Natatorium after the Jayhawks won their eighth consecutive Big Eight championship.
"Our goal at nationals," Kempf said, "is to finish in the top 15."
There is no doubt that Jenny is one of the premiere freshmen swimmers in the nation," Kempt said.
If the Jayhawks are to finish in the top 15 in the nation they will need a good performance by their team.
KU got off to a quick start in the championships, which started Thursday morning.
"I WAS A LITTLE surprised that we didn't do very well in the preliminary events," he said. "But we came back and swam well in the championship events."
During the season, Kansas qualified swimmers in 17 of 24 events to the AIAW national championships at Columbia, S.C., March 18-21. Kansas Coach Gary Kempf said the seven swimmers would make the trip to Columbia.
The Jayhawks continued to swim well in the second day of racing as Wagstaff set a Big 10 record with the fourth fastest time in the nation that day. **7** mark in the 200-yard individual freestyle.
Kansas 'women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Natatorium.
THE VICTORY capped off a regular season in which the Jayhawks won all but one meet they competed in. The only slip was a second-quarter hit at the Husker Invitational in Lincoln, Neb.
Senior Janet Lindstrom and sophomore Tammy Thomas also swam well on Friday. Lindstrom set a Big Eight record and was named the championship in the 400 individual lindsey, with a time of
250 West Sixth 843-7333
Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments,
2-3-4 Bedroom Townhouses.
Despite the records, Kempf said that he was not entirely pleased with the team's performance.
Kansas won tour or eight first-day events, and set three Big Eight records.
Kempf said that he was quite pleased with Kansas' performance.
ZEN PRACTICE
Intensive Meditation
Retreat, March 5-8
WAGSTAFF WON the five individual events she swam in as well as two relay events at the Big Eight championships. She was named the meet's outstanding swimmer.
Public Talk
Sunday March 8, 2:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
"I am real happy about this weekend," he said. "It was a real team effort."
ZEN PRACTICE
THOMAS SWAM the sixth fastest time in
township with a 24.3 finish in the 50-yard
fence.
TRAILRIDGE APARTMENTS
Bv JIM SMALL
Sports Writer
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
1307 Mass. phone 843-1151
Patronixe Kansan Advertisers
SNA FILMS
Two early twiety musicals, Roberta is the Kern-Harbach operetta, illuminated by the presence of Fred Astaire and Grace Kelly. Dunne and Randolph Scott star in this long-unsen musical, Murder is a musical mystery set backstage at Earl Carr Theatre. Jack Oakie, Kitty Carlisle and Donald Meek. Among the musical numbers is a graphic pre-Code dity called “Sweet Mouse” (8588 min.BW; BAD; 7:30).
Tuesday, Mar. 3
Roberta
(1935)
Murder at the Vanities
(1935)
(1934)
Unless otherwise noted, all films will be shown at Woodfair Auditorium in the Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday Sessions. Tickets available at the SAU office. Tickets available at the SAU office. 4th Union, 4th level. Information 864-2300. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
Wednesday, Mar. 4
Due to unavoidable circumstances THE SEARCH is cancelled. The film was lost in shipping.
Your Luncheon Alternative
THE CROSSING
Cook, serve, wine,
hands off food safely.
Business Brief
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Uni Law
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporte
Staff Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Viscsoni and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt a setback to JVJ's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this," Don Jones, JV vice president for mail development, said. "We have an annual investment of
Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends, as two plump managers envisioned them.
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 376 supported, JVJ's promised project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for JVJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Wilden.
50
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PERSON POOL 40
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Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' lists, according to the committee chairman.
The chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the Board of Regents system-wide proposed committee committee cut those requests deeply last month.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for
the individual campaigns, requests for next year.
After committee action this week, the campuses and Regents budgets will be sent to the board.
Since the individual requests, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governor."
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
ByGENE GEORGE
Staff Reporter
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have no seen the subcommittee reports, I don't know if ours (KU's) is done."
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topek, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
EU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent average increase in tuition for all state colleges.
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 8 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
JANE FONDA
DUSTIN HOFFMAN
JEFF BECK
PAT BENATAR
OUR Votes Are in!
READERS POLL RESULTS ON P.15
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
& Ampersa
SPECIAL TRAVEL
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Key West, Costa Rica,
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John Hiatt's
Critical Interview
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VOLV NO.6 MARCH 1981 • DAVID PETERS
The Music, Arts & Entertainment Magazine for College Newspapers
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably can't get because the governor don't recommend them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall project and $0,000 for a feasibility study for second library.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the iology department to move from the outdated nd cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Vatson Library, could be built near the Military science Building.
1 contract
ne rest of the semester. This total of $69.30 a
course may be paid in full or paid by
aid does not include cafeteria lunch costs.
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they on't like the meat, Wilson said.
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall or anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he
The women said that salads did not provide for ll of their nutritional needs.
"We complained about paying $70 a month just or saled, "Miller said. "That is not a balance
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
BOW GREENES AKANAAN kanaan se swept into the area with a high in the mid 40s. ontine today with a high in the mid 40s.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournamen is five years old today.
Its five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been grips from coaches and fans, who would have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLIANTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a 'second season,' another chance to win the NCAA's automatic spot for the Big Eight.
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the Jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys in the final round. The team presents some problems, but there are also some advantages, KU's Head Coach Ted Owens said.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eight during the regular season, Oklahoma at 74. Kansas at 68.
"IT HELPS IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State." Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to have a larger crowd tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response."
"It's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous road team. They
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that get support that we get, and we will really need it."
The Jayhawks will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-6 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and can help him out of the starting lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 8-4 forward, started both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NI and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking tonight's game as a chance to get into the NCAA.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT that 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament if we played in February (3-5), it would be awfully tough to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAYHAWK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was: Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Jojo Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Derek Valentine and Missouri forward Ricky Frazier.
The second team was: Jack Moore, Nehrskra; Ed Nelyk, Kansas State; Chuck Barnett, Ed Nelyk.
Honorable mention went to Leroy Combs,
of Boca Raton, FL. Joel Sund-vold
and Steve Vernochville, Missouri.
Five KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the studentsection.
Tickets are still available for tonight's first round Big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.50.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket arena in the Kansas City, Md., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff times Friday are 7:05 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the state-Missouri game. The game between the winner of the Oklahoma-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in coaches poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNWUXKERS, coached by former KU man's assistant Gary with 128, finished second. With Gary and 128, finished second.
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . . they put in 120 percent. It was a total team effort."
"We were really happy," KU Assistant Coach Theo Hamilton said. "This was our best job in competition this year. It was a super team effort.
Ten Big Eight records were in the set meet including Tudie McKnight's event-winning leap in the long jump. The mark qualified her for the 2014 Olympics, which will be held March 13-14 in Piccone, Idaho.
"IM REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
Gwen Poess, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-yard hurdles with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Rory McIlroy with a mark of 8.06 qualified her for the nationalists.
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
Kansas finished among the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish in Iowa.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
Practice expressing feelings and thoughts clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work settings.
Saturday, March 7, 1981
Inroom Building
Walnut Grove
Kansas Union
*pre-registration required by March 5th*
For further information, contact the Women's Center at 864-3522.
Public Talk
Sunday March 8, 2:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
ZEN PRACTICE
ZEN PRACTICE Intensive Meditation Retreat, March 5-8
TRAILRIDGE
APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth 843-7333
Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments, 2-3-4 Bedroom Townhouses.
• Free Recreation球
• Free Tennis
• Free Swimming
• Convenient Location
• On KU Bus Route
Patroni
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SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
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Monday-Sep
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Murd
"They (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Iowa had not, but we predicted that we would place third."
PEPIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers had a *g-rated* chance of winning the national title.
Women's swim team extends streak
731 Now Hampshire Monday-Setulaire
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By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to the seventh conference crown.
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Natatorium
Wed
Due
cl
T
I
The
Unless ohh shown at Kansas Un Friday, Sat films are $ Tickets avail $ tickets 3477. No lowed.
FEDERAL PARK SCHOOL
March, 1981
Ampersand
Panasonic Stereo-to-Go:
Nobody gives you more ways to fill the room inside your head.
Only Panasonic Stereo-to-Go brings beautiful music to your ears in so many different ways. There are four Stereo-to-Go models, each with super-light-weight headphones. So what-ever kind of music moves you, moves with you. Wherever you go!
The RS-J3 is a stereo tape player so small you won't believe the size of the sound that comes out of it. And its price will come as a pleasant surprise, too.
The RS-J1 is a slightly larger portable stereo cassette player with a handle for carrying tunes—and the right connections for use as a tape deck at home.
The RX-2700 is the world's smallest headphone AM FM stereo cassette recorder. It has a built-in AM FM radio, so you can listen to tapes or FM stereo through headphones and even record in stereo.
The RF-20 is the world's smallest FM stereo headphone radio. It's a set of featherweight headphones with an FM stereo radio built right into it. Fantastic! Whichever model you choose, a Panasonic Stereo-to-Go lets everybody know you've got something between your ears.
Panasonic® just slightly ahead of our time.
[Image of a man fishing in a boat]
Univ Law
D co
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By DA Staff F
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4,1981 Vol. 91, No.108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
By DALE WETZEL
Staff Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Vissonsi and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt a setback to JV's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this." Don Jones, JV vice president for mall development.
Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends, as two plump masters end up paying dividends.
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached: 37 supported JVJ's roosed project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for JVJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Widman.
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence
50
PLAYER POLE TIME HIT PLAYER POLE TIME HIT 0 2 20 3
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' committee members, according to the committee chairman.
The chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the number of Regents system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut those requests deeply last month.
After committee action this week, the campus and Regents budgets will be sent to the federal government.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for Snow and Friday to consider the individual campuses.
Since the individual requests, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the government."
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald R, R-Topea, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not notice that the team reports ie, I don't know if our KU's is and is."
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent average increase in tuition for all state universities.
Ampersand
March,1981
You told her you have your own place. Now you have to tell your roommates.
TOMMY ROBINSON AND MARGARET BURTON
LOWENBRAU
AU
You've been trying to get to know her better since the beginning of the term. And when she mentioned how hard it is to study in the dorm, you said, "My place is nice and quiet. Come on
"My place is nice and quiet. Come on over and study with me."
Your roommates weren't very happy about it. But after a little persuading they decided the double feature at the Bijou might be worth seeing.
Löwenbräu.Here's to good friends.
CERVEJA
They're pretty special friends. And they deserve a special "Thanks." So, tonight, let it be Löwenbräu.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably on't get because the governor didn't recommend them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall and $1.000,000 for a feasibility study for second library.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the iology department to move from the outdated nd cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Vatson Library, could be built near the Military science Building.
1 contract
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they don't like the meat, Wilson said.
he rest of the semester. This total of $89.30 a
month includes location and food purchase
address linking to your student account.
"There's enough at the hall or at any hall, or anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he said.
The women said that salads did not provide for ll of their nutritional needs.
"We complained about paying $70 a month just or salad," Miller said. "That is not a balanced cost."
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
B
BOC GREENE ANKANam Kaiser an
swept into the area with a high in the mid 80s.
outline today with a high in the mid 80s.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Its five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been grips from coaches and fans, who would rather have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLAINTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a 'a second season,' another chance to win the NCA's automatic spot for the Big Eight.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eight during the regular season, plays Oklahoma in the playoffs.
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys in four days. Playing back-to-back games with Oklahoma State, the Cowboys advantage, KU's Head Coach Ted Owens said.
"I HELP IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State." Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response.
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crowd tonight.
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"It's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous road team. They
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that get support that we get, and we will really need it."
The Jayhawks have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-8 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and he has not allowed him out of the starting lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 8-6 forward, well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds againstNU and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the NHL.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play,"
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an 18-4 large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament this week." He turned to February (34), it would be awfully difficult for us to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record.
JAYHAWK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was: Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Joo Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darnell Valentine and Missouri forward Raviel Frazier.
The second team was: Jack Moore, Nebraska; Oleah Kannas, State; Chuck Barrett, Oklahoma.
Honorable mentions were to Leroy Combs,
Jim Sandoval and Ike Shipovac, Missouri.
FIVE KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's first round Big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.50.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tippo times Friday are 7:00 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the Iowa State-Missouri game. The game bet-winner is the winner of Oklahoma-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coaches' poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNWUSKERS, coached by former KU
142 points. Oklahoma, with 182, finished second.
143 points. Florida, with 167, finished third.
"We were really happy." KU Assistant Concerta Theo Hamilton said. "That was our best job in college."
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . . they put in 120 percent. It was a total team effort."
Ten Big Eight records were set in the meet including Tudie McKnight's event-winning leap of 19.3% in the long jump. The mark qualifier which will be held March 13-14 in Pocatello, Idaho.
"I'M REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
Kansas finished among the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish in the NCAA Tournament.
Gwen Pow, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-game hurdles with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Mike Anderson with the mark of 8.02 qualified her for the nationalals.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
Practice expressing thoughts and feelings clearly and directly; situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work settings.
Saturday, March 7, 1981
10:00 AM—1:00 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(Pre-registration) March 6th
For further information, contact the Women's Center at 864-3522
Public Talk
Sunday March 8, 2:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
ZEN PRACTICE Intensive Meditation Retreat, March 5-8
TRAILRIDGE
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2500 West Sixth 843-7333
Studios, & 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments, 2-3-4 Bedroom Townhouses.
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"They (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Oklahoma, though, we predicted that we would place third."
PEPIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers had a good chance of winning the national title.
Murd
Women's swim team extends streak
Two early the Kerm-hip by the pr gry in Mr. Larson Dunne and long-unseen ical myster realms Jack Oskill Jack Oskill Meek, Amek graphic pr gry in Ms. Rush (8589 min)
Bv JIM SMALL.
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its seventh straight conference crown. The
Wed
Due
cl
T
Th
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Natatorium.
Sports Writer
Unless oth
shown at
Kansas Ur
Friday, Sa
films are $
Tickets ava
noon 3477.
No allowed.
I'll take a picture of you
A
& Ampersand
Ampersand
Publisher DURAND W. ACHEE
Advertising Director JEFFERY A. DICKEY
Editor in Chief JUDITH SIMS
Music Editor BYRON LAURSE
Design Director CATHEINE LAMPTON
Production Manager CHIP JONES
Illustration DAN EIGHOTZ
Art Assistants NEIL MOSKOWITZ
MEL RICE
Typography COMPOSITION TYPE
Contributing Editors COLMAN ANDREWS,
JACOB ATLAS, MARTIN
CLIFFORD, CRAY, LEN FELDMAN, DAVIN
NAY FRED, SITTERBERG
Office Manager CHRISTOPHER THOR
Advertising Office Los Angeles New York
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1680 North Vine, Suite 900
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© 1981 John Winston Publishing, 1680 N. Vine, Suite 902, Hollywood, CA 94705. All rights reserved. Letters become the property of the publisher and may be edited. Publisher reserves the right to change the scripts. Published monthly except January, June, July and August. Annual subscription rate is $0.00. To order subscriber letters, see www.winstonpublishing.com. Submit a manuscript at the above Hollywood address
Lennon comments on many other areas in *Double Fantasy*, such as male-female relationships. It's plain to see John is saying in "Clean Up Time" and "Woman" that men don't have to be super-macho to be men and women don't have to be housemums to be feminine. This is only the tip of the Lennon-meaning iceberg. Mr Scullart would do well to listen closer to the albums he reviews in the future.
Jim Gavadie
As a reviewer, Gene Sculati is out to lunch. If all he got from Double Fantasy by John Lennon was the fact that it took Lennon 5 years to learn housekeeping, then Sculati has to let learn about his music. And if you look at what he says in *Double Fantasy*, and it all flies right over Mr. Sculati's head the reason the roughness is gone in this album is because Lennon's anger is gone. The whole idea is to show Lennon living the peaceful, loving life which he for so long preached about when he died. But with a plastic, Ono Band-style album
Michigan State University
NEW CONTRIBUTORS
Dual Studios (In Praise) not only reviews it as books, he writes them in Michigan. Nobody's perfect. Richard Hearsonberg (John Flint) has fraught his photo collection. Richard Rosenberg is be a developer of natural light that specify whether he beer or beverage sunshine. Drama Series (On Tour) who stalks the elusive American star with the film for the California Agate (UC, Davis) and RM Magazine (On Course) (On Disk) may or may not be the infamous Cluck Streak. whose Unparalleled Audio film show leaves the audience shocked by the University of California, Magic Mountain. but we know for certain Stellant's writers have appeared in New York, Out Railing, and the late, more famous Worse Miser
In Tbe Red
March,1981
All Hollywood is waiting (with assorted attitudes) to see whether Francis Ford Coppola's Zootope Studios will come or remain open, and whether his currently-inproduction film, One from the Heart, will be completed. Coppola is in serious financial trouble but he can come up with a million or two. All this less than a year after Hollywood General Studios had run down Hollywood General Studios at press time his studio employees had agreed to take cuts in salary, but this was a temporary measure.
Jungle Jack Flash
THERE MAY NOT BE A BOLLING STONES tour this year because Mick Jagger is reports stranded deep in the Amazon jungle filming *Tizarduella* directed by Werner Roth. The band is in a nearby locality) and starring Jason Robards as an obsessed madman keen on building an opera house in the jungle so he can hear Caruso first hand. Jagger plays them venture deep into the jungle to find rubber. Stay tuned.
Football Has Been Very Very Good to Me
OI HOSTS controversial former foot ball coach, Woody Wiley, will be the subject of a film titled, rarely predictable *The Wheel* Schulberg (who wrote *On the Waterfront*
I $ ^{N} $ O $ ^{NE} $ E $ ^{AR} $
and the *Hunter They Fall*, among others),
Jack Nicholson was being pursued for the title
Two more rumored football flicks. The Jim Pimkett story, all about the man who just led the Raiders to their superb victory; producer Roger Corman supposedly wakes Erik Estrada to star. Ed Asner is the reported choice to play Knute Rocke in the George Gipp Story (do you believe these titles?) Our president once played George Gipp ("Win one for the Gippit"). How depressing
Terminations
DESPITE A HOT SINGLE WITH "The Tide Is High" and a very popular (if semi-pund) album with *Autonomeric*, rumors assert that Blondie has broken up. According to her bereed conversations, Deborah Harry and Chris Sneed have fired the rest of the band.
**In REED has shifted from Arista Records,**
**headed by his professed friend Clive**
Davis (a.k.a. "Jove Clive"), to RCA Records,
where he cut his original solo material and
the Velvet Underground albums. Reed's
recent Arista albums got generally good critical
notes, but, in the words of a New York
store manager, they didn't sell for $1
Listen to the Wookie
**STAR WARS** on the radio — National Public Radio is finally offering the first audio installments, a full year after originally promised, but welcome anyway. The only familiar Star Wars voices will be Mark Hamill as Luke Skwalker and Anthony
A historical testimony from
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What Acting Should Know...I am His Wakern
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Love, and Stephen Dale and Jon
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Viscosa and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt a setback to JV's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this," Don Jones, JV vice President for mail development, said. "We have a great program."
Some of JV's dollars are already paying
in the office. The company envelopes
in the jersey's shipping office can attest.
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 375 supported JVJ's proposed project.
KANSAS 50 TIME HIT
PLAYER NO.1 PERIOD NO.1 TEAM
02203
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However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for JVJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Wilden.
After committee action this week, the campuses' and Regents budgets will be sent to the full Senate in one bill for debate.
Since the individual requests, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the chair.
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for tomorrow and Friday to consider the individual candidate.
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' 1982 budget requests, according to the committee chairman.
The chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the number of Resegs system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut those requests deeply last month.
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be bigger than the committee."
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topeka, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not seen the subcommittee reports, I don't know if they are."
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state universities.
Ampersand
March,1981
& $ \mathrm{O}^{\mathrm{U T}} \mathrm{T}^{\mathrm{H E}} \mathrm{O}^{\mathrm{T H E}} $
Two "on the road" Amperands this month, to celebrate our special travel section. The road sign is by Martha Kabalin of Okemos, Michigan; the crooked freeway is by David Mossman of Austin, Texas (above work has appeared before here). Each recipient's creative readers are encouraged to submit original Amperands, in black ink on a paper note with name and address on the work, to Amperands of the Month, 1680 N. Vine Street, Suite 900, Hollywood, CA 90028.
NOSSMAN
Daniels as CBP. Perry Kirk will portray Han Solo, Brock Peters will be Darth Vader, Ann Sachs, Princess Leia. The first 15 episodes will be a "greedy expanded" version of the first film; new characters will be introduced who may appear in fourth films, so pay attention. About 200 National Public Radio stations will carry Star Wars starting with the second week of season 4. Check your locals. Oh yes — the series will also incorporate sophisticated stereo sound techniques, including the nifty John Williams score.
More Boobs for the Tube
CUNTRY SINGER MEL TILLS and Steeler quarterback Terry Bradshaw were supposedly so funny together in *Cannibal Bull*; the lured Burt Rempel signed them up for a series, called *The Vikers*, based on their *Cannonball* character.
**BAND ON THE RUN**, an hour-long new series from MTA on GBS, gives us the on-theroad adventures of a country & western band (three guys) with a long-fashioned former mana's mean benchman. Sounds like The Frutive Titers the Monkeys on Hae Hau
ROHMAN DREYFUS will portray Albert Einstein, age 26 in a Disney production — described as a cross between a "straight biography and Fantasia." The untitled picture will use animation and special effects to show how Einstein devised his theory of relativity. Dreyfus' brother Lorin and David Landsberg are the project developers.
STEVE MARTIN. Bernadette Peters and Christopher Walker are starring in *Pennis from Heaven*, about a sheet music salesman in the Thirteens. Although full of song and dance, the film is dramatic; D Martin's dull, boring life and unhappy marriage send him into musical fantasies. Peters starts out as a schoolteacher, has an abortion and ends up a prostitute, while Walken plays it hinted by all this. The movie is not a typical Steve Martin film. "This is his first draft," quoth the film's publicist, "he's definitely not playing this with an arrow through his head." Martin spent four months on tap dancing lessons, but no one
in the film sings, rather, they all lip-sync to original recordings of the Thirties
Digital Delay
And after that, Martin is supposed to revert to type, playing a private eye in *Suck the bullet* (a tentative but memorable title)
RY COOBER has sworn off digital recording. Though his recent Borderline is digitally recorded and last year's Bop Till You Drop was promoted as 'rock' first digital LP. "Coocher wants to go back to the sounds of the pre-transfer era. Never less, digital has several new converts to its clean, lively & (expensive) sound. Billy Joel, Jefferson Starship, Rickie Lee Jones, Williams, the Outsiders, The People (remember them). So Outsiders Jones are all making digita! Do. Digital studio time is about 40 minutes more costly than stand-alone recording. "I like the clean, perfect sound of digital," Grammy winner Christopher Cross told Billboard recently, "especially for my type of music. Of course," he added, "if I was Matt the Hoople I probably wouldn't think it was such a good idea."
DAVID JOHNSON is in New York studios, working on his third album for Blue Records. Also in coercion country artist Billy Ray's television now a solo artist for Warner Bros.
ANTICIPATION is high for a new Garland Jeffries album, his first for Epic *Escape Artist* will feature the 7 and the Mysterians classic, "96 Tears" as well as "Miami Beach," a song about the recent Freedom City riots, and a 4-song reggae EP including contributions from David Johansen, Lou Rowe Big Wheat, Linton Kewlson (Jesus), Eve Bentan Band, Danny Rittenhouse and Ribbon and a number of members of the Walkers. The Rumour, formerly Graham Parker's quintessential back band, is accompanying JEF jerries on a European tour.
In the Studio & on the Road
BRC CLAPTON begins a four-month, sixy-concert tour in March. For those chained by the sleepwalking qualities of Clapton's recent discs, the bill of the clapton's tour is in support of a new LP (first studio in two years) called Another Ticket
Frogs Dig Blues
What Might Have Been (A Continuing Saga)
BLESMAN ARBERT COLLINS, a great, sweaty showman who likes to crowp audiences with a long cord on his Fender, tossing off insinuating glances with his nasty riffs, just received the 1981 'Prize Big Bill Brooney' in Paris. The award, granted by the French Academie du Jazz, celebrates Collin's recent Ice Pickin' on Alligator Patches.
TWO MUSICIANS were on their way to Am- perand's cover recently, but each got uniquely sidetracked.
Delbert McClinton, now Top Ten with "Givin' it for Your Love," was slapped on a flight to Los Angeles recently, there to meet with Ampsandr, Rolling Stone, Newsweek and the crew camera of Solid Gold, a TV pop music series. Caine Tuesdays and Delbert. "We don't know who is chorused McClinton's manager and record label, Mr. Blankhik he had a fight with his wife and he might be somewhere in Mexico, maybe."
Tom Petty, triple platinum a year ago with Tommy the Torpedoes, an album made in the midst of legal battles, is deliving completion of his newest album because MCA, parent label to his Backstreet Records, wants to retail the finished product at $9.89. Arguing that a shopping price would damage his personal image, Petty adds, "For once in my life, I'd like to make a record without a legal battle. It isn't just fair to the kids."
maybe, countered an anonymous MCA spokesperson, "if he'd burn up a million dollars making the record, it wouldn't have to cost so much."
De-evolution
DEVON, PENNSYLVANIA has a headache
Avid fans of devo, the Akron, Ohio,
rock and roll mindbenders who postulate
that humans are experiencing retrograde
evolution, have taken to proving that theory
with a thorough campaign to change
what things they think to "Devo. Thus
thousands of children have attended 'Devo
Elementary School' and commuters by
the thousands have taken the "Devo" highway
interchange.
FARRION has reportedly filed a $42,500,000 lawsuit against Transamerica, United Artists, producers Gene Kirkwood and Howard Koch, Jr. Bob Marcus and writer Edward Dilorenzo, claiming amoebic charges, that their film also constitutes his privacy and holds to ridicule Kirkwood said at press time that he had not yet been served any papers. "But Paul Land [who plays the young singer in the film] may use for defamation of character Kirkwood wiser cracked, that it should be noted, in discoverer and manager back in the early Sixties — not unlike the Ray Sharkey character in the *Idolmate*
They Shall Be Released ... Maybe
THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GARP script by Breaking Away's writer Steve Tesich, will reportedly star Robin Williams as Garp
Illian Hellman's three biographical books, *Pentimento*, an Unfinished Woman and *Scoutland Time*, are planned as one film, so far untitled and unstarred. Producer Jula Phillips has Eric Fearn's *Fearing* in beginning stages (no cast yet).
while long herself is trying to produce a version of her latest novel, *Hawaii*. It is rumored that Peter Q Toole has visited the River Kaua and from the Japanese point of view
James Caan and Al Pacino, who co-starred in the first Godfather, will reunite in *The Pope of Greenwich Village* (Count currently filming in Spain with Max Badbarr, schwarzenegger as the big bad barbarian, will also star Jennifer Garner and Max Von Stern in a production design by Bill Sutton, prominent in the Tins and Lizard school of fantasy Illustration. Sissy Spacke, who won the Golden Globe for Best Actress in *Coal Mine's Daughter*, will next appear in *Raggedy Man* with Sam Shepard and Eric Roberts, a 1980 tale of marriage and separation in mid-May, this season will be released in mid-May, this is an all-inclusive directing act, an accomplish (the wrote and starred in the *Reduction of Joe Tynan*) about friendship among three couples. Tim Hutton will spend four weeks in military training — shared head, 5 a.m., pushups, etc — to prepare for his role in Taps.
THE GREAT AMERICAN PHOTO CONTENT, men
tioned last issue, has postponed its
deadline for new photography more time to enter Call 800-251-790 for more details.
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FEATURES
Four Writers of the Thirties
Four Writers of the Thirtees
Cozey, Rashmil Winken & Orwell's
autobiography 9
A Fabulous Summer/Easter Vacation
Travel Section
All about desert ihabing, Europe
Key West & Coast Rica & more 10
The Amputated Readers
Poll Results
You filled me! you live with 'em 15
John Hatt is a Wary One 16
but he writes good songs
In One Ear Letters 4
6 Out the Other News & Humors 5
On Disc Ry Cooley, Sir Douglas Quintet, etc. 6
In Both Ears The sword cartridge 8
In Print Harlan Ellison's Shatterday, etc. 8
On Screen Secacua Saven, Tiss 17
On Tour Richard Brantigem, Wilson painter etc. 20
On Tour Richard Braunigan, Wilson Pickett, etc 19
OUR COVER
Daniel Peter Dunn (remembered from the box hit, Teach Tails Hear Cover two issues back) has created another rock 'em, knock 'em down and assembled of famous faces—winners of the Amberwood Roolls Pell.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably don't get because the governor didn't recommend them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall project and $300,000 for a faculty study for second school.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the iology department to move from the outdated nd cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Vatson Library, could be built near the Military science Building.
1 contract
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they on't like the meat, Wilson said.
he rest of the semester. This total of $98.30 a
day is not included in cafeteria labor costs.
did not include cafeteria labor costs.
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall or anyone to have a balanced diet," he
The women said that salads did not provide for ll of their nutritional needs.
"We complained about paying $70 a month just or saled," Miller said. "That is not a balanced one."
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
I will not be charged with any crime. I have an attorney available. I will not be arrested. I will not be prosecuted.
GOREEENGRKAN$ kansnlist swep into the area
contine today with a high in the mid 40s.
Page 10
University Dalii Kansan, March 3. 1981
The text in the image is:
一
X
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys Jayhawk's opponent best of second division last game in Allen Field House. KU's seniors John Cra Valent
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Its five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been grips from coaches and fans, who would rather have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLAINTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a 'second season', another chance to win the NCAA's automatic spot for the Big Eight.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eagle during the regular season, plays Oklahoma in the first round. The Kansas State team
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the joyhawks the chance to face the Cowboys against them in back-to-back games presents some problem for their opponents. ADVANTURE, KU's Head Coach Todd Owens said:
"I TELIPS IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State," Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor on Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crownton tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response."
"it's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous road team. They
beet Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that the support that we get, and we will really need
The Jayhawks will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-8 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and could potentially help him out of the starting lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 8- forward, both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NI and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the NHL.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament where you are going to get (34), it would be awfully tough for us to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAYHAWK NOTES; United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was: Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Joo Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darnell Valentine and Missouri forward Frank Frazier.
The second team was Jack Moore, Nebraku; Ed Nedley, Kansas State; Chuck Barnett, Illinois; Tim Johnson.
Honorembale note it went to Leroy Combs, Oklahoma State; Terry Caniff and Jumold Sunwu, Missouri.
FIVE KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's round big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.50.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff times Friday are 7:05 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the town State-Missouri game. The game bets between the winner of Oklahoma State-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nehaska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS
Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coaches poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNHUSKERS, coached by former KU
14 points. Oklahoma, with 126, finished second.
14 points. Alabama, with 128, finished second.
"We were really happy." KU Assistant Coach Theo Hamilton said. "This was our best job in competition this year. It was a super team effort.
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . . they put in 120 percent. It was a total team effort."
Ten Big Eight records were set in the meet including Tudie McKnight's event-winning leap from 12-4 to 13-1, qualified her for the AWL national championship, which will be held March 13-14 in Pocatello, Idaho.
Women's swim team extends streak
"I'm REAL HAPPY." McKnight said. "This jumps me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
Kansas finished among the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish in the 220 relay.
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
Gwenpos, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-yard harden with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Justin Fargas with a time of 8.06 qualified her for the national.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
BEHAVIOR
Practice expressive thoughts and feelings, clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, work and study.
Saturday, March 7, 1981
10:00 AM - 1:00 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
*P registration required.* March 31st
For further information, contact the Moors Center at 864-3522
T O H M M K M M I S R S H M M M M M
MISSION
ZEN PRACTICE
Public Talk
Sunday March 8, 2:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
Intensive Meditation Retreat. March 5-8
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Nalhati University.
TRAILRIDGE
APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth
843-7333
Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments,
2-3-4 Bedroom Townhouses.
• Free Racquetball
• Free Tennis
• Free Swimming
• Convenient Location
• On KU Bus Route
Bv JIM SMALL
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its seventh straight conference crown. The
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PEPIN SAID the Cornhushers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhushers had a g-load of awards the national title
"The they (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Iowa had been good, but we predicted that we would place third."
T
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JOE "KING" CARRASCO & THE CROWNS
(Hamblin Records) If party music is a lost art, nobody told these guys. The band has put the word "Joe" King "Carasco and the Crowns debort LaPont don't just cook — they parrot, deep fry and barbecue. It's the only thing that matters since the invention of the polka and long overdure proof that the best rock is played straight in the feet, not the song.
Texas breed Jeb and his rollicking Greens recall a galaxy of trashy Tex Mex, rock and R&B heroes on this delightful album, including Sam the Musician, the Swinning Medallions, The Mysterians, the Swinning Medallions, the Kingmen and a host of others. Yet it's not so much the disseminate infinity of their music as the poignant rogo rhythms — that endow this outing with an authentic good time feels it really the group's own exuberant energy. They don't invite you to dance
Nominally, the band uses the Tex-Mex mumbia rock of South Texas much as a good Mexican chef would use refried beans — a hearty and nourishing base to which are added tomatoes and green chilies. Aural auraita tastils has all sorts of musical flavor buds at the same time and the whole concession slides down with a pleasant sizzling sensation. Genuine rock primitives, the Crowns of Tucson and the Crimson Kris Cummin's Parfus organ — have accomplished the impossible, a record with no bad cus. Songs career to each other with hapless and happy abandon Not only are there no slow songs between cues but cries crackles with energy.
Dancing, laughing, eating — Joe *King* and the Crown recall all to which might also be added, drink, leching, and howling at the moon.
SIR DOUGLAS QUINTET Border Wave
(Takema)—As gratifying as it is to welcome back long gone musicianisms, such affairs have a way of being preamidal. One thinks of such mischief in songs and unison, short lived jokes by the Righteous Bros. and Four Seasons, the ill-advised "return" of Sam the Sham or Country Joe and the Fish. Most shock of recognition wears off and embrace turns warm quickly. coldly
All of which makes the reunion of *Sir* D'Agou Salm with members of his original Quinnet who an unexpected achievement, best music Alicia's lacinic Salm has ever made, and it surely matters that he's making it with "Mendocino" era accompanies "Odoge" Meyer and John Grosso with Alvin Crow and Speed Stunts.
Tings get off to a hot start with what sounds like the fasthest, most up-tempo opening of *The Kinke*: "Who'll Be the Next in Line." There is a junky, 1965-ish read of Roxy Erickson's (and the 13th-century) *Wind*. You can't beat "Me" that restores all of that cheesiness.
pre-pychedelic glory. And there’s a drastically improved update of ‘Revo bautionary Ways’ one of the understated works from Sir Doug Laytates solo career.
Univ Law
Most impressive are the Quintet's new songs—Crow's "Tonite Tonite" (Meyer's organ弦剧 should at least get a full score) and the Schoenberg-solla polk-dotted title cut, "It was Fun While It Lasted" and "Old Habits as songs as fine any as his ever been."
DCCR
There are few requirements for anyone like this record. New Wavers, if you want to be an artist none should have any reservations whatsoever. In an age when mass appeal equals bland, along comes the raucous waltzes of our "crusader" eats mean.
By D
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Gene Sculatti
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RY COODER Borderline
If Borderline has one deficiency, it is that Cooler's rewritten slide guitar is featured too sparingly. Though his stunts are impressive, he's tracked ("Train Your Move Too Soon" most notably), we're left wanting to hear more. Then he can be a difficult, overly precise artist, and I will not forbid his music for his music us over
(*Warmer Broo*) After dabbling in such exoticism as Hawaiian guitar sylvis (*Chicken Skin Music*) and antique jazz-tools music (Jazz). By Cooler songs, it is no wonder we wish to develop at length *Borderline* finds the veteran guitarist pursuing a Latin/blues/pop direction, caping a solo piece of *outside* romance, fast living.
Tex-Mex melodies and rhythms are in vogue in rock at the moment, making this LP very much in step with the times. Goober brings out the plaintive, joyful rhythm of this album through lively, unloved arrangements. A number of his sidemen distinguishes themselves, particularly drummer Jim Kelner and organist Wilt Schoonover for authenticity While some of Cooler's choices for material ("Speedo," "Down in the Boondocks") might seem unlikely ones for this alum, but they turn out well—every song includes a Cinnamon serene intimation and follow.
Barry Alfonso
'8 $^{0/81}$ Pat Metbenj
(*ECM*) When a leader surrounds himself with talents like saxophonists Dewey Redman and Mike Brecker, musicians like Jon Delhistoire, provocative and aluring sounds are expected and 80/81' is surely that Slaying temporarily from the spotlight. Like Metheny guitarist Metheny seeds new ground here and often lands solidly, even managing to overcome manlier Musicians' envy for sameness within a project.
The two-disc outing is in four hours. You can open its windows with freeraster taking the melody in full, rounded tones then soloning at length over a high-charged rhythm from the beginning of the song.
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol. 91, No.108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
Staff Reporter
3y DALE WETZEL
Itelf Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Viscosi and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt a setback to JV's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this," Don Jones, IVA vice president for mail development, said. "It gives us a lot of freedom."
Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends as two plump marmoset animals in their cages.
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 375 supported, JVJ's promised project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for JVJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Wilden.
50
PLAYER TIME OUT
PERIOD PLAYED POLES TEAM
0 2 20 3
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case before
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' projects, according to the committee chairman.
The chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the number of Regents system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut those requests deeply last month.
Since the individual request, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the
After committee action this week, the campuses' and Regents budgets will be sent to the full Senate in one bill for debate.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for
their request to consider the individual
campuses requests for faculty
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation," Hess said. "But don't expect us to be a rubber."
JIM SCHMIDT
Ry Cooder captured by outlaws (romance & fast living).
Johnette's spirited, always-shifting palates. The terrorist almost immediately breaks away from the back and forth harmonic center and exerts force across her room with Metheny work all together while Haden and the drummer work inside, then the bassist, wristish and delicate, plays what uses "Bury Me" in the form of a previous tempo, followed by a bright guitar passage, with Metheny evolving images of the Great Southwest, almost like a western弦rack that except for having a达佛尔杰tiny eggingly osseous or has
The second portion is a tribute to Ornette Coleman, with two Metheny vehicles in the Coleman tradition and two BMW vehicles in the Bentley around "80/81" have a bristle sport with a startling half-time melody against that pulse at the bridge, creativeness, and power. wide, wire work sounds well with the go-where-you will rhythm section that constantly grooving. Redman and Haden know this course well, and he plays it with great energy. Redman emits a darker, more robust sound than his compatriot Brecker, and is less extreme in his mediate performance. The two players on Cordon Bleu grad. The "Bat" is a radiant ball, delivered with a staely elegance and highlighted by Haden's powerful performance. Open with the bassist's sure-fingered reading of the line and show that Metheny, for all his contemporaries, has not forgotten this ancient twelve
The third segment consists of 'Open', which, excepting the brief melody, is soft free and, 'breast cry' is too much for what just went before.
The last disc centers around "Every Day (I Thank You)," more in the popup that we expect from Metheny and Kendry, but this week at first is refreshing, as he sprays double utterances over an aggressive trot accompaniment. But he has not yet done a praise from this onlaugh is not soon coming. The leader's "Goon Ahead closes the session," while lyrical and persuasive it is insufficient to balance the music.
The whole of 80/81 is a bit much to take in one time, but in small morsels it is an enjoyable, and often quite musical, release.
MY LIFE IN THE BUSH OF GHOSTS
Brian Eno/David Byrne
Zan Stewart
stretching Head Bryne and producer, electronics who Elof lifted the polylink concept of *nemian in light* from this collaboration effort, initially recorded beforehand. Yet The Buch of Ghosts is far more experimental.
Ampersand
But the LP's masterpiece is "The Jezebel Spirit." An intense dance beat is established. Byrne adds a sharp twist to the music with a synthesizer that swells menacingly. An evil-sounding laugh is heard. Do you hear voices? what sounds like the Rev. Ernest Angely? You do. How can you be on exorcism a demon from a woman, who can be heard hyperventilating with passion. As he reaches an emotional peak, demanding "Out," he turns toward the music. The music peaks in intensity.
The album opens with an evangelist declaiming that "America is waiting for an answer of some son." A Beetlethead claning and Eno's woo-hanging synthesizer frames his speech, as he condemns us for having an unintelligent what? throbbing music in "Mea Culpa mides deep, resonans whispers with me," and made a mistake. The black preacher howling in "Help Me Somebody" is backed by a furious funk beat; it doesn't unlike James Brown in his prime.
The music on the second side is saber, with more of an emphasis on the melody than the rhythm, a typical of that influence; the wailing voices are reminiscent of the Turkish Muslim prayer in Midday Express. Musical examples from "Mountain of Needles" is a stellar example of using silence to amplify melodies, or the reverberations of a pao.
more execlance dance and music movement. My life in *The Flush of Ghosts* is a sequel to *The Flush*, where I sent taped passages into speech, but by Byene and Eno have given the concept a whole album's worth of emotional depth and style as spectacular. What The Talking Heads hint at in their most recent release, Eno and Brymly amplitude in a blaze of excitement.
Jeff Silberman
Delbert McClinton Rocks His Way from Honky Tonks to a Hit Record
A.
Delbert's first record, a cover of Sonny Bowe William-Marcovich, precedent in 1960 as the first platter by a white artist to air on Ft. Worth's black radio station. The album was totally lost on the white
After 20 years of hard nights in hikton tonks, after a string of luckless affiliations with 10 different record labels, after five critically acclaimed but seldom heard albums, Delbert McClinton suddenly finds himself in the commercial music mainstream.
with legendary bluesmen like Howlin' Wolf, Lightnin'
Hopkins and Jimmy Reed.
McClinton's newsingle.
Record deals in the late '70s produced a succession of albums that pleased critics but also audiences. Airplay and sales. Knockout live shows across the country brought Delbert a loyal cult following, especially among younger formerers. But even an appearance on "Saturday Night Live" proved a short-lived burst of national exposure that paid dividends at the record rack.
It wasn't until McClinton teamed with Muscle Shoals bandmates to establish a dependent label (distributed by Capitol) of the famed studios in Sheffield, Alabama, that he began to happen. Debbie Berry at Muscle Shoals with an all-star roster of session musicians, has a fuller, cleaner sound than anything he's done
"I never could get everything I wanted onto a record," he says. "But I feel like I grew up with these muscle Shoals guys. They have no barriers. We could take it in any direction we wanted to go. I did just watch the songs — find some songs I can put my heart into and sing 'em so they sound to me."
Coast dog food factory.
The songs sound good to others as well. Top 40 radio has discovered Debeer's sassy and
With more than two decades of performing in smoke filled roadhouses throughout rural America, Delbert is arguably the best white southern blues rocker around.
"Giving It Up For Your Love," is rapidly becoming a nationwide wide radio favorite, and sales on his recently released Capitol "The Jealous Kind have been selling it for previous appearances on vinyl.
How do you explain this surprising emergence? People who know music aren’t surprised at all. For years Delbert as an aunt the best white southern blues rocker alive. But many would also allow that McClinton’s uncompromising stylistic commitment to his ‘blackest song’ kept him from success in the mass marketplace.
"I'm not saying that I'm right and the world is wrong" draws Delbert, "but the old stuff just sounds better to me."
Keeping things going hasn't been easy. More than two decades ago, McClinton started singing and playing harmonica on the rawhide from southern texas, between the boozing and brawling, he honed his chops by jamming
buving public
Two years later, Delbert's searing harmonica work on Bruce Channel's "Hey Baby" worldwide number one hit. The record's success prompted a club tour of England, where at one of the dates a promising Liverpool open the bill.
"After one of the sets, somebody from the opening act asked me to show him what I was recalling. Delbert recalls. "I showed this guy a few things, but I didn't think anything of it." Within a year the result of our talk could be heard on "Love Me Do." The Beatles' first single, Delbert's impromptu pupil had been John Lennon, and the opening act that an the fideline Fab Four
But while The Beatles went on to redefine pop music, Delbert went back to a dozen years of redneck beer joints and regional obscurity, trained in an abatissortion at the big house he headed for Hollywood and wound up working in a West
soulful style, while powerful renditions of Al Greens "Take Me To The River" and the sensuous "Shotgun Rider" are bringing the rockin' blues back to album-oriented airwaves.
It's been a long upstream journey for Delbert McClinton, but he finally getting the chance that he and his music deserve.
It's about time
DELBERT McCLINTON
THE STARZ
STARS ON THE ROAD
RANGE OF COLORS
1986
McClinton's first Capitol album, The Jealous Kind, is a current favorite on album-oriented stations across the country, while "Giving It Up For Your Love" has been covered" by Top 40 formats as a powerful new single.
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not seen the subcommittee reports, I don't know if there is any."
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topea, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state universities.
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the iology department to move from the outdated nd cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably not get the governor don't recombine them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall expansion and $300,000 for a feasibility study for
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Vatson Library, could be built near the Military science building.
1 contract
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they on't like the meat, Wilson said.
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall or anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he
he rest of the semester. This total of £69.30 a month is the allocation for raw food purchase and sales.
The women said that salads did not provide for ll of their nutritional needs.
"We complained about paying $70 a month just or saled." Miller said. "That is not a balanced payment."
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
TOWNSEND
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
swept into the area. Two girls walk behind
ontinue today with a high in the mid 40s.
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys
By KEVIN BERTELS
Sports Editor
Sports Editor
Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Its five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been gries from coaches and fans, who would rather have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLIANTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a 'second season,' another chance to win the NCAA's automatic spot for the BIG Eight.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eight during regular season, Oklahoma is the top-ranked team to touch 65.
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the Jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys twice in four days. Playing back-to-back games on Sunday was a big advantage, KU's Head Coach Ted Owens said.
"I HELP IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State." Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response.
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crownton!
"it's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous road team." They
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that get the support that we, and we will really need
The Jayhawks will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-8 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and has been allowed him out of the startling lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 8-4 forward, started both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds againstNU and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowbys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the NHL.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament and we'll get back on February (34), it would be awfully tough for us to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAYHAWK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was: Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Joo Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darnell Valentine and Missouri forward Ricky Frazier.
The second team was: Jack Moore, Nebraska,
Neely, Kansas State; Chuck Barnett,
Oklahoma State.
Honorable mention to Leroy Combe,
Oklahoma State University, for Jon Sundwell,
Stanford Stipmanovich, Missouri.
Five KU players, including three of the players to expect start tonight, will be playing their
last game in Allen Field House. KU's seniors are John Crawford, Art Housey, Booty Neal, Valentine and George Thompson.
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's first round Big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.50.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff time Friday are 7:05 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the Iowa State-Missouri game. The game bet-low is the winner of Oklahoma-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coaches' poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNHUSKERS, coached by former KU men's assistant Gary Pepin, won the meet with 142 points. Oklahoma, with 126, finished second.
Women's swim team extends streak
"We were really happy," KU Assistant Coach Theo Hamilton said. "This was our best job in competition this year. It was a super team effort.
PEPIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers had a good chance of winning the national title.
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . . they put in 120 percent. It was a total team ef fort."
Ten Big Eight records were set in the meet including Tudie McKnight's win-energy-leaping 10-39% of the long jump. The mark qualified her for the all-time record, which will be held March 13-14 in Pocatello, Idaho.
"I'M REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
Kansas finished among the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its seventh conference crown.
Gwen Poss, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-yard hurdles with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Alex Schoenfeld in mark of 8.06 qualified her for the nationals.
THE FOOTBALL GAME
"They (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Oklahoma, but we predicted that we would place third."
By JIM SMALL
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Natatorium.
ZEN PRACTICE
Intensive Meditation Retreat, March 5-8
A IERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
Practice expressing thoughts and feelings clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work settings.
Saturday, March 7, 1901
10:00 AM - 10:00 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(IP-registration required by March 6th)
For further information, contact the Women's Center at 864-3522
Public Talk
Sunday March 2, 3:30pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
Sports Writer
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
TRAILRIDGE
APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth
843-7333
Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments,
2-3-4 Bedroom Town-houses.
• Free Racquetball
• Free Tennis
• Free Swimming
• Convenient Location
• On KU Bus Route
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
Monday-Saturday
731 New Hampshire
9 am-5 pm
Patron
1307 Mai
T
1307 Mar
THE GUARDIAN
SK
Tu
Two early
the Kermh-
ing Ginger
Glingo
Dunne and
long-unsees
mical mystery
lumberjack
Jack Oakie
Meek. Amm.
graphic print
(8580 mm²)
(8580 mm²)
Murc
Wed
Due
cl
T
Th
Shatterday
HARLAN ELLISON
Houghton Mifflin. $12.95
Unless other shown at Kansas Uni-
Friday, Sanfia, Sailors are $15.00,
was Sasan Union, 3477. No lo-
owed.
I seems repetitions to review Harlan Ellison's newest set of phantasms. The man reviews them himself. The man reviews them stories, seventeen written stories, you veen introduce them. You count the general introduction. He tells you how to read each story, what was going on in his life when he wrote the book. He says, "The introduction, what being a writer is all about, what he thinks of what people think of his故事, and generates the interest." He hard-boiled, bar-wired, iconoclast, brushed, one-step ahead chiaroscuro camera named Harlan Ellison—all the people who pleaded with them about how famous fantasies are *ouir* dreams, *our* fears, *our* mortal dreads, *transmogrified* rife, the *partner* of my *ouir*, the *partner* of per cent holum, and a lot of fun.
March, 1981
Ampersand
The introductions seem worthy of mention, because they are skewered on the same connecting rod that holds all the stories together, namely Elliott *Love and Happiness*, from behind and out of the literary masque. It is like a child intensely make believing, alternately delighting and alarming it. This phenomenon means that when we save one that ingenuous and lourished Mind, cackling, smirking, commenting wrily, or lifting a what-do-you make o_o of a eyewitness in a flitting moment of characters. There is only the 'woman with the serious smile,' the 'man lying in the fog, and so on.' These particular wranks, we learn at the end of "The Woman With The Serious Smile" the lost bits of the main character. They are 'Malfared', hairless, blind, atrophied, runned." They are 'Damaged, forlorn, but no longer bound to him. Artistic exorcism, problems being worked through in isolation; Ellison is not even concerned with character as an aspect of the story (a particularly funny parody), nor is he hallucinating attempted suicide named Anne Marie *Screwball* has a long-page conversation with the Seven Doards who are planning a bonsai tree on the island. He gets along quite nicely without his *Force*. His force is upon page it-filling readability, as shown in the longer stories. All the Lies That Are My Life go under siege, in one case by symboiosis, in the other by conscience.
Ellison's style is polygol, informed as it is not only by the serious fanatics (Irving, Hawthorne, Poe, and Twain, to name a few of them) but by palp magazines, comic books, radio shows, novels, and other forms of rock. There is a wonderful description of a magic shop in *Shoppe* Keeper, and in *Opium* Ellison's penchant for injecting jokes into macre dreams is at its fierest best. Marie again, slowly bleeding to death from a rabizorble incarnation in her arm.
chimes
"Sailing the catamaran through the reefs of sapphire rocks she made for the island. The wind smelled of it. It was a tide with it the faint tunking of wind
"If it gets too lonely out here, she said aloud, perhaps I start a fast food franchise. Something with Lebanese food, maybe."
That's nice; sort of Bruce J. Friedman with horns or elsewhere, the ribbing gets tiresome, as in 'How's the Night life on Gisela?' in which we're subjected to an endless lynx of real life media celebrations having coins in an alternate universe. When an alternate time/universe happened to deformity suits?
I $ ^{\mathrm{N}} $ PRINT
Clarke Owens
Beyond the Blue Event Horizon
FREDERIK POHL
Ballantine/Del Rey, $9.95)
GEORGE R. R. MARTIN
Berkley, $1.95
New Voices III
In Gaiman master had discovered alien (Heechie) faster than light and knew how the controls worked, but how the controls worked, he pressed "GO" it would take you somewhere. If you were lucky, the alien would attack. If you weren't lucky, you were dead.
The three top awards in $f are the Hugo, the Locus Award and the Nebula Collectively they are science fiction 'Triple Crown,' and in 1978 Fell Pall's Gateau won all three 'Blue Even Horizan' is the sequel
Robinette Broadhead survived three trips, struck it rich and lost the girl he helped to save. But she had a chance to rescue her and save a surviving karibal, along the way becoming the richest man in history. A lot of探险家 tried to destroy the factory, which could convert comets directly into food. An expedition found the factory still working. That wasn't enough.
I didn't breathe turn pages, but I kept coming back to Ilue Event. I didn't care what happened to his people, although I believed in them. The concepts were intriguing, even grand but to late in coming. Poll is a world-reading, but interracial, California worth reading, but Ilue Event is not award quality.
Also every year the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer is given. New Voice III is a collection of ten short stories by nominees and winner (There is a substantial lag before book publication). Fred Poll is typical of state-of-the-art, well-acted writers. Come with the notable exceptions of John Varley, already one of our best.
and Alan Brennett, equally gifted though not as acclaimed, who recently chose to leave the field.
The stories are fresh and *alive*. they reach up and claw out your carotid at tertile white you are not looking. The re is hard to find, but the evidence shows, so as does the tape.
David Lubkin
Live at the Village Vanguard
MAX GORDON
St. Martin's Press. $12.95
this slim volume (146 pages) is an entertaining account by Gordon, the sole proprietor of New York's old jest饼库. Gordon has a way of taking the reader into his confidence as if he overtakes a cup of coffee in the Vanguard and settles for Perkham. Set perhaps Gordon is not the sharp-edged scribe that Nat Hentoff makes
him out to be in the introduction, but Gordon gets his story across quite well.
Gordon was a failed law student, a seemingly unlikely candidate for enrepresencehip, but he opened a depression coffee shop (the Van guard) which featured, in turn, the most glamorous revoice boasting an unknown named Judy Holland, folklershaker Josh White and Leadomics, from Wally Cox to Lemma Bruce. From the early 1950s to the present, Gordon has standily survived as a leading figure it would have been more financially expedient to book rock groups.
The strongest points of the book are Gordon's discursive word portraits of the artists who have played the Van Gogh and his contemporaries and interesting chapter deals with the patron/adversary role he was forced to play with Miles Davis. Don't talk to him. Don't talk to him. You're a white man and don't forget. Dice seemingly enjoyed laughing
his accumulated wealth, offering Gordon the services of his tailor, girlfriend or the use of his luxurious whirlpool bath
By contrast, the chapter on Charles Mingus consists of a kitchen dialogue between Gordon and Mingus that gives Dan Egan, Richard Richmond, We learn more about the politics of Mingus ghostbird Mingus Dynasty, than we do about the man himself. Stories and rumors are often accounted more aca-zately elsewhere.
A final word about truth in advertis-
ing the photo on the duasket collage
gardon with an array of celebrities
in front of the Vanguard. There are also many photos inside, but several of those picture are not men
and women text, save for cautions. To include two of these, they probably never even played the Vanguard, and omit him from the story is less than honest.
Kirk Silsbee
$ \mathrm{I}^{N} \mathrm{B}^{\mathrm{O T H}} \mathrm{E}^{\mathrm{A R S}} $
The Phono Cartridge
Of all the components in your h/ü system, the most improbable, the most unlikely invention of all, is the phono cartridge. Looking like a small, colorful toy, it sits on the end of the treadmill, it is supported to translate the extremely fine grooves in phono records into clean sparkling sound. Further, the stylus must track these grooves at a speed of more than a thousand feet per minute. And while the stylus tracks the whoa that wiggle back and forth a million times a minute.
While doing all this the syllabus jugs a tiny rood, a cadmium, and this, in turn, moves a magnet, or a coil of wire, or a rod of iron, giggling them at the same incredible rate. These are the cables, vaping in the magnetic field supplied by the moving magnet, that change movement into an equivalent audio electric current.
But that isn't the whole story. The phono cartridge must be able to respond to peak amplitudes of about 10 with average amplitudes of less than 0.0001 dB and loudest and softest sounds, and to forces producing accelerations commonly in excess of 1200 times the force of gravity and sometimes greater than 4000 feet. Any astronaut subjected to such force would become subjected to human floblity
As a final requirement, the stylus
must respond uniformly to these changes in amplitude, something that is often called a frequency response, or the response of a terminated uniform amplitude response.
Also, as a crowning insult, the sculpt of the phono camera must travel in the exact center of the record grooves, where it changes shape slightly change in that groove, not moving its own valuation, but only in response to the configuration of the image.
The concept of a photo cartridge is bizarre, but the system does work and works well enough for us to enjoy the music supplied by phono records.
Theoretically, the stylus should move only when forced to do so. But there is a law of Nature that a body in motion tries to stay in motion and a body at rest tries to remain that way. A guitar can produce movements not dictated by its own wills, thus supplying sounds that were never created by an orchestra.
The lower the mass of the styli tip, the more accurately it will track transient signals which require precision coatings to achieve transmission. To reproduce high frequency overtones the styl tip must be tiny so as make good, firm contact with the high frequency modulations in the grooves. But there is a penalty. The greater the tip, the greater the pressure on the tip and the salt is that the vinyl can become de
BOO D
I LIVE RICH
MEN.
I'm RICH.
I LIKE RICH MEN.
I'm RICH
I LIKE SINGERE MEN.
THAT'S ME.
BUT THERE'S ONE THING I ADMIRE MOST IN A MAN...
WHAZZA!
CELIBACY
YOU GOT A SISTER!
BUT THERE'S ONE
THING I ADMIRE
MOST IN A MAN...
WHAT22A?
formed as the stylus travels through it
I LIKE SINCERE MEN.
THAT'S ME.
CELIBACY
YOU GOT
A SISTER!
Univ
Lawr
formed by the style travels through 2. The phono cartridge can ionized capacitors or the preamp. There may be a radical change in response when connecting a cartridge to a different preamp because the electrical characteristics of the cartridge vary with capacitance—can vary from one preamp to the next and not necessarily those of different manufacturers. So while the response of a cartridge may be reasonably flat from 20% to 80% RH, it may so after the preamp gives a grip on it.
D
c
c
m
Not only can the preamp behave in a villainous manner, so can the photo record records are made of vinyl, an electronic material. The line the vinyl is going to push back against the styling. If, when listening to a record you note that instruments have a sort of metallic sound, then you can easily add action (or perhaps, AD-CD).
Jacol after t Commi rezone
By DA
Staff R
If at money
Records aren't perfect, a choice understatement. Manufacturers try to make the pickup cartridge, its headshell and the tormear as light as possible for durability in record warp. But you can help too. Clean records with a professional record cleaner, not soap or detergent and water. Keep records in their protective cover with an antifabric coat with an antithetic drug or an unintended mat beneath the disc. Clean the stylus with a stylus brush and follow the manufacturer's instructions in its manual. Turntable records turntable, push down at the center to make sure the spindle comes completely through the center hole of the disc. Don't play records with the turntables discover in its up position. These don't require a recommendation on tracking force.
"We
Jones,
said re
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Finally, the phono cartridge is a device mechanic working at a tough job. It works by reading off the record surface, an action that won't help the cartridge, the phono cartridge.
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol.91, No.108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
Jacobs, Visciani and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission deataed a setback to JV's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this" Don Jones, JV vice president for mail development,
of the company.
l o s s p i e r g o w t h a r t o l u s d i r f l e c t w o u p p u t a b e l Pla r g r o w m a r c e s e for on t h a r rep er s e c a n z o d z o n d d i v e d m i s w o r Jon
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 376 supported JVJ's proposed project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for VJJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Widgen.
Some of JV's dollars are already paying in the city. A laquette office can attest.
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case befor
50
PLAYER: FOULS
TIME: PERIOD: PLAYED: POLES: POLES:
0 2 20 3
Since the individual requests, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' committee members, according to the committee chairman.
the chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to budget of Regents system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut those requests deeply last month.
After committee action this week, the cam-
pany's budget will be sent to the full Senate in one of three formats.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for tomorrow and Friday to consider the individual campuses' requests for next year.
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation," Hess said. "But don't expect us to be a rubber."
March.1981
Ampersand
Orwell
Kazin
Wilson
Cowley
THE DREAM OF THE GOLDEN MOUNTAINS
Malcolm Cowley, Viking $14.95
STARTING OUT IN THE THIRTEES
Alfred Kazin, Random House $12.95
THE THIRTEES
Edmund Wilson, edited by Leon Edel Farwar, Straus & Giroux $17.50
ORWELL: THE TRANSFORMATION
Peter Stanley & William Abraamis, K罗斯 $12.95
Reliving the Thirties with Cowley, Kazin Wilson & Orwell
BY FRED SETTERBERG
If history occasionally opens a wider door and demands extraordinary participation from ordinary men and women, then the Thirteses, the Depression, the "Red Decade" was such a time. Presently, we are experiencing a renewal of interest in the Thirteses. Given the dreary state of our economy, with high unemployment, promised, uncompelling expression of our political leadership, it should come as no surprise that the Thirteses are once again emerging as a touchstone for our popular culture. As a nation flaunted with the idea of interpreting history through a tapelope of revolving decades, we stand as more-than-willing subjects for this particular brand of history, though strongly enamored of nostalgia, and we can prove as much by the implausible rise and blather of our major public figures. But amid the prevailing notions about the good old days—notions that for the most part are fraudulent, self serving, and bipartisan—there is a more complicated, corrective, and oftentimes ambiguous visi
Now clearly, these memoirs of Thirtesi-
lary life do not provide a man-in-the-scree
spective perspective of the Depression years.
And this is one of the reasons why his
his New Republic, office as including "good
French cooking 'and' "deck tennis on Wednesday afternoons".) Nor do we learn much first-hand about the rise of trade unions, radical political movements, nor government reformism. (For these inside accounts, we might turn more profitably to publishing books like *Order Al Richmond's A Long View from the left*, or library copies of *New Muses*). Rather, it is the peculiar experience of the middle-class, Left-leaving intellectual that is explored here. Or more to the point—particularly given the special status and influence of the four men who were to be president of the contemporary England's finest essayist—it is the keenly documented journey from personal containment to public commitment, from radical sympathies to political action (and back again) that makes these books in interesting and serviceable beyond the nurrow pale of literary criticism. *Mankier wins the fight* (more than some other admits him; that was their way in his tory.*
Of course, we all live in history. But what these four volumes seem to be implying is that we also *rely* on history, and the choices that we now find ourselves facing are not so different from those that were grappled with, agonized over, and finally left unresolved by the activists of the 1930s. I was a literary radical "Alfred Kzinn writes for himself in the early Thirties, 'indifferent to economies, suspicious of organization, planning. Marxist sociology and intellectual thought,""Kzinn would have been speaking for many of his contemporaries were it not for the botherome role of history, the intrusion of world events into the writer's place of purely personal existence.
In the end, it is not so much the story of events that makes these memories so valuable, but rather the portrait of civilization's continuing history of conscience. We are in interested here primarily in the quality of choices; we learn how commitments are made and why we are forgiven. For many of the writers and intellectual profiles by Cowley, Kaizn, and Wilson, or identified with Orwell, it all finally seems to boil down to a matter of simple usefulness: how can an individual, particularly a man of letters, be of some influence in the world? Cowley speaks most perceptively of the moral qualities that writers have to deal with, since the co-responsibility in struggle, the self-imposed discipline, the ultimate purpose ... the opportunity for heroism, and human dignity." At last, it is the universal drive towards community, productivity, and compassion that allows us to identify so strongly with the struggles of Cowley and friends. To para philosopher who had become so fashionable among the 1960's liberal literary establishment, novelists, playwrights, and poets have interpreted the world, the point now is to change it.
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not been submitted committee reports, I don't know if ours (KU) is."
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Rohlm, Ron Heim, R-Topke, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent average increase in tuition for all state universities.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably don't get because the governor didn't recommend them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall expansion at $300,000 for a feasibility study for KU.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the iology department to move from the outdated nd cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
1 contract
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they on't like the meat, Wilson said.
ne rest of the semester. This total of $89.30 a
purchase does not include cafeteria purchase
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall or anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he
The women said that salads did not provide for ll of their nutritional needs.
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
"We complained about paying $70 a month just or saled." Miller said. "That is not a balanced cost."
"If you aren't eating the food, then you wouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
A woman in a white jacket is walking on the street. She looks like she's holding something in her hands.
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan ata
BOC GREENGARD ANKMAN saskatchewan swept into the arena to continue today with a high in the mid 80s.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys
By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Editor
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
Its five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been gries from coaches and fans, who would rather have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLIANTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a 'a second season,' another chance to win the NCAA's automatic spot for the Big Eight.
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the Jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys twice in four days. Playing back-to-back games with the Coyotes in favor of advantages, KU's Head Coach Ted Owens said.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eagle during the regular season at Oklahoma State. The team has won 56-41 in eight seasons.
"IT HELPS IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State." Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crowd tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response."
"It's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous roar team." They
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that get support that we get, and we will really need it."
The Jahayahs will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-8 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and has been traced to him out of the starting lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 8-6 forward, started both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NI and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the NHL.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament and we'll have it for February (34), it would be awfully tough for it to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAYHAWK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was; Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Joie Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darnell Valentine and Missouri forward Rickell Frazier.
The second team was: Jack Moore, Nebraska; Neely, Kansas; State; Chuck Barnett, Oklahoma
Honorable mentions went to Leroy Combs,
Oklahoma State; Teymour Cox, Joun Sund-
ing; John W. Missouri, Missouri.
Five KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
last game in Allen Field House. KU's seniors are John Crawford, Art Housey, Booty Neal,
Valentine and George Thompson.
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's first round Big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.50.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff times Friday are 7:05 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the Iowa State-Missouri game. The game bet-on the winner of Oklahoma-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coaches poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNWUCKERS, coached by former KU
his assistant CHOU, with 126, finished second.
1427
"We were really happy." KU Assistant Coach Theo Hamilton said, "We've been a best job in business. It was a super good team."
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . . they put in 120 percent. It was a total team effort."
Ten Big Eight records were set in the meet including Tudie Mcknight's event-winning leap and the AlMW national champion mark qualified her for the AlMW national championship, which will be held March 13-14 Pocatello, Idaho.
"I'm REAL HAPPY." McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
Kansas finished among the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish in the 220 relay.
Gwen Poss, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-hard hardshell with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Alex Delaplace with a mark of 8.04 qualified her for the nationals.
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
BEHAVIOR
Practice expressing thoughts and feelings clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work interests.
Saturday, March 2, 1981
10:00 AM - 10:30 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(For registration required by March 1st)
For further information regarding the Women's Center at 804-3521
L N
A O
O M
M K
M L
M H
M I
M J
M I
M I
M I
ZEN PRACTICE
Public Talk
Sunday March 2, 3:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
ZEN PRACTICE Intensive Meditation Retreat, March 5-8
TRAILRIDGE
APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth 843-7333
Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments, 2-3-4 Bedroom Townhouses.
• Free Requestball
• Free Webcast
• Free Swimming
• Convenient Location
• On KU Bus Route
Patron
1307 Mass
SK
Tii
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
Monday-Saturday
Murd
"The (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Oklahoma had, but we predicted that we would place third."
PEPIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers had a good chance of winning the national title.
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Jack Oakie
Meek. Amc
graphic pr
graphics
Women's swim team extends streak
731 New Hampshire
By JIM SMALL
Monday-Saturday
9 am-5 pm
Sports Writer
Wed
Due
cl
T
Th
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Nelatiorum.
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its seventh straight conference crown. The
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shown at
Kansas Uni
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PUBLIC SCHOOL
100%
Ampersand
March,1981
NOWHERE MAN
Backpacking the Desert Trails
BY DON ROBERTS
They cannot scare me with their empty spaces Between stars—on stars where no human race is. I have it in me so much nearer home To scare myself with my own desert places." Robert Frost
fier a i-f-n-g winter the mind starts to warp, turns to dementia and homicidal fantasies. It might be too early for you; may easily entertain and devise an infinite variety of ways to skin the household cat. Ah, but outside the jonquils and daffodils have already zipped open green skirts to brazenly exhibit their bright-hued sex organs. These creatures lift into the tender flags signaling a race—a foot race in the gawd-a-friday! I can breathe again, out-of-doors.
Gotta get out ... exchange blood in the eye for a bootful of blisters. Beyond the ever-closing walls, the sedentary-pedantry, and the self accusing notes taken in Beginning Abnormal Psychology 303 (one must start on a career of perversity somewhere), there is redemption. There is the desert, a fragile void waiting to swallow you down into the entrails of nowhere. Do not fear; there is no timed examination at trail's end.
While evicting spiders from the o' backpack and abstinently priming the suction cups on the ancient, unused snakebite kit, one's mind wanderers to the serrated silhouette of a sapphire mountain range. Forget it, Chinggookoop. Unless you adore slogging through Sierra cement (wet, packed snow and ice) you must disregard the temptation of getting Rocky Mountain high. Turn the channel on John Denver and tune in on Death Valley Days—replete with 20 Mule Team Borax and, if you're a lucky cowboy patron, Ronald Reagan.
March, April and May in the U.S. of A. is prime time to trek into an ocean of desolation, the baddest of the bad lands, the gloriously hostile, more than a little dangerous vastness of the Great North American desert.
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol.91, No.108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Viscosa and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas Planning Commission dealt a setback to JVJ's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this," Don Jones, JV vice president for mall development, said. "We'll do the bulk of it."
Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends, as two plump are making a profit without payment.
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PLAYER POLE
PERIOD POLE
PLAYER POLE
0 2 20 3
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached: 376 supported JVJ's nosedo project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for JVJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Wilden.
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case befu
1
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The chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the Board of Regents system-wide proposed Board of Committee cut those requests deeply last month.
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' requests, according to the committee chair.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for tomorrow and Friday to consider the individual campuses' requests for next year.
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
RvGENE GEORGE
After committee action this week, the campa-
men's delegates budgets will be sent to the
Fall Senate in January.
Staff Reporter
Since the individual request, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation," Hess said. "But don't expect us to be a rubber."
March,1981
11
Amnersand
desert regions you will automatically avoid the most pervasive threat to cosmic sanity—the crowd, including: thieving bands of hippies, social climbers (photogenic groupies dressed in those revolting Lederhosen); rabid squads of drug-crazed Girl Scouts, overly affectionate, possum-breathed hillbiles, and the inevitable busloads of retirees with cameras sprouting from their sternums. And don't worry about the possibility of boredom. Ask any Bedouin; it is virtually impossible to be bullied and dulled by the desert. Killed, yes, but never bored.
in his tyrical book, *Desert Notes*, Barry Holstun Lopez comments, "Prepare for the impact of nothing." But don't misconduct his admonition. Between you and that delicious sense of nothiness (a mental more than physical phenomenon) there exists a deceptive abundance of natural stimuli.
In mountainous regions the intensity of the seasons forces all life into periods of ebb and flow. In the desert, wildlife abounds in constant, symbiotic reticence. The animals are there, but they are shy, retiring, wary—as subtle in their movements as the shimmer of heat waves which hover above the formica landscape. If you approach softly you will notice cobwebs, bobcat coyotes, and their stylish style and brand name, mule antelope, bats, birds (including the elegant and mystical raven), lizards, snakes, and a host of exotic insects.
At night, with the scent of helleboe and sage pressing against the desert tarmac, you will be serenaded by a chilling cacophony of cries and whispers. It quickly become evident that the Hollywood conception of howling coyotes is a ridiculous auditory myth; this discovery alone justifies the trip. Although each melody is different,
Okay, you're talked into it; you're ready to part company with the seemingly sane, the rational, the hopelessly predictable. You are ready to saddle up your Detroit steel and follow the bouncing ball into Gila-land. Go ahead, on a chassis, hitchkike if you must, or even straddle a crock-nocket (motorcycle), but do not forget to extricate your civilized arse from the naugahyde once you get inside the environment, particularly the desert, upon which you must wander and suffer to even begin to "see."
There are, fellow mesa mauraders, some practical considerations. First and foremost, unless you prefer to work in the company, never go alone. A kind of companion is also a great accessile when you happen to shatter a kneepiece, on a cactus, or stick
your big toe into a rattlesnake's kisser, it is much more rewarding to panic with a friend. The second important preparatory consideration is the care and maintenance of the most important organ (with the exception of the brain) that the backpacker possesses—the foot, preferably a matching set.
For desert trailing a pair of high-top tennies is usually preferable to those awesome, heavy-truckin' alpine boots armed with three-inch lugs. But foot fashion tends to the individual's own pedestrian prejudices.
coyotes never string together a series of extended OWOW-OOWWWOOO's, as if being tortured by the German S.S. In reality, coyote songs are more in the Miles Davis school — a beat spirited by broken and desperately comical dissonance, more like the shrill laughter and marpi-mer squewing squels of startled school girls.
It is not for nothing that Madison-Avenue advertising agencies airflirt everything from refrigerators to Farrah Fawrott into such desert wonderslands as Arches National museum for surreal film sessions at the apex of monolith.
Pre-seasoning the old peds will also spare you loads of both sheer anguish and Dr. Scholz's foot pads. One week prior to departure spend each evening listening to Roy Rogers' hit recording, "Happy Trails," while soaking your feet in a brine solution composed of one part coarse salt to five parts plain o'l tap water.
Not to be ignored is COLOR, living, breathing, changeable character in the desert realm. Everywhere one looks the stark brilliance of rock and sky, the raw exposition of minerals, assaults the eye. Nowhere else on earth does the wounded stratosphere hemorrhage so freely at sunset.
The following list of provisions will greatly reduce the odds of gambling with your bones.
Essentials for Desert Hiking and Camping
1. Matches in waterproof container. (A Bic lighter, if you don't mind cheating . . . Remember that a "Mojave master" never, never builds a raging infarto. Keep fires small and do not piller lit vegetation. That scraggly juniper close to camp was a resident when the first Paleudug for grubs at its base.)
2. High energy food, (Oatmeal, gorp, Twinkles, anything that constitutes a "mOVEable feast," as Girl from out in the park says), or those birds in flight? Asholeslha Ya see 'em on the highways jumping on the road hills . . . all they eat are the ass-
VEL
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not seen the subcommittee reports, I don't know if ours (KU's) is done."
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topea, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 8 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state universities.
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably can't get because the governor didn't recommend them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall project and $300,000 for a feasibility study for second library.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the iology department to move from the outdated nd cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Vatson Library, could be built near the Military science Building.
1 contract
he rest of the semester. This total of $93.0 a
workday is $89.0 for each day in the
does not include cafeferia labor costs.
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they on't like the meat, Wilson said.
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall or anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he
"We complained about paying $70 a month just or salad," Miller said. "That is not a balance."
The women said that salads did not provide for ll of their nutritional needs.
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
BOB GREENSPAN/Kenan staff
swept into the area. Two girls walk behin-
ontine time with a high in the mid 40%.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
2023-01-27
(1) 1.2
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys
By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Editor
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Our five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been gips from coaches and fans, who would rather have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
ALL COMPLIANTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a "second season," another chance to win the NCAA's automatic goal for the Big Eight.
Kansas, by virtue of its second place Big Eagle State in Alabama and Oklahoma State in Alabama Field House States.
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 60-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the Jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys back-to-back games presents some problem. The cowboys advantage, KU Head Coach Ted Olsen said.
"IT HELPS IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Okinahara State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State." Owens said. "They have that kind of reason. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3.610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crowd tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response."
"It's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous road team. They
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that need it support that we get, and we will really need it."
The Jayhawks will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-8 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and the team sent him out of the starting lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 8-5-forward, started both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NI and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and
I would anticipate that he will be ready to play.
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the NFC.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament when the teams are playing in February (34), it would be awfully tough for us to tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAHYWAK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was: Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Jojo Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darnell Valentine and Missouri forward Ricky Frazier.
The second team was: Jack Moore, Nehraka; Nelly Kaye, Kansas; State, Chad; Barnett, Oklahoma.
Honorable mentee will work to Leroy Combs,
Oliver McGill, and Joe Sundwil for Joe Sundwil
and Steve Stumpf with Missouri.
Five KU players, including three of the players to start tonight, will be playing their
last game in Allen Field House. KU's seniors are John Crawford, Art Housey, Booty Neal, Valentine and George Thompson.
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's first round Big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.50.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket arenas in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff times Friday are 7:00 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the Iowa State-Missouri game. The game bet-ween the winner of Okahanna-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Eig Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coach's poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNHUSKERS, coached by former KU men's assistant Gary Pepin, met the meet with 142 points. Oklahoma, with 185 finished second
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . .
they put in 120 percent. It was a total team e-
fort."
"We were really happy." KU Assistant Coach Two Hamilton said this. "This is the best job in town."
Ten Big Eight events in the meet including Tudie McKnight's event-winning leap jump. The mark qualified her for the AIAW 14-31 Pocatello, which will be held March 13-14 in Pocatello, Calif.
"I'm REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I'm beating in the outdoors."
event finished among the top six in every
kansas except two, including a second-place finish in
Texas.
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 306 at the conference championships.
Gwen Poss, who qualified for the rational championships earlier this season, won the 60-hurdle hurdles with a time of 8.02, edging teammate David Lutz with a mark of 8.03 qualified her for the nationals.
ASSERTIENNESS
BEHAVIOR
Practice expressing thoughts and feelings clearly and directly, situation addressed will include personal, academic, and work settings.
Saturday, March 7, 1981
10:00 AM--1:00 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(Prere Registration required by March 6th)
For further information, contact the Women's
Center at 864-3521.
ZEN PRACTICE
Public Talk
Sunday March 2, 3:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master DHAmer Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
ZEN PRACTICE
Intensive Meditation
Retreat, March 5-8
TRAILRIDGE
APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth 843-7333
Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments, 2-3-4 Bedroom Townhouses.
• Free Receivball
• Free Tennis
• Free Swimming
• Convenient Location
• On KU Bass Route
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Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
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Monday, Seur
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"They (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Oklahoma had, but we predicted that we would place third."
Mur
PEFIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers had a gritty defense, the national title
Two sandy the Keni-
li gring Prig gring
Dunne an long-unser
imagical maltie
Jack Oak Jack Oaks
Meek. Amk.
graphic print (85/98in)
(85/98in)
731 New Hampshire
Women's swim team extends streak
Rv. JTM SMALL.
Monday-5saturds
9 am-5 pm
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its seventh straight conference crown. The
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Natatorium.
Sports Writer
Watt
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holes, leave the rest for the backpackers. That's what those health food factories make their penniman products look like. Kamaroo mice. Dida know that?"
3 A compass that works at least 50 percent of the time. (The kind found in Crackerjacks will not suffice.)
4. Map and itinerary (File your travel plan with a friend, relative spouse, priest, or the local Mountains. Someone has to get a headstart on
5. Desert wardrobe (light-colored clothing that is comfortable and durable bit) the prepared for cold nights. And a hat to keep it fluffy, faintish, like a hat with a brim.)
6. A field knife. (Forget the Che-style guerrilla hardware and macho Jim Bowie meat cleavers.)
Ampersand
11
7. Flashlight and extra batteries.
8. First aid kit. (Plus lip balm and sunscreen potions.)
9. Polarized sunglasses. (It is never a bad idea to carry a spare set of Foster Grants.)
pounds per gallon. Figure at least one gallon a day per person. To purify questionable spring water, boil it for 20 minutes.)
10. WATER and salt tablets. (Remember that water weighs eight
the one out and baggage lst is mercifully brief, there is another lst inside which it should be within which the desert backpacker should indulge ethically with his cortex.
Professor Snakebite's List of Desert No-No's
1 Never set up camp or cut a few zes' n the soft, inviting contours of a gulch. With the approach of a thunderstorm in the mountains or foothills, that jumble in the dirt may become all too transitory, transforming into a dense mail box,堡, terrestrial landscapes, and small owls.
2. Avoid camping within spitin' depths of wet or overcrowded. All kinds of creepers and black widow spiders, loiter on the premises, waiting to ambush you.
3. Do not counsel forced marches during a full sun. Not even Audie Murphy rode out at high noon. Keep a
cool head by hoofing it through the shadows of early morning and evening.
4. Wash out for seep water that tans sulfur, or gulp, even arsenic; A distinctive, bitter odor will usually dissolve in a body of water; cily of water that looks pure as a beer commercial. Desert water that is not scummy, thick with hides of algae and swarming with wringing minutiae is apt to be the final, eternal thirst
5. For those who value the ecstatic qualities of loneliness do not stay too near Las Vegas, sheep droving or near their testing sites, or the Moung Ranch.
state and national narks.
Desert trekking is an addictive form of recreation. Packing into harsh and barren seas of sand is not entertaining, but the search for more amid extravagant quantities of less. According to Thomas Merton, "With the Desert Dathers you have the characteristics of a clean person who lives in social context in order to swim for
When searching for new places to invest do not ignore the so-called "high desert" found in the Columbia Basin, a region of prairies of southern Idaho, the inhospitable outskirts of eastern Oregon, and the un-scarched Sterias of western Utah.
For information and maps regarding those desert areas accessible to the public, simply write to the Parks Dpartment of whichever state harbors a desert area. In order that there are hundreds of out-of-the way priaries, baskets, salt and flair, rather regions which, though rarely intersect, fall within the public do main.
TRAVEL
FOOD & MUSIC &
NEW ORLEANS
BY DON SNOWDEN
one's life into an apparently irrational void."
Perhaps no man can be complete without having first tested the terminal strength of his soul set adrift in the deeds. Don Roberts, an editor of Fly fishing in the West, is based in Oregon, where he occasionally tries into the water.
COO
VOLUME
BASS—TREBL
PLUS RADIO
PULL BALANCE
VOLUME
BASS - TREBLE
PIONEER
FM 1 88 92 96 10
AM 2 54 70 100
PULL RADIO
PULL BALANCE
PIONEER
DC KELVIN SYSTEM
FM 1 88 92 96 10
AM 2 54 70 100
MENU
It was a dancer before
We made this Pioneer car stereo do a little twisting and shaking before it left our factory. Twisting through temperatures ranging from $ - 2 2^{\circ} $ to $ 1 5 8^{\circ} \mathrm{F} $ Shaking 8-100 times a second with forces ranging from 2.9 to 4.4 times normal gravity. Slamming to a sudden 80-G stop from 1760 mph This is the kind of routine every Pioneer
Univ Lawr
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
e v. n F m v. n. r
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Visciosa and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt a setback to JV's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this." Don Jones, VICE president for mail development, 604-758-2990. www.donjones.org
Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends. The telephone office can attest.
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 376 supported JVJ's proposed project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for VJJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Wildeen.
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02203
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JJV's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
the chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the Board of Regents system-wide proposed committee cut those requests deeply last month.
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's renewed attitude toward individual universities' 1982 assets, according to the committee chairman.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for
a consider the individual
campuses' requests for
After committee action this week, the campa-
men's budget grants will be sent to the full Senate in response.
Since the individual requests, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the cuts.
Ampersand
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation," Hess said. "But don't expect ... . . . .
13
The Spanish, French, Cajun, black and old southern cultures that shaped New Orleans provided the city with a cosmopolitan flavor. The city's diverse mix of the Superdome, a concrete monsieur looming above the downtown business center adjacent to the French Quarter, is one reason it doesn't detract from the character.
There are rooming houses in the French Quarter and along St. Charles Avenue (a min d'age) at fairly reasonable convention city so you can about reusing a car, to arrange it in advance. Even without wheels, you should have too much trouble getting around via buses. The St. Charles avenues are particularly of the typical tourist attractions — museums, souvenir shops, steamship cruises and horse-drawn carriage tours are centered around Jackson Square.
Bourbon Street is a lew'd Disneyland for middle-aged tourists. Apart from some hot Disneyland izz, the most interesting sounds come from the
sidewalk spellers — They got their daddies names and their manners frames, took the best honeys horizons due to their trying to try hiding into the clubs.
But, oi. yes, you will吃 well. Connoisseurs of seafood and spicy table fare will dig into Italian and Creole cuisine. You'll find jambalaya, gumbo, red beans and rice.
The Gumbo House (630 St. Peter's
near Jackson Square) offers a
representative taste of New Orleans fries
(jambalay, gumbo, etc.) for $5.6
Toney's Spaghetti House (121 Bourbon Street) is a functional place to score 0 for ambiance but serves good food in the $4.5 price.
Cake De Malone (800 Decur St or Jackson Square) is mandatory in the kitchen. The square doughnut covered with powder sugar — and chicory-laced coffee of sufficient strength to blast caffine into full consciousness with two cups.
Camellia Grill (626 S. Carrollton, off St. Charles) is a counter restaurant serving good short order food—bure-
ers, shakes and a great potato & onion
omelette — for $2-4
ly a's
Pescal's Mandle (1838 Nixonpe) is the place to go if you decide to splurge on $1.02 per person dinner and $4.02 per person restaurant, you can get by on a button down shirt and blue jeans and then be prepared to wait for an hour or so.
Speaking of native places, Buster Holmes (721) burgundy St. in the French Quarter) is a cobalt collar that closes around 6.00 p.m. where the most expensive item on the menu is red shrimp and red beans & rice for $3.00; the next best food is good and you get enough to fill your belly. what more can you ask for?
Everyone automatically associates New Orleans with the Mardi Gras hat, on a native friend's recommendation, or in a music festival and Heritage Festival. Held over the course of two weeks in April, it’s equal parts state fair and music festival featuring everything from gospel and jazz to local homemets like Fats Domino.
Allen Toussaint and the Neville Brothers.
The weekend concerts are held on doors at the Fair Grounds Race Track where simultaneous musical programs can be played. There's no way to absorb everything so buy a program and place your priorities. A number of crafts teen tents offer activities for kids. Louisiana handicrafts, food treat everything from jambalaya to goat ribs and a healthy number of social club events bandes parade New Orleans style.
A special treat is the opportunity to see the Mardi Gras Indian tribes performing their funki, percussive street dance, in a horta that started as a homage to the bonds formed between native Americans and runaway blacks during slavery days. The horta has feathers and plumed headaddresses interfaith with orate semen and bead designs, are hand-made, and no one else on the same costume two years in a row.
to half a dozen locales around the city, including the SS *Pierce*, a bona fide steamship docked at the southern end of Gail Street. Many performers at the weekend also play club dates during the week, allowing the performers to see someone like zydeco long Clifton Chester in intimate surroundings.
During the week, the concerts shift
There are five clubs worth knowing about Tiptinatas (at Napoleon and Teuchontupitula) has a tremendous jugboxes, among other virtues, the blue of the eastern fringe of the French Bride Jed's and Jimmy's are located a couple of blocks apart off the uptown end of St. Charles, as is the Maple Leaf Bar where James Booker, one of the last of the original members of the pianos, holds count every Tuesday.
The Figaro, a readily available weekly newspaper, lists New Orleans' favorite books about the 1981 Jazz & Heritage Festival can be obtained by writing to New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Park, P.O. Box 3764, New Orleans, LA 70550. Telephone (504) 522-4786.
MONO TUN FM1
AUTO FM2
component
104 108 STEREO NR
140 160
70bps
NR
mponent
LOUD
104 108 STEREO NR
140 160
70PS
NR
MONO TUN FM1
AUTO FM2
it became a singer.
model goes through before it goes into our line.
So it can go into any car. Withstand all
of the above.
And always live to sing about it.
PIONEER
The Best Sound Going.
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topea, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not seen the subcommittee reports, I don't know if anyone knew."
©1980 Pioneer Electronics of America, 1925 E. Dominguez Street, Long Beach, California 90810
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But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
ive hat
Two other projects KU wants, but probably won't get because the governor didn't recommend them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall project and $500,000 for a feasibility study for a second library.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Watson Library, could be built near the Military Science Building.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the biology department to move from the outdated and cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
good contract
rve the rest of the semester. This total of $69 30 a
month is the allocation or raw food purchase
eat
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they don't like the meat, Wilson said.
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall for anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he said.
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
The women said that salads did not provide for all of their nutritional needs.
"We complained about paying $70 a month just for saland," Miller said. "That is not a balance amount."
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
TOM PARKER
BOB GREENSPAN/Kensan staff
as rails swept into the area. Two girls walk to continue to time with a high in the mid 40s.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 3. 1981
1.
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Its five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been grips from coaches and fans, who would rather have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLIANTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a "second season," another chance to win the NCAA's automatic spot for the Big Eight. Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eight tie during the regular season, plays Oklahoma
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the Jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys in four days. Playing back-to-back games with the Gators was advantageous, KU's Head Coach, Ted Owens said.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eagle during the regular season, Oklahoma is ranked at 7. The Oklahoma State was ranked at 7.
"IT HELPS IN some ways," Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State." Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crowd tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at host the crowd response.
"It’s vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous roar team." They
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that get support that we get, and we will really need it."
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
The Jayhawks will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-9 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and he will help him out of the starting lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 6-8 forward, both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NI and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the NHL.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament because of the absence of February (34), it would be awfully tough for us to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAYHAWK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was: Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Joo Hunt, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darnell Valentine and Missouri forward Ravier Frazier.
The second team was: Jack Moore, Nebraska;
Nesly, Kansas State; Chuck Barnett,
Oklahoma.
Honorable mention went to Leroy Combs, Ohio State; Tori Cogan, Joan Sundahl, Ohio State; Kevin Missouri.
FIVE KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's big round Big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.00.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mt., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff times Friday are 7:05 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the Iowa State-Missouri game. The game bet-on the winner of Oklahoma-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coaches' poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNHUSKERS, coached by former KU
14 pints. Oklahoma, with 16, finished second
at 14 pints. Oklahoma, with 16, finished second
"We were really happy," KU Assistant Coach Theo Hamilton said. "This was our best job in competition this year. It was a super team effort.
"The team put in more than 100 percent the put in 120 percent. It was a total team effort."
Ten Big Eight records were in the meet including Tudie McKnight's event-winning leap of 1894 in the long jump. The mark qualified her for the Masters and which will be held March 13-14 in Pocatello, Idaho.
"IM REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
Gwen Poess, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-match hurdles with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Katie McKinney and mark of 8.06 qualified her for the nationals.
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
Kansas finished among the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish in the NCAA championship.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
Practice expressing thoughts and feelings clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work settings.
Saturday, March 7, 1981
10AM - 10PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(Principal required by March 6th)
For further information, contact the Women's Center at 864-3532.
ZEN PRACTICE Intensive Meditation Retreat, March 5-8
Public Talk
Sunday March 2, 8:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
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"They (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU knew that we knew that Nebraska and Oklahoma would be better, but we predicted that we would place third."
PEPIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers had a good chance of winning the national title.
Women's swim team extends streak
BY JIM SMALL
Sports Writer
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was uneated this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Natatorium.
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its seventh straight conference crown. The
Unless of shown at Kansas U Friday, S illama are tills us thatas Union 3477. No allowed.
100
BY DEBORAH BAKER
March,1981
BEWARE THE EUROPEAN LEECH
Foreign Studies Programs
Are Not Always ... Foreign
in the spring of her sophomore year in college, a young woman decided to spend a semester of her junior year in France for credit towards her French major for twice the amount of money she earned at home university she was accepted into a program sponsored by a respectable American university. When she arrived in France she found herself living in a dormitory of a dormant student and students were not allowed to study in French professors. Instead of being registered as a student of the area university [in this case, the University of Bordeaux], she discovered that the program was linked to an independent university. She then headed ship to the French university. Consequently, she was not allowed access to the university's library and had to depend upon a feeble selection of books from the city library. She relied on a valuable sense of the French education system and social student life.
The quality of a program set up by an American university depends largely upon the commitment of that university to the program. There is a need to train students to ship students off, entrusting them to the care of "representatives" from foreign universities. There are cases in which the official liaison in the foreign country must be present to status in that academic community. Eminent foreign universities look upon these academic entrepreneurs as leeches, and take steps to prevent an authorized American student from enlisting in halls and using their libraries.
On the other hand, European universities less concerned about their academic reputation repraise American universities and demand extra money. Some rent out dormitories at a stiff price to the parent university in the States, and allow him to use the money for facilities and faculties. Even this does not always mean the use of libraries or the befit of foreign faculty instruction, erer, as well as of a good foreign study program.
There are three basic types of foreign study programs. One is sponsored by an American university in an institution, implied with a British or continental university. The second type is sponsored by a foreign university and aimed explicitly at the American student. The third type is linked with a wholly independent or organization, either foreign or American, and set up in the locale of a foreign university frequently with no reciprocalization from that foreign university.
Such an experience is not unusual. The increasing number of American students choosing to spend their summer holidays in foreign countries corresponding increase in the number of foreign study programs —many of them hoping to exploit the "rich" American college students, hungry for international education that native in their choice of programs.
...aung; because many American universities will not accept independent credit from foreign universities, a
There are, of course, varying degrees of quality among the numerous foreign study programs available to the university. It is often, never, to be very expensive. One way to avoid the prohibitive cost of a foreign study program is to apply diy admission programs in your country. Most European universities are public institutions that are heavily subsidized by the government. Thus foreign students who want to study at the student is not a citizen of the country.
Naturally this involves a more intense approach. These extra commodities, field trips and grade transfers will not have been arranged upon arrival. There will be no AmeriCan homeobioses. Still, the direct experience of a foreign school—its social life and academic standards—will be a far more demanding study program tailored like a tour for retired senior citizens. (Obviously, a confident grasp of the language is necessary to make this experience open to students open their registration to noncitizen students, the crucial source of information is the foreign country's official language.) A warning because many American universities will no longer indenture
Ampersand TRAVEL
BIG GLOBAL FUN
foreign study program may be the only means of acquiring academic credit if it is needed. In this case it is necessary to enroll in an institution or organization with questions that may not be answered in its brochure. Are courses specially designed for foreign students? Will all one's classmates be Americans? What are the qualifications and nationalities of the instructors? Does the student have an official relation with the institution? What does this include—library privileges, faculty instruction, membership in student organizations? Do foreign students do not accept any foreign undergraduates, independently or in a foreign study program, though there are many summer programs and even winter programs conducted in their vicinity.
Finally, before even considering a foreign study program it is necessary to evaluate one's academic and personal expectations of a foreign study experience. The questions that stem from this consideration are important as the questions asked of the program. What sort of living accommodations would be preferred, family or dormitory? Could the student be taught in English or the security of American classmates to make friendships and speak the language of the country? Would the student be happier travel under the supervision of a known superior or guideur by personal ambitions and expense?
country can be an invaluable experience if one is wise in the selection of a program. Even if one's college or university doesn't offer programs, it is important to compare them with others. Where would one rather be—Baris or Bordeaux? Is it possible to save money for more pleasurable experiences? How demanding is the program in academic standard? Does it allow for personal initiative, time for travel? How can one prepare for the course of the student in the foreign study program, the more expensive it will be and, perhaps, the less will be gained from the experience.
Living and studying in a foreign
For more specific information about foreign study programs, Deborah Baker suggests the following publications
The New Guide to Study Abroad 978-1079
A. Garrrey, Lily von Klempner,
Cyril J. Hattar, Taylor & Row, New York.) "A practical, authoritative, and up-to-date book of year and summer programs for high school college, university students and teachers."
U.S. College Sponsored Programs
Abridged
Gall A. Goben (ed.)
Vacation Study Abridged
Gall A. Goben (ed.)
G
Publications of the Institute of International Education, clearing house for foreign study information, 809 United Plaza, Plaza, New York, New York 10072
BY
THE "KEY" TO A GREAT SPRING BREAK
BY ALISON NELSON
A mere sixy miles from Cuba, Key West is the most南most point in the world. It offers a string of tiny islands off the coast of Florida called the "Keys." Key West is rapidly becoming the springtime mecca for college students from around the world.
It's an annual predicament. As spring break approaches, many college students get the urge to go on vacation with friends and funds, with parents who think the ideal spring vacation is a week at home with the family. Sunny days are better for students to enjoy a fabulous Florida vacation without running into debt or staying at Aunt Sally's condominium in Tampa it's called 'camping in Key West.'
Vacationing in Key West needn't be expensive. Those willing to travel on the economy plan "forging such luxuries as plane flights and hotel room canals" for themselves, as for little as $150 per person. Besides traveling's checkers, all one needs are summer clothes, sun-tan衣, a tent and a sleeping bag. Car owners will be spared the hassles of finding a ride down, but if you own a gasar motor may need to find a couple of friends to share expenses.
Once in Key West, most college stu
Those who arrive at Bovin's on a Saturday have the best chance of getting a fairly decent camp site in the shade under some trees, with a small picnic table nearby. The less fortunate are those under the blazing sun, on camping on something kinky to kitty litter. If the campground is temporarily full, the best place to go is not the beach or a public park, but rather to college high jinks, and those包队 can in unaffected areas often end up in jail for several days, awaiting bond money from their parents. Fortunately, there are several other camps in the area that a father away from town and the beach
sits on a budget stay at Boyd's Campgrounds. Boyd's is reminiscent of the migrant camps where the Joads are placed in places rather dummy-looking, but everyone is friendly and willing to share food, beer, and a helping hand in putting up a tent. While far away from the city, they telephones, and at $6 per night for two people, the price can't be beast. The campground sponses inexpensive souls and snooker lessons, and is loophole-free from tow and the public beaches.
Except for sleeping, showering, and a couple of campite dogs, student campers spend most of their time at the backyard or on the deck. The called Old Key West. There the streets
are lined with charming boutiques, shops, restaurants, bars, theatres, and gift stores. You'll most money usually spend in here. For those with a weakness for unique and beautiful clothing, Bahama Mamma's on a sunny day will feature stunning handpainted dresses skirts, bathing suits, and men's shirts all originals by proprietor Vaughan
One night ritual that no one will want to miss is the sunset gathering at Mallory Pier. overlooking the bay; they walk around to gather to watch the sunset and be entertained by jugglers, musicians, dancers, and other local characterists; they are old fellow renowned for his unusual pets. When the sun finally dips below the horizon, all activity stops and there is time to enjoy, followed by a round of apeluses.
After the sunset, a favorite before-dinner stop for students is a sand near the pier called *Cinch Conch* for an afternoon meal. You can pay $15 per dozen. For a more substantial meal, there are several Cuban restaurants that offer both local color and low prices. Yes, it is possible to eat Cuban sandwiches, black beans, conch chowder and sangria without blowing an austere budget. At places like Cacique and Al Mar dinner for two will cost $10 or more. (Continued on page 19)
Univ Law
Dearborn Baker spent the last year reading *English and History* at Con bridge University and working in London as a research assistant. She is now at the University of Virginia and claims she is bright and beautiful.
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MOSEYING AROUND EUROPE... PODNER
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BY RICHARD LEVINSON
Relax the处 is lousy with cowboys and if you carry a battered guitar along too, you'll probably be ask for help. They'll tell you to get invited to the best parties. Not only will you score big with the locals as you *sunter*, legs bowed, down the Champs Elysees but in least two larger final establishments made just for you.
h. Europe, where the river Thames thunders out of the Alps and floods lazily past sturdy Dutch dutch towers vigorously over the houses of Parliament, where every street corner is filled with bourgeois German hosing festive gloses of Ouzo and dancing fashions of a traditional flamenco guitar戏
The Studio (41) Rue du Temple, Paris is an honest-to-gut goey TeX/Mexican stacks from Notre Dame Rose Restaurant, a renowned entrepreneur, the Office offers chill at least as good as most urban bars and restaurants of tortilla dishes. It's also a good place to meet American peer groups. The address is a very dark alley leadway and the office is right outside the location is located, but not be put off by the *dinners*. The Studio is warm and friendly, and on certain nights an American bluegrass band plays later in the evening.
Well, fine, but, being the stylish sort you are, you are also heavily invested in the so 'couleur cowboy trend. What, you say? Is it really a kind of thunk of your tall-in the saddle look?
In Amsterdam, the Bronco (1 block from the Amsterdam Sonesta IX hotel in the Centurium) is a full-fledged Urban Cowboy bar complete with live C & W music and a fucking machine. One gets the feeling that it may be even more fun than playing, and will be just as hasty rebuilt to cash in on the next one. No matter. The drinks are real drinks, the waitresses are the most beautiful ones you ever see in a country bar, and while you are eating passable pie, you’re going to Amsterdam everybody asks. (Sample answers. Yes, you can in some places. Yes, there are lots, at competitive prices.) While there, find out how to get to the Last Water Holder, which is a good place where you’ll just find what you’re looking for if you catch my wait.
Have a nice trip, and don't worry a bit about the fact that when you get back home from school, you will be Lordenherder, and you won even be able to Goodwill you make your own班会.
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Visciani and Jacobs is doing just after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt a setback to JVJ's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this," Don Jones, JV vice president for mall development, said. "We're targeting 250,000 customers."
Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends, as two plump marmot endorsers have done.
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 379 supported JVJ's proposed project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for VJJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Widleen.
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case
5.0
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KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' committee requests, according to the committee chairman.
The chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the effort of Regents system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut those requests deeply last month.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for
the Wednesday and Friday to consider the individual
communities.
After committee action this week, the campuses' and Regents budgets will be sent to the full Senate in one bill for debate.
Since the individual requests, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did. Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation." Hess said. "But don't expect
HERE THEY ARE
Results of The First Annual Readers Poll
At last, we are keeping that promise — here are the results of The First Annual Amplers and Readers Poll Calm down, now. Please hold your applause until all the winners are introduced.
The best rock album of 1980, a hands-down no-contest winner, was *The River* by Brian Springwater. Rump up (about half as many songs) was Billy Jack's *Glass House* trailing but with half the tone and length. The Wall by Fine Royd and Emg Glass by Pete Townshend.
Best Chemical Albums (nearly a Ga): Perotecto's Greatest Nits and Beekermann's 8th Symphony.
Best Jazz Album; Jeff Beck's There & Back sedded out Herb Alpern a Rise by one vote. Among the 8 remaining albums named there was an 8-way tie, including Dee Jonah (in Georgia) and the likes of The Dirty Dozen (in Georgia) and Brian Lennon (in Georgia) by Brian Lennon Gassoon by Slewey Dan Extensions by Manhattan Transfer, and Corsalee by Syrgy Rope.
E:
The Beat Gold Album, leading the pack by a week margin; Off the Wall by Michael Jackson. Second —朵咪.Mr.Bye. Ms.
The Best Country and Western Album, the Golden Gate Soundtrack,
was released in 1980. It is a musical epic set on the beach and
is sung with an extraordinary grace. The greatest hits for second time.
Best New Songs, sing to Springwater, for "Jungle Heart" followed by Dove's "Whip it and Guests" "Another One吹 the Bone."
Top movie choice was Ordinary People, which ranked up greatly one more than The Simpsons Sutton Bank, which had 9 votes more Dan Blackman Man. Also rated The Shaking Forms, Caddyshack,
The Stonewall and Allegiant.
Best Christmas Blues naturally, new Rewilds’ “Bolaria” to the movie of George J. White the jazz star was Alabama ‘Rise,’ Wes ‘Little,’ “Udle Down” by Diana Rose, followed by George Benson’s “Give Me the Night.” Country & Western ‘Lady,’ by Karen Rogers, then “Driving My Life Away” by Eddie Rabbit and “Looking for Love,” by John Lee.
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Picture shows Morel Monroe nine times David Holman; second Brooke Vane Robert Redford, then Jack Nelson, Chris Eisenwood and David Burtley each jameson chocolates.
Farouche Ravishne Girisha Dhar Jr. Jamee Neume. Training in her wake was many Mary Tyler Moore, Marcia Gorman, Gochelle McGill, Jill Claremont and Sally Sheffield.
The Best Recording Artist, no doubt about it, with nearly three times as many votes as any other artist — Springington again. Galloway plays in the distance were Billy Joel, Jackson Brown, Baird Marshman and Pete Townshend.
Best Female Recording Artist, with not quite twice as many on number 2, who Pet Denzel. Register 1: Burke Sternhead, followed by Linda Romney; Carly Simon and Donna Summer.
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Broad Street Band will go public, Spring Festival and the & Street Band, followed by Touche Theatre BBD on Sunday, the Closet, all mixed for second place.
Assoc. Director, Jesse the Smith, Group Management and Mark S. Branson Board, both of which are in charge of sales, marketing and support for the New York City and New Orleans offices. Send resume to Jesse the Smith, Group Management, 205 Broadway, New York, NY 10026.
Best Once-Time TV Special — a first place between Seeded Stretch and Playing for Twin, second place you won by kanye West special, and third place was a three-way tie. Steve Meyer's special. The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour (necally two shows both), and Bendoff on Broadway.
Jim Crowley, Hornsby-Greene District, M.J. S.H., Knee Pain, Dallas, 901 Minuteman, South, and
Lewisville
**Historic Homes in the District:** Home four times the size of Chichester, Macdonald and Palmer, with historic interiors. Each house has four grand dining rooms, Garrison and Taffer, kitchen and living room.
Best Station home, Great King Hone a four farm in collegiate; The Scholar's Hone a four farm; The Grand King and Flammerer for third farm. Second place—The Lord of the Rings. Only Firestorm was published in 1980; the others are ancient history.
First play. The Elegant Man, with lines as many as poems in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.
Best Notion Book you've ever read. Biography, Ancestor Gems Get
Collaborated. Collected essays. The Real New York. Townhall Writings and the
Townhall Anthology.
Other job performance based salary. Prior, Nancy Williams and Robbie DangerGeld did for Lisa M., while Bill Cipio and Sage Rosen did for Susan.
Burt Hartman Andrew Young scored first place, by Gorilla Steenan, Ralph Marner, Mal Bard (the voice of Buga Bunny, among others). G. Gordon Liddy, Woody Heyes, Vincent Price and Leo Buzziga tied for third place. Who is Lao Busceala?
But really, dear readers, we expected great, unusual, off-beat pearls from an informed, intelligent, educated audience like yourselves. What did we get? Top 40 Best sailor Big deal
We're going to do this again next year . . . and we're going to keep doing it until you get it right.
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not seen the subcommittee reports, I don't know if they are."
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Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topea, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
ive hat
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state universities.
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably won't get because the governor don't recommend them, are $4.6 million for the Haworth Hall project, $400,000 for a feasibility study for a second library.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Watson Library, could be built near the Military Science Building.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the biology department to move from the outdated and cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
good contract
eat the rest of the semester. This total of $63.30 a
mch purchase
cate and does not include caterer labor costs.
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they don't like the meat, Wilson said.
be "There's enough at the salad bar at any hall for anyone to have a good, balanced cheese," he cait
be
The women said that salads did not provide for all of their nutritional needs.
"We complained about paying $70 a month just
for salad," Miller said. "That is not a balanced
to
ons Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
for "If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
P. W. L.
as rals swept into the two. Girls walk behind
ced to continue today with a high in the mid 60s.
BOB GREENSPANK kansaan talla!
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 3. 1981
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Our five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been grips from coaches and fans, who would rather have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLIANTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a "second season," another chance to win the NCAA's automatic spot for the Big Eight.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eight during the regular season, plays Oklahoma State. The Bills beat the
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys to top-to-top-game back games presents some problem, but they advantage, KU's Head Coach Ted Owens said.
"IT HELPS IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State." Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crowd tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response."
"it's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous road team. They
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that give support to we get, and we will really need it."
The Jayhawks will have one nighton that they didn't need very bad Saturday. Six-foot-8 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and he has stopped him out of the starting lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 8-4 forward, started both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NI and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the NL.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what's important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament that we want to get to the secretary (35), would be awfully tough for us to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAYHAWK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was; Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Jojo Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darnell Valentine and Missouri forward Fawkler.
The second team was: Jack Moore, Nehaska;
Nellyen, Kansas; State, Ohio; Barnett,
Oklaunce, Kentucky.
Honorable mentions went to Leroy Combe,
David Dillen and Steve Stapvayle, Missouri.
Five KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's first, round Big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU LD. Public tickets are $5.50.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff time Friday are 7:05 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the Iowa State-Missouri game. The game bet-winner of Oklahoma-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coaches poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNWALKERS, coached by former KU
14 points, Oklahoma, with 128, finished second.
14 points, Oklahoma, with 128, finished second.
"We were really happy," KU Assistant Coach Theo Hamilton said. "This was our best job in competition this year. It was a super team effort.
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . .
they put in 120 percent. It was a total team ef-
fort."
Ten Big Eight records were in the meet including Tudie McKnight's event-winning leap to the high jump. The mark qualified her for the AIM at Philadelphia, which will be held March 13-14 at Pocatello, Idaho.
"IM REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "Thus jump tells me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
Gwen Poss, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-yard hurdles with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Mason Ripley with a mark of 8.06 qualified her for the nationals.
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
Kansas finished among the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish in the 220 relay.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
Practice expressing thoughts and feelings clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work settings.
Saturday, March 7, 1981
10:00 AM--1:00 PM
Washington Room
Kansas Union
(Pr-registration required by March 6th)
For further information, contact the Women's Center at 864-3532.
ZEN PRACTICE
Intensive Meditation
Retreat, March 5-8
Public Talk
Sunday March 8 & 2:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
TRAILRIDGE
APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth
843-7333
Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments,
2-3-4 Bedroom Townhouses.
• Free Racequetball
• Free Tennis
• Free Swimming
• Convenient Location
• On KU Bus Route
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to us
Women's swim team extends streak
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
731 New Hampshire
Monday-Saturday
p.m-5 p.m.
Patrol
1975
PEPIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers had a g"
T
1307 Mass
"They (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Iowa would win, but we predicted that we would place third."
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Natatorium.
SC
By JIM SMALL
Mure
Sports Writer
Two early
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John Hatt takes his time. He in no rush to bore his soul, despite the comfortable melancholy that settled over the
Unless of shown at Kansas U
Friday, S films are 18
Sasun Asia 3477. No lowed.
Santa Monica bar. It's one of those marmoset, three quarters drunk in a world away wherephyospilhizing it, but forgotten bymorning light.
Slight, pale, dressed in a blue windbreaker, jeans and a pair of battered buckles, the 28-year old Inno looks very good as he intently wary the message, couched in some masterful body language, is not "too close." He responds with a look of relief, leaning into them across the table or pulling back in his chair, returning each hip with dislain, bemusement or gratitude. He rests in his high forehead and elegantly expressive eyebrows — he's reached a conclusion, but he's not done with a thrim.
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Nothing, that is, until the warning moments of this precipitous night. Up now it has been sticking to the facts and, granted, it a pretty rejoice in his heart. Hunt first looked the rock and roll bear's eye in the ear at eleven
He played guitar in the obituary string of Midwestern garage bands, lied about his age to club owners, dreamed the journeyer's dream. It's the same old story with one important detail: he didn't do anything else. He wasn't building onto a CPU degree or a job in a rubber plant in case things didn't work out Hardly. Tucked into the middle of the seven-member焊 brood, he took his single opinion very seriously He was taken at 16 At 18 be told in Nashville.
"It was heaven," he confides, recalling those first two years in Music City. He had landed a 425-a week staff writing at big Tree Publishing, lived in a township on a screen sited on a diet of hard-rigged cigarettes, baloney and beans. An auspicious start, but the Nashville tenure proved ultimately a deadend. There was a ceramic necklace, kept up, highly personal songs and the preening rhinestone aesthetic. Later, of course, all sorts of people worked out he was a half of a writer. Three Dog Night glanced a middling smile at me. "I'm Conway Twiny's cut" from *Hearty Years* was number one country. There were soundtracks, a movie of the Week score, lots of appreciation from left wing critics. It was srict, well-buten and sirtle, well-buten and beans.
Ampersand
in 78 that he got down to the serious business of his destiny.
That year, LA was in the threes of its new wave seizure. The club scene was percolating nicely and the ARR Ein Theater had been the best place to every hour on the hour. Enter Haiti, with a new band and a batch of songs that kicked up lots of attention pronto. A year later he released his second album, Two Bit Monsters in October of 80.
was taking a lot of risks, throwing a lot of curves. Nobody knew what to do with it and even the matter of those two Epic LP. The fate of Haitu 'Around the Observatory and Orchestra', both released in 74, was a crash course in the ritual music of their instruments on artists. Both were marked by a lyric whim that seems utterly alien to Haït's later persona, and both went absolutely nowhere, thanks to a subsequent wandering minstrel period — a wear playing coffeehouses and club clubs in 34 states and most of Canada — was hardly a feast for musicians to deal with its kind of emotion. The remark has the ring of classic understatement. The fact was Haït was no more a folle than a fool in RB and what he calls its white variant' — rock and roll — but it wasn't until he came to Los Angeles
In retrospect, Haiti's ascent up the ladder of critical responsibility has a sort of astrological inevitability to its Jaundiced, often cynical, always unaware of his past, his paranoia and purpose came along at just the right time. He was called the American Elvis Costello, a term which did nothing to enclose its subject to the rock press, and his MCA output was not new but our new wave's post-news direction.
"It was a unique time." Hiatt admits
"I mean, when a guy like me could
The record buying couldn't have cared less. After a dismal sales run, Hair switched managers, was extracted from the MCA deal and formed a new hand. He also did some recording on Björk's *Lover*. But he got better. The *The Way We Make a Broken Heart*) that resulted in his hiring on as
March.1981
a member of Cooder's road band for a Euro-American tour, winding up in March.
All of which brings him to this particular jacqueline, in an empty bar, staring monolky at an astrahum full of bulls and trying to address some pointed questions about a checkered career emancipated by egmantic body of work. It's not easy.
"I'm really optimistic," Hatt has been insisting throughout most of this boozy evening in downtown Santa Monica. It's been a hard statement to carry around, but I'm feeling forebodingolic of his music. That's part of the problem," he parties, especially with rock critics. They put him up for criticism with Dylan and I don't think I'll ever forgive him for it. I think I handle the characters in my songs with a lot of tenderness. If that means pointing out problems, that between them and me."
Maybe Hiatt's positive dread of ex
CLOSING IN
-ON-
JOHN
HIATT
BY DAVIN SEAY
planning his business beyond what a living in the groves extends to his role as a new wave, weatherwise. "The new wave is not just a band with a shrug," I mean there was a big orchestra three years ago, but the lads are now playing it on the radio. It’s Kenny Rogers and Pat Bernat. And the Clash know every detail of that band, but I sure can figure it out.
A long silence happens. What really seems to be eating Haiti are those con man demands for rebellion, as restless something to the press and public.
"I just want to be loved and adored by millions. That's part of my problem," he concedes, watching a patrol car cruise Ocean Avenue. "I mean, if selling records is the point, I'll be a perfect custodian of success." I will never put out a crumdy record and I'll never do a crummy need to know?
What else indeed? Well, there's Hint's well publicized discontent with nearly every aspect of his recorded output, in direct contraction to his no-crummy product show. "Let's face it. I'm a show learner," he courted me. "I can't tell you all the stills a mystery to me. after four albums I never had enough money or time to do things right. I need to play with a band that weren't a bunch of dogs on here where do you find a producer with the gold coke snap around his neck?"
Abruptly, Haitt changes tack Yes, he concedes, he's been surrounded by a "bunch of assistants for a long time now, but how have they been able to get him? He's got some high power management, a decent company and a lot of lucrative recording offices. (Warner Bros is a distinct possibility.) He lives in a nine house in the Holl Park area where wife and cat What could be better?
will all these good times change his music? Is he going to start writing songs that will not be in the instead of ones who die in motorcycle accidents, get old to fast or need more money?
Exasperation wells beneath those lowering eyes. Dumbly, the Gritty Interview Moment has been the topic of much what I think? he snaps. "Sure, every thing is corrupt, except maybe my cat. Do they need me to tell them that I'm a real musician. I am just not. I see the guitar, I don't play it. Rock and roll is a limited form of expression who should other people?"
Univ
Lawr
There's no stopping him now. If weren't doing this, I think I could write good short stories. I like John Foster Dixon and Ann Bradley. Flannery O'Connor she wears her Catholicism well. I was raised a Catholic, so I've always eventually have to face in my mind.
Dc
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The sound of the hatterer's fingers drumming on malagony abruptly dissolves the tension. The moment has passed. The interview is over.
By DA Staff R
"I'm afflicted with gulls." Hatt says, rising and touching a band of change on the table. "Sometimes, I'll do some thing without thinking and have to live in the room for a long time. Like this interview. But that's okay. I appreciate the grasshaw."
It seems to be close as anyone's going to get to John Haiti's creative pro-production floor, and the front door, holding it open. Haiti, hung against the cold art, is looking at you with a smile.
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DAN EICHOUTZ
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
Staff Reporter
By DALE WETZEL
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Viscosi and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt a setback to JV's bid to regreeze a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this," Don Jones, JV vice president for mail development, wrote. "We're working to get it out there."
Some of JVL's dollars are already payed individually. Includes rent, insurance, a luxury car attest.
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 376 supported JVJ's proposed project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for JVJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Widney.
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case
50 TIME OUT PLAYS POOLS TEAM POOLS 0 2 20 3 1
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
By GENE GEORGE
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' assets, according to the committee chairman.
Staff Reporter
the chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the success of Resigns system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut reports deep last month.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for
homestead and Friday to consider the individual
committees.
After committee action this week, the campaign budget for Legents budgets will be sent to the full Senate.
Since the individual requests, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation," Hess said. "But don't expect
March,1981
Ampersand
ONSCREEN
Tess
starring Natasia Krishi, Peter Firth and Leigh Lawson, written by Gerard Bracan, Roman Polanski and John Brunjainny, based on Thomas Tess and Tess of the Dübervilles, directed by Polanski.
Tess (Kinski) is a beautiful young late-19th century English countrywoman, poor but proud, whose life is changed forever when her washer father learns the family may be connected to the aristocracy—they could be sent off to meet, and sent off to meet, and extract money from their supposed rich relations, the scion of the manor (not related after all, but a rich family that simply bought the land and land) rapes and keeps Tess until she summons him. She begins her life in beginning, Tess trudges stolically through poverty and grinding labor, suffers the birth and death of an illegible child, and for a brief summer finds love and happiness and a husband (Hirth, in a remarkably restrained performance) before her inevitably tragic end.
Polanski filmed *Tess* in France, because he feared extradition to this country if he wandered too close to England. He even recreated Stonehenge somewhere in France, and packed German-born Kinski on to live with a Dorsetshire family for a year to learn the proper accent (she didn't quite). Polanski's landscapes are beautiful. But when he goes back, he keeps reminding us, in the smallest details that this story does not have a happy ending—and this makes the few genuinely joyful moments all the more poignant.
One scene in particular has taken root in my mind; when Tess child (whom she loves in spite of its shameful origins) dies in a plane crash, the village no doubt casts no hardships nor nobards allowed near the good dead people of the village. At night, in defiance of her vicar, church, and townpeople, she buries the baby in the cemetery and erects a pathetic little wooden cross.
Kinski, for all her sensuously innocent beauty (her resemblance to the young in grid Bergman is downright eerie) never convinced me she really understood Hardy's heroine. Tough and resilient, stubborn and practical, Tess is a wonderful invention straightforward and honest in an age when women were expected to be elinging, pious and sensible. But Hardy sad looks are not quiet enough, Tess should have some fire and spirit, too. But while Kinski may not bring enough to the role, she doesn't detract from it.
DAN EICHOUTZ
Polanski frames his actors precisely and emotionally (but never sentimentally). He is a masterful manipulator, a man who never fails to get the point. He can casually slip a dagger into our hearts.
Tess may not elicit sobs in the theater, but the sadness linger after.
Judith Sims
Every Man for Himself
starting Isabelle Hooper, Jacques Dutrane and Natalie Bubie, written by Jean-claude Carrere and Anne-Marie Miestefal; directed by Jean-Luc Godard
In *Every Man for Himself*, avante garde director Jean-Luc Godard (Breatheless Weekend) not surprisingly opens for style and mood rather than plot and characterization, but the film's style is mostly baffling, and its mood, on those occasions when the story is comprehensible, is depressing. It contains enough references to incest and anality to occupy an army of psychiatrists for years, and Godard's stylistic flourishes (stop motion, for example, and soundtrack manipulations) are regarded in certain film circles as a hallmark of Godard's art, but the only blessing a general audience is likely to find in this idiosyncratic work is its relative brevity (87 minutes). If not for Godard's technical skill and vaunted reputation, the movie might easily be dismissed for obscurity and pretentiousness.
The Dutrone character is blatantly autobiographical; in addition to being a director, his name is Godard, and he is hit by a car (several years ago Jean-Luc Godard had a serious car accident). But like Woody Allen in *Stardust Memories*, Godard lacks the ability to articulate criticizes, mocks, and alienates his audience. (In a faint and not altogether successful way, Godard may be trying to demonstrate that in a world full of whores, he alone is pure.) Goddard may have retreated from the excesses of his Maist film, but it has been a powerful tool yet eschewed an essentially solitistic and indulgent approach to moviemaking.
Robert L. Liebman
The Return of the Secaucus Seven
Featureting Mark Arriot, Gordon Clapp, Maggie Adamowicz, Adam Lefevre, Jorge MacDonald, Jean Passante, Mike Renzi, David Karris, Karen Karrt, written and directed by John Sayles.
A handful of old college friends gather for a weekend in smalltown New England. Nothing much happens a little basketball gets played; several pounds of hamburger are pounded into patty, fried, and then consumed; someone drinks too much wine or beer, so they spend the course of this film, no critical decisions are made, no ideals forsaken; there isn't the tuff of terror nor pity lying about here. What does occur is far more prosaic, far more realistic than the fables and characterizations we are accustomed to seeing on the screen Again, the actors are all quite good; you don't get much than you, me, or any of our closest friends. And that is precisely what makes this charming, funny, talky film so irresirable.
Ten years ago, on the road to an anti-war demonstration in Washington, DC, a small group of young college students, VISTA volunteers and dropouts found themselves waylaid and arrested (charges dropped) in Secaucus, New Jersey; thus, with appropriate self-depreciation, the Secaucus Seven Now, continuing with their lives, they struggle to make some sense, and some joy out of a rather different world. They teach high school, go to medical school, work for a law firm, or being it big on the record charts, none of them can be noted, is employed on Wall Street. Their aspirations have leveled off, or rather, caused upon good friends, good work, love, family, and some measure of justice; they are idealists in a non-heroic fashion, equipped with irony and a prevaling sense
of humor. They're good company, familiar and generally admirable in words and tone.
Novelist John Sayles, author of the National Book Award nominee, *Union Dues* has written and directed a marvelous evocation of one generation's shared experience. It's roughly made ($60,000 budget, originally shot in 16 mm, nicely cast, and beautiful scripted). What's more, the realistic eye of *Nocassus Remains* reminds us of how truly awful and off the mark were all those people who gave up to the *Gatsby Statement* and *Getting Straight Now*, at last, someone has made a film about the post-Counterculture who knows what he's talking about, someone with the wit and skill to hammer it all together.
Fred Setterberg
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"we'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not known what reports committee reports, I don't know if our (KU's) office is."
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topke, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
ive hat
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state universities.
Money to cover enrolment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the biology department to move from the outdated and cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Watson Library, could be built near the Military Science Building.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably won't get because the governor don't recommend them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall project and $100,000 for a feasibility study for a second library.
good contract
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall for anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he said.
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they don't like the meat, Wilson said.
r eat the rest of the semester. This total of $99.30 a
mod. student allocates one purchase
eat
The women said that salads did not provide for all of their nutritional needs.
"We complained about paying $70 a month just for meal," Miller said. "That is not balanced money."
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to navi for it," she said.
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansaan a left
as rulers swept into the field. Two girls
cited to continue today with a high in the mid 40s.
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Its five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been grips from coaches and fans, who would rather have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLAINTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight is Colorado, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a "second season", another chance to play in the conference.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eight during the regular season, plays Oklahoma at 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday.
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the Jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys twice in four days. Playing back-to-back games with the Giants was a big advantage, KU's Head Coach, Ted Owens said.
"IT HELPS IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State," Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crowd tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response.
"It's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous road team." They
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that he support that we get, and we will really need the team."
The Jawahars will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-9 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and has helped him out of the starting lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 8-4 forward, started both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NI and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the N.Y. Jets.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament and then go on to the honors (34), it would be awfully tough for us to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAYHAWK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big-Eight team last night. The first team was: Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Joo Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Ricky Valentine and Missouri forward Ricky Frazier.
The second team was Jack Moore, Nebraska; Nealy, Kannas State; Chuck Barnett, Oklahoma.
Honorable mention went to Leroy Combs,
Honorable Stats. TGI Corp. and Juno
Sundevil.
Five KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's first round Big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.50.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tippot times Friday are 7:06 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the Iowa State-Missouri game. The game bet-deration is for the winner of Oklahoma-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is for 9:06 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLEKS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coaches' poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNHUSKERS, coached by former KU men's assistant Gary Pepin, wore the meet with 142 points. Oklahoma, with 126, finished second.
"We were really happy. " KU Assistant Coach Theo Hamilton said. "This was our best job in coaching."
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . . they put in 120 percent. It was a total team effort."
Ten Big Eight records were in the meet including Tudie McKnight's event-winning leap of 19.3% in the long jump. The mark qualified her for the NCAA championship, which will be held March 13 in Pocatello, Idaho.
"I REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
Gwen Poss, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-hour hurdles with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Jamie Stryker with a mark of 8.05 qualified her for the national.
Kansas finished among the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish in the 220 relay.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
Practice expressing thoughts and feelings clearly and directly, situations addressed in personal, academic, and work settings.
Saturday, March 7, 1981
10:00 AM - 1:00 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(pre-registration required by March 6th)
For further information, contact the Women's Center at 864-3522
ZEN PRACTICE
Intensive Meditation Retreat, March 5-8
Public Talk
Sunday March 8, 2:30pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
TRAILRIDGE
APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth 843-7333
Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments, 2-3-4 Bedroom Town-houses.
• Free Receiptball
• Free Tennis
• Free Swimming
• Convenient Location
• On KU Bus Route
Patror
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boysd Coin
& Antiques
Monday-Saturday
New Hampshire
SK
Muri
"The they (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU staff felt that Nebraska and Oklahoma be ahead, but we predicted that we would place third."
PEPIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers had a g*
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Jack Akef
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Murray,
Maryland. at
Mairuig.
832-695-6100,
marylaw@kuernik.com
731 New Hampshire
Women's swim team extends streak
BY JIM SMALL Sports Writer
Monday-Saturday
9 am-5 pm
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was not tested this weekend at the Big Eight swimming championships at Robinson Natatorium.
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4,1981 Vol. 91, No. 108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Viscisoni and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt a setback to JV's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this." Don Jones, JV vice president for mail development, said. "We're targeting a 25 percent return."
Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends and they want to present an enduring investment that's charging more money.
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 450 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 376 supported, JVJ sponsored project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for VJJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Wilden.
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case before the commission. Two weeks earlier, despite an hour-long presentation by Zinn, Jones
50
PLAYER TIME OUT
PLAYER PERSON PLAYER POOLS
0 2 20 3
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' assets, according to the committee chairman.
The chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the board of Regents system-wide proposed Board committee cut those requests deeply last month.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for
norrow and Friday to consider the individual
committees.
After committee action this week, the campuses' and Regents budgets will be sent to the board.
Since the individual request, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the cuts.
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation." Hess said. "But don't expect a rubber stamp of the governor's proposal."
Hess said all individual requests probably
March 1981
TRAVEL
BEST BEEF
(Continued from page 14)
their hearts set on a romantic island dinner at one of Kite's best restaurants, the Rose Taste on Dullah and warmen up the atmosphere, fresh seafood.
When a bad case of sunburn makes the beach out of the question, Key West offers a variety of interesting and inexpensive tourist attractions. One place is the Hermann Beach lodge Ernest Hemingway, now inhabited by the 42 cats that the novelist provided for in his book *The Historic Turtle Kraals*, a small but fascinating mariana toze feature a 750 pound logger boat, which can be used as captivity—as well as sharks, Florida lobster, conch, sea turtles, and many other varieties of fish and marine life.
Night life in Old West Key ranges from classy discotheques like the Maestro to sleazy pool hall complete with favorites of the college crowd include Captain Tony's, Shoppy Joe's, Maynard and the Bull, all featuring live entertainment. Cover charges vary and the ball is $1, $2 or more for drunk drinks.
all explained in a lively tour by a marine biologist.
Another interesting place to visit is the Key West Cosmetic Factory, which manufactures and sells all natural skin care products made with aloe; a tropical plant known for its burn-healing properties. A warning those who are badly sunburned should not walk in direct sunlight or moment a sunburn victim walks in the door, he or she is assaulted by aggressive salespeople who insist on shattering aloe lotion all over the visitor's hand. The aloe lotion is sunburn, but all the attention made me feel like a heel for not buying any of their outrageously expensive products. A single bottle of aloe bubble bath
A terrific way to wind up any Florida vacation is to spend a day at Disney World in Orlando. A whole day of fun costs about $25 per person, and the most sophisticated student will have an opportunity to break up the long ride back to school. The author, a recent graduate of the University of Virginia, spent two spring holidays.
The author, a recent graduate of the University of Virginia, spent two spring breaks in Key West.
COSTA RICA IS NOT NICARAGUA
BY MANFRED WOLF
C
Costa Rica may seem somewhat out of the way to student-planing their Easter or sum
her visitation but several new possibilities for traveling this little Central American country open up often from occasional charter flights to low weekly fares on LACAO, and other destinations. You should know a few things first.
2. Costa Rica is not Mexico. Americans often find to explain the discomforts associated with american travel or eating at the table of the above. Drink the water, eat the lutenze, and don't bother peeling the tomatoes on that score—and on others' it's a little like roaming the streets. The further pleasure is the unabashed enthusiasm for Americans that obtains in Costa Rica—macho means both blood and a blonde woman is *may macho* in Zacateca or Torreon or Tooraco!
1. Costa Rica is not Nicaragua
Some tourists have been staying away in the mistaken belief that there's trouble in all of paradise, however the problem of it is not affect Costa Rica, which any prides own on being as different from Nicaragua as possible—democratic, peaceful, or怜 Homestay has something to do with Costa Rica's sadly non-violent history. It is truly descended from Spanish and more recent European settlers.
Monea Racims live in, and most tourists go to the Sun Island area, on the coast of the Atlantic Ocean, rather plain modern city in a beautiful setting. its sight. (Night is more beautiful, seen but
Young travelers warning to test the warmth of the Costa Rica should know that diecochete in and around San Jose welcome single men mainly on beach and area Baracoa (near the Playboy Club) were favorably mentioned by young Costa Ricans who also said that if they wanted to meet someone of the elite e.g., El Gran Parque in San Rafael or Los Mimosos in Caragua, it is a measure of the modern influence on Costa Rica that there's even a singles bar in Dolores, which is also strongly San Jose's only vegetarian restaurant.
lesser known excursions out of town are hereby strongly recommended: a bus ride to the old colonial capital of Mazatlan, where they can be visited, Heredia, or to the mountain village of Acosta. Centrally located San Jose will probably be headquarters despite reservation requirements for five dollars a day at the Pension Nizza, on the western end of the Paseo Colon, or on the pension Costa Rica near the Morazan Park, for a little time.
Most vacationers will inevitably be drawn to the spectacular tropical beachs. The Caribbean town of Liébana stands on high mountains and jungle, is very worthwhile but not for swimming. Go south from there to Cabatua for the beach where you can spend a short side of the country, a short bus ride from San Jose, is Puntarenas, which has a fine beach—though the more famous destination is Gran Canaria, Costa Rica's Wild West. This has become a favorite meeting place of the young. At all of these and many others, rent cabinas if luxury is desired. You will also enjoy the county's deserted beaches.
Ampersand
ON TOUR
Wilson Pickett
PRIVATES. NEW YORK
The spaghetti of profitability is restful. It is funded on Wicken Pickett in lieu of cash. It was greateful. Not to the kickle market that buried him in the seventies, but to the Wicked One. The Midnight Mover and the Black Hole chandeliered new showcase called Privates. Wicked Pickett was all sex and confidence. Saltbait. hot-and shot.
And he was timely
et showled legitimate check to say, "Don't call it a comeback. I never left." In 1978, New York dance club devises a program for the band Muscle Shoals Fame sides. In 1979 everyone opened a rock salon with a soul-and punk playlist. In 1980, James showed Studio 54 the meaning of "rock and roll" and groove, and suddenly everyone looked for tickets on the new soil train in town. An inconsistent lighthearted哭 but, Picket commands it on his
Picket showed Privates what a classic is something with built-in merit that fashion can't dismiss. Crusising the audience by mock delirium from his well horned band, Picket did a while show of greatest his. Picket sang like he wanted to hear the old stuff as much as he wanted to see here! Just a rushed and command.
In the Midnight Hour 'The women — punk hair and all — get visions Green Grass." Everybody Needs Someone to Love. The man beside me makes moving Piketts走 to embody sexual belishting. The woman he kisses him like women. The men remember confidence and sagge
"In the wye hours you need some body to hold real tight". Picket pumps No clinical removal Hes not discus s with me, but I know her phone number 5789. TU be right here at home/all you have to do/s pick up your telephone/dial or 5474 6589. Ah, the simple prescription — the love on you and the woman, woman and you know I want it.
In Pickett's presence, the language of sexuality had content. His style was playful, tough, and mildly cynical, but pewer vacant.
Pickert's vocational mastery, engaged drive, muscianism, and *sexuality* make a good case here for merging the old and new meanings and swagger. Rock and roll's giddy planned obsolescence dismutes Pickert's own sense. But Pickert was slобled so easily
say a lecture tour $ \mathbf{\nabla} $ college campuses. Read to students who may look closer, than mix it up with Zsa Zsa on the front cover of a book. Mix it out to be么么 one of style.
L. M. Eklund
in the wails he called the interplays into respectful, if not quite revenge, sledge. After offering several doser readings from his latest book, the *Wonderland* series, he crept an amazing series of questions from the audience: "Are you trying to make a statement?" "Have you ever actually done much trout fishing?" and so on. "Does your mother read your poetry?" A few of these stunned Braultan momentarily, but he endured them all with patience and surprising good humor.
What does a best-selling author do when he has a new book to promote? The usual answer, taking to interviews, interviews, and talk-show appearances, may be fine for Jake Kranz, but for a former cult hero like Richard Brutan, a promotion junker seems a good idea. He demands something more digitized.
After some nineteen books, Brantau still seems looked into the persona of the Sixties innocent. "I don't read contemporary fiction," he told one man in 2013. "I just want to quarer" His reaction to the 1982 election "I am apolitical." Somehow, by now all this seems more irresponsable than innocent. This came into focus during a visit to the University of incineration and his used old travel innery (Tacoma, Washington to Eugene, by way of Meridian, Mississippi) to excuse the lapse. There was also a conversation with who left his Montana ranch for a lecture tour that squeezed too many miles into too few days and short changed his fans as a result would have been the subject, rather than the event, a wawful British sketch
Richard Brautigan
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE
As he was introduced, Brantigan, replenient in wrinkled blue jeans and a faded blue shirt, wandered through the room. He asked a giant pawn. He began the evening by giggling with delight at several of his clients. He then pointed to the plane and I can't hear()'s closed requests from the audience. After he stared down an early cheerlark—firing back at him.
David Coursen
pounds to a galloping beat as 'Walters Terrace' is measured off 'Once I like crying Twice I like laughter/Come on I love him.' after 'he's singing in Book I read in Books'.
Echo & the Bunnymen THE LONDON RAINBOW
Multi-colored fog, camouflage and netting smoothed the stage Above, an Arthurian castle flanked with a moat of water and stars of staring clouds on the cellin welcome to the London Rainbow for Echo and the Bummeny (and pass the Echo)
What he and the rest of the Bunnymans are apparently after is an Eighties form for the crossroads brain wash that gives me more industrial and vacuum than its Sixties psychedelic counts, but its nonetheless full of interesting tone color, idealism and moments that will keep you dreaming had too much to dream (last night).
like the drug inspired psychiciele
bands of the Sixties, the Bunyimen
make music for the expanded
consciousness. A hand to watch and
absorb, not necessarily to dance to,
they hang songs on a remote has
and a wandering, lately impregnating guitar
strings. The only element that is
really upfront.
Jeff Hays
Fluffy haired singer Ian McCallough affords the onward phrase of the line Jim Morrow, yet personally resembles him in his poetic spoon poet Along with deep and formidable vocals, he shares with Morrison a matter of life-and death rock and roll music, sometimes taken seriously by other musicians in a daze for days*. McCallough ex
James "Blood"
Ulmer
THE STONE, SAN FRANCISCO
capacity crowd arrived at the mondaestcript North Beach club, most in their early to mid 20s, wearing wavy hair and a cute outfit for the tiny dance floor. The only anomaly on the scene was ontage—a 38-year old black jazz guitarist, James Bloodu. He was also wearing a burgundy, bulky earring. African garmb He stood nearly still to play, and out came a challenging music at once similar to what he had seen in some iron-patients respect—he
Umer first picked up a guitar at age three, because a professional musician at 17, then hit the road for a ten year career. He played in all kinds of bands, R&B, R&B and jazz outfits.
He eventually hooked up with saxophonist Ornette Coleman, whose composing and playing style (called 'tales') is so brilliant that influence—as is quite evident on Ulmer's new solo albums *Tales from captain Black* (which featured Coleman as player and coproducer)—has become his best holiday套装 on Summer Trade
At the Stone, Ulmer powered through an hour of music that was as distinctive and rewarding as it was striking. The guitarist played in jazz, but it branched determinately into fery shoots of rock, R&B and, particularly, funk. His charged-up synthesis of various musical forms does not seem to be limited to his most stuff people think of as "fusion."
Ulmer performed with only two sidemen, the brilliant rhythm section of bassist Amin Alin and Calvin Westen, a 19-year-old drumming prodigy. When a number demanded it, Alin and Westen performed a very synchronous rhythm foundation to support Ulmer's cascading guitar runs. But most of his compositions call for more active, prominent participation by bass and drum, which mean Alini and Westen were often laying down a sturdy rhythm instrument in the instrumental forefoot with Ulmer
The set was heavy with turbulent in instruments. Ulmer mixed up things a la John Mayer, who number Jaz is the Teacher, Funk is the Preacher* and *Are You Gad to be in America*, a glitting tune that could possibly unsequenced into a grave dead Tace.
3 Hess' from the nittee's carlin's
The latter song was also one of the few pieces laced with Ursula's grunt chaning, a strange vocal style that exudes confidence and convincing, almost in spite of itself.
Duncan Strauss
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not seen the subcommittee reports, I don't know if they are."
recutive on what
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topke, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 8 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state university students.
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably won't get because the governor didn't recommend them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall and $400,000 for a feasibility study for a second library.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the biology department to move from the outdated and cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Watson Library, could be built near the Military Science Building.
't serve
e meat
"They fix the was." contract sedent,
food contract
ts own
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they don't like the meat, Wilson said.
ident to
eptions
reasons
the rest of the semester. This total of $69.30 a
month is not included in the purchase
and does not include caterer labor costs.
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall for anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he said.
The women said that salads did not provide for all of their nutritional needs.
day for
"We complained about paying $70 a month just for salad," Miller said. "That is not balanced (for our budget)."
Hartman suggested the hails offer their residents optional food contracts.
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
(Image not provided)
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
n campus as rains swept in the area. Two girls walk behind
s are expected to continue today with a high in the mid 40'
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Our five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been grips from coaches and fans, who would have the big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLIANTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a "second season," another chance to win the NCAA's automatic spot for the Big Eight.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eight during the regular season, play Oklahoma State and give the Browns a chance.
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the Jayhawks the chance to face the Cowboys who played without a playoff game presents some problems, but there are also advantages. KU's Head Coach Ted Owens said.
"IT HELPS IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State," Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crowd tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response.
"It's vital that we have the student support for this game. OSU is a dangerous road team. They
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the home team. There aren't many teams that get support that we get, and we will really need it."
The Jayhawks will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-6 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and should help him out of the starting lineup for two games.
John Crawford, 8- forward, both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NI and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking at tonight's game as a chance to get into the NHL.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament that could have been February (34); it would be awfully tough for us to give a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
JAYHAWK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was: Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Jojo Hunter, Colorado; and had for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darrin Valentine and Missouri forward Ricky Fruzier.
The second team was Jack Moore, Nebraska; he
nearly, Kansas. State Chu, Barnett,
Oklahoma.
Honorable mate well went to Leroy Combe,
and Steve Stimpson, and Jon Sund-
vold and Steve Stimpson, Misha
Gill.
Five KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
Big Eight tickets still available
Tickets are still available for tonight's first round Big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU I.D. Public tickets are $5.50.
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff times Friday are 7:06 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the State-Missouri game. The game between the winner of Oklahoma-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coaches' poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNWURKERS, coached by former KU men's assistant Gusty Ammann, with 128, finished second with 124, with 128, finished third with 120.
"We were really happy," KU Assistant Coach Theo Hamilton said. "This was our best job in competition this year. It was a super team effort."
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . . they put in 120 percent. It was a total team effort."
Ten Big Eight events are in the meet including Tudie McKnight's event-winnning leap of 1984 in the long jump. The mark qualifier held by John Foster at Pocatello, Idaho will be held March 13-14 in Pocatello, Idaho.
"I REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I be doing in the outdoors."
Gwen Poss, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-hurdle hurdles with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Jason Kerr with a mark of 8.05 qualified her for the nationalists.
Kansas finished among the top six in every event except two, including a second-place finish in the 220 relay.
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
BEHAVIOR
Practive expressions thinking and feelings clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work skills.
Saturday, March 7, 1981
10:00 AM - 1:00 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(Pre-registration required. Contact Kahlia for further information on the Women's Center at 864-3523)
ZEN PRACTICE
Public Talk
Sunday March 2 8:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas National
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
Intensive Meditation Retreat, March 5-8
TRAILRIDGE APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth 843-7333 Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments, 2-3-4 Bedroom Townhouses.
- Free Racquetball
* Free Tennis
* Free Swimming
* Convenient Location
* On KU Bus Route
BUY OR SELL
SK
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
Monday-Su
Muro
Monday-Saturday
9 am-5 pm
731 New Hampshire
"They (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Oklahoma, but we predicted that we would place third."
PEPIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers had a g*
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Women's swim team extends streak
By JIM SMALL
Sports Writer
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KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its
Kansas' women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Natatorium.
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol.91,No.108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
staff Reporter
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Viscasoni and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission deed a setback to JVJ's bid to rezone a south lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this." Don Janson, JV vice president for mail development, said. "We've got a lot of money to invest."
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 405 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 378 supported JVJ's proposed project.
Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends, as two plump mama婴经营商分担一部分。
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for VJJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Wilden.
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case before the commission. Two weeks earlier, despite an hour-long presentation by Zinn, Jones
50
PLAYER NO. 10
PERIOD 02 20 3
PLAYER NO. 40
TEAM
TEAM
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
By GENE GEORGE
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' restrictions, according to the committee chairman.
the chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the board of Regents system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut those requests deeply last month.
HESS SCHEDULED committee hearings for tomorrow and Friday to consider the individual campuses' requests for next year.
After committee action this week, the campuses and Regents budgets will be sent to the governor.
Since the individual request, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the cuts.
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors recommendation." Hess said. "But don't expect a rubber stamp of the governor's proposal."
Hess said all individual requests probably
March. 1981
TRAVEL
COCOA
Night life in Old West Kay ranges from classy disheاتures like the Monster to sleazy pool balls full of gin and tonic. The favorites of the college crowd include Captain Tops, Sloppy Joe's, MacMaster and the Bull, all featuring live entertainment. Cover change vary, and the price for a beer is $1, $2 or more for a cocktail.
their hearts set on a romantic island dinner at one of the Wine's better restaurants, the Rose Tattoo on Durnal spent the warm atmosphere and fresh seafood.
When a bad case of sunburn makes the beach out of the question, Key West offers a variety of interesting and inexpensive tourist attractions. One can tour the exotic house of the lake on the island, or visit the 42 cats that the novelist provided for in his will. The Historic Turtle Kraals, a small but fascinating marine zoo features a 700 foot loggerhead turtle—the world's largest in captivity. Lumberjack, lobster, conch, sea turtles, and many other varieties of fish and marine life
(Continued from page 14)
Another interesting place to visit is the Key West Castellock Factory, which manufactures and sells all natural wines made with aloe. a tropical plant known for its burn-healing properties.警告 those who are badly sunburned should be aware of this place. From the door, through the glass door, he or she is assaulted by aggressive salespeople who insist on shilting aloe gel after all over the visitor's skin. The castellock factory is sunburn, but all the attention made me feel like a bed for not buying any of their outrageously expensive products. A single bottle of aloe bubble bath
all explained in a lively tour by a marine biologist.
The author, a recent graduate of the University of Virginia, spent two spring breaks in Key West.
A terrific way to wind up any Florida vacation is to spend a day at Disney World in Orlando. A whole day of fun for you will be spent with the most sophisticated student will have a blast. Besides, it really helps back up the long ride back to school.
COSTA RICA IS NOT NICARAGUA
BY MANFRED WOLF
C
Costa Real may seem somewhat out of the way to students planning their Easter orsum *studies* in a college, but abilities for traveling to this little Central American country open up often from occasional charter flights to low weekday fares on LACSA and other travel companies you should know a few first things.
1. Costa Rica is not Nicaragua
Some tourists have been staying away in the mistaken belief that there's trouble in all of paradise; however, the Costa Rican government do not affect Costa Rica which any prides itself on being as different from Nicaragua as possible—democratic, peaceful, or独. homogeneity has something to do with Costa Rica's cultural heritage, which is almost descended from Spanish and more recent European settlers.
2. Costa Rica is not Mexico. Americans often expect to find the discomfort associated with Mexican travel or Neither of the above. Drink the water, eat the lettuce, and don't bother peeling the tomatoes. On score and on others' it's a little like roaming in the woods. The further pleasure is the unabashed enthusiasm for Americans that obtains in Costa Rica - *macho* here means blood, and a blonde woman is *mujaka* in Zacatecas. In Zacatecas or Torreón or Oxaca
Most vacations will inevitably be drawn to the spectacular tropical beaches. The Caribbean town of Liwanga, south of mountains and jungle, is very worthwhile but not for swimming. Go south from there to Calcutta for the beach of the country, a short bus ride from San Jose, is Puntarenas, which has a fine beach—though the more adventurous go to Cozumel in Mexico. This has become a favorite meeting place of the young. At all of these and many others, rent cabinos if luxury is desired. You can also visit the county's deserts beaches.
Young travelers warning to test the warmth of the Costa Rican should know that dishevelies in and around San Jose welcome singles mainly on the beach, at the playground and at Barco and near the Playboy Club) were favorably mentioned by young Costa Ricans who also said that if *Ivy wanted* to meet someone of the opposite sex they'd go to dance hall, Baju Alonso or Los Milos in Cartagua. It a measure of the modern influence on Costa Rica that there's even a singles club, Club de Solerlo, which is also home to San Jose's only vegetarian restaurant.
lesser known excursions out of town are hereby strongly recommended; a bus ride to the old colonial capital of Ajijana, which is surrounded by Heredia, or to the mountain village of Acoza Centrally located San Jose will probably be headquarters despite reservation requirements for five dollars a day at the Pension Nizza, on the western end of the Paseo Colon, or at the pension Goca Rea near the Morazan Park, for a little more.
Most Costa Rica live in, and most tourists go to, the Sun Joaquin area, on the island of Isabela. The city is rather plain modern city in a beautiful setting its Sights (National Theatre, Banco Nacional).
Amnersand
O N T O U R
Wilson Pickett
PRIVATES NEW YORK
And he was timely.
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not reported to committee reports. I don't know if ours (KU) are."
After seven low-risk years, Picket showed legitimate cheek to say, "Don't call it a comeback. I never left," the dance功架 clown unsure their abilities Muscle Shirts Fame sides. In 1979 everyone opened a rock lake with a soul-and-pink playlist. In 1980 James Brown showed Studio 54 the meaning of life and suddenly everyone looked for grooves and suddenly everyone looked for tickets on the new soul train in town. An incarunt illhearted! Hellay, but Picket commands it on his
The spotlight of profitability is restless. Yes, it lanked on Wicker Picket in New York but not in London; get grateful. Not to the fictile market that burdened him in the Seventies, but to the Wicked One, the Midnight Mover of London. The chancelled new showcase called Prize Written. Wicked Picket was all sex and sugar, confident, blatant, hot shot and gracious. Blatant, hot shot and gracious.
Pickett showed Private what a classic is something with built-in merit that fashion can not dismiss. Crusising against the idea of mock delirium from his well-horned hand, Pickett did a whole show of greatest his. Pickett sang like he wanted to hear the old stuff as much as he wanted to see here; just saw just rush and command.
"In the Midnight Hour" "The women — punk hair and all — get visions 'Green Grass.' "Everybody Needs Somebody to Live." The man beside me starts making moves. Pocket bits start to embody sexual belonging. The woman has him dating women she knows confidence and slog ger.
"In the wee hours you need somebody to hold real tight." Picket purrs. No clinical removal Hes not disclosing. You know the address 5789. It right be here at home/All you have to do/s pick up your phone/and dial 5474. 6589. As the simple prescription — the love on their mind — is woman, and you know I want it
Pickett's vocal master, engaged driver, musician, and sensibility made a good case here for merging meaning with meaning and swag. Rock and roll's gappy planned obesence dismisses the sense of meaning but Pickett won't be slapped so easily
In Pickett's presence, the language of sexuality had content. His style was playful, tough, and mildly cynical, but never vacant.
say a lecture tour to college colleges.
Reading to students may look closer than mixing it up with Zea Zea on the cover of *The New Yorker* and out to be more one of style.
What does a best-selling author do when he has a new book to promote? The usual answer, taking to interviews, interviews, interviews, and talk show appearances, may be fine for Judith Krantz but for a former cult hero like Richard Brutau, a promotion junket seems more appealing, demands something more digustable.
As he was introduced, Brantagh, as repleinent in wrinkled blue skin, took the lead and onto the stage smiling beautifully like a giant price. He began the evening by giggling with delight at several of his own jokes and ignoring it I just got off his chair and asked if anyone had requests from the audience. After he stared down an early hedding—farting in the wind he called the interruption "I'm too scared to enter into respectful, if not quite revenge, silence. After offering several dozen readings from his latest book, the author accepted an amazing series of questions from the audience. "Are you trying to make a statement? Have you ever actually done much truss fishing?" and so on. He
L. M. Eklund
After some ninety books, Braultan still seems locked into the persona of the Stuarts innocent "I don't read contemporary fiction," he told one采访者. "I'm a guerre" His reaction to the 1989 election "I am apolitical," somehow, by now all this seems more irresponsible than innocent. This came into focus after his first encounter with incoherence and then used his old travel narrative (Tacoma, Washington, to Eugene, by war of Meridian, Missouri) to excuse the lapse. There was an element of sadness who left his Montana ranch for a lecture room that squeezed too many miles into too few days and short changed his fans as a result would have been the subject, rather than the subject, a wryly useful Braultan sketch
Richard Brautigan
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE
David Coursen
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topke, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
Echo & the
Bunnymen
THE LONDON RANBOW
pounds to a galloping beat as "walters Terrace" is measured off "Once I like cryingTween I like laughter/Gone on my mind," and then, he sings in Read It in Book 5.
KU asked the governor for $5 million more for a 10 percent salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
What he and the rest of the Bummymen are apparently after in Eighties form for the crossing braintrain vixene of a 1960s city more industrial and vicious than its Sixties psychedelic cousins, but nonetheless full of interesting tone color, idealism and moments that laid too much distance to dream (last night).
Multicolored fog, camouflage and melting smothered the stage at The Fashion Show. palm trees stretched toward thousands of stars flickering on the ceiling. Well come to the London Rainbow for Echo and pass the electric Kool Aid
Jeff Hays
Like the drug-inspired psychic绷 band of the Sixties, the Bunyim make music for the expanded consciousness. A hand to watch and absorb, but not necessarily to dance to, they hinge songs on a remote bar and a wandering lazily aspiring guitar player, only the only element that is really unfamiliar.
Plucky haired singer Ian McCallough orchestrates the oround phrase of the line Jur Morrison, yet personally resembles a poet who has spotted poet. Along with deep and formidable vocals, he shares with Morrison a matter of life-and death and rock roll, sometimes taken seriously by critics. In a daze for days," McCallough ex
James "Blood" Ulmer
THE STONE, SAN FRANCISCO
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
capacity crowd arrived at the hondescript North Beach club, most in their early to mid-28, wearing black jazz guitars and the tiny dance floor. The only anomaly on the scene was onstage—a 38-year old black jazz guitarist, James "Blood" Burrell, wearing African garb. He stood nearly still to play, and out came a challenging music at once similar to what he found in some inn-present irresects.
Ulmer first picked up a guitar at age three, became a professional musician at 17, then hit the road for a tenure with EMI. He played all kinds of bands, R&B and jazz outfits.
He eventually hooked up with saxophonist Ornette Coleman, whose composing and playing style (called harmelodic) became a great in-music sensation. He recorded Ulmer's two solo albums, *Tales from the captain Black* (which featured Golenam as player and co-producer) and *Are you glad to be in the america?*
at the Stone, Ulmer powered through an hour of music that was as distinctive and rewarding as it was demanding and difficult. Its roots were in rock and pop, but through fiery shoots of rock, RBB and particularly, funk. His充电 helped up series of various musical forms does not seem to have much influence on most people stuff their mind as of "fusion."
Ulmer performed with only two sidemen, the brilliant rhythm section of bassist Amin Alin and Calvin Wesson a 19-year-old drumming prodigy. When a number demanded it, Alin and Wesson began an impassioned musical rhythm foundation to support Ulmer's cascading guitar runs. But most of his compositions for call more active, prominent participation by bass and drum, which meant Alin and Wesson were often laying down a surdy melody in the instrument alt forefront with Ulmer.
The set was heavy with turbulent instrumentals. Ulmer mixed things up a bunch of songs — but one number Jaz is the Teacher, Funk is the Preacher, and "Are You Glad to be in America," a gliding tone that could probably slip inconceivably into a song.
'g Hess' from the mittee's Carlin's
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
Money to cover increased enrolment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
The latter song was also one of the few pieces laced with Ullrich's gruff chant-singing, a strange vocal style that echoed the chorus, almost inside of spite itself.
Duncan Strauss
The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state university students.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
recutive on what
Two other projects KU wants, but probably won't get because the governor didn't recommend them. are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall project, $900,000 for a feasibility study for a second library.
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the biology department to move from the outdated and cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Watson Library, could be built near the Military Science Building.
"They fix the was." contract
't serve
food contract
e meat
ident to
options
reasons
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they don't like theneat, Wilson said.
the rest of the semester. This total of $89.30 a
purchase and/or include the layer paper.
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall (so anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he said.
The women said that saalids did not provide for all of their nutritional needs.
"We complained about paying $10 a month just for mealad. Miller said, "That is not a balanced money."
day for
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
P
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
n campus as rays swept into the area. Two girls walk behind
are expected to continue with a hard in the mild 40°
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 3, 1981
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Owens looks to fans for edge against Cowboys Jayhawk's opponent best of second division
The Big Eight postseason basketball tournament is five years old today.
Its five years have been filled with complaints from lovers of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament, which the postseason meet replaced. There have also been gries from coaches and fans, who would have the Big Eight's representative to the NCAA Championship tournament be the regular season champion, as it was before the postseason tourney.
ALL COMPLIANTS will be set aside by seven teams tonight, however. The only team in the Big Eight that might favor the old plan is Missouri, the regular-season champion. All others will truly get a "second season," another chance to win the NCAA's automatic spot for the Big Eight.
The luck of the draw, as well as Saturday's 80-65 victory over Oklahoma State that made the difference between second and fifth place, gave the Jayhawks the chance to face the Cowbies in the play. They back-to-back games present some challenges, with the advantages, KU's Head Coach Owens said.
Kansas, by virtue of its second-place Big Eight during the regular season, plays Oklahoma at home. Kansas is a No. 1 seed in the
"IT HELP'S IN some ways." Owens said.
"Your preparation for several days has been to play Oklahoma State and you just continue that preparation."
Most of the other Big Eight coaches are probably happy that Owens gets the advantage of preparing for the same team two games in a row. Oklahoma State, the Big Eight's leader until mid-February, is the best of the second division teams.
"All of the teams that play at home in the first round would like to play anyone but Oklahoma State." Owens said. "They have that kind of respect. The other home teams would rather not play Oklahoma State because they are a dangerous team."
Because the Cowboys are a talented team, Owens is more concerned about the attendance of tonight's game. Attendance at first-round tournament games has been low in the past, as low as 3,610 last season against Colorado. The crowd was an important factor in Saturday's game, Owens said, and despite lagging ticket sales, he hopes to see a larger crowd tonight.
"I THINK MOST times people have assumed that we will win and that they will wait to see us in Kansas City," Owens said. "The best chance that we have of winning is to have student support. One of the most important reasons for our success at home is the crowd response.
It is vital that we have the student support for it. It’s data that we have the student support for it.
beat Kansas State, Oklahoma and Iowa State on the road.
"The reason for the home court advantage is the positive force that the crowd has for the team. There aren't many teams that get support that we get, and we will really need it."
The Jayhawks will have one thing tonight that they didn't need very badly Saturday. Six-foot-9 center Victor Mitchell is back to full strength and a shot he took him out of the startin line for two games.
John Crawford, 8-4 forward, started both those games and played well enough that Mitchell was used for only 13 minutes Saturday and 14 minutes the game before against Nebraska. Crawford scored 13 points and had 5 rebounds against NIU and had 15 points and 12 rebounds against Oklahoma State. Crawford will start tonight, Owens said.
"VICTOR HAD A good practice yesterday and I would anticipate that he will be ready to play."
Paul Hansen, coach of the Cowboys, is looking to the game's chance as a chance to get into the NCAA.
A victory tonight would give his team a 19-8 record and possible consideration for an at-large
bid to the national meet. The victory would also advance the Cowboys to Kansas City where they could win the automatic bid, but the record is more important to Hansen.
"I WANT THAT 19th win," Hansen said. "That's what is important to me. It doesn't matter if we had gotten it Saturday or Tuesday. We've got to have it for a shot at a tournament first, then for the February (34), it would be awfully tough for us to get a tournament bid with an 18-9 record."
The second team was: Jack Moore, Nebraska; Ed Nealy, Kansas State; Chuck Barnett, Illinois.
JAYHAWK NOTES: United Press International announced its All-Big Eight team last night. The first team was: Rolando Blackman, Kansas State; Andre Smith, Nebraska; Matt Clark, Oklahoma State; Jojo Hunter, Colorado; and tied for the fifth spot were Kansas' senior guard Darnell Valentine and Missouri forward Rachel Frazier.
Honorable mention to went to Leroy Combe,
Ken Sinclair, and Jon Sundvold and Steve Stipmanov, Missouri.
Five KU players, including three of the players expected to start tonight, will be playing their
Big Eight tickets still available
The tickets are reserved seats in the student section.
Tickets are still available for tonight's round big Eight postseason tournament game in Allen Field House. They can be purchased until halftime of the game at the Allen Field House box office for $2 with a KU LD. Public tickets are $5.50.
Nearly 3,000 tickets are also available for the semifinal and final round games in Kemper Arena. These can be purchased at ticket outlets in the Kansas City, Mo., area, according to Bill Hancock, Big Eight Service Bureau director.
Tipoff time Friday are 7:06 p.m. for the game between the winner of the Oklahoma State-Kansas game and the winner of the Missouri game. The game between the winner of Oklahoma-Kansas State and the winner of Colorado-Nebraska is set for 9:05 p.m.
KU women's track team overcomes low ranking
By WENDY L. CULLERS Sports Writer
Nebraska won its second consecutive Big Eight women's track championship this weekend, but a third-place finish for KU did not cause any disappointment.
The Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a coaches poll before the championships at Lincoln, Neb., won two events and scored 76 points, beating out Kansas State for third place.
THE CORNHUSKERS, coached by former KU men's assistant Gary Pepin, meet with 142 points. Oklahoma, with 126, finished second.
"We were really happy," KU Assistant Coach Theo Hamilton said. "This was our best job in competition this year. It was a super team effort.
"The team put in more than 100 percent . . . they put in 120 percent. It was a total team effort."
Ten Big Eight records were in the meet including Tudie Mcknight's event-winning leap of 19.3% in the long jump. The mark qualifier her team held March 13 in Pocatello, Idaho.
"I'M REAL HAPPY," McKnight said. "This jump tells me how I'll be doing in the outdoors."
Gwen Poss, who qualified for the national championships earlier this season, won the 60-kilometer with a time of 8.02, edging teammate Jamee Cohen with a mark of 8.02 qualified her for the nationalists.
The Jayhawks have qualified four athletes for the national championships. Lori Green-Jones, already qualified, finished third in the 300 at the conference championships.
Kansas finished among the top six in every
event except two, including a second-place finish
in the NCAA Tournament.
BEHAVIOR
Practice expressive thoughts and feelings clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work-related skills.
Saturday, March 1, 1981
10:00 AM - 1:00 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(Pre-receptionists required to marry March 1)
For further information, contact the Women's Center at 864-3552.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
Public Talk
Sunday March 8, 2:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dharma Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
ZEN PRACTICE
Intensive Meditation
Retreat, March 5-8
TRAILRIDGE
APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth 843-7333
Studio, 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments, 2-3-4 Bedroom Town-houses.
• Free Racquetball
• Free Tennis
• Free Swimming
• Convenient Location
• On KU Bus Route
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
731 New Hampshire
Monday-Saturday
g 9am-5pm
Patror
"They (the other coaches) were surprised that we placed third," Hamilton said. "The KU coaching staff knew that Nebraska and Oklahoma had, but we predicted that we would place third."
PEPIN SAID the Cornhuskers' victory was important because it was his first year as a head coach at Nebraska. He said the Cornhuskers bad a g-
Women's swim team extends streak
two early
the Kem-i-
l Ginger Ringer
Ginger Ringer
Dunne an-long-unes
the rolls' vani
Jack Ocki
Oakie Makk
Amk Amk
Marijuana
Marijuana
(85/89 m)
By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
Kansas" women's swim team has won every Big Eight championship. That record was never tested this weekend at the Big Eight championships at Robinson Natatorium.
KU won 10 of 24 events en route to its
Unless of shown at Kansas U Friday, S films are I sus Unsas Usas 3477. No lowed.
March, 1981
THE SUNDAY BAY HIGH SCHOOL EQUIPMENT COMPANY
Ampersand
ALPHA MIDDLE CHURCH
HOME COMING
"Thanks anyway, but my kid sister can give me a lift. She's got a Jensen."
The Jensen Triax three-way speaker system.
After Jensen invented the Triaxial car stereo speaker system, it became the most imitated in the world. Because it was designed with one purpose: Faithful sound reproduction.
A Triax is extremely accurate and distortion free because it not only has a woofer to recreate low tones and a tweeter to capture the highs. A Triax features a midrange speaker to reproduce all those subtle sounds between low and high. The result is remarkable clarity across the entire sound spectrum.
And since Jensen hasn't had to concentrate on duplicating the Triax, we've been able to put all our effort into making it better than ever. Not with gimmicks or gadgets, but with meaningful innovations in the sound.
After studying absorption, reflection, baffle enclosures and the "closed cavity effect," a Jensen Triax interacts with the acoustics of your car for even greater clarity. We've examined road noise, car speed, sound level vs. distortion and the need for higher power handling. And driven the Triax high performance even higher.
But enough. Come hear a Triax three-way car stereo speaker system.
After all, we know it's not all the technical talk that moves you. It's the sound.
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 4, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 108 USPS 650-640
Developer continues mall battle
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
If at first you don't succeed, invest more money.
Jacobs, Viscasoni and Jacobs is doing just that after the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission dealt a setback to JV's bid to rezone a south Lawrence lot for a shopping mall.
"We've got $300,000 invested in this," Don Jones, JV vice president for mail development, said. "We're on a roll."
Some of JVL's dollars are already paying indirect dividends, as two plump mania entail the stock price falling.
THE ENVELOPES contain coupons, clipped from a full-page JVJ advertisement published in the Feb. 22 Lawrence Journal-World. As of March 2, the planning office had received 450 coupons, many with letters and other comments attached; 376 supported JVJ's promise project.
However, the fruits of the Cleveland developer's efforts won't be known for at least two weeks. A March 18 City Commission hearing date set for JVJ's request is "still tentative" according to assistant city manager Mike Wildgeen
Meanwhile, Richard Zinn, JVJ's Lawrence attorney, is preparing to argue his client's case before the commission. Two weeks earlier, despite an hour-long presentation by Zinn, Jones and others as representatives, the planning commission voted 9-1 against recommending the request.
"The City Commission meeting is essentially another forum in which to present our case," Zhn said. "We were disappointed with the response we received and don't have final say. The City Commission does."
Responding to Zinn's arguments will be the job of Garner Stoll, city planning director, and his staff. Stall said yesterday he disagreed with several of Zinn's contensions—namely, that the city must accept its decision "in a vacuum" and was protecting a "monopoly of competition" downtown.
"Protecting competition is not a concern of ours." Stoll said. "We are paid to decide what's best for the city, not what's best for the merchants and developers.
"We don't think that the city's interests and the businesses stores, interests are, in all respects, parallel."
Stoll conceded that "a number of commercial outlets" were located on south Iowa Street, but disputed Zim's characterization of the area as "heavily commercialized."
I don't know what 'heavily commercialized' means, "Stoll said. They don't define it. I think they aren't."
"Dean Palos, planning staff member, has been working on this pretty solidly since December, up until the time we released it (Feb. 20). We've put a lot of time into the report."
AT THE PLANNING commission's Feb. 23 hearing of JVL's request, Zinn contended that Plan 96," the city's comprehensive guidelines for growth assumed there was not retail sales "leakage" out of Lawrence. This assumption, which was seriously disputed in subsequent market studies, cast a shadow on the plan's credibility. Zinn said.
Stoll, however, dismissed Zinn's arguments as "not bein' addressed to the point.
“Of the points we listed as Plan 95 reasons for dental in our staff report, none of them, hinged on the type of tooth filling.”
"We did not consider that as an option in our report," Stoll said. "I think that would be an error. The area is contiguous to the city, city boundaries, and the land can be developed for urban purposes."
"When the landowners made their original zoning request, it was for the cornefield mall. But the City Commission and the planning commission were very specific that the annexation did not constitute approval of the mall. The owners wanted it annexed anyway."
If the owners and JVJ don't like the commission's final decision, and indicate they are not satisfied,
"Anything is possible, including a court case," Jones said, indicating that a court reporter had
See MALL page 5
Weather
DAILY
RAIN
It will be cloudy with rain ending in the early afternoon today, according to the KU Weather Service
Today's high will be 45. Tonight it will be clear skies and a low of 29.
For tomorrow, partly cloudy with a high in the low 50s.
50
PLAYER POLE
TIME WT.
PERCUMBER
PLAYER POLE
TIME WT.
0 2 20 3
KU's John Crawford battles for a rebound with OSU's Ricky Jacobs (40) and Lorenza Andrews during the second half action last night in the opening round of the Big Eight Conference post season tournament at Allen Field House. The Jahways won, 96-86. Story page 12.
KU 1982 budget request tied to Regents budget
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas won't be helped by the Senate Ways and Means Committee's relaxed attitude toward individual universities' assets, according to the committee chairman.
The chairman, Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday that KU's requests for a faculty pay raise, an increase in the operating budget and money to cover increased enrollment were tied to the number of Regens system-wide proposed budget. The committee cut those requests deeply last month.
HESS SCHEDLUED committee hearings for tomorrow and Friday to consider the individual campuses 'requests for next year.
After committee action this week, the campaign will be sent to the Senate in one bill for debate.
Since the individual requests, as proposed by Gov. John Carlin, did not entail the large sum of money that the Regents proposal did, Hess said the committee probably would go easy on the cuts.
"I suspect that the subcommittee reports certainly will not be higher than the governors' recommendation," Hess said. "But don't expect a rubber stamp of the governor's proposal."
Hess said all individual requests probably would be adjusted to fit in with the committee's views.
Last month the committee, following Hess' $100 million hit list, had cut $3 million from the Regents proposal. Hess had set the committee's budget to $526 million from Carlin's proposed $2.78 billion 1982 budget.
RICHARD VON ENDE, KU executive secretary, said that he had no indication what the committee might do.
"We'll just wait and see," he said. "I have not in our subcommittee reports, I don't know if ours."
Von Ende said he "had a good talk" with KU subcommittee chairman Ronald Hein, R-Topke, last week, but Hein gave no indication which programs the subcommittee supported.
KU asked the governor for $8 million more for a 10 percent faculty salary increase and higher classified pay and $12.5 million more for its education and operating budget.
THE COMMITTEE decreased Carlin's proposed 6 percent faculty pay increase to 7 percent and his proposed 6 percent operating budget increase to 5.5 percent.
Money to cover increased enrollment this year was eliminated and the committee told universities to manage with what money they had if future increases were minor.
But Carlin cut both requests before sending them onto the Legislature. The committee in effect reduced the amounts more last month by trimming $3 million from the Regents proposal.
The committee also voted for a 15 percent increase in tuition for all state universities.
The increase would mean KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay around 23 percent next year.
Lewis Hall residents released from food contract
The Haworth Hall expansion would allow the biology department to move from the outdated and cramped conditions at Snow Hall into more modern facilities.
The feasibility study would see whether a second library, needed to take the load off Watson Library, could be built near the Military Science Building.
Two other projects KU wants, but probably won't get because the governor don't recommend them, are $3.6 million for the Haworth Hall expansion, $900,000 for a feasibility study for the library.
By KATHY MAAG
Staff Reporter
Three Lewis Hall residents who complained about the quality of meat served in the hall cafeteria were released from their food contracts in February by the housing office.
The residents, Jennifer Miller, Derby freshman; Maria Sanchez, Puerto Rico junior; and Debi Hartman, Derby freshman, said that the team had not up to standards and had made them sick.
"We decided the meat here was pretty bad because we had all gotten sick on it," Miller said. "But even though we're out of our contracts, there is still a problem.
"I think they let us out of our contracts just to shut up."
But housing director, J. J. Wilson, said that the complaints had no rational basis.
"We let them out of their contracts, not because there was validity to their story, but because they were being a nuisance," he said.
THE MEAT is up to state standards as required by law. Wilson said.
Lenoir Ekdahl, director of food services,
agreed with Wilson.
"We get a better quality meat than the normal market," he said. "We have good specifications, good inspection, better grading and more effort."
"We're not convinced we've been getting any
bad meat," she said. "If we do, we don't serve it."
The women said the preparation of the meat was not the problem, but the meat itself
"They evaded the issue," Miller said. "They kept asking us if there was another way to fix the meat. They wouldn't tell us what grade it was."
This is the first time this year a food contract was broken, but it does not set a precedent. Were we to eat
"We'll check each (complaint) on its own merits," he said.
The housing office rarely allows a resident to break a food contract, Wilson said. Exceptions are made for diet problems, religious reasons and working schedules.
THE WOMEN were refunded $2.30 a day for
the rest of the semester. This total of `$9.30 a
month` is the food purchase
included in the laboratory labora-
Residents have the option of a salad bar if they don't like the meat, Wilson said.
"There's enough at the salad bar at any hall for anyone to have a good, balanced diet," he said.
The women said that salads did not provide for all of their nutritional needs.
"We complained about paying $70 a month just for food," Miller said. "That is not a balanced meal."
Hartman suggested the halls offer their residents optional food contracts.
"If you aren't eating the food, then you shouldn't have to pay for it," she said.
Shankel OKs fee increase, yet Senate wants still more
Staff Reporter
ByKAREN SCHLUETER Staff Reporter
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel has decided to ignore the Student Senate's $14.55 student activity fee recommendation and approved on request the University of David Amberle, vice chancellor for student affairs.
In a letter to Amber, Shankel said that he would recommend the $14 figure to the Board of Regents in an effort to keep costs down for students.
The letter also said that the Senate should be responsible for cutting its recommendations.
LAST WEEK, THE Senate reaffirmed its decision to recommend $14.55 in spite of suggestions by Ambler and Caryl Smith, dean of student life, to reduce the recommendation.
Senate leaders say they are not ready to relinquish the 55 cents.
Bren Abnett, student body vice president, received a copy of the letter yesterday. He said he still planned to meet with the chancellor to endorse the Senate's justifications for the increase.
"If you look at it in terms of real money, 50 cents can't buy a beer. Collectively, it's over."
See LIMITpage
Motorcyclists argue with legislators on safety value of helmets, insurance
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Yesterday nearly 100 motorcycle organization members poured into a House Insurance Committee meeting and took 20 minutes to discuss the matter that felt it was a statute violating their rights.
The lines have been drawn. Forcing a helmet on the head of a motorcylist or an insurance policy into his budget has gained the support of state legislators. But riders remain uneasy.
Beyond questions of safety or savings of tax dollars, the question that has drawn the irice of many a leather-jacketed free wheeler is the infringement of personal freedom.
These motorcyclists said their right to be unencumbered by a motorcycle helmet is as precious as the right to a fair trial or freedom of speech.
The members, not of motorcycle gangs or clubs, but of organization, are facing a group of counter-terrorists.
"I had a high school friend who was killed three years ago," State Rep. Timothy O'Sullivan, D-Hutchinson and the main sponsor of the bill, said. "He was only going 20 mph, but a
car caught the car of his bike and threw him over the car. He died of head injuries the next
O'Sullivan said that if his friend had been wearing a helmet he would not have died. O'Sullivan then pointed out a case in which a rider wearing a helmet was not killed even though he was thrown through the air and was travelling at 55 mph.
Many other people, however, insist wearing a helmet is not all that worthwhile.
Members of the organization ABATE,
American Ballet Admirn Toward Education, say a
deadline for the next season is at 8 p.m.
"The helmet actually cuts down on my vision and it muffles my hearing when I am riding," Gordon Chappell, president of ABATE said. "I think that I am much safer riding without a helmet.
A former Douglas County public health officer agreed with Chappell.
"When this discussion on helmet laws last came up," the officer, Dale Clinton, said, "it all came down to a study that showed that of the states with helmet laws, the death rate for accidents was much higher than the rate of accidents went up. I think it was something like an increase of 33 percent."
See MOTORCYCLE page 5
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
Umbrellas and raincoats were common on campus as rains swept into the area. Two girls walk behind Weseco on their way to class. Rain showers are expected to continue with a high in the mid 80s.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, March 4, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Troops to El Salvador unlikely
WASHINGTON—President Reagan, denying a parallel between El Salvador and Vietnam, said yesterday that he saw no likelihood that the United States would send American combat forces to the strife-torn Central American country.
"I certainly don't see any likelihood of us going in with fighting forces," Reagan told CBS news correspondent Walt Crankle during an interview in New York on May 30.
The president said he hoped the United States had learned from its experience in Vietnam, that never again do we send an active fighting force to Iraq.
He said there were a number of actions short of military force open to the United States as it seeks to stem the flow of weapons into Central America. He added that the U.S. will be ready to do so.
Reagan said there was a "a profound" difference between the situations in El Salvador and Vietnam. "What we are actually doing is at the request of El Salvador and Vietnam of our neighboring countries, helping offering some help against the Islamic State," he added, where of terrorism, of disruption—and it isn't just El Salvador," Reagan said.
VA faces ax; 20,000 mav lose jobs
WASHINGTON-President Reagan's budget-cutters want to fire 20,000 Veterans Administration medical personnel) and scrap the VA's readjustment counseling program for Vietnam veterans, a congressman reported yesterday.
Democratic Rep. Robert Edgar of Pennsylvania told a meeting of the House Veterans Affairs Committee that a VA source informed him of the proposal to eliminate the positions over the next five years and to ax the counseling program at once.
The proposal would mean slashing $800 million from the agency's budget, which Reagan said during his presidential campaign he would not touch.
In other budget news, Senate budget leader will push for a package of spending cuts that go beyond President Reagan's proposals and would reach into the "safety net" of programs for the poor and elderly that Reagan wants protected.
The staff of the Senate Budget Committee has compiled a package of 65 spending cuts that could be added to Reagan's $4.5 billion proposal, finalized in January.
The Senate proposals include a three-month delay in inflation adjustments in Social Security benefits, supplemental security assistance and veterans benefits.
Another proposal would require Medicare patients to co-pay $1 a day from the first day of admission for in-patient care rather than wait for the 61st day for co-payment.
Energy development subsidies cut
WASHINGTON—Energy Secretary James Edwards said yesterday that the Reagan Administration would not cut $5 billion from the Energy Department budget for synthetic fuel production but would end subsidies for development of energy from alcohol fuels, biomass and urban waste.
"I share your sense of urgency," Edwards told the House Banking Subcommittee on Economic Stabilization, which pioneered syruffs legislation in 1984. "We don't want to be caught up."
Edwards called for moving ahead with synthetic fuels production "at the fastest possible pace," in hopes it would stimulate interest in the industry.
"We share your concern that we get moving with this program and get syruffle production up," he told the subcommittee.
The secretary said the energy budget would propose no changes in the $5 billion now available to the department for continuing its financial assets.
But he pledged to eliminate federal funds for development of energy from alcohol fuels, biomass and urban waste because those low-risk programs "should be able to attract private financing without the need for government loan guarantees."
Miners to protest benefit cutbacks
Miners in the nation's coalfields are preparing to march in Washington next week to protest President Reagan's proposed cuts in black lung benefits, United Mine Workers officials said yesterday.
Miners from West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Virginia,
Alabama and some western states also, were planning to participate in the twelfth
annual NCAA Golf Tournament.
The march will coincide with a nationwide miners walkout ordered by UMW President Sam Church. The union leader, acting within the provisions of the coal contract, ordered the walkout for March 9 and 10 and urged miners to travel to Washington.
Regan plans to reduce the federal black lung program for the fiscal 1982 budget by $378 million. He said he wanted to "restore solvency by restricting benefit entitlements to those who are truly medically disabled by black lung," a disease common among coal miners.
President Frank Kulish of UMW District 2, headquartered in Ebenburg, Pa., said, "We're in agreement with Church. We predicted the walk by on Sunday."
Church said the walkout would have no bearing on current talks with the Bismuthian Coal Operators of America on a new national coal contract to replace it.
Brezhnev's leadership reaffirmed
MOSCOW—In an unprecedented endorsement of his leadership, Leonid Brezhnev and the entire 22-member Pollitubo he dominates were re-elected unanimously at yesterday's closing session of the Communist Party Congress.
The 5.002 delegates packing the Kremlin Palace jumped to their feet and shouted, "Glory to Communism," when the 74-year-old Soviet president and the congress after eight days of unbroken praise for his stewardship.
their stewardship. The congress, which meets once every five years, was highlighted by Breznev's call for a summit meeting with President Reagan, an invitation which Breznev's chief spokesman reminded reporters still requires "a proper response" from the White House.
For the first time in Soviet history, all the Politburo members, including 14 full members and eight others who do not vote at the weekly meetings, kept their decisions.
Technically, the main job of the congress is to debate and approve the 11th five-year plan, which will guide the Soviet economy through 1985.
Army recruiters alerted to threats
After its presentation by Prime Minister Nikolai Tikhonov, delegates unanimously passed the plan, which calls for greater energy production and improvements in the agricultural industry that has disappointed consumers for two consecutive years because of disastrous grain harvests.
WASHINGTON—The Army, responding to a rash of threats across the country, has ordered troops to take extra precautions in their daily activities.
Ll Col. Jeffrey Cook said the Army sent messages last month to all Army stations after bomb threats were recalled from New Haven, Connecticut, Canton, Ohio.
The Army said recruiting stations had received numerous threats, apparently from a terrorist Puerto Rican organization.
Cook said recruiters were advised to vary the routes they take, to keep their car doors locked while driving and while parked, to inspect their vehicles for explosives and generally, "to use reasonable precaution."
The FALN, or fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional, has a record of terrorist activities in the United States. Last month, 10 members were convicted in federal district court in Chicago of conspiracy, armed robbery, weapons violations and theft of vehicles.
Cook said the army had no solid evidence that proved the threats were the work of Puerto Rican terrorists, but added, "They appear to be focused on a detainee."
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---
University Daily Kansan, March 4, 1981
Page 3
Associations offer free paint
By PAM HOWARD Staff Reporter
Besides being laborious, house painting is also expensive, but two neighborhood associations are making affordable for some Lawrence residents.
The Oread Neighborhood Association and the East Lawrence Improvement Association, backed by Community Development funds, will each choose a project to receive free pain, Lynn Goodell, community development director, said.
Renters as well as homeowners are eligible for this program, Nan Harper, Oread Neighborhood Association director, said. Residents who want their house painted should contact the owner.
"The owner is the one who will apply and will receive the paint," Harper said. "He may not be aware of the program."
KATE DUFFY, East Lawrence Improvement Association VISTA supervisor, said that renters needed only to receive the permission of the owner if they wanted to paint their house.
Harper said that residents who were interested in the program should contact ONA. The ONA board plans to choose a block this weekend.
The block to be painted will be chosen
on the basis of need, interest of residents and visibility, she said. ONA is seeking a block that would be highly visible.
Duffy said that her group also was looking for a highly visible block.
"We're going to try to get a block on Connecticut Street that is the most traveled block in east Lawrence," she said.
UNDER THE PROGRAM, community development inspectors will look at houses before paint is given to the owners. Harper said.
These inspectors will consider whether the house has been painted in the last three years, whether the surface would be hard to paint and what repairs need to be made before painting could begin.
Owners or residents would be responsible for doing the painting or hiring someone to do it, Harper said, and a time limit would be set.
"It will be either 60 or 90 days," she said.
Duffy said that the Community Development Board had approved painting in six neighborhoods for next year at a cost of $15,000 or $16,000. He says before the Commission for approval within the next two months.
Harper said that the painting probably would have to be done between April and July because the paint was already properly in weather that was too hot.
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Bill to raise speed limit killed in House
TOPEKA-What was probably the last of the speed limit bills to pass through the Legislature died a natural death on the House floor yesterday.
Along the path of its defeat, the bill was amended, denounced, reamended and rejected to the point where even its supporters refused to vote for it.
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
If the bill had passed it would have raised the speed limit in Kansas immediately after Congress had raised the national speed limit. The bill was defeated resoundingly on a voice vote and stiffened from the House calendar.
"I was very much against the bill," House Speaker Wendell Ladv. the main
"It may take people longer to get where they are going, but at least they will be alive when they get there."
opponent of the bill, said. "I really don't think that we should increase the speed limit at the risk of people's lives.
LADY SAID THAT he thought that the bill was the last the Legislature would see this year on changing the speed limit.
Earlier this session, the House Transportation Committee reluctantly recommended a bill proposed by State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, that would have eliminated the 10-mph grace limit on speeding violations.
Charlton, who did not vote for the bill,
said that she would have voted if the bill
had been amended to 60 mph on four-
ways and always 55 on two-lane highways.
Three major moves led to the demise
of the bill. First, Lady gave an impassioned speech on the thousands of lives saved by the lower speed limit.
The crowning blow to the bill was an effort by State Rep. George Dean, D-Wichita, to amend it from 65 mph on all highways to 55 mph on two-lane
The driver told Webb that when the speed limit was 70 mph, similar accidents happened almost daily.
State Rep. Darrel Webb, D-Wichita,
said that he had been in a tow truck
when he passed the scene of an accident.
After trying to help the victims,
the driver of the tow truck told him that such serious accidents had happened only three or four times a month since the speed limit was lowered.
Then another member of the House spoke on how he had witnessed an accident that killed one and injured three college students.
"The speeches, I think, changed a lot of minds," she said. "Also, when the amendment made by Rep. Dean passed, a lot of the representatives felt it was too fast on one side and too slow on the other side."
Lady said that now that this bill had been defeated, any change made by Congress would be handled by the or the secretary of transportation.
highways and 65 mph on four-lane highways.
Charlton also said that she thought the strong speeches against the bill led many representatives to vote it down.
"That was what probably killed the entire bill," State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said. "Once it was amended, its supporters did not like the bill and its opponents still would not vote for it."
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 4. 1981
Easy pickin' at KU
Somehow, the last couple of months have made the University of Kansas feel as though it's not welcome in Topeka anymore.
Perhaps it feels that way because the Legislature has been using the proposed KU budget as easy pickin' for cutbacks in state expenditures. Perhaps it's because when the chairman of the state Senate Ways and Means Committee drew up a hit list of potential budget-cutting areas, every one of the major requests from the Board of Regents was on that list.
Perhaps it's because Governor Carlin recommended that KU faculty members get only 8 percent pay increases, not the 10 percent that the University had judged the very minimum for acceptable raises. And now that the Legislative committees have gotten their hands on the pay request, they've trimmed it down to 7 percent. (At this rate, by the end of the session, KU instructors will be paying the state for the privilege of working on the Hill.)
Why is KU all of a sudden the most popular place to cut the budget?
Maybe the Legislature believes the stories it's heard about KU being a seedbed for malcontents. Maybe hatchet-happy legislators, steeped in the Carry Nation Kansas tradition, have been chopping a way at that sinful seedbed of education.
Maybe the legislators find it less trouble to hack away at KU's budget rather than increase revenues by passing the proposed severance tax on gas and oil—and consequently having to face up to the tough oil and gas lobbies.
But whatever the reason, it's not difficult to project the long-term results if these budget cuts are finalized, especially those concerning the faculty pay increases. In a few years, when this Legislature's mistakes have taken effect, KU will begin losing good instructors, because even though its educational atmosphere may be alluring, its pay scales are still in the Pleistocene.
And then, no doubt, a whole new Legislature will call upon the University to explain why it allowed its once-admirable standards of education to decline so!
Politically active first ladies do more than just serve tea
Next to the president, the first lady is probably the most scrutinized, questioned, analyzed and examined person in the nation. She is expected to be knowledgeable, composed and able to face hordes of reporters vying to decipher her personality and her relationship to the president.
She, by chance of her marriage and the whim of the American people, is thrown into the
CYNTHIA
CURRIE
spotlight and the role of first lady. It is a role that no longer is merely that of a wife and hostess, but one that has expanded to include ambassador, counselor and leader.
The first woman to step out of the traditional role of first lady and into the limelight was Eleanor Roosevelt. Eleanor became the eyes and ears of her invalid husband, Franklin, traveling 40,000 miles a year while he remained in the city. She is notisted only nursery schools and hospitals to the time-honored hustles of president's wives, but stums and sharecroppers' dwellings.
Eleanor held press conferences, wrote a newspaper column that appeared in 135 newspapers and performed a radio broadcast twice a week. Her admirers said she was at the same time a mother, wife, politician, journalist and stateswoman.
She began a trend that some wives would follow. Others would not, deciding to be merely a shadow behind the figure of their husbands. First ladies that stepped out from behind that shadow were those who made the ones best remembered, and they are made of the same daring mould as Eleanor was made of.
In recent years the mold has not been broken and first ladies have taken their positions seriously and approached their opportunities with vigor. For example, Rosalyn Carter stumped for her husband, Jimmy, during his reelection campaign, often speaking before groups
who did not wholeheartedly support her husband at that time. She spoke eloquently and forcefully at her engagements, often cutting a more solid and imposing figure than her husband.
When her husband had made it into the White House in 1977, Rosalynn was scheduled to become the chairman of the White House Commission on Mental Health before she met that the president's family members were prohibited by law from being on committees.
Undaunted. she served as co-chairman.
She helped fashion a mental health bill that would improve service to the poor, racial minorities and the elderly in need of mental care—a bill which, ironically, was supported by Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, Carnegie Democratic rival during the 1980 campaign.
Rosalymn, like Eleanor, has been criticized by the press and Congress for her candor, for the precedents she has broken, the influence she apparently wielded over the president and information she was privy to during his term. Despite the criticism and scorn, Rosalynn's example reveals that the first lady can no longer be simvolve a wife.
Nancy Reagan has a difficult act to follow. She is different than Eleanor and Rosalynn. She has always been behind her husband, Ronald, in the shadows and not in the glaring, revealing light.
Nancy may not want to be actively involved, and that is her preogative. However, when the president is unable to see through the injustices of inflation and unemployment, the first lady has the unique opportunity to alert the nation to the small injustices by giving them her attention.
So far the public has seen only the frivolous Nancy—the ex-actress who wears designer dresses and who prohibits the president from blowing out the candles on his 70th birthday cake for fear he'll get frosting on his lapels. She and the newly-elected president are said to be close, but she has expressed no desire to be actively involved in politics.
The first lady is a symbol, a representative of the country to itself and others. A first lady who plays an active role in the political process, who is a strong advocate for herself, is an asset to the president and the nation.
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 afaraway, please include the writer's class and include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
KANSAN
(SP95 66-64) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday June, June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Kansahawaii Post Office. Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansahawaii, or six months or six years a year outside the county. Student addresses must be addressed to the university's $1 a student, passed through the student office. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansahawaii, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas.
Editor
David Lewis
Managing Editor David Lewis Ellen Ivandola
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JVJ SHOPPING MALL
For Bentos 91
A new look for Lawrence?
Ohio mall has no place in Lawrence
Imagine the shock of finding a crew of workmen busily measuring your living room, apparently because some speculators on Ohio Street decided your apartment was perfect for their use. You're going to just spend a fortune improving the place, they calmly explain that this hot tub is just what you need. By now, you're getting hot under the collar. "Who do these Ohio guys think they are?" You ask. "Mercifully, before you resort to violence, you awake from this bad dream in a cold sweat."
But wait. A surprisingly similar drama is taking place right here in River City. Rather than a hot tub, it's an enclosed regional shopping mall that's on the drawing board.
Some three years ago, Jacobs, Vissoni, Jacobs, commercial developers from Cleveland, landed in Lawrence. They spent time studying the area and found Lawrence a plum ripe for the picking. They took an option to buy a 61-acre tract of land at 35th and Iowa Street, which was way for the City Commission to rezone the land from residential to commercial.
The city requested JVJ first explore other alternatives, resulting in a downtown mall concept that looked as though the spaceship from "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" had touched down in East Lawrence. This Wesco Hall-gone-mad of a building was quickly abandoned, however, bringing us up to the present.
Early last week, the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission overwhelmingly recommended that JV's request for rezoning be denied. The City Commission, which has the final say, is expected to follow suit later this month. But with $300,000 already invested, the Ohio Gang has threatened legal action to overturn the city's decision. And like a good soap opera, heaven only knows how that drama will be resolved.
In exploring the issue, two basic questions about the proposed shopping mall come to
mind. First, are there alternative ways to keep Lawrence money in Lawrence without destroying downtown, and second, what role enterprise have in public planning decisions?
The first question's easy: Yes, sound alternatives do exist. A Chicago area planning firm hired by the city last spring determined that full-line department stores, such as Sears
DAVID
HENRY
100
or Macy's, are what the downtown needed to offset any need for a mall. They presented three different proposals where these new stores, along with office space, could be built without greatly altering downtown or wiping out surrounding neighborhoods. JVJ, however, planned to expand from major department stores to such cluster development undermines the planer's scheme.
Answering the second question is relatively simple, too. The alternative to public planning—private speculation without restraints—brought us the concrete and neon strips of Sixth and 23rd streets. Zoning laws were created to prevent, or at least, minimize, such mistakes from reoccurring. Clearly, when left on their own, developers are notorious for abandoning all concern for the community's good. Houston, with its zoning laws, it's also becoming the Los Angeles city of beauland a city where a sewer plant could easily be built next door to you.
Sometimes the long-range benefits of a development offset people's noisy protests and the city has no choice but to displace residents who live nearby. And the mayor is rezoning argue that the mail will bring additional revenue to the city, county and state. Admittedly true, but at what cost to businesses throughout the city, especially those downtown?
And while discussing the economic practicality of shopping malls, consider the question of energy efficiency. In the next twenty years, energy costs will undoubtedly soar, particularly for utilities. Heating and cooling a 450,000 square-foot beached whale in New York will cost about $1 million, particularly when the cost is passed along to the consumer in the form of higher prices.
Lawrence's response to the proposal was loud and clear: people simply don't want it. Many are loyal to a newly revitalized downtown and fear the mall would destroy the area. Others view the massive build-up of southwest Lawrence as unnecessary. Whatever the reason, clearly, there is solid evidence supporting their opinions.
Therefore, when Jacobs, Visconsi, Jacobs hints at going to court, I'm reminded of the kid who threatens to take his ball back if he doesn't get his way. My guess is that JVJ's main concern isn't for the betterment of downtown or the community. Rather, I suspect these people are really upset because there's a handsome profit to be made. Otherwise, they'd have left here long ago.
Downtown merchants, neighborhood associations and concerned citizens have joined together in opposing an enclosed regional shopping mall. I'm confident the City Commission will follow the planning commission's guidelines against rezoning. Certainly, their approval of JVJ request would make a mockery of representative government.
Nevertheless, denying the request probably only wins the battle and not the war. If the issue does go to court, we can only hope that Lawrence wins the right to continue planning its own future development. Anything less would be a nightmare.
Letters to the Editor
Washburn valuable to more than Topeka
To the editor:
Cynthia Currie in her column in the Feb. 25 issue states that Washburn University should be allowed to suffer "a slow, painful death." One would have hoped that a college student would have had more of an appreciation of her education than to have written such a column.
Where did Currie get the facts to arrive at the conclusion? True, Washburn is only a small liberal arts college, but it is hardly a clone of Pittsburgh State University or Fort Hays State University. Its location in the capital of Kansas provides students with many unique opportunities, such as observing the state Legislature in session.
As for her assertion that the law school at KU is superior to the one at Washburn, it also can be discarded as being without basis in fact. Law faculty at Washburn must have a high quality of the faculty at Washburn's law school equals that of the respected faculty at KU. In fact, a higher percentage of Washburn law school graduates pass the bar exam on the first attempt than those of faculty staff (it is far superior, but reputations do not teach.
Finally, Currie discovers that supporting Washburn would be "bad business" for the state. This is undeniably true, but is it "good business" for the state to pour nearly $3 billion into the existing six Regents schools? Of course it isn't. Education has never been a good business. It is, however, an institution upon which this country has placed its all its hopes. The death of any university should be avoided whenever possible, not applauded. Chris Cobler
Topeka junior
Review unjustified
To the editor:
True! Some plays at the University Theatre are less equal than others, but one wonders if it has occurred to Paul Lim that some critics are less equal than others? This occurred to me after reading "Gerardina Alba"; what an example of objective criticism describing the daughter of a Spanish matriarch as "a foreshored Charo." However, after his review of "The Admirable Crimson," ineptitude did more than just occur to me; it leapt out and grabbed me by the . . . throat.
The first half of his review is quite complimentary (to the script) and I agree wholeheartedly. When he states that "the only things worth recommending were the colorful costumes, the smudgy (?) makeup, the whimsical lighting and the fanciful set," it makes me wonder whether he and I saw the same production.
As far as you review of "Bernarda Alba",
quit effort, go to a "wetty fellow." And your
I am an actor, and, until the cast list was posted, was in competition with LeWan for the part of Crichton. I must admit, I probably viewed his performance with a far more discerning eye than most theatregoers would. And I was impressed. Lim, without realizing it, said to me: "He head; LeWan's Crichton was stuff, which is precious." He made most appropriate word a person could use to describe that period of Victorian England—stiff, starched and stuffy.
M
The decree the c suppe
Clin had no to mo
"At said, have fatali have
mittee Clinto Medio decree
Am
was !
who s
when
Frida
review of Crichton? Well, most of the 1,500 people who saw it would agree with me, you see.
Overland Park freshman
"I ciden Bran not th if the Bree
To the editor:
Real war is no game
Although we have learned to accept infantile behavior by various groups in the KU community, the McCollum "frat" warfare games represent a new frontier in the annals of campus childishness. Although wrapping someone's house or car in toilet paper might be considered funny, making a mockery of the American combat soldier is immature and disgraceful.
To explain the irreversibility of their actions in terms these beer-guzzling bumbos would understand is a task I'm not sure I could handle. Just let them ask any American who has defended the country in wartime. They are likely to find out that combat is not fun and games. A visit to any Veterans Hospital would open their eyes to the understanding that jeopardizing our military industry in change for national freedom is not a joking matter. I suspect that the thousands of brave men and women buried in our national cemeteries would not want their supreme sacrifice taken in a humorous vein. When they did, they didn't recover by drinking a few beers.
So come on, fellas. Why don't you go cram
yourselves into a phone booth?
Dave Jampolsky Lawrence sophomore
---
---
University Daily Kansan, March 4. 1981
Page 5
Motorcycles
From page 1
Clinton, a motorcycle rider himself, said he had never been in favor of helmets as a deterrent to drunk driving.
"At the speeds that they are talking about," he said, "a helmet becomes virtually useless. I have seen just as many highway motorcycle accidents as I have as I have on people who did not wear helmets."
A study presented to the Insurance Committee, however, contradicted the study cited by Clinton. According to University of Kansas research, cars with rearview mirrors had alarms decreased motorcycle accident fatalities.
The study showed a significant enough decrease with helmets that several legislators on the committee were immediately persuaded to support the law.
Among legislators favoring the helmet law was State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, who said she thought the bill would be approved if it was voted on in committee Thursday or Friday.
"I have seen the results of motorcycle accident that have caused severe injury," Branson, a former nurse, said. "More often than not, the accident has been prevented if the rider had worn a helmet."
Branson said the higher incidence of serious
injury to riders with helmets was driving up health costs, which is eventually paid by the tax
Motorcyclists have said that many serious accidents could be prevented if the state funded motorcycle educational programs, instead of enforcement on enforcement of the helmet and insurance law.
"The officers will be having to stop us almost every time they see one of us riding without a helmet," Chappell said. "Then they would have to track down our insurance policy. Instead of wasting money on all of that, they could spend it on motorcycle riding education."
O'Sullivan said the main problem in serious motorcycle accidents was not careless riders, but careless car drivers. Although there may be signs warning the driver to watch out for the motorcyclist, he said, it is human to overlook smaller objects.
Chappell said Iowa had abolished its helmet law and had installed an education program instead, and currently has the lowest rate of motorcycle accident deaths.
Owners of motorcycle shops said they did not think the bill would hurt their business.
"The sales of buses in Missouri are just as good as ours are, even though Missouri has a helmet law," a salesman at Kelings Kawasaki, 3200 Iowa St., said. "A lot of riders won't wear a
Art Summer, owner of Lawrence Yamaha, 506 W. 23 St., said he also did not think sales would lag, but that he did support voluntary use of helmets.
"I think it is unconstitutional for the Legislature to make somebody do something that they don't want to," Sommer said. "I would like to see them propose some education hills."
helmet when they are out on the road, they will just put it on when they get into the town."
Sommer said he was in favor of education programs because he had noticed most of the motorcycle fatalities in Lawrence were riders with six months experience or less.
"Few accident victims are experienced rideons," he said. "It is just like car drivers, except that there is naturally more chance for injury on the motorcycle."
The assistant safety administrator for the Department of transportation said something unexpected.
"Based on seven years of study," D. E. Robinson said, "it has been shown that the rate of serious injury or death in motorcycle accidents outstrips what the total percentage should be."
"Out of a total of 4.4 percent of all drivers who are motorcycle riders, 19 percent suffer serious injury or death. That is entirely too high and something needs to be done to lower that figure."
services of these groups," Abbott said yesterday.
Limit
From page 1
"The administration can blame the $5 tuition increase for Health Services on the Student Senate, and then they're trying to come across as heroes by cutting that $5 cents."
BERT COLEMAN, student body president, agreed with Abbott, adding that the 55 cents would be a minute amount compared with the other expected increases in tuition.
"I think that the increase in tuition is going to be huge and this 55 cents is just a drop in the bucket," he said. "These groups need the money and it's been recommended and justified through a long and arduous process by the Finance and Auditing Committee and the Senate."
Loren Busby, Senate Finance and Auditing
Committee chairman, said he was disappointed the chancellor made his decision before meeting the committee.
"Dancellor Shankel is rubber-stamping what Ambler recommended without giving the Senate the chance."
Busby said that the students should have control over the amount of the activity fee.
"Even though I'm sure Dr. Ambler has no justifications for making the cut," Busby said, "I don't hope he examined the issues closely enough to be making a recommendation to the chancellor without the Senate having a chance to present its side."
"You may just as well call it the administration activity fee, paid for by the students," he said. "They're letting us control the cutbacks, but not the increases."
Mall
From page 1
attended the Planning Commission's hearing on JVJ's payroll.
Zinn, although refusing to comment on the possibility of a lawsuit, said the presence of a court reporter at the hearing was "unusual for Kansas.
"In some states, where these hearings are conducted more formally, court reporters aren't unusual," he said. "But, on an issue as complex and far-reaching as this one, having a court reporter there is not only appropriate, but prudent."
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THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
1307 Mass. phone 843-1151
The BLACK STUDENT UNION will hold an informational meeting for those interested in running for the following offices:
PRESIDENT
PRESIDENT
VICE-PRESIDENT
CORRESPONDING SECRETARY
RECORDING SECRETARY
TREASURER
PARLIAMENTARIAN
Time: 6:00 p.m.
Place: Kansas Union - Governor's Room
Date: Thursday, March 5, 1981
For more information, contact the Black Student Union B113, Phone 864-3984.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, March 4; 1961
10. (A) 30
On Campus
TODAY
THE UNIVERSITY FORUM will present Roger Fisher on "Conflict Resolution in Global Perspective" at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
SXMPOSIUM OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
CONCERT will be performed at 2:30 and 8 p.m.
at the Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy.
KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINAR ON PRAYER will discuss "Prayer Without Ceasing" at 4:40 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER SESSION will be at 7:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
LA MESA ESPANOLA (SPANISH TABLE)
will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 3059 Wescow. All native speakers and students of
Spanish. The table is sponsored by Sigma Delta PI.
JAYHAWK TOASTMASTERS will hold its
international Room of the International
Room of the
WOMEN AT WORK LUNCHON SERIES will sponsor "Reflections of a Woman Artist" from noon to 1 p.m. in Alcove D of the Union.
LAWRENCE COLATION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE will host Roger Fisher, Harvard law professor, speaking on "The Limited Role of Justice in the Injustice" at $4 p.m. in the 8 Room of the Union.
TOMORROW
ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER
SEMINAR on "Remote Batch Entry from Time-
Sharing" will be held at noon in the Auditorium
of the Computer Services Facility.
STUDENT BAR ASSOCIATION FORUM will present Wendall Harmons on "Alternatives to Traditional Legal Practice—The Public Interest Law" at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green.
UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB will present
it's a Small World" at p.m. in the Watkins Rink
and at 10:30 a.m. on Thursday.
THE GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF
INTERNATIONAL ROMANCE p.m. in the
International Room of the Room
GRADUATE SCHOOL TEA AND TALK LECTURE with Tony Genova on "The Justification of Principal's" will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Union.
PHOTOJOURNALISM STUDENTS ASSOCIATION will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 119 Flint. Anyone interested in photojournalism is welcome.
THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SPIRITUAL DISCIPLINES will discuss "Simplicity" at 7 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER will sponsor an "Introduction to SCSS" at 7:30 p.m. in the Auditorium of the Computer Services Facility.
LA MESA ESPANOLA (SPANISH TABLE)
meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 3069
HOPELE
THE STOUFFER NEIGHBORHOOD
AUTHORITY will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the
Satellite Unite
Starring Robert DeNiro, Cathy Mortier, Jose Pesci, screenplay by Markid Martin and Paul Schrader, directed by Martin Scorese. Now playing at the Hillcrest Theatres.
By MIKE GEBERT
RAGING BULL
"Raging Bull" would be one of the greatest boxing movies ever made, except that it not "blows."
Contributing Reviewer
Viewers admire fighter in 'Raging Bull'
There are really only two boxing movies in the same league as "Raging Bull." One is Robert Wise's 1956 "Somebody Up There Likes Me," which starred Paul Newman as Rocky Graziano. Newman was the same kind of angry dead-end punk that DeNiro is here, but while boxing gave way out of the slums, it need LaMotta's savagery, putting it in a controlled atmosphere.
It's about a boxer, Jake LaMotta (Robert DeNiro), a creaked, sado-masochistic fighter who tries to live like a boxer out of the ring. Martin Soreseau's film echews both the manipulative competitiveness of a "Rocky" and the anti-boxing moralizing of a "Golden Boy." It's not a matter of who wins, but how Jake LaMotta plays the game—and he plays it brutally and to the utmost, savagely demolishing his opponents and gleefully absorbing the weight of their punches.
THE OTHER IS Robert Rossen's very great "Body and Soul," with John Garfield (obviously a model for DeNiro here) as an alternately manipulative and manipulated up-and-comer. But DeNiro doesn't have that sense of upwardness. Rossen has proved himself to prove himself to a world that doesn't care. And when, as he ages, he loses the magic of the ring, he's lost.
The ring is treated by Scorsese *mw aww* in a place of pre-civilized battle. The boxing scenes are shot impressionistically, as they might appear to a fighter who has endured fourteen previous rounds. The punches are amplified to the effect of an explosion of a howitzer. In close up, we fight, while the characteristic camera work in extraordinary, newsreel-like black and white by cinematographer Michael Chapman gives the old world of the ring an amazing cinematic vitality that makes LaMotta's avagery almost impossible to miss. The helicopter scenes in "Apocalypse Now." It is the closest we come to understanding the fury and love of pain in this movie.
The non-boxing scenes are less memorable; no doubt that is how it was for LaMotta as well. He argues with his first wife, meets his second, argues with his manager and brother (Joe Pesci), becomes insanely jealous of his wife (Cathy Moriarty), agrees to throw a fight, becomes champion, loses to Sugar Ray Robinson (Cathy Moriarty), as he grows fat, he loses his vital retirement, as he grows fat, he arrested for pimping a fourteen-year-old. He continues to inhabit the outer rings of show business, making a poor stand-up comic. Fifteen years after retirement, whatever he had is gone.
DeNiro gives an extraordinary performance, and one that will probably net him his second Oscar. But one cannot say that DeNiro really reveals LaMotta to us. He is a crazy man who might explode at any moment. He is a little too harsh when joking with the small-time hustlers on another operette, with, and he is so jealous of his wife that he eventually drives her away.
TAUNTING PEOPLE, demolishing a young fighter's face because his wife called him
"pretty," facing Sugar Ray after their fifth and last fight and telling him (though he can barely see or stand) that Ray never knocked him out, LaMota is still an enigmatic psychotic, a man whose mind works differently from everyone else's. Only when LaMotta gains weight, ages and dissipates his animalistic rage do we understand him.
The mythic part of Martid Martin's and Paul Schrader's screenplay works with DeNirno; it does not always work with other characters. Schrader has clearly demonstrated in his own films "Hardcore" and "American Gigolo" that he hates women and is repelled by sex in the manner of the censor who can't tear himself away from the pornography he is censoring.
The character of Vickie, LaMotta's second wife, is obviously inspired by Lana Turner's roadhouse seductress in "The Postman Always Rings Twice", but where Turner was Moss Mortality as Vickie is as praternatal than DeNiro, sending men to doom by accident.
She is naïve, basic and incredibly sexy, and it is easy to see why LaMotta becomes fanatically protective of her. If she is a realistic character, that's another question.
MORE REALISTIC are the various small-time hoods and wheeler-dealers around La Motta, led by Pesci as his brother/manager. He has the ability to keep things on easy to see why he never got his name in the paper.
The paradox of the film is that we have a natural instinct to admire LaMotta over his brother, or the grocer down the street, or Albert Schweitzer or anybody. LaMotta busts people's faces and we cheer him on; when he stops we lose interest in him. Scorsese and DeNiro can make LaMotta as ugly as they want and there's still a part of us that cheers.
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JANE FONDA
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9 to 5
PGC
EVE 7:30 & 9:30
MAT, SAT, SUN 2:00
CINEMA 2
Windwalker
EVE 7:15 & 9:15
PGC
MAT SAT & SUN 2:00
The words of eternity!
JET MO HWYS 14.8 181 T
SS RTE BOX 230
WEST PLAINS MO 65775
MISSISSAUGA WI 56902
SCHNEIDER'S RETAIL LOUOR
THE WINE SHOP
Pre-Spring
WINE
FESTIVAL
CINEMA 1
JANE FONDA
LILY TOMLIN
9 TO 5
PG
EVE. 7:30 & 8:30
MAT. SAT. & SUN. 2:00
CINEMA 2
Windwalker
EVE. 7:10 & 9:15 PG
MAT. SAT. & SUN. 2:00
The words of a servant
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
PAUL NEWMAN
FORT APACHE
EDWARD ASNER
THE BRONX
20TH CENTURY FOR FILMS
EV 7:15 & 9:35
MAT SAT & SUN 2.00
VARSITY
One of the year's 10 best.
ALTERED STATES
EVE 7:15 & 9:30
MAT SAT & SUN 2.00
HILL CREST 1
2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
NICHARD DREYFUSS
THE
COMPETITION
EVE 7:15 & 9:30
MAT SAT & SUN 2.15
HILL CREST 2
ROBERT DE NIRO
Nominated for & Academy Awards,
including BEST PICTURE
EVE 7:15 & 9:30 MAT SAT & SUN 2.15
TRAGING
HILL CREST 3
JACK LEMMON NOMINATED "BEST Actor"
JACK LEMMON
ROBBY BENSON
TRIBUTE
PG
MAT SAT & SUN 2.15
VALUABLE COUPON
$2.00 OFF per canoe
5 canoe minimum
Not valid Memorial Weekend
TWIN BRIDGES CANOE RENTAL
NORTH FORK RIVER
Funky Junk Sale
20-50% off Items!
Pente, stocking hats, ceramics,
mirrors, picture frames, stationery and more!
at
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
open M-F 10:30-7
Th 10:30-9
Sat 11:6
841-8377
MY HAIR'S SO FINE AND THIN
I HAVE THIS COWLICK HERE...
HOW CAN I GET RID OF THESE &?5% FLUPS?
MY HAIR'S SO COARSE AND UNRULY...
I WISH I HAD MORE BODY IN MY HAIR!
MY HAIR AND SKIN ARE SO DRY
I HATE MY HAIR! WHAT CAN I DO WITH IT?
SOLUTIONS to these problems and more with help from open most evenings till 8 headmasters
809 Vermont 843-8808
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
Wednesday, Mar. 4
Due to unavoidable circumstances THE SEARCH is cancelled.
The film was lost in shipping.
Thursday, Mar. 5
Weekend
(1967)
The film it took Jean-Luc Godard thirteen years to recover from a blistering, bitter sore on a world gone mad, consumer society in the last three as revolution and its own destructiveness bury it. "A great, original work." Weekend is Godard's vision of Hell, and it trans with the visions of the greatest," Pauline Kael, The New Yorker. With Jean-Pierre Leauq, Mitelle Daro (105 min). Color, Frenchubtilities, 730.
Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodduff Auditorium in the Kressard Union Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular, and Sunday films are $1.50. Midnight films are $2.00. Tickets available at the SUA office. Kan萨 Union, the level. Information seeks 3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
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
Back by Popular Request!
Ask to See The Moose!
719 Massachusetts
Wea. thru Sun.
March 4th thru March 8th
Enjoy Coca Cola
No coupons accepted with this offer.
Hog Heaven Rib Special
HALF SLAB BIG END $3.49
HALF SLAB SMALL END $4.99
FULL SLAB (to go only) $6.99
footlights
Footlights
Footlights
Footlights
Funky Junk Sale
20-50% off Selected
Items!
Pente, stocking hats, ceramics,
mirrors, picture frames, stationery and more!
at
footlights
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
open M-F 10:30-7
Th 10:30-9
Sat 11-6
841-6377
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
SUA FILMS
MY HAIR'S SO FINE AND THIN
I HAVE THIS COWLICK HERE...
HOW CAN I GET RID OF THESE &/?* FLIPS?
MY HAIR'S SO COARSE AND UNRULY...
HOW CAN I GET MY HAIR TO SHINE?
MY HAIR AND SKIN ARE SO DRY
I WISH I HAD MORE BODY IN MY HAIR!
I HATE MY HAIR! WHAT CAN I DO WITH IT?
SOLUTIONS to these problems and more with help from open most evenings till 8 headmasters
809 Vermont 843-8808
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
SUA FILMS
Wednesday, Mar. 4
Due to unavoidable circumstances THE SEARCH is cancelled. The film was lost in shipping.
Thursday, Mar. 5 Weekend (1967)
The film it took Jean-Luc Godard thirteen years to recover from a blistering bitter saline on a world gone mad, consumer society in the last throes as revolution and its own destructiveness purnit it. "A great, original work... Weekend, Godard's vision of Hell, and it ranks with the visions of the greatest." Pauline Kael. The New Yorker. With Jean-Pierre Laudre, Minnie Darr. (105 min). Color, French/subtitles, 7:30.
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. Miniature films are $2.00. Tickets available at the SUA office. Kansas Union, 4th level. Information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
NATIONAL
BOWING CO.
Back by Popular Request!
Back
by
Popular Request!
Ask to See
The
Moose!
Hog
Heaven
Rib Special
Wed. thru Sun.
Hog
Heaven
Rib Special
Enjoy Coca-Cola
Sc
Today teacher mention creation
Howe be force teaching the near
By ANN
Staff Req
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University Dally Kansan, March 4, 1981
Page 7
Scopes II sparks reactions
By ANNIKAN NILSSON Staff Reporter
In 1925, a young biology teacher, John Scopes, was convicted by a Tennessee court for teaching public school science that denies the divine creation of man.
Today, the vast majority of biology teachers teach evolution without mentioning the biblical account of creation.
However, the biology teachers may be forced to change their approach to teaching the origin of man and earth in the near future.
Bills requiring teachers to present the creation theory on an equal basis with the evolution theory in public schools and have been applied in several states including Missouri.
The creation theory has also gone to court several times. In a current case, a mother and son sued the California State Board of Education on behalf of younger children in the family. The trial began Tuesday.
They claim their religion is being disparaged and held up to ridicule when only evolution is taught in public school science class rooms. They also claim that evolution theory is scientific dogma and therefore is a mantra of a religion, not a state. They say, is establishing a relation by teaching only evolution.
THE MOST COMMON argument for reintroducing creationism in public schools is not based on freedom of religion, however. The creationists offer evidence for creation that outweighs the evidence for evolution.
Mike Windheuser, Lawrence senior,
and a creationist, said he did not so
much object to evolution being taught
in schools as it be taught as fact.
Windheuser, who is presently student-teaching biology, said a two-model approach would provide students with the skills to explain contrast evidence for the two theories.
'You would then be able to say what
the other opposing evidence was and look at the assumptions of creation theory," he said.
Bill Lashier, professor of curriculum and instruction, said introducing creation in public schools would require changes in teachers' education. He said teachers today were ill-equipped to teach creationism.
According to Laahier, a two-model approach could be pedagogically effie-
"Teaching is improved if you have some contrast," he said. "From that point of view it is sound to contrast the two models."
ACCORDING TO ONE study, students develop a more positive attitude toward biology and learn evolutionary arguments better with a two-model approach than when taught only evolutionary theory.
However, Lashier said laws forcing teachers to teach creationism on an equal basis with evolution could harm education.
"We lose even more teachers if they are forced to teach something they don't believe in," he said. "The evidence for scientific creationism isn't evidence for the fact that put teachers in a difficult situation if they have to present both sides."
Stanley Roth, Lawrence High School biology teacher and past president of the National Association of Biology Teachers, said he would refuse to follow any state laws requiring him to teach creationism.
According to Roth, scientists have not taken the creationists seriously but are now starting to act.
"Public school teachers have done an inadequate job of teaching legislators what science is and what it can do," Roth said. "What we are trying to do now is to show the procedure of science and how concepts of evolution fall into line with science and not with creation."
Ed Wiley, assistant professor of systematics and ecology, said introducing creationism in science classes would create severe problems.
"Creationism is about as scientific as astrology," he said. "If we accept these people's views we must reject all science."
Wiley said fair play was not the real issue.
"We don't teach science on the basis of science, but we teach science on the basis of merit."
Milo Stucky, professor of higher education administration, said the creationist claimed their theory was static and had no connection with religion.
A MEMBER of the New Life Student Fellowship, which sponsors lectures on creation by people with advanced degrees in science, said creation as a valid approach was actively suppressed in the university community.
"This is a strategy for getting it into the public schools curricula," he said.
Smith said there was solid ground for the creationist theory.
Scientific creationism posits that the book of Genesis is an accurate scientific account of origin of earth and man.
"I think the crucial clue is not where the particular theory comes from, but how it stacks up scientifically," Jay Smith, Village Nursery senior, said.
Windheuser said evolution, as well as creation, required a step of faith.
"To say God exists is a step of faith as much as saying God does not exist is a step of faith," he said. We freely and openly admit that the creation theory falls apart if our first assumption, that God exists, is not true. The logical, scientific, and philosophical existence of evolutionary theory negates the existence of a god or God."
The battle lines in the creation versus evolution debate are not drawn between scientists and the church however, and we have a different evolution with their religious faiths.
KU police are investigating a rash of recent thefts of several license plates from cars parked in the Daisy Hill lot near Lewis and Templin halls.
Vincent Krische, St. Lawrence
Student Catholic Center priest, said
teaching creationism as science
misused the scriptures.
On the Record
The Jayhawk statue in front of Strong Hall was covered with about a gallon of white enamel paint.
were vandalized early yesterday morning, police said.
At least seven plates have been stolen in the past month, all of them are from different states, police said.
The vandals put plaster in the hand of one of the figures on the Jimmy Green statue in front of Lippincott Hall.
Police said that the thefts were probably related and the thief was collecting the plates from as many different places as possible.
"We don't hold the book of Genesis as a scientific account of creation," he said.
interest places as possible Two statues on Jayhawk Boulevard
A thief took $500 Monday from a room in Hashinger Hall, police said. The money was taken from a wallet in a desk drawer.
JACK BREMER, campus pastor for the United Methodist Church, said Genesis was not intended as a serious scientific message.
"In practice the Methodist Church has said that the biblical story of creation is primarily a religious story," he said.
Bremer said the creation movement had political overtones and was aimed at ensuring stability and control of society.
"It is an effort to overcome the long American tradition of pluralism," he said.
You provide our Margin of Excellence in:
JAZZ
BLUEGRASS
CLASSICAL
NEWS
Support
KANU's
Campaign
for Excellence!
Feb. 28
Mar. 7
Call in your pledge now! (913) 864-5100
92 kanu.fm
Easter Seals
1ST ANNUAL WHEELCHAIR BASKETBALL CLASSIC
Wednesday, March 4th 7:30 at Allen Field House
Adults $3
Students $2
Pre-school & individuals with disabilities FREE
DEFENSE
Come watch two nationally ranked teams. The Big 8 Champions lady 'Jayhawks' against the Kansas 'Chairmen', No. 4 in the nation, in a benefit game for the Kansas Easter Seals Society. Sponsored by the Ramada Inn and The University of Kansas students concerned with disabilities.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, March 4, 1981
---
OREAD BOOKSHOP
and SATELLITE SHOP
BOOK SALE
Selected Hardbacks at 60-80% off original prices.
Bargains for $1.99 through $4.99.
Today Thru March 13
Two Locations:
Oread Bookshop
Level 3,
Kansas Union
Weekdays 8:30-5,
Sat. 10-4
864-4431
Satellite Shop Satellite Union 8:30-7 MTWTh 8:30-5 Fridays
864-5697
Rubber will meet wood as usual in Allen Field House tonight, but the squeak of wheelchair wheels will be the familiar slap of tennis shoes.
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
By ALVIN A. REID Staff Reporter
OREAD BOOK SHOP
Wheelchair game to benefit Easter Seals
OREAD
BOOK
SHOP
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
Chairman founder, Joe Greve, said the Topika-based team, which travels worldwide, was especially excited about playing in Lawrence.
The Kansas Chairmen will join the women's basketball team in 7:30 p.m. exhibition basketball game to benefit the National Eastern Seals Society.
"We're happy to join hands with Coach Mariah Womanish and her team," Greve said. "These women can shoot well from outside."
Greve said the teams would combine to form two teams to prevent the Chairmen from having an advantage.
KU students place third in law contest
"When we play exhibition games the
A team of four KU law students tied for third place in the Jessup International Moot Court Competition last week.
Ruth Benien, Norton, Katryn Gardner, Topeka, Jett Anderson, Topela and Philip E. Porter, Overland Park, represented KU in the regional baseball league. Omaha, Neb., where they competed against eight other regional schools.
The students were judged on the basis of their oral arguments, written briefs and general skills.
Washington University of St. Louis won the regional tournament after four
rounds of competition. The school's team will compete in the national competition against eight other regional winning teams.
team, he would be moved to Topekha by the team. The player ages range from 21 to 38, with most players in their late twenties.
KU's team was chosen last fall by a panel of students and professors on the basis of written briefs and oral arguments by each student. They had until the regional tournament to prepare their cases.
Each year, law schools around the world are given a hypothesis problem to solve concerning some aspect of international law. This year's subject involved a boundary dispute between two fictitious countries.
THE CHAIRMEN play many exhibition games, but they also compete in the National Wheelchair Basketball League. Out of 140 teams, the chairmen are ranked fourth in the nation. The squad holds the record for most points in a game, 185. Nine-year-old Miller has scored 100 points in a game.
"We run around the country whipping everybody and then clutch in the semil's. Hopefully, this year will be different," Miller said.
other squad usually has great difficulty moving the chairs," Greve said. "We palyed K-State varsity last year and were beating them 40 at halftime.
"We traded scores, but still beat them by 20 points. We weren't that much better, but we knew how to handle the chairs."
"We've been very successful as a team over the last seven years," Miller said. "We've reached the semi-finals of the national tournament for the past seven years and have lost each year by only one point."
Miller said in the last five years the team has never lost more than four games in a season and has never lost by more than a single basket.
GREVE SAID that since he started the team in 1970, it had traveled to the Virgin Islands, Canada, Mexico and Hawaii and had raised more than $100,000 for charitable organizations. He is also one of the happiest children on the island of St. Johns.
"When we played in St. Johns the entire island population showed up," Greve said. "They had never seen a wheelchair basketball game."
"They let in 6,000 fans for the first half and another 6,000 for the second half."
Greve said private business contributions and personal donations sponsored their team. Coach Ted Owens donated their crimson and blue uniforms. The team gives all proceeds from its games to charity.
He said the team was interested in any handicapped male who could play basketball. He said that age was not a factor and that if a player made the
Tickets for the game are $3 for adults,
$2 for students and $1 for children under twelve.
Pre-school children and han-
dled individuals will be admitted free.
Spring drink specials
$1 DRINKS
(single shot high balts)
Every Tues. Wed. Thurs.
8:15 p.m
Where the stars are
Tiff & Rose
842 6930
Lawrence
Opera House
ZEN PRACTICE
ZEN PRACTICE
Intensive Meditation
Retreat, March 5-8
Public Talk
Sunday March 8, 2:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dacher Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
FREE Cups & Ice
with Keg Purchase
and this coupon
($5.00 value)
Coupon expires 3/31/81
the
KEGGER
1610½ W. 23rd
841-9540
$5.00
Coupon expires 3/31/81
DOLPHIN
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NOW AT WENDY'S WIN A NEW JEEP CJ-7
WINNERS WHEEL
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The key to the device is an American Wired Wi-Fi Cable Cat 7 connector. This cable provides a standard audio connection with an AM radio. The connectors are the equivalent of the components in a CD player. Each component works like a Wi-Fi receiver, a Cable Coax, and other regulated devices which identify the same product of the Cable Coax Company.
Two games to play—Two ways to WIN! COLLECT LETTERS AND WIN!
The vehicle that captured the spirit of fun...America's own 1981 AMC Jeep CJ-7?
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**WENDY'S WHITEWINGS WHEELED GRAFT CHART**
Category Price Per Share
Category No. Shares Price
HOT SPORT CAT 7 4 $1,098 (200) $1,134 (400)
BABY RACE CAT 5 10 $1,098 (200) $1,134 (400)
BUSSLE 105 $1,098 (200) $1,134 (400)
BUSSLE 105 $1,098 (200) $1,134 (400)
CHIP 7,600 $1,098 (200) $1,098
SINGER 7,600 $1,098 (200) $1,098
SINGER 7,600 $1,098 (200) $1,098
NEGRO FUR 3000 $1,098 $1,098
LARGE CAT FUR 5000 $1,098 $1,098
LARGE CAT FUR 5000 $1,098 $1,098
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PLAY NOW AT...
523 W. 23rd - LAWRENCE
2027 Fairlawn, 3250 S.
Topeka, 2025 N. Topeka
TOPEKA
University Daily Kansan, March 4, 1981
Page 9
SALE STILL IN PROGRESS!!!
We've been too busy to change the ad. We've added new items Remember many of these items are one or two of a kind.
DON'T MISS OUT ON THESE SUPER VALUES!
WOW! IT'S WOLFE'S FABULOUS 23rd ANNUAL
DOG SALE!
OUR DOORS OPEN AT 8:00 A.M. SHARP FEBRUARY 27 & 28. HUGE SAVINGS ON NEW & USED CAMERAS, ACCESSORIES,
DEMONSTRATORS, TRADE-INS AND DISCONTINUED ITEMS. BRING CASH, MASTER CHARGE or VISA. BUT HURRY TO WOLFE'S
CAMERA SHOP FOR THE MOST DYNAMIC SALE EVER.
SALE STARTS FRIDAY
FINANCING AVAILABLE
MOTION
TELEPHOTO LENSES
Perfect for sports and nature pho-
tique, complete with case (Reyes
偶援驾 not included)
reg 89.95 $ SALE $69.99
1000mm x 111 $189.99
reg $295
TRD
**Renal** 2191
Virutex T200 (78) BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Virutex T200 (78) BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Virutex T200 (78) BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Virutex T200 (78) BVL 853 (78) FTU 670 (70)
Centra
35mm COLOR PRINT FILM
35mm SLR CAMERAS
Freshate film FUN USA 100 12
exposure processes in Kodak
chemistry
Competes in SALE $1.99
XERO XERO XERO
35mm RANGEFINDER
CAMERAS
Buffalo 325 I
Miami 155 I/I
Minneapolis 155 II
Minneapolis 39 II
Olympia EA
Rush 35 II
Rush 35 III
Manatee 15 (Used)
Manatee 15 (Used)
Miami 15 (Used)
Miami 35 (II/I)
Miami 35 II/E
Yorktown 358 II /E
Yorktown 358 II /E
Mumbai 7 x 15 (Used)
Mumbai 7 x 15 (Used)
Yuchiho Diects 35 6 x 17 (Used)
Rochester 52 I/E
Rochester 52 I/E
Yorktown 355 I/I/E
Yorktown 355 I/I/E
Nikita Johnson 35 I/I/E
Jacques Centre 2.8 I/I/E
Jacques Centre 2.8 I/I/E
Yukkun half balloon 2 (Used)
Yukkun half balloon 2 (Used)
INTEGRATICS
INSTAMATICS
Retail Sales
Kedah 500 3.50 12.00
Kedah 110 11.00 22.00
Chinese Pandan Flash 29.95 13.00
Huawei Mate 10 24.95 4.00
Japanese Pandan Flash 29.95 13
MOVIE
CAMERAS
Name | Beneath | SALE |
China 8140 S&P | 1599 | 350 |
China EB 8140 S&P | 1599 | 350 |
Bull R & B 762E1 | 1699 | 350 |
Bull R & B 762E1 | 1699 | 350 |
China 8140 S&P | 1599 | 350 |
Sandy 8128 S&P | 4790 | 350 |
Sandy 8128 S&P | 4790 | 350 |
China 8140 S&P | 4790 | 350 |
China GMBH1 | 3290 | 320 |
China GMBH1 | 3290 | 320 |
GAD 11.2 mm | 2799 | 150 |
Chang 1571 S&P | 2799 | 150 |
Chang 1571 S&P | 2799 | 150 |
China 8170 S&P | 3995 | 130 |
China 8170 S&P | 3995 | 130 |
China 8170 S&P | 3995 | 130 |
China 8170 S&P | 3995 | 130 |
China 8170 S&P | 3995 | 130 |
ZOOM LENSES FOR PENTAX K AND RICOH
100 to 200mm $1.5 Quantum
Orig fast
retail 249 95 SALE $999
retail 249 95
Ong fast
retail 349 95 SALE $139$9
MOVIE PROJECTORS
Rental Sales
Ball & Herman 1933 Sound 249.00 15.99
Ball & Herman 1933 Sound 249.00 15.99
Lewis 1807 Dual Sound 619.00 249.99
Lewis 8000 Dual Sound 619.00 249.99
Ball & Herman RML Dual 219.95 13.99
Ball & Herman RML Dual 219.95 13.99
Ball & Herman Sawdust Writer 369.95 23.99
Ball & Herman Sawdust Writer 369.95 23.99
BILL & MURDO 1421 169.95 19.99
Bill & Murdo 1421 169.95 19.99
Bill 151 8000 Sound 389.95 26.99
Bill 151 8000 Sound 389.95 26.99
Chenon 1100 Sound 349.95 19.99
Chenon 1100 Sound 349.95 19.99
Chenon 1500 Sound 429.95 22.99
Chenon 1500 Sound 429.95 22.99
Chenon 11500 Sound 850.00 19.99
Chenon 11500 Sound 850.00 19.99
Iham & Ball Head Writer (490) 499.00 39.99
Iham & Ball Head Writer (490) 499.00 39.99
Vancouver Iham & Ball Head 1150.00 69.99
Vancouver Iham & Ball Head 1150.00 69.99
Iham & Ball Head Ilam & Ball 1150.00 69.99
2X TELECONVERTERS
---
Bring pictures twice as close Available for SLR cameras. Some New others used
SALE $999-$2999
100%
PROJECTORS
| | If More |
| :--- | :--- |
| Eagle A30 Concurrent | 135/50 | SALE |
| Eagle A30 Concurrent 2.7MP | 135/50 | SALE |
| Eagle Concurrent FDM48 | 289/50 | 46.99 |
| Eagle Concurrent FDM48 | 289/50 | 46.99 |
| FFDV-17000 | 191/50 | 46.99 |
| FFDV-17000 | 191/50 | 46.99 |
| (Unused) (Uuid) (Land) | | |
SLIDE FILE PAGES
Special purchase vinyl pages
Special purchase vinyl pages to fit 3 arm ribbon. Usually 40c
25' Each
5' 100
1' 100
DEVELOPING
Retail Sales
Loyale AZ 725 Wonder Used 180.00
Loyale Tuxedo (Used) 160.00
Olympus Wonder Used 185.00
Olympus Drive Mir ML (Used) 185.00
Olympus Drive Mir ML (Used) 185.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Eonate Auto Wonder (Used) 180.00
Quality tanks by Dust press center load for 35mm him, only 8 oz of chemistry required per roll tanks also hold stainless steel rods.
MOTORS FOR 35mm
E
| | Retail | Ship/U.S. |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Kodak Nintendo II | $14.90 | 54.12 |
| Kodak Nintendo II (GSI) | $15.90 | 54.12 |
| Kodak 320 | 76.58 | 69.00 |
| Kodak 320-320 | 76.58 | 69.00 |
| Battman Fury | 20.50 | 19.00 |
| Batman Fury | 20.50 | 19.00 |
| Oniq Sung Seal M | 16.50 | 13.00 |
| Oniq Sung Seal M (i-m) | 159.50 | 31.00 |
| OnePiece Open Sea | 159.50 | 31.00 |
| OnePiece Open Sea (i-m) | 159.50 | 31.00 |
| Colorgraphy BM (snd) | 24.95 | 6.00 |
| Prince of Ice | 29.50 | 14.00 |
| Prince of Ice (i-m) | 29.50 | 14.00 |
INSTANT PICTURE CAMERAS
SLIDE VIEWERS
Kalmar Mini, Reg. 3.95
SALE $1'*'
Bain Dehne, Reg. 9.99
SALE $5'*'
INSTAMATIC CAMERA
T
Uses 126 film and RipRash. Great
First Camera. Original factory re-
rive $19.95 SALE$19.95
30mm 15毫米 Handheld Unit (used) 1950.00 17 000.00
35mm 16毫米 Handheld Unit (used) 1950.00 17 000.00
Reduced Camera Use) 3950.00 40 000.00
Reduced Camera Use) 3950.00 40 000.00
Camera Use) 3950.00 40 000.00
45x3 View Use) 3950.00 20 000.00
45x3 View Use) 3950.00 20 000.00
Print for Home Use 3950.00 20 000.00
If New Retail SALE
LARGE FORMAT EQUIPMENT
SALE $899
LIGHTING ACCESSORIES
Harwood 10 and 12 inch clamp
lights $\frac{1}{2}$ PRICE
Smith Victor Lites
$\frac{1}{4}$ OFF
= 40 Light Stand reg $1.54 95$
Haworth 10 and 12 inch clamp lights 1/2 PRICE
Savannah Mall
Retail 299.5 SALUE
10mm T Wheel Alkai A 299.5
10mm T Wheel Alkai A 299.5
10mm T Wheel Alkai A 349.5
10mm T Wheel Alkai A 349.5
10mm T Wheel Alkai A 349.5
10mm T Wheel Alkai A 349.5
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 132.6
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 132.6
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 132.6
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 132.6
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 132.6
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 132.6
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 132.6
200mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
200mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
200mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
200mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
200mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
200mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
15mm D Wheel Alkai A 194.9
85 110mm D Wheel Alkai A 349.9
85 110mm D Wheel Alkai A 349.9
85 110mm D Wheel Alkai A 349.9
85 110mm D Wheel Alkai A 349.9
85 110mm D Wheel Alkai A 349.9
85 110mm D Wheel Alkai A 349.9
85 110mm D Wheel Alkai A 349.9
85 110mm D Wheel Alkai A 349.9
10mm B Wheel (wheel) 445.0 124.0
10mm B Wheel (wheel) 445.0 124.0
10mm B Wheel (wheel) 445.0 124.0
10mm B Wheel (wheel) 445.0 124.0
10mm B Wheel (wheel) 445.0 124.0
10mm B Wheel (wheel) 445.0 124.0
10mm B Wheel (wheel) 445.0 124.0
15mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
15mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
15mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
15mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
15mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
15mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
20mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
20mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
20mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
20mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
20mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
20mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
20mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
30mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
30mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
30mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
30mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
30mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
30mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
30mm B Wheel (wheel) 395.0 154.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
25 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (wheel) 780.0 100.0
35 110mm F5.6 Pentax K1 (
PRINT
LENSES FOR NIKON
SCREW MOUNT LENSES
PRINT MOUNTING SUPPLIES
| | Retail | Sales |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 17mm I.5 Vizor | 291 | 19.0 |
| 18mm I.5 Vizor | 314 | 19.0 |
| 20mm I.5 Vizor | 391 | 19.0 |
| 20mm I.5 Vizor | 471 | 19.0 |
| 20mm Vizor | 383 | 19.0 |
| 20mm Vizor | 471 | 19.0 |
| 20mm I.5 Vizor | 383 | 19.0 |
| 20mm I.5 Vizor | 471
(FIT PENTAX, MAMIYA, FUJICA)
Assortment of Seal Brand Cold
Mount, Spray, Exhibits, etc.
1/2 PRICE
MAT BOARDS—
ASSORTED COLORS
7% v/9%, 35c
SALE 8 FOR $1⁰⁰
YASHICA/CONTAX
LENSES FOR
H
| Model | Brand | Price | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | ---: |
| 10mm F2 Sigma | Renoir | 189.91 | 7.90 |
| 10mm F2 Sigma | Renoir | 169.91 | 7.90 |
| 15mm F2 Di Pentax MC | Renoir | 115.00 | 6.90 |
| 15mm F2 Di Pentax MC | Renoir | 115.00 | 6.90 |
| 15mm F4 Di Pentax MC | Renoir | 155.00 | 6.90 |
| 15mm F4 Di Pentax MC | Renoir | 155.00 | 6.90 |
JUNK AND STUFF
Come browse nummage and dig through kinds of photographic gems. Camera supplies cases, camera accessories, disksum item Cheap
29' and UP
| | Retail | Total | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1mm28 B Raygun New 10 | 374 | 195 | 9.8 |
| 1mm28 B Raygun New 10 | 261 | 195 | 9.8 |
| 2mm28 B Raygun | 281 | 195 | 9.8 |
| 2mm28 B Rail | 160 | 195 | 9.8 |
| 2mm28 B Fix | 160 | 195 | 9.8 |
| 5mm28 B Raygun | 245 | 195 | 5.0 |
| 5mm28 B Raygun Varistone | 245 | 195 | 5.0 |
| 15mm28 B Varian Varistone | 195 | 195 | 5.0 |
| 15mm28 B Canon | 218 | 195 | 5.0 |
| 15mm28 B Canon | 218 | 195 | 5.0 |
| 15mm28 D Laser | 181 | 195 | 5.0 |
| 15mm28 D Laser | 181 | 195 | 5.0 |
| 35mm28 Varian Varistone | 499 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 37mm15 Burial | 195 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 37mm15 Burial (O) | 195 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 0 (O) | 195 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 85 120mm B Raygun (0.1) | 399 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 85 120mm B Raygun (0.1) | 399 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 80 205mm M5 Varistone | 275 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 80 205mm M5 Varistone | 275 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 80 205mm M5 Varistone | 275 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 18mm 35mm K90 (O) | 139 | 195 | 0.4 |
| 18mm 35mm K90 (O) | 139 | 195 | 0.4 |
| 18mm 18 mm K90 (O) | 139 | 195 | 0.4 |
| 18mm 18 mm K90 (O) | 139 | 195 | 0.4 |
| 200mm 3.5 Burial (O) | 185 | 195 | 0.9 |
| 35mm15 Burial (O) | 185 | 195 | 0.9 |
| 35mm15 Burial (O) | 185 | 195 | 0.9 |
| 200mm 3.5 Varian (used) | 499 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 200mm 3.5 Varian (used) | 499 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 200mm 3.5 Varian (used) | 499 | 195 | 1.0 |
| 75 260mm G55 (used) | 460 | 195 | 0.9 |
| 75 260mm G55 (used) | 460 | 195 | 0.9 |
| 90 200mm G55 (used) | 375 | 195 | 0.9 |
| 90 200mm G55 (used) | 375 | 195 | 0.9 |
| 28mm 25 Varian | 195 | 195 | 0.9 |
LENSES FOR CANON
TRIPODS
Collection of tripods needing repair
measurements, other just losing care
sale $199 up
LENSES FOR MINOLTA
| | Retail | Sale |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 21mm B Rearback | 204.60 | 159.80 |
| 22mm B Rearback | 191.50 | 159.80 |
| 22mm B Rearback | 191.50 | 159.80 |
| 22mm B Rearback | 191.50 | 159.80 |
| 22mm B Rearback | 191.50 | 159.80 |
| 22mm B Rearback | 191.50 | 159.80 |
| 22mm B Rearback | 191.50 | 159.80 |
| 22mm B Rearback | 191.50 | 159.80 |
| 22mm B Rearback | 191.50 | 159.80 |
| 22mm B Rearback | 191.50 | 159.80 |
| 135mm B F2 Lens Tamer | 195.00 | 159.80 |
| 135mm B F2 Lens Tamer | 195.00 | 159.80 |
| 135mm B F2 Lens Tamer | 195.00 | 159.80 |
| 135mm B F2 Lens Tamer | 195.00 | 159.80 |
| 135mm B F2 Lens Tamer | 195.00 | 159.80 |
| 135mm B F2 Lens Tamer | 195.00 | 159.80 |
| 75mm B Dual Lens Tamer | 201.90 | 159.80 |
| 75mm B Dual Lens Tamer | 201.90 | 159.80 |
| 75mm B Dual Lens Tamer | 201.90 | 159.80 |
| 75mm B Dual Lens Tamer | 201.90 | 159.80 |
| 75mm B Dual Lens Tamer | 201.90 | 159.80 |
| 80mm
U FIX IT
(1)
As usual we have a collection of 35M SLR camera, instratmets lenses, protectors and such at crazy prices. Find out what makes
Buy an SLR
FOR ONLY
$500
LENSES FOR OLYMPUS
1mm 12.5 Jeggen Fuchs
1mm 12.5 Jeggen Fuchs
7mm 17 Vinter
7mm 17 Vinter
13mm 12.5 M. Pfeil
13mm 12.5 M. Pfeil
100mm 15.4 Vinter
100mm 15.4 Vinter
300mm 15.4 Vinter
Quattrojetron
35-14mm 12.5 Vinter Series 1
35-14mm 12.5 Vinter Series 1
70-185mm 12.5 Wizard (Zw 35)
70-185mm 12.5 Wizard (Zw 35)
75-300mm Indigo
75-300mm Indigo
80-300mm Indigo
80-300mm Indigo
35-15mm 12.5 Delta
35-15mm 12.5 Delta
85-300mm 10.5 Quantum
85-300mm 10.5 Quantum
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
13mm 3.2 Delta (sound)
LENSES FOR KONICA
12 Wheel
17 Wheel
SALE
24 mm (W) Winch
31 mm (W)
28 mm (W) Plowman
29 mm (W) Mower
35 mm (W) Winch
35 mm (W)
28 mm (W) Plowman
25 mm (W) Winch
25 mm (W)
MATT PRINT SPRAY
MINI PRINT PREPARED
Make prints of a large enough reach marks, turn glossy photos into glare free display photos.
Reg. 4.95 SALE $2^{49}
0
LENSES FOR PENTAX K AND RICOH
| | Model | Market | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 V Camera | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 200mm ML Camera | 2750 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 200mm ML Camera | 2750 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 200mm ML Camera | 2750 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 200mm ML Camera | 2750 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 28mm Quantum | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 28mm Quantum | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 28mm Quantum | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 28mm Quantum | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 70mm F2.8 Varistor | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 70mm F2.8 Varistor (Olympus TZ 2) | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 70mm F2.8 Varistor (Olympus TZ 2) | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 70mm F2.8 Varistor (Olympus TZ 2) | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 80mm F2.8 ML Camera (Dexmina) | 4150 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 80mm F2.8 ML Camera (Dexmina) | 4150 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 80mm F2.8 ML Camera (Dexmina) | 4150 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 80mm F2.8 ML Camera (Dexmina) | 4150 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 80mm F2.8 ML Camera (Dexmina) | 4150 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera (Varistor) | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera (Varistor) | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera (Varistor) | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera (Varistor) | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 135mm F2.8 V Camera (used) | 1650 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 135mm F2.8 V Camera (used) | 1650 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 135mm F2.8 V Camera (used) | 1650 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 135mm F2.8 V Camera (used) | 1650 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 135mm F2.8 V Camera (used) | 1650 | 100 | 4.99 |
| | Model | Market | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 V Camera | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F2.8 LM Camera | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| | Model | Market | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 V Camera | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| | Model | Market | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 V Camera | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M Camera Zvari | 1950 | 71 | 6.99 |
| 10mm F2.8 M摄像头 | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 Sl Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 Sl Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 100mm F14 SL Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 Sl Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 Sl Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 Sl Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| | Model | Market | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm F2.8 M摄像头 | 3950 | 100 | 3.29 |
| 100mm F14 Sl Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 Sl Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 100mm F14 Sl Camera | 3400 | 100 | 3.19 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.99 |
| 15mm F2.8 V Camera Matte | 2350 | 100 | 4.9
ADAPTER LENSES
(Require Mount to Fit Camer)
| | Retail | Sales |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 15mm Z Winder used | 1910 | 60.00 |
| 30mm Z Winder used | 1890 | 60.00 |
| 70mm Z Winder used | 1850 | 60.00 |
| 100mm Z Winder used | 1810 | 60.00 |
| 125mm Z Winder used | 1800 | 60.00 |
LENSES For FUJICA (AZ-TOS)
10mm (2.5) Fibre Camera
15mm (3.5) Telephoto
35 mm (5.0) Aquatone
35 mm (5.0) Aquatone
45 mm (6.0) Aquatone
100 mm (10.0) Aquatone
100 mm (10.0) Aquatone
| | Land | Air | Surface |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm (2.5) Fibre Camera | 180 | 100 | 90 |
| 15mm (3.5) Telephoto | 70 | 100 | 90 |
| 35 mm (5.0) Aquatone | 410 | 100 | 90 |
| 35 mm (5.0) Aquatone | 410 | 100 | 90 |
| 45 mm (6.0) Aquatone | 410 | 100 | 90 |
| 100 mm (10.0) Aquatone | 410 | 100 | 90 |
LENSES FOR TOPCON
FILTERS
Retail Sales
11mm 3.5kg lever used 1850 15 00
10mm 3.5kg lever used 1500 15 00
100mm 8.5kg lever used 1490 15 00
100mm 8.5kg lever used 6000 6 00
Large selection of screws in and
size series filters, includes some
special effects. Lots of larger
series.
SALE 99'-5799
IQ
LIGHT METERS
Retail 91 % SALE
Sulgen SF 85 %
Gazelman Limo Mate 87 %
Gazelman Limo Pro Mate 87 %
Gazelman Limo Pro Mate 87 %
Gazelman Limo Pro Mate 87 %
Gazelman Limo Pro Mate 87 %
Gazelman Limo Pro Mate 87 %
Gazelman Limo Pro Mate 87 %
Gazelman Limo Pro Mate 87 %
Gazelman Limo Pro Mate 87 %
Gazelman Limo Pro Mate 87 %
Homewood 3 21 Meter (used) 64 %
Homewood 3 21 Meter (used) 64 %
Homewood 3 21 Meter (used) 64 %
Homewood 3 21 Meter (used) 64 %
Homewood 3 21 Meter (used) 64 %
Homewood 3 21 Meter (used) 64 %
Homewood 3 21 Meter (used) 64 %
TUBI
Automatic extension tubes set of 3 for shooting closures larger than life size. Available for most SLR cameras. Reg 14 95 to 99 95
EXTENSION
TUBES
SALE $799-$5999
ELECTRONIC FLASH
WOLF CENTER
| Model | Retail | Sold |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Nissan 155A | 119.90 | 64.80 |
| Nissan 212 Airage | 119.90 | 64.80 |
| Nissan 3222 | 24.95 | 9.90 |
| Nissan 3225 | 24.95 | 9.90 |
| Mitsubishi 25 | 44.95 | 24.90 |
| Nissan 1755 | 129.90 | 64.80 |
| BAC 353 Airage | 34.95 | 14.90 |
| BAC 353 Airage | 34.95 | 14.90 |
| Virtus 31 | 11.95 | 3.90 |
| Virtus 31 | 11.95 | 3.90 |
| Virtus 1708 | 29.95 | 12.90 |
| Dionne X180 Airage | 64.90 | 30.90 |
| Dionne X180 Airage | 64.90 | 30.90 |
| Virtus 285 | 172.90 | 64.90 |
| Virtus 285 | 172.90 | 64.90 |
| Quantum O425 | 34.95 | 27.90 |
| Nissan 1553 | 169.90 | 64.80 |
| Ferrari 416B | 169.90 | 64.80 |
| Ferrari 416B | 169.90 | 64.80 |
| Fiat 19000 | 119.95 | 49.90 |
| Fiat 19000 | 119.95 | 49.90 |
| Fiat 19000 | 119.95 | 49.90 |
| TCI LT2000 | 94.50 | 64.00 |
| Nissan 600R 4x1 (head) | 162.90 | 64.00 |
| Nissan 600R 4x1 (head) | 162.90 | 64.00 |
| Lavida 2000R | 295.90 | 33.90 |
| Lavida 2000R | 295.90 | 33.90 |
| Camaro Sportback 1554 (head) | 79.95 | 24.90 |
| Ottawa Qashqai 310 (head) | 149.90 | 39.90 |
| Ottawa Qashqai 310 (head) | 149.90 | 39.90 |
| BUDDLE 1002 (Head) | 119.95 | 24.90 |
| BUDDLE 1002 (Head) | 119.95 | 24.90 |
| Virtus R202 902 (Used) | 38.95 | 9.90 |
| Virtus R202 902 (Used) | 38.95 | 9.90 |
| Virtus R202 902 (Used) | 38.95 | 9.90 |
| Camaro Sportback 1554 (Head) | 149.90 | 39.90 |
ENLARGERS
Lens & Carrier not included If New
F
Shipment (unpaid)
Sales ¥10.99
Brazer 720D Cheese & Power Tools £49.99
Brazer 620D Cheese £41.99
Brazer 620D Cheese £41.99
Brazer 620D Cheese £41.99
Brazer 620D Cheese £41.99
Pre 350w - 500w Lamp & Carrier £19.50
Pre 350w - 500w Lamp & Carrier £19.50
Brazer 472D Cheese £20.99
Brazer 472D Cheese £20.99
Brazer 472D Cheese £20.99
Mostly Agio, Uncle B&W.
6 some illidard and Kodak Suns 7x
to 16x20. Most Fresh Date
15 x to 16x20. All Agio Gallery. Inc. 12
sun 15 x to 16x20. All Agio Gallery. Inc.
50 ab c10 ab 10 a10 de. Nov. 19 12. A12 12 99
ab d12 ab e12 f12 g12 h12 i12 j12 k12 l12 m12 n12 o12 p12 q12 r12 s12 t12 u12 v12 w12 x12 y12 z12
ENLARGING PAPER 1/3 to 1/2 OFF LIST
DARKROOM AIDS
| | Retail | Market | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | ---: |
| 11x14 Pointe Mirror | 19% | 99 | 1.00 |
| 12x14 Pointe Mirror | 19% | 99 | 1.00 |
| 14x4 Two Level Mirror | 65.30 | 60 | 0.00 |
| 14x4 Four Level Mirror | 65.30 | 60 | 0.00 |
| Grabboard 300 Mirror | 149.5% | 100 | 0.00 |
| Grabboard 300 Mirror | 149.5% | 100 | 0.00 |
| UniTerm II 800 Boardless Level | 29% | 19 | 1.40 |
| UniTerm II 800 Boardless Level | 29% | 19 | 1.40 |
| Pro Ip Clip | 19% | 99 | 1.00 |
| T14d Randerson Demand Center | 37.5% | 100 | 1.70 |
| T14d Randerson Demand Center | 37.5% | 100 | 1.70 |
| T14d Double Paper Safe | 3.60 | 100 | 1.70 |
| T14d Double Paper Safe | 3.60 | 100 | 1.70 |
| T14d Double Paper Safe | 51.50 | 100 | 2.00 |
| T14d Double Paper Safe | 51.50 | 100 | 2.00 |
| Grabboard 300 Mirror | 64.9% | 60 | 0.00 |
| Grabboard 300 Mirror | 64.9% | 60 | 0.00 |
| Astra Digital Timer | 159.5% | 100 | 1.40 |
| Astra Digital Timer | 159.5% | 100 | 1.40 |
| Capture Camera | 29% | 99 | 1.00 |
| Capture Camera | 29% | 99 | 1.00 |
| Pr International Coord (ID) | 14.4% | 100 | 1.00 |
| Pr International Coord (ID) | 14.4% | 100 | 1.00 |
| Astra 120W Timer | 255.00 | 100 | 1.90 |
| Astra 120W Timer | 255.00 | 100 | 1.90 |
| DBSI 551 Corner (Omega) | 19.9% | 100 | 3.40 |
| DBSI 551 Corner (Omega) | 19.9% | 100 | 3.40 |
| DBSI 551 Corner (Omega) | 19.9% | 100 | 3.40 |
| DBSI 551 Corner (Omega) | 19.9% | 100 | 3.40 |
| Lantz Kit Bk II 10/5/13 | 17.9% | 5.00 | 0.00 |
| Lantz Kit Bk II 10/5/13 | 17.9% | 5.00 | 0.00 |
| Timer One IDC 23/73 Meter | 99% | 100 | 0.00 |
| Timer One IDC 23/73 Meter | 99% | 100 | 0.00 |
| Omega Digital Timer | 19.9% | 20.00 | 0.00 |
| Omega Digital Timer | 19.9% | 20.00 | 0.00 |
TRIPODS
| | TOTAL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| ExeMiner Tabular Tool | 51.99 | 14.00 |
| Pc 1355 | 11.99 | 14.00 |
| RK Saturn R | 11.99 | 14.00 |
| Pc 1212 | 11.99 | 14.00 |
| ExeMiner P3 | 11.99 | 14.00 |
| Usk 0210 | 99.95 | 60.00 |
| Usk 0210 | 99.95 | 60.00 |
| Usk 0212 | 99.95 | 60.00 |
| Usk 0212 | 99.95 | 60.00 |
| IvyPad Pad | 28.49 | 14.00 |
| IvyPad Pad | 28.49 | 14.00 |
| M300 G | 24.95 | 15.00 |
| M300 G | 24.95 | 15.00 |
BLACK & WHITE FILM
Fresh date AGTA 200 ASA in
loadable cassettes 135-36
reload $2.50 SALE $49
CAMERA BAGS
Large selection of gadget bags
both soft sided and rigid aluminum
num and fibre attach cases
SAVE UP TO 70%
STORE OPENS AT 8:00 AM SHARP BOTH
DAYS AND CLOSES AT 5:30 EACH DAY.
Wolfe's
camera shop. inc.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 215-7380
Topeka, Kansas 66603
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 4, 1981
KUMC offers Gehrig disease program
A program to help victims of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis deal with the disease is being conducted on a basis at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
An anthropologist, psychologist and a neurologist are working with 30 victims of the disease, commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease.
Victims of the disease gradually lose control of their muscles. However, they do retain their intellectual skills, and this presents unique problems for medical staff treating them, Edna Miles, the program psychologist, said.
"They want to take part in making decisions about their care," Hamera said.
Ann Cobb, the anthropologist, said the patients were enthusiastic about the group.
"There is so little public attention given to their problems that they appreciate anyone who is interested," she said.
Cobb said she had received positive response from the patients in the group about having her work with the group and about a monthly newsletter she produces for patients and their families.
"I try to interview them about their perceptions of their quality of life." Cobb said. "It helps the medical people deal with them."
This particular program will not receive another grant when funding runs out Sept. 1.
The program, which is the only one of its kind in the state, is funded by a $10,500 one-year grant from the Kansas Commission on the Humanities and $2,000 in in-kind contribution, which matched funding from the KCH.
"The KCH is interested in putting a similar type of program in another setting," Cobb said. "This is mostly a model program."
The group meets once a month in a Kansas City. Kan., church.
MISS STREET DELL
1021 MASSACHUSETTS
HOT OR MILD
SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL
$1.50
Wed. thru Sun., March 4 to 8
Enjoy Coke
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
No coupons accepted with this offer
Career,family hard work female professional says
It's not impossible, but it is hard work, for a couple to have two careers and one family.
"It pains me to say so," Domer, "program coordinator at the KU Adult Lifes Resource Center, said. "I would like to travel, have an active social life, and be the ideal mother, but I'm convinced it's not possible."
That was Shirley Domer's message in her speech last night to the Lawrence chapter of Women in Communications, Inc. at the Kansas Union.
The career-oriented woman must ask herself both how she can manage her time and what her career goals are. Domer, who has a doctorate in speech communications and human relations from KIL, said.
The major question in a two-career family is what to do when career paths diverge, she added.
"That's the clincher." Domer said. "It's the tough, ugly, question that's the real test of the whole arrangement."
Domer said she had the questions, but not the answers.
Dorner pointed out that even more demands were placed on the woman's time in a marriage where she was held responsible for such family obligations as cooking and shopping.
"A two-career family can 'double the fun' as far as social life is concerned," she said. "Both his and your careers have social obligations and it is hard to find time to socialize with your regular friends."
"If you have too many obligations, then you need to set some priorities," Domer said. "You must ask, what is most important to me?" She said there were also stress
She said there were also stress points in a marriage that might hurt the relationship.
"Working late or on weekends can be a problem," she said. "It's better if you can keep to a routine."
Other career-related factors that sometimes trouble marriages are when the woman has higher job status than her husband, out-earns him or travels extensively on the job, she said.
منفذ الحلول المعينة للأسس
المنطقة وغيرها من المناطق المالية للمستثمر
الضمير في الفعل
السنة المالية ٢٠١٧م - ٢٠١٨م - ٢٠١٩م
يقول رسول الله ﷺ الحسين المؤمنين صلى الله عليه وسلم أنه قال لنا:
الحَمْلُ. . . . .
يُمكن استخدام المقارنة للمقارنة للمقارنة للوصول إلى
CHEXELBERG
- 1. أقر بالإبلاغ عن إضافة كلمة المرور إلى المستخدم - > . . .
فعلت الاعتبار الحالي له ؟
الحسن بن عبدالعزيز المُحَمَّدِ
من شارع الرؤي
TERRY M. FERRELL
Schumm For City Commissioner
The Institute for Paralegal Training
235 South 17th Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103
(215) 732-6600
Association Programs Earn Full Credit Toward M.A in Legal Studies through Antioch School of Law.
"I will work to continue to provide necessary city services on a timely, efficient, and cost effective basis."
.
Approved by The American Bar Association
Successful Careers Don't Just Happen
We will visit your campus on: MARCH 11. 1981
We are regarded as the nation's finest and most prestigious program for training legal specialists for law firms, business and finance. But, as important as our academic quality is our placement result. The Institute's placement service will find you a job in the city of your choice. If not, you will be eligible for a substantial tuition refund.
At the Institute for Paralegal Training we have prepared over 4,000 college graduates for careers in law, business and finance. After just three months of intensive training, we will place you in a stimulating and challenging position that offers professional growth and expanding career opportunities. As a Legal Assistant you will do work traditionally performed by legal professionals in law firms, corporations, banks, government agencies and insurance companies. Furthermore, you will earn gracious towards a Master of Arts in Legal Studies through Antioch School of Law for all coursework completed at The Institute.
If you are a senior in high academic standing and looking to the most practical way to begin your career, contact your Placement Officer.
(Operated by Para-Legal, Inc.)
francis
sporting goods
SPEEDO SUITS SPRING
Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 6044
648-4101 731 Massachusetts
Speedo Racing Swimwear. Worn by more gold medal winners and world record holders after their ban. Block panel print. $21.95
Plus other Spanko tanks,
fashion shirt and water shoes
and swim trunks, too to
lowers, goggles, caps,
ears and on ear phones.
*Speedo is a registered trademark of Speedo Knitting Mills, Pty. Ltd.
MARILYN MONROE
"Sporty things for sporty people
TRY DRESSER
ATLAS FOR
"REAL WORLD"
CAREER EXPERIENCE!
Electrical Engineers
Physicists
Mechanical Engineers
If you're ready to begin your technical career, but aren't looking forward to a pencil and paper pushing existence, we want to tell you about a highly professional profession. Essentially, we the people who make it possible for energy producers to evaluate the productivity of well-sites. Our equipment must resisticy, conductivity, acoustic traction, and heat resistance.
Up to five graduate teaching assistants will receive awards for outstanding teaching from the English department this spring.
Your progress will be in your hands on a job that is tough, demanding and long. But if you are interested in accumulating real world experience, there's nothing like it.
Don Warders, chairman of the English department awards committee, said yesterday that letters of citation and cash prizes would be distributed to students in the department who had distinguished themselves in teaching.
We offer full company benefits, relocation assistance and a variety of training programs to help you stay up-to-date with Sunbelt areas. Enjoy the kind of personal recognition that comes with your position. This one. To out our more, make arrangements with your colleagues to visit us on her/our Wednesday, March 11, 1988.
"The swords are to recognize and honor the performance of the part-time English staff." Warders said. "This really is a distinction and an honor. We can give them something more substantial than we need." Just don't have the funds to do that."
TAs to receive awards for meritorious teaching
All teaching assistants in the English department who are enrolled as graduate students are eligible to be nominated for the awards. Nominations can be made by other teaching assistants, full-time faculty or students. Warders said that self-nominations also would be accepted.
NOMINATION LETTERS should outline the outstanding aspects of the teaching Nominations should be submitted to Warders office, 301 Wesley, by March 23.
WINNERS OF THE Outstanding Instructor Award will be announced at the English department honors and awards banquet May 2.
The judges for the competition will be Haskell Springer, professor of English, James Hartman and Janet Kernan, both associate professors of English.
Nominees will be notified by the department and are required to submit
About 5,000 students were enrolled in required English classes last semester. About 38 percent of those students were taught by teaching assistants, according to James A. Gowen, director of freshmen/sophomore English.
If you are unable to visit with us, send your resume
detailing your background to
Manager, Recruitment & College Relations
P.O. Box 6504
a brief statement highlighting their teaching activity. They also will be encouraged to include other relevant materials such as copies of exams, essay questions, lesson plans and special projects.
Anyone can nominate for the awards. The deadline for submitting nominations has not yet been set.
Dresser Atlas
The Speech and Drama department is offering two awards for graduate student teaching assistants this year. The E. C. Buehler teaching award is given to first-year teaching assistants in oral communications, and the E. C. Buehler teaching award is open to any teaching assistant in department completed graduation work.
DRESSER
Summer Orientation Program
STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
1981
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
leadership abilities
knowledge of University programs (i
interspecial communication skills
knowledge of University programs & activities
interpersonal communication skills
enthusiasm about program
student in a good academic standing
and returning to KU for Fall 1981 term.
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS
AVAILABLE IN ADMISSION & RECORDS,
124 STRONG HALL
Play begins: Sat, March 7, 10 am Robinson Raquettball Courts
APPLICATIONS DUE BY WEDNESDAY,
Entry deadline: 5:00 March 4
For more information call Recreation Services 864-3546
an equal opportunity employer
Tennis Shoes
208 Robinson
啊咆步1步
Raquetball Mixed Doubles
Robinson Raquetball Courts
GET INTO THE SWING OF THINGS
'81 "Class" begins with a selection from our '81 shirts, jerseys and nightshirts.
SENIOR
81
Wear the pride of '81 from $5.95
MU
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.
8-5 Mon-Fri
KU
843-3826
10-4 Sat.
ALCOHOL
O
The K
Tr
15 word:
Each ad
to run:
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday.
FOUN
Found item
placed in
Sch
go th
Mea
K
For
TC
- Airlil
- Hot
- Car
- Intel
Special--
per pers
evening!
Disco No
Sat. 7 pt
Pasamore
Bass Play British re Gurss 1-3
Em
Earn Extra
Newspaper
to Rick.
74074.
University Daily Kansan, March 4, 1981
Maupintour travel service
- AIRLINE TICKETS
- HOTELRESERVATIONS
- CARRENTAL
- TRAVEL PASSES
- TRAVEL INSURANCE
- ENCLOSED TOURS
CALLTODAY! 843-1211
900 MASS.
KANSA UNION
843-1211
Figure Salon
Open 9-9 Mon.-Thurs.
9-3 Fri., 9-12 Sat.
842-2323
2500 W. 6th
COMPLETE FITNESS PROGRAM
Look Terrific With Our Year 'Round Tennis
WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES
A Zoo for the future
Dr. Chris Wemmer
Conservation and Research Center
National Zoological Park
Washington, D.C.
March 4
7:30-9:00 PM $1.50
Museum of Natural History
Poe Hall
Tanning Program
St. Lawrence Street
S1 DRINKS
St. Lawrence Street
Everyday Tuesdays
9:00am
Where the stalls are
17th & Mass
842-730-8200
lawrence
operag house
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven十二十二十二十二十二
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
girls
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Pond items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be inserted in envelope or simply be emailed to the £6 business office at M439
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Extra Knee Extra for Spring Break. Clip
Newspaper item for each. Send long SASE
to Rick, P.O. Box 134, Stillwater, OK
74074.
Hillel and the School of Journalism present Israeli Journalist
Elimelech Ram
Friday. March 6
12-1:30
go through the food lines and join us for lunch on
Kansas Union Cafeteria
Meadowlark Room in the
For more info call 864-3948
Employment Opportunities
TRAVEL CENTER
ENTERTAINMENT
TRAVEL CENTER
Domestic & International Reservations
• Airline • Escorted Tours
• Hotel/Resort • Ski Packages
• Car Rental • Group Rates
• International Student Specialists
Free services to students and lacuity.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W 325 St (by Perkau)
9:00 5:00 CD-20 DSt
Free services to students and faculty 841-7117
Special-All 6% Beer 7:30-10:30 pm $30 per person. Budget cut drinks $100 all per person. Drinks non-drinks welcome. Open Man-Stat. Sun 5pm, sun 2pm $25 per person. 848-293-9033.
Bass Player urgently needed to complete British rock-oriented band. Contact Jade Gursz 1-379-5523. 3-6
"Say it with a song"
ASTA SINGING
TELEGRAMS
841-6169
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED
Boy in New York, New York, on
car. Parke: New York, Lake Champlain,
Work: Housework, mowing, carpentry,
carpentry, woodworking. 125 $50 weekly for the couple. Living quarters on a lake or in a housekeeping cabin Time: June 1 to August 8 on either your choice) after pre-
ferring a day off. All studentscluding local references; to: Occupant, 1000 hours Lawrence, Lawrence KS 66404. No phone pleas,照片.
FOR RENT
HANOVER PLACE TOWNHOUSES: Avail-able immediately. New and contemporary.
Bathroom. Wait dining room to K.U. and downstairs. Will seat $-10
141-212 or 842-4455.
TBURON TOWNHOUSES are new, spacious, and contemporary. 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2 or 3 bedrooms starting at $45 per month. Must include 9th and 18th floors. B42-4455. 3-10
**AIRONZA STREET DUPLXES** Available
at AIRONZA STREET, study room, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, at home laundry room, central air conditioning, carpet & jacks. central air conditioning. carpets & jacks $800 - utilities. Call 843-5730 or 842-5911.
For spring and summer, Naisalm Hall of Nursing offers a variety of advantage to an apartment. Good food and plenty of it. Weekly maid service to clean activities and much more. If you you're looking for roommates, stop in or give us a call: NAIL HALL, 1800 Manshin Road, 843-259-8260.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
room-roomates; feature wood burning fireplace;
room-mates; feature wood burning fireplace;
wather/rug; hookups; fully-equipped
dryer; dryer; princeton room; phone 842-
563-9700; princeton room phone 842-
563-9700
Cavita Capri Apt. Unfurnished studio, 1 & 2 bdm. apts, available. Central air, 1-8 wall care quiet location 2 % blocks south of apartment 492-8783 20% anytime weekdays
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5. 843-3228. tf
3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. ff
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. If
3 bk houseware for rent now at Pine Haven
3 hr houseware & weather close to shopping
mgr. wather & dealer close to shopping
1 yes, pay low or no, payment on new
car; 1 yes, pay low or no, payment on new
marriage; 1 yes, pay low or no, payment on new
marriage. No pets. Call 862-354-8777
3-827
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute walk to campus. 1821 Tennessee, $270 rent + utilities. 842-4822. 3-4
Five bedroom house close to campus available for summer leave. Carpet, modern upstairs, air conditioning and laundry $month. Call David 841-5386, 1407-Kentway-9.
Summer sublease 2 bedroom, $1 \frac{1}{2}$ bath at Heatherwood Apts. Rent + electricity. Call 841-7077 after 5:30.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 26 hh and Kakold. If you tired of apartments at nearby townhouses, feature 3 br., 1/2 baths, all appliances; at 4 hh, 1/2 baths, all appliances; have openings for summer and fall. Call Craig Lefor or Jim Bong at 748-1997 for information about our modernly fitted townhouses.
For rent, 2 bedroom Apt., air cond., 3 blocks from campus. Call 749-3469 after 6. 3-6
2 bedroom, attached garage home, 2621
Mountview. Fenced yard, $290.00 mo. Available now. 843-0570, 843-6011. 3-10
FOR SALE
Male roommate needs to rent furnished apt. kitchen, wather. p. dryer, cable tv, a. pool, r. central air i. all utilities paid (excl. electric) i. $110/mo. Call Kevin 6-481-8470-5407
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them—1). As study makes sense to use them—2). Analyze of Warman's rearranion, the law. Analysis of Warren's rearranion, the law. Cite: The bookmark, and Oread Book Cite.
Bass guitar and amp. Used 6 months. Cost $400, new, make offer. 811-6079. Ray. 3-4
Mid Center Bound? Nice, 2-bedroom
duplexes available for summer and fall.
Carpet, A/C, appliances, and parking. Call
-1(813)-381-2876.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-906-3900, 2900
W. 6th. tt
Moped~1980 Vespa Bravo Super Deluxe.
Almost new, 150 mpg. $450 new, asking
***** RAI-2877.
3-4
Pair Justin Women's cowboy (71) boots.
New, design on top, mauve-out uppers.
Originally $75.45 #60 best offer; best
offers quilted, velvet quilted; $229.83-
7402 Love
Ford Granada GHia 72.4 4-door, 4-peel standard trans, air conditioner + AM-FM Radio cassette player + many extras. 842-3 6422.
Mens 19" Gitante bicycle, custom built
$150.00. Call 864-2815. 3-6
Guitar Ventura 12-string. Very good con-
trols. $135 or best of best.
749-729 jack for Jeff. 3-6
1856 Chevy, two door post, 32 eng. should have minor work矿 843-982-833-3
must four wall seat to Kansas concert.
Call 749-0581. Ask for Paul.
3-5
For Sale: 1976 Honda CB 550. Completely stocked, low mileage, excellent condition. 3-10
841-2665.
D.C. Marvel comics back issues for sale
cheap. 841-8279. 3-9
Men's Sierra West rain jacket. Blue Size. medium. $33. Call 814-739-9.
Alawo 1250 slant style cassette tape deck.
Aiwa 1250 slant style cassette tape deck.
Fine condition. $125. 749-0486. 3-10
1975 Carson Supreme, V-8, Radials 34,
88,700 miles, $2,000. Call 841-1386.
3-10 Kansas concert tickets for sale cheap,
concert come call 864-8413; and 6-46
for Glenn
84 Mustang Coupe, recently rebuilt 289
$84 Mustang Coupe, recently rebuilt 289
new front brake jacket, new brake calipers, new rear brakes, near new tires, new starter, upholstery is new
$700. Call Tatry at 474-3440, 3-10
Reel to reel tape deck, Pioneer 1020L
$320.00. Call Don 842-657-6
3-10
1979 Jeep C27 Renegade, auto - v. 5.8, hardtop, partial soft-top, rollback w/ matching bumpers, over-sized tires, Bale wheels, AM/FM Guns, Console. 841-4847
FOUND
key found in Woodruff Auditorium
after Woodruff movie call. 749-8520, 3-4
5 month old black dog in Village Square
wearing earl coat. Call 814-7514.
keep trying
Two walking leases on big red dog—contact Kirk, Kansas News Room. 3-5
TI calculator and small circuit board, left at Room 3018 Learned. Please claim at above address. 3-5
Ring found in Robinson weight room Thursday. Call 564-2836 to identify. 3-5
Women's shoes, without socks.
Women's glasses without case at 9th and
Emery, Call Rob at 749-2464. 3-5
Money found Friday morning in Spencer Art Museum. Call Daryl to identify 749-0986.
Lost keys behind Haworth Hall. Call 843-
9363 3-5
Ladies' Eastman watch, found on side of Fraser, Mon 3/2. Call Denise and identify, 749-0444. 3-6
Codi Shaven—brown check book with ID.
Call 864-1475. 3-6
Calculator in Strong Hall. Call to identify.
749-2000. 3-6
Found Monday, coat and hat at Westridge car wash. Call to identify. Ask for John at 749-1553. 3-6
HELP WANTED
SUMMER RAPTING JOBS! $1,200-$3,600
African Spk. $89.50 for Apprentice
African Spk. (1) Job title: New job
job title: Lake Tahoe CA) SA1
Box 60125, Sacramento, CA 95000
ING EXPEDITIONS! Needed: Sports
Injury Treatment, Caribbean, Worldwide Summer
CATERATION OPENINGS to GRUISSE
GOLD 123 Box 60125, Sacramento,
5-6
Full or part time help wanted. Combination
full or partial time help wanted. Turned.
Dancing starting $4.00 per hour.
Nude dancing $7.00 per hour. Your choice.
Entrance fee $25.00 on enceon Hw 40.3-97900.
3-24
Summer youth camp employment for pool
handlers, Business Manager, Health Supervisor (LPN,
EMT), Assistant Cook, Craft Director,
Business Management. Must be 18. Write or call
Riding Assistant. Must be 18. Write or call
Topeka, Kansas 66064, 731-309,
414, Topeka, Kansas 66064, 731-309,
414. Applicate. Equal Opportunity Employer.
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF
accepted for the Summer Orientation student's advertisement in today's paper or come by Strang Hall. An equal opportunity employer. Strong Hall. An equal opportunity employer.
COULD YOU USE SOME EXTRA MONEY?
A SECOND INCOME? If so, you can help!
Send in your receipts for stamped envelopes to: Job Tech, Associates,
325 Fireline 2, Lawrence, KG644- 6-064
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AID/S.
experiences with us, as a public service to
nursing home resident? Our consumer or
graduate nursing homes (KINH) need your help
and input in nursing home conditions and
residents. All names and correspondence
with us are required. or 843-7107, or write us:
912-843-7088 or 843-7107, or write us:
St. Ma. Jr. 654, Laurie K., ksas.com
60044
Part time person to work as an observer
M-F. Data collection, graphics, some typing,
prefer Soph. Jp. Must be prompt.
Ext 21 Hawthorne Hall 482
Ext 21 Hawthorne Hall 482
RADIologic TECHNOLOGIST Lawrence Warrantz is a technologist for an ARRT Biological Technologist. Will work with patients in the morning and at 16, 18, or 16-hour weeks. Apply at the Parr Center on Monday, December 4, 2015, 843-380. Qualified handlers charged to visit patients include: price Memorial Hospital, 282 Main Street, New York, NY 10017; contact Brenda Cummings, Exhibitor
World's Largest, business needs you. Stay home-paid weekly. Free details. Enclosed stamped envelope. Peggy Jones. 3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, K6944. 60944.
Need female salesperson capable of work-
ing morning hours. Apply at Morris Sports
or call 843-0412. 3-10
CRUISESS CLEM MIDTERRANEAN, SAIL-
HOUSE, CLUB OF THE WORLD, Commis-
sion, Office Personnel, Counselors,
Cancer Care $50,000 & $100,000 for busi-
ness.贷
LOST
Would deeply appreciate the return of my black leather jacket. Missing, Saturday Feb. 21. Reward, Call Kevin 799-6225
Lost. Brown-suede sweater in Carruth O'Leary or Woezier 2-15. Call 842-4549, no answer call 843-3521 and ask for Jance. 1-Look—a very centiment in gold serpentine robe. 2-Robinson—girl locker room on Tuesday. 3-Robinson—girl locker room on Tuesday. 4-Found please call Kim Willan. 5-426-5660
Lost- 5 key documents to 3 kvekvies, some
bought at auction. Indiana. Please call 894-6714.
3-6
Substantial reward for Inner backpack,
back pack, and book, and Gold Pendant Watch. Call 749-
2036.
MISCELLANEOUS
Used and battered golf clubs and bags.
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan. March 4. 1981
---
Seniors honored as 'Hawks defeat OSU again
BY TRACEE HAMILTON Associate Sports Editor
There were 7,100 fans in Alain Field House last night, far below the usual Big Eight game-home crowd.
The other 8,000 fans who could have been there but weren't missed the time of their lives.
The Kansas Jayhawks earned a berth in the semi-finals of the Big Eight postseason tournament by beating the Oklahoma State Cowboys 96-69.
THE SCORE accurately reflects the tempo of the game—fast.
The Jayhawks jumped ahead early and led by as much as 15 at several points in the first half, largely because of the hot shotting game of 6-10 senior forward Art Housey. In the first half, he landed on the floor, 2-of-2 from the goal and grabbed 2 rebounds. He finished with 21 points and 15 rebounds.
"Art continues to improve," Head Coach Ted Owens said. "He's starting to put it all together. In retrospect, a redshirt would have been appropriate.
"He's got the skills and the desire to play basketball. I think he'll play far beyond
Housey, playing his last game in Allen Field House, was also pleased with his performance.
"I WAS READY to play tonight," he said. "I was hoping to get a chance to go out and play and to really show what I can do. I just appreciate the coaches giving me a chance to really play.
"That's one of my better performances as far as statistics."
Owens was concerned before the game about facing the Cowboys in consecutive games. The Jayhawks beat the Cowboys in Lawrence Saturday. 80-65.
"I was quite concerned about the game," he said. "They had an impressive year. They played the team, and they defeated Kansas in Miamian, that they play better than they did Saturday."
For that reason, among others, Owens stressed before the game the importance of a large crowd. But with Allen Field House less than half the crowd, he maintained with the quality, if not quantity, of the fans.
Several of the players agreed.
"I WAS NOT disappointed," he said. "They were very enthusiastic."
"It it's just well known that the postseason tournament doesn't draw," Tony Guy, 6-8 guard, said. "We knew we had to make it happen. We were psyched for it, we knew we had to put it and the people here got excited when they saw us fired up."
"As long as I've been here we've always had outstanding careers," John Crawford, 6-foot-8 senior center, said. "They were fired up and they had some problems; they gave them something to get fired up about."
The crowd got excited early by the quick tempo of the game. Oklahoma State's style of play this year has been run, run, run. Housey and playy was played not much different from Saturday.
"THEY PLAYED well, but, just as before, they can run us out and not realizing that we have people on the street."
"They didn't use any different tactics.
Basically it was just the same game over again.
They didn't do anything different. We just overpowered them."
KU's zone and its offensive prowess were part of that overpowering. Six Kijawashines finished in double figures. Houssey was top score with 21, and 6 & 4 senior guard Booty Neal gave his performance in the way everyone has come to expect—he can off the bench to score 20 points.
Darnell Valentine, 6-3 senior guard, scored 14 points despite sitting on the bench much of the first half after drawing three quick fouls, two on charging calls. Owens had praise for the way he
"OUR PLAYERS have confidence in Tony."
Tigers ranked 20th in UPI basketball poll
NEW YORK (UPF)——The United Press International board of Coaches will college kick off basketball ratings (fir- ting) on Monday.
of Coaches Top Twenty college basketball rankings (first-place votes and won-lost records in parentheses):
1. Oregon St. (41) 25-6
2. Delaware (11) 25-6
3. Louisiana State (72-2)
4. Virginia (24) 23-2
4. Arkansas (22) 41-5
5. Iowa (21-4)
6. Notre Dame (21-4)
7. Kentucky (22-4)
8. Kentucky (22-4)
9. Utah (27-5)
10. Wake Forest (21-5)
11. North Carolina (22-7)
12. Tennessee (20-8)
13. Indiana (18-10)
14. UCLA (18-6)
15. Arkansas (26-6)
16. Wyoming (17-14)
17. Illinois (19-4)
18. Louisville (19-4)
19. Eagles Vince (19-4)
20. Missouri (18-7)
NOTE: By agreement with the National Association of Boys Clubs of the United States, teams on preseason by the NCAA are inclusive for Top 20 and the UPI Board of Coaches. The only on-preseason for the 1980-81 season is
he said. "Sometimes when you lose your best player the other guys concentrate better."
Guy responded to the added pressure by scoring 12 points and making six assists.
"I have to concentrate more on the other team (in Valentine's absence)," Guy said. "We have to pick up our emotional level. We just have to work with it." He also mentioned several other motivations. The team donned green ribbons at the request of the Phi Beta Sigma fraternity. The green ribbon is part of a national movement in support of the efforts to kill the killer or killers of 21 children in Atlanta, Georgia.
"They asked us if we'd wear them, and we were more than happy to," Owens said. "The ribbon has an inverted V on the end, which will up to a V for victory when the killer is caught."
The game was also the final home appearance for six Jayhawk seniors. Mark Knight, 6-4 guard, Neal, Crawford, Valentine, George Thompson, and Zachary Gardner before the game and all saw slaving time.
Owens made late-game substitutions for all the seniors, and they received standing ovations.
"I'm happy for the seniors," Owens said. "They started their careers with a conference championship. They've stayed together. They're going to have a good finish."
The Jayhawks improved their season record to 20-7, the 13th 20-victory season for KU, and the eighth for Owens. And Owens feels the record is higher now than it was before whether the Jayhawks win the conference or not.
"I believe, as I look at records, we should get great consideration," he said. "I believe that we will. We played a good schedule and have a fine record.
"However, if we go in and win two games, we will receive a bearer. The sure thing is if you win own team first."
JAYHAWK NOTES: In big Big Eight action, Colorado upset Nebraska in Lincoln, 70-68. Kaisa State downed Oklahoma State by the 95-69, 96-49, and Missouri defeated Iowa. 95-70.
Kansas will face Missouri at 7:06 p.m. Friday in Kemper Arena. Kansas State will meet
Three Jayhawk teams have won conference championships this year and they were honored at halftime of last night game. The KU men's track team took first place at the Big Eight Indoor Championships in Lincoln, Neb., this weekend. The KU women's swimming team won its eight straight conference title, also weekend, and the KU women's basketball team won its fourth straight Big Eight championship and will compete in the NBA championship iffirmed in 14-16. Each team and its coach presented its championship trophy to KU Athletic Director Bob Marcum.
KU Head Coach Ted Owens still hasn't stiffened his position on the current version of the Big Eight postseason tournament, Owen's plan would be to eliminate the eighth-place team, give the first-place team a first-round bye, and have the other six teams play on Thursday at 5,7 and 9 p.m. in a tripleheader at Kemper Arena. The three winners and the champion would advance to Friday night, and the championship would be played on Saturday.
"We would have sell-out crowds and more of a tournament atmosphere," Owens said. He was outvoted 1-7 on this plan by the other Big Eight coaches.
| MIN | MAX | WT | FT | REB | A | PF | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jacobs 26 | 18 | 4-10 | 0-4 | 7 | 0 | 3 | 18 |
| Crenawhite 26 | 11 | 1-10 | 0-4 | 11 | 0 | 2 | 19 |
| Comison 33 | 28 | 5-10 | 0-4 | 11 | 1 | 3 | 10 |
| Clark 28 | 18 | 5-10 | 0-4 | 11 | 1 | 2 | 10 |
| Hannon 19 | 16 | 3-6 | 0-4 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
| Peterson 19 | 16 | 3-6 | 0-4 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
| Wright 19 | 16 | 3-6 | 0-4 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
| Wright 18 | 16 | 3-6 | 0-4 | 1 | 2 | 4 | 7 |
| Wright 18 | 16 | 3-6 | 0-4 | 1 | 2 | 4 | 7 |
| Laingwood 13 | 6 | 1-4 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Connelly 1 | 6 | 1-4 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Connelly 1 | 6 | 1-4 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Andrew 1 | 21 | 4-5 | 0-4 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 19 |
| Newbury 21 | 20 | 4-5 | 0-4 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 19 |
| Totals | 200 | 33-75 | 3-4 | 34 | 14 | 3 | 69 |
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
KANADA
| MIN | FT | REB A | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Magley 30 | 6-9 | 0-4 | 9 | 4 |
| Crawford 30 | 6-9 | 0-4 | 9 | 1 |
| Gawlion 36 | 9-11 | 3-4 | 15 | 2 |
| Guy 38 | 4-11 | 3-4 | 15 | 0 |
| Guy 38 | 4-11 | 3-4 | 2 | 12 |
| Nealine 23 | 7-13 | 0-6 | 6 | 2 |
| Mitchell 13 | 7-13 | 0-6 | 3 | 2 |
| Summers 2 | 0-0 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 |
| Worrel 2 | 0-0 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 |
| Worrel 2 | 1-3 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 |
| Knight 1 | 1-3 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 |
| Thompson 1 | 1 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 |
| 206 | 36-42 | 20-43 | 45 | 14 | 11 | 96 |
KANSAS
54
KU center Art Housie did a lot of things right in the Jayhawks' first-round tourney in Allen Field House, including this defense of a shot by Oklahoma State's Randy Wuest. Housie
OKLAHOMASTATE
Iba named Big 8 Coach of the Year
KANSAS CITY, MO. (UPI)—It's not a bad accomplishment to be named a coach of the year after holding that coaching position for one week.
But that's the feeling of satisfaction that Nebraska's head basketball coach, Moe Iba, must be experiencing now. Iba was named Big Ten Coach in the Year today by United Press International.
AUTHORITY
Officials: Dabrow and Weerns
Technical Fouls: none
Attendance: 7,100
Iba had been the acting head coach of the Huskers until last week, when he was officially named to that position. He was also named coach of the year last year, an honor he shared with the late Joe Cipriano, who died of cancer last November.
The Cornhuskers finished the regular season in a second-place tie with Kansas and Kansas State. Nebraska was knocked out of the Big Eight post season tournament last night by Colorado, 70-66, in the Bob Devaney Sports Center Arena in the first round of play.
Diaw won the coach of the year honors with 14 votes from UPI's selection panel of 24 writers and broadcasters Paul Hansen received the award. He is ranked State to its first winning record in years 11—18.9.
Kansas State forward Randy Reed was named Big Eight Newcomer of the Year by UPI yesterday. Reed scored 16.1 points a game and shot 60 percent from the field.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Office of the Chancellor
B221 Elmhurst Lawrence MH41
CENTRAL PARK ACADEMY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Faculty, Staff, Students and Alumni
Buchy, Stuart. Students and Alumni of the University of Kansas
Dear Friends:
I wanted to write to you with regard to concerns that have been raised recently among the students involved in the academic programs and the level of academic competence that are available to you.
The University of Kansas has a long and distinguished history of providing for all of its students and for the people of Kansas an academic institution which places its highest priority on the quality of the educational opportunities provided. The administration, the faculty, the alumni and the students share a common concern that all aspects of the program of the University reflect this priority. Academic excellence is, and will remain, the mutual goal of all members of the University community.
This commitment to the quality of the academic program extends to the opportunities that are made available to every student and to the responsibilities that must be fulfilled.
The student athlete is, above all, a student. To the extent that any dilution of the quality of the academic program may occur for an individual student, the University must scrutinize carefully whether the programs and policies of the University have contained inappropriate information to fail to commit himself or herself to the educational opportunities that were provided.
The members of the University of Kansas community are examining all aspects of the academic program to assure ourselves and the people of the State of Kansas that the integrity of a high-quality academic program is being maintained for all students, including student athletes. To this end, we have initiated the following efforts:
2. Established in the Fall of 1980 an athletic Academic Standard Review group to assist and advise the appropriate University officials in discharging the university's responsibilities for certification, eligibility, and other academic responsibilities placed on the institution by the NCAA, Big Eight Conference, and AIAW. This Board consists of a representative of the Athletic Department, a member of the Athletic Corporation Board, a representative of the faculty, a representative of the Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, and the Registrar of the University. I am asking this group to review the concerns that have been raised.
Announced a Commission on the Improvement of Undergraduate Education, composed of faculty members, administrators, and students who will examine all aspects of the undergraduate programs and policies and recommend actions that will enhance the quality of undergraduate education. This Commission began its work in the fall semester of 1980, and is expected to submit an initial report at the end of the spring semester 1981.
Univ Law
5. We have also requested that the faculties and the deans of the Schools examine our academic procedures to make sure that the academic programs of the University retain their integrity and quality and that these are available on an equitable basis to all of our students.
Sl pi at
By BR Staff R
Receive Govern more simple
4. Determined that the University will cooperate with the Athletic Department in improving our communications with prospective student athletes about the academic opportunities available at the University. We firmly believe that a student athlete must be fully informed with regard to the priority placed on the academic programs at the University of Kansas before that student commits himself or herself to participation in the athletic programs of the University.
3. Required that the regular channels of the Schools and the College be utilized to assure that course selection, classroom requirements, and evaluation of performance are the same for student athletes as for all other students at the University of Kansas.
It is our hope that all of the above actions will serve to reinforce and enhance the ongoing quality of the academic program for all students at the University of Kansas.
Chief fearing severa
Carli was be the bu taken distrac
"All as to w cuts," sideste whopi sideste fares strateg
Best wishes,
Delbert M. Shankel
Acting Chancellor
Issue highwa attenti enough Carlin
CAR the Le spendi
CAR cuts necess legisla budget
"The atmosp problem them."
G do ka
"The said, " move. Kansa decrea danger!
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, March 5, 1981 Vol. 91. No. 109 USPS 650-640
Slashing of KU budget prompts Carlin to look at legislators' motives
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Recent slashes in the KU budget, according to Governor John Carlin, are beginning to look more like part of a Republican-led plot than simple fiscal conservatism.
Chief among the programs that Carlin is involved in are those that promote increased cooperation severance tax on oil, natural gas and other resources.
Carlin, a Democrat, said yesterday that he was becoming more and more concerned that the budget-cutting spree the Legislature had passed would damage the district attention from several of his proposals.
"Although a clear picture needs to be drawn as to where the Senate is going with the budget cuts," Carlin said, "I am afraid that they plan to垫issue tips like the severance tax by whooping up the budget-cutting issue. If they do垫sideep, I will have to wait to see how the issue fares in the other House before I plan my strategy."
CARLIN IS CONCERNED that many of the cuts were made not because they were necessary, but because they were popular. Many coaches have said that the biggest sporting trend in Washington, D.C.,
Issues, like the financing of schools and highway repairs, that should be attracting the attention of the state are not getting nearly the capacity because of the cutting fever, Carlin said.
"There seems to be a relatively cooperative atmosphere on the outside," he said, "but some problems just are not getting the attention due to them."
Following up on his statement that there seems to be a cooperative aura in the statehouse, Carlin said that he did not see any extra conflict or tension in extreme conservatism of this session's Legislature.
"The balanced budget that I proposed," Carlin said, "seems to me to be a rather conservative move. It is the first such budget in 10 years for Kansas, and I think that it does a good job of decreasing government spending without endangering services."
CARLIN SAID THAT he certainly agreed with the Legislature's notion to tear back government spending, but said that he thought their efforts to
trim more than he recommended were going a bit too far.
"It does, however, put them in harmony with what is going on in Washington," he said.
Carlin said he was not concerned with the conservative nature of the statehouse. Kansas naturally is a conservative state and that such politics pose no problem; the problem was irresponsible actions.
"My feelings have less to do with the genealogy of the Legislature's action than with the reasons why the actions were taken," Carlin said. "If some of these things are being done simply because they are popular now, then we will pay the price later."
"Their thinking that the budget is not tight enough or conservative enough raises some questions in my mind. It makes me wonder if they really want a fiscally conservative policy, or if their goal is political because cutting is popular."
ON THE WHOLE, however, Carlin said he had
tried to friction this session than in
any of the past sessions.
KANSAS
"There always seems to be some conflict beetween the governor and the Legislature," he said. "If there is any extra friction this year it is because there are more controversial issues—issues that the Legislature seems to be wanting to pass over."
Even if the Legislature were to pass over, or defeat, the variance tax property Carlin said this week is "not a big deal."
"The budget does not depend upon the severance tax this time around," Carlin said. "But it soon will become necessary for us to work with the budget and try to keep up the quality of our roads and schools."
"Right now that is where the biggest fight between my office and the Legislature will be," she said.
Kansas Chairman Joe Greve and Rod Bowen chase after a long basketball during last night's game against the KU players. **MARK MICCONALD/Chairman Staff** The Chairmen and Jayhawks played on both teams in a scrimmage to raise money for the Kansas Eagle Seal Society. The blue team won 7-1.
CARLIN SAID the severance tax would also help keep down personal property taxes.
For the next few days, Carlin said that he would be concentrating on the severance tax as it gets tossed around in the House. Discussion on that tax will start this morning. The House has planned to re-convene tonight if debate on the tax warrants it.
"A lot of people don't realize that if there is no severance tax, then their taxes will go up." Carlin said. "Not only will their property taxes increase, but so will their sales taxes."
Benefit game a break from seriousness
By ALVIN A. REID Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Chuck Gambie of the blue team led all scorers with 12 points, and the Jayhawks 'Tracy Claxton had 10 to lead the white. Angie Taylor tinsed in eight.
The KU women's basketball team and the Kansas Chairmen join to make two teams and on put a show for the fans. The blue team will be out on Friday, game filled with as much hilarity as competition.
Taylor said. "Getting up and down the court was a little tough, but it was an enjoyable game."
"Boy, I was really having fun out there."
Lynette Woodard, who played for the blue team, shared Taylor's feelings about the games.
and the game.
"Hey, that was fun." Woodard said. "Of course, I'd rather be running."
Woodard, a three-time All-American, scored two points, and probably for the first time in her career.
Royce Miller, the white's player-coach, said the Jayhawks played very well in their win.
"These girls are all very skilled players, and the game was very competitive. Miller said." I thought it was great.
Victor Mitchell, center on the KU men's basketball team, traded his uniform for a
referee's whistle last night and was the target of many catcalls.
"Hey, I'm just learning these rules." Mitchell said.
In wheelchair basketball a player can pump his chair twice, dribble, push the chair again. Also, players are allowed five seconds in the lane instead of three.
Spectators were given a surprise by Coach Marian Washington and her assistants, Cindy Sam Booth and Sandy Bahan, at 19:28 of the second ball.
The trio began the game `causing the cheating` to start satited up at half-time and played in the second half.
I didn't score because I didn't want to
SWEETHEARTS
Glassblower designs art, lab equipment
By DEBBY FOSTER Staff Reporter
The windowless room is stifling. Boxes of glass rods line the walls, and the tables overflow with glass beakers and test tubes. Paper diagrams of strange-looking pieces to be made for research projects cover another table.
Harold N. Fakbury, KU's glassblower- residence, works in this small cluttered room in the basement of Malot Hall, creating murals in the chemistry and pharmacy departments.
[Image of a person]
He learned the art of blowing glass in his hometown of Alexandria, Egypt, where he worked in the chemistry department at the University of Alexandria. He came to the United States in 1975 and has worked at the University of Kansas ever since.
MARK MCDONALD/Kensan staff
"My main job is to make sophisticated apparatus for research," Fakhoury said. "The glassblower is to make things that can't be bought on the local market."
Harold N. Fakhoury, KU's glassblower-in-residence, creates special containers for the chemistry and pharmacy departments. Below, Fakhoury's aged hands show the many years of experience as a professional glassblower.
HE CREATES SPECIAL glass pieces
HE CREATES SPECIAL glass pieces adding to read-made bottles and beakers.
"It only gets boring when I do the same thing over and over," he said. "Sometimes I get large orders for a classroom project and have to make a hundred of one thing.
They are two small glass swans, of his own design, that he fastens together so that the tips of their beaks and the front part of their bodies join together resulting space in the middle is heart-shaped.
"It doesn't matter how many I have, though. I always take the time to do it right." Glassblowing is like fishing; it teaches you patience."
Among other things, he makes cheeset sets, wine glasses and what he calls "sweetheart baskets."
Blowing glass is also a hobby for Fakoury. He designs and bells some novelty pieces and glazes them.
"I give away a lot of my work," he said. "I
speak to polly people. I like to give gift out of
the blues."
"I enjoy my work," he said. "It makes me laugh." He added that when he met me happily, Also, I liked to do with him.
FAKHOURY'S JOB can be hazardous because there is always a chance of getting
Blowing glass is a major part of Fakouhy's life and takes up much of his time. He works from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m in his lab, and afterwards he often works on his personal creations. He doesn't teach the art, and though he does learn about most of his time is spent simply blowing glass.
burned or cut. However, he hasn't had any major accidents.
"I get more burns than anything else," he said. "With glass you can't tell which is hot or cold by looking at it. You only know if you touch it."
"You have to pay attention to exactly what you're doing."
HE CAME TO THE United States partly because his religious beliefs were different from those of most people in Egypt. He is a Christian. Most Egyptians are Moslems.
He said that he was glad he had come to the United States and was thankful for his religious freedom, but that there was another problem here—office politics.
"If you're an apple pollinator in the United States of America and you want to get somewhere—you're there," he said. "If you're an apple pollinator, you'll be on the rack."
"I was deprived of promotions and allowances because of my faith," he said.
See GLASSBLOWER page 5
Late-night legislative session scheduled for major issues
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Speaker Wendell Lady, who said yesterday that neither house had been distracted from the major issues, scheduled the first late-night session for today.
Amistad the usual flurry of moonlight sessions, Kansas lawmakers should complete their business on schedule, according to the Speaker of the House.
The House will debate Gov. John Carlin's proposed 8 percent severance tax on the production of oil, natural gas and coal today and should take official action on the bill by Friday.
Lady said the Legislature was not strained by as many bills this session as in the past, and he attributed this partially to an understanding that the number of bills should restrict the number of bills they sponsored.
BOTH HOUSES are under pressure to take final action on their own bills by March 11, so lawmakers can start final debates on bills passed by the other house.
"There's nothing I can do, nor would want to
contort the number of bills introduced."
Lady said.
Lady controls the House calendar and could prevent a bill from being debated, but he said it would not be politically popular to do that frequently.
LADY SAID THAT the Legislature traditionally put off action on finance bills but added that it did not mean work was not being done.
"People have to realize that most of the work goes on in committee," he said. "Debating bills on the floor takes up a very small percentage of the total amount of time."
He said lawmakers had lost no time considering bills dealing with university faculty training.
"Those issues were considered at a time when
The House was on schedule in considering budget items. Lady said.
the major issues were still in committee," he said.
STATE REEP. John Subach, D-Lawrence, said in setting up the state's budget was gone process. The state's budget was gone process.
"Budget items are always held till the last," Solbach said. "Until then, we won't know what money is available, and we won't know the priorities of each house."
Lady explained that by the end of the session, the issues had been defined.
"The decision is being refined at that point," bead. "Sometimes down at the end, it (a bill) might be fine."
HOW MUCH ADJUSTMENT bills will need before they pass both houses won't be 'clear until later this month, but State Rep. Betty Jo Ann Young said, she expected some heavy horse-trading.
"Trade-offs are made at the last minute when people want to go home," she said.
But that does not deter from the quality of the decision being made, she said. It's just the nature of it.
Charlton said that according to the timable legislative leaders were following, lawmakers would be allowed to vote on new bills.
WITH THE DEADLINE approaching fast, Charlson said, his job should become more "sophisticated."
She said lawmakers were eager to vote on the major issues that they had been working on since 2015.
However, there's always some disappointment. If she was killed or is dead at the last minute, she said.
Lady said the legislative schedule worked smoothly, and he would not try to prod legislators into considering budget issues earlier.
"The procedure works well, I see no reason to make any morai changes," he said.
A LITTLE WARMER
Weather
It will be mostly sunny today with a high of 44 degrees, according to the KU Weather Service. The winds will be light and breeze light and variable later in the day.
Vigintas' low will be in the lower 20s with clear skies prevailing.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the low- to mid-40s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Rightist gunmen attack U.S. Embassy
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Right-wing gunmen raked the U.S. Embassy in San Salvador with automatic rifle fire yesterday, but there were no reports of any shots.
U. S. Charge D'affaires Frederick Chapin said the attack was the work of extremists trying to intimidate Washington into backing a military offensive.
It was the second attack on the embassy in four months. On Nov. 20, leftist guerrillas fired two Chinese-made rocket-propelled grenades at the building, destroying an unused office on the top floor of the three-story building but causing no injuries.
Chapin said Dust in the 11 a.m. attack, unidentified gunmen armed with automatic riffles and riding in the back of a pickup truck, pumped six rounds into his hands. (AP)
U. S. Marines and Salvadoran National Guardmen patrolling the compound in northern San Salvador did not return fire. Chakin said.
In Dublin, Ireland, political leaders, newspapers and a Roman Catholic church spokesman yesterday united against the Reagan administration's aid for the El Salvador junta in a rare display of Irish criticism directed at the United States.
Pentagon asks for record budget
WASHINGTON — The Pentagon appealed to Congress yesterday for a $32.6 billion increase in defense spending over the next two years, much of it for new weapons to prevent the United States from becoming a second-rate military power by the mid-1980s.
Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger told the Senate Armed Services committee that the Pentagon needed more money now to end the Carter administration.
Weinberger sought the highest pacetime defense budget in U.S. history to pursue President Reagan's policy of preserving peace through strength.
More ships, planes and tanks and $11.5 billion worth of increased combat readiness are necessary to project American armed to the defense of Western interests worldwide, particularly in the Persian Gulf region, which Weieringer described as 'the umbilical cord of the industrialized free
Inherent in Weinberger's revision of the Carter administration defense budgets for fiscal years 1981 and 1982 is a toughened global policy designed to get U.S. power to potential centers of conflict without stretching resources too thin.
House debates waste control bill
*TOPEKA-Responding to public focus on hazardous waste disposal, TOPEKA has established effectively an bill that would make sweeping changes in the state's laws.*
House members debated the bill for a little more than an hour before
admitting it on a 8:30 tentative vote. A final vote is set for today.
State Rep. Robert Miller, R-Wellington, led debate on the hazardous waste bill, saying the measure expanded the law that the public would have a chance to recycle. He said the legislature should not.
Miller, chairman of the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee, and Gov. John Carlin had pinpointed hazardous waste shortly before the session began.
Miller said he doubted that any new commercial hazardous waste sites would be approved under existing law, which requires the approval of new sites by the state Health and Environment Department.
Allowing the public a bigger role in the decisions on whether new licenses for dumps should be granted might help alleviate fears about hazardous waste.
The state's only commercial hazardous waste dump is near Furley, where violations of waste laws have been found. In addition, public attention recently was focused on an area near Kansas City, where a metal company had illegally dumped chemical wastes.
Iran, Iraq disagree on truce terms
BEIRUT, Lebanon—Efforts by an Islamic goodwill mission to forge a cease-fire in the 164-day-old war between Iran and Iraq ended in failure yesterday with both the Tehran and Baghdad governments refusing to compromise their hard-line positions.
The eight-man team of Moslem statesmen, which included PLO chief Yasser Aassar fervently, visited both Tehran and Baghdad, meeting with Iran's spiritual leader Ayatollah Ruhullah Khomein and Iraqi President Saddam willing to back down for the markers indicated neither side was waiting to back down for the sake of a truce.
Hussein, after a two-hour meeting with the Moslem mediators in Baghdad, reiterated his position that "any solution that disregards the causes of the war and Iraqi sovereignty over the Shatt Al-Arab Waterway would not be logical or just," the Iraq news agency reported.
Earlier in the day, the peacemakers found the Iranian leadership in Tehran also refusing to end fighting on anything but its own terms.
"The war will continue until all attackers has ceased and its effects have been totally removed," Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai said in a joint speech while the Moslim mission was meeting with Iran's Supreme Defense Council, led by President Abdouassan Bani-Sadr and Khomeini.
Mozambique orders Americans out
MAPUTO, Mozambique—Mozambique yesterday ordered the expulsion of six Americans, four diplomats and two of their wives for alleged espionage, subversion and interference in the African nation's internal affairs.
The State Department described the incident that apparently led to the evasion as a "blatant confrontation" and blamed Cuban intelligence officials for the attack.
In Washington, the State Department charged that Cuba and Mozambique had to recruit a U.S. diplomat who failed, they ordered him back, but he escaped from the country.
Unofficial sources in Maputo said the arrests and expulsions were part of a crackdown on foreigners suspected of helping South African commandos in a raid into the capital Jan. 30, during which 14 members of the outlawed African National Council were killed.
A Foreign Affairs Ministry statement said the Americans were given 48 hours to leave the former Portuguese colony. Press reports from Maputo said security police also had arrested other foreigners and Mozambicans during a country-wide crackdown.
Oil companies overcharged Canadians
Those excess charges, amounting to more than $500 for every man, woman and child in Canada, would be worth about $89 billion today to those same consumers if they had been invested instead of paid to the oil companies, the report said.
OTWAWA — The major oil companies, employing "predatory and
$12 billion from 1988 to 1973, overcharged Chesapeake Federal report released vystayed
$12 billion from 1988 to 1973, overcharged Chesapeake Federal report released vystayed
Consumer and Corporate Affairs Minister Andre Ouellet had already announced that the report would be submitted to the Restrictive Trade Practices Commission for a full public airing of corporate practices.
The 1,700-page, seven-seventh report was prepared under the direction of Robert Bertrand, director of the Corporate Affairs Department's Bureau of Competition Policy, and followed an eight-year investigation by the department.
Debate team, director honored nationally
Bertrand estimated that from 1968 to 1973, Canadian oil branches were overcharged for imported oil by about $3.8 billion. If those funds had been invested, they would have amounted to a return in current dollars of about $22.3 billion.
Meanwhile, during that period, world oil prices were driven downward as new companies gained access to crude not controlled by the world's seven largest multinational petroleum companies.
By CORAL BEACH Staff Reporter
Whether the competitors are slam-dunking, high jumping or arguing their way into first place, most winning teams have a winning coach behind them. KU debaters, nationally known for their expertise, have such a coach.
Dorn Parson, director of forensics,
has been recognized as one of the five
outstanding directors in the nation by
Baylor and Emym食堂. He was given an $-inch screw and a born in the true satira tradition of debate.
"The awards go to me, but they are for the whole team," Parson said. "If the students were not good, I wouldn't
AS DIRECTOR of forensics at the University of Kansas, Paron supervises the six debate coaches and organizes the Heart of America Debate CU sponsors annually. All 60 team members usually participate in the tournament.
University forensic directors across the country participated in a survey that determined the winners of the Baylor and Emory awards. The winners were selected on the basis of their service to debate in the 1970s.
have gotten the bonus. It's like Ive talented based on players making the best plays.
Parson said he encouraged KU students to observe at least one of the debate rounds, which are open to the public. Preliminary rounds will be Saturday and Sunday in Wesco Hall. Elimination rounds will begin at 9:30 a.m. and the finals will be at 4:30 p.m. in the Room of the Kansas Union.
day. Teams representing 46 schools and 30 states have registered to participate
The tournament this year will start Saturday and continue through Mon-
"The 1976 KU team of Robin Rowland and Frank Cross received one of the team awards, and KU's Heart of America Debate Tournament was
The top five tournaments of the decade and the five individual outstanding teams were also selected by the country's forensics directors.
"We were the only school in the country to have winners in all three sports, and we had with any other school in the country, including Harvard and Northwestern."
recognized as one of the best tournaments in the country." Parson said.
Parson said that the debate program had gained momentum over the years.
"The tradition of fine debate at the University has built itself over the years," he said. "Many distinguished people have debated for KU. Former Bennett and several members of the Board of Regents were on the KU squad.
"If the students didn't live up to this winning reputation, I wouldn't be a winning director."
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University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Page 3
Child safety bill clears panel
RvRRADSTERTZ
Staff Reporter
Lawrence State Rep. Jessie Branson's child passenger safety bill neither died nor out of committee as included in Branon, had predicted.
Instead the bolt hosed out of the House Public Safety and Welfare Committee with a resounding 10 to 4 recommendation for approval.
On the trail to state law, the bill faces a formidable obstacle in getting out on the House floor for debate and final action.
The bill proposes making child restraint mandatory for children under 2 years old riding in moving motor vehicles.
HOUSE SPEAKER Wendell Lady said that he did not know whether the bill would get out on the floor.
"It really made it out of committee?" Lady, R-Overland Park, asked after hearing the bill's latest status. "Well, then the next step is for the speaker to decide if it is going to be debated, and then I will know't know what I am going to do about it."
Lady said he had not looked at the bill closely. He did say, however, that he could understand the logic behind the bill.
Branson, D-Lawrence, said that although she hoped the bill would progress faster, she did not think there was a need to work on the House calendar to work it into.
"At least it had a good start," Branson said. "The next step is going to be tough for it because of all of the confusion of trying to meet work deadlines, it's a very big rush right now and I act on all of the bills before the house."
BRANSON SAID that for more than a week she had been trying to convince the other members of the committee of the merits of her bill.
She' said most of the members probably changed their minds after a day of testimony by mothers, KU reseers; cheers, emergency room workers, pediatricians and highway patrol officers.
"So many of the members of the committee were so unaware of the problem when I began pushing for it," Branson said. "But by the time that the committee day, several of the members had changed their stand and voted for the bill."
Even Republicans who had been strongly against the personal freedom restraints the law would imply voted to measure once it was amended, she said.
Branson, however, said she had no trouble accepting the amendments because they were mainly superficial to the ideal of child safety.
"Several people from Lawrence came up to say that there were parts of the bill that would be bad for them because they had big families," he said. "They had a language on several points, like the provision to give a fine to violators."
SOME OF THE HEAVEN that were amended to the bill were changing a fine to a warning for violators, reducing the age of the child to be restrained from 5 to 2 and, along with the warning, more information about child safety education.
The bill also was amended to read that violations only could take place in the front seats of the vehicles. It also was changed to give stronger language about the Department of Transnational's role in education and use of the law.
"I still think that this was a major victory in getting this through committee," Branson said.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Opinion
Letter is meaningless
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel wrote a letter to the University community this week, reaffirming the University's commitment to academics in light of allegations to the contrary.
Actually the letter reaffirmed nothing.
Shankel listed five steps to ensure high academic quality and quantity. Yet KU officials have not even acknowledged that an academic problem exists. They only have attempted to implement some vague proposals for a system that has yet to be adequately investigated.
In the letter, Shankel tried to convince us that academic quality is being ensured because of two new committees—the Commission on the Improvement of Undergraduate Education and an athletic Academic Standard Review Board.
These underpublicized committees—
virtually unheard of—were formed last fall, long before the academic allegations surfaced. The committees apparently didn't do much good then; what assurance do we have that they will benefit the University now?
The rest of the recommendations stress an increase in communication—but only internally. The University community needs more than a mere letter assuring us that the big boys in Strong Hall will take care of the problem.
The letter did nothing to answer the allegations. If there indeed is an academic problem, the University community—the students in particular—have a right to know. And the administration must confront the problem openly.
Then, and only then, can we start formulating effective steps to prevent the so-called abuses.
Dad healthy after operation despite his heart condition
My father has an anniversary of sorts this week. I say "of sorts" because it is not an ordinary milestone you would take note of. At the time it was not a happy occasion.
A year ago today my father was in the hospital about to undergo heart bypass surgery. Today he is fine. He is not on any medication, and he can do all the activities he did before he was sick.
My father's story is not unique. More than 75,000 bypasses are performed each year, with a very high success rate. In fact, the operation is
DAN
TORCHIA
POLICE
so commonplace that medical authorities are concerned that it is being performed without first using other methods of treating heart disease.
My father's story started in July 1979, but the groundwork was laid long before then. Like thousands of other men, he was deceived by his lifestyle. Like thousands of other men, he had no idea that his habits would affect him the way they did.
And like thousands of other men, his habits caught up with him. He was a moderately heavy smoker for more than 15 years. He was overweight, and he had high blood pressure.
But it was not enough. He was playing raucquetball in July 1979 as a change of pace from tennis. He felt a tightness in his arm. When it hit him, he asked someone to call an ambulance.
But when all the evidence about heart disease and bad diet and bad lifestyle began to be collected, he took steps to correct his habits. He lost weight. He took up tennis, playing several times a week. He went on a low cholesterol, low sodium diet.
Ever since his business partner had a heart attack and bypass surgery, my father had joked about his being next. Now it was happening. He was 42 years old.
His youth was a blessing of sorts because he recovered faster than other heart patients who had been hospitalized.
But his recovery did not last. In January 1980, six months after his heart attack, he started to deteriorate. He quit playing tennis because he got too tired. He cut back on his walking. He added having heart flutters and angina, pain that caused by a lack of blood getting to the heart.
He went back into the hospital for tests last February. The tests showed that he had gotten much worse, and the doctors recommended surgery. My parents agonized over the decision, but they knew there was no choice. He stayed in the hospital, and they operated right away.
In a bypass operation, the doctors take veins from the leg and graft them onto the heart. They replace the clogged arteries that can't carry enough blood through the heart.
The doctors expected to graft only three arteries, but they did a fourth as a preventive measure. My father spent 10 days in the hospital, and he was taken. Again, because of his age, he recovered quickly.
I have a lot of memories of that period, some positive, some not. Just witnessing what was happening with my father was a traumatic experience. But friends and family were very supportive and that helped. There was one woman who came down and spent the afternoon with us, even though her husband had died of heart disease less than a year before.
We got to know many of the people who had someone in the hospital for the same operation, and we leaned on each other for support. In that case, we also find that your situation is far from the worst.
We met the family of a man from a small town in Kansas. He had cancer and heart disease. Before they could operate on the cancer, they had to go to the hospital where they have survived the trauma of the cancer surgery.
I met a man named Mr. Cutter at a seminar for heart patients and their families. He was in his mid 55s, but he looked like he was 70. He was spending much more slowly than he should have.
He always seemed confused by what had happened to him. It seemed as if his body had betrayed him, and he didn't understand why it had. He was a kindly man who never thought that he would be in that situation. He died a few months later.
The awful thing about heart disease is that it can ravage your body without your realizing it. My father always thought he might avoid a heart attack, or at least delay it.
Even after his heart attack, he thought that he might be able to do without surgery. That is what the doctors said. But when his recovery after his heart attack ended, you could almost mark daily how much he had worsened. And there was nothing anyone could do, except have survirz.
A year later, despite the positive feelings we have, there are still uncertainties. There is no telling how long my father will stay healthy. The doctors said that there would be at least five years of treatment guarantee; the Disease could start up sooner. Or he may never have problems again.
He hasn't had any problems for a year. Bypass surgery is so common now, but it's still a miracle to "is taking a body apart and putting it on" (that's not what I'm referring to) a friend of my father's who went through it too.
He is right. It enables many people to live full lives where they wouldn't be able to otherwise. People like my father. And my family is grateful.
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NOW, Let's not be Selfish
There was a time when I thought censorship meant only the little "bleeps" on TV when somebody like Johnny Carson or Dicky Smothers would say a naughty word. My brother and sister and I used to sit cross-legged on the living room floor and laugh raucously while trying to read the lips of whomever had gotten bleeded.
Library censors threaten free speech
The hunt is on. On one side of the gun are groups of people with names like "Concerned Citizens for a Decent Society" and "Moral Majority."
Of course, that was when I still thought Joe McCarthy was the name of a ventriloquist's dummy. I was only half as tall as a library worker. No idea that libraries could get censored too.
But they can. According to Judith Krug, director of the American Library Association's Office of Intellectual Freedom, its office is enough to ensure that libraries are threatening to become an epidemic. She noted recently, with a hint of urgency in her voice, that her office had received three to five times as many complaints than its censorship last November in 19 years past.
The prey? Any reading material that demonstrates their conception of a Christian anti-Americanism.
We've been hearing so much about other facets of this nationwide janitorial campaign—self-righteous salvos directed at gays, abortion, contraception, you name it. Compared to these, libraries seem like such unlikely targets. According to Krug, however, books by Mark Twain, Ernest Hemingway and Jack London are particularly spirited off some school library shelves across the country. She says librarians are under such pressure in some communities that they fear for their jobs if they don't remove books.
Although school libraries account for the lion's share of censorship complaints, the percentage of public libraries falling under its seige also is on the rise, according to Krug.
There's the tiny library in Abingdon, Va., whose 24-year-old librarian is being threatened with eternal dammation by a Baptist preacher because she allowed the acquisition of books like Sidney Sheldon's "Bloodline"; and Jacqueline Susann's "Once
is Not Enough." The preacher even went as far as to demand the names of people in the community who had borrowed the offending volumes.
YEAH, you say, but that's in Virginia. Yeah, you ask, but that's in Virginia at the first floor in Launeyer at the first floor in Launeyer
Complaints about books in the Lawrence Public Library have been isolated—mostly from children.
JUDY
WOODBURN
stereotypes in children's books. A few times a year someone will go as far as to file a formal complaint, but that's about it.
Sofar, anyway.
Wayne Mayo, head librarian at the Lawrence Public Library, sees no imminent threat to libraries, but he does point to incidences like this one as an indication that demands for library censorship are becoming more acceptable.
"You can see little trends moving this way," he said. "It shows that people are a big part of it."
What about Bacon Bob, a commissioner just next door in Johnson County, who raided the library there because it carried books on sexuality and other un-American things?
Lawrence has been. In Davis County, Utah, it took the American Library Association two years and $43,000 to reconstitute a librarian who had been dismissed on pornography grounds.
The threat is just plausible enough that the board boarding is taking a few steps to protect itself.
So concern creeps in, even in a university community like Lawrence where tastes are broad-ranging and tolerance for differing views is likely to be the greatest.
By the next board meeting, the board hopes to have a formal policy on library acquisitions that emphasizes the right of individuals to select their own reading materials. The policy will shield the library board and staff from potential lawsuits because, under state law, library staff are immune to pornography charges if the material in question was purchased according to an established acquisition policy.
In the long run, it seems that having to protect librarians from prosecution is just the outward manifestation of some much larger questions. Just what is the purpose of a public library in the first place? What does it owe its patrons and the community at large?
Some communities are not as fortunate as
In the good old days of public libraries, there was never any doubt as to their purpose. They were for the "enlightenment of the common man," a means by which he could pull himself up by his own bootstraps a la Andrew Carnegie.
The Abingdon brothaila may not portend a return to the McCarthy days, when you couldn't look up "Communism" or "United Nations." The real issue is becoming suspect. It may open obscure the more important elements of the debate. After all, the issue really isn't simply keeping Sidney Shelldon or Jacqueline Susann on the ground. How would we know what they do with literary junk food like that?
Shortly after the turn of the century, when hundreds of thousands of immigrants flooded the country, libraries shouldered what Judith Kahn called "the burden of white men's burden" of "Americanizing the newcomers. Things changed again shortly after World War II, when the library became a symbol of a democratic society, and the university guardian angel of the public's "right to know."
Now, would be censors like the folks in Abingdon are playing Plato, demanding that both community and school libraries act as proponents of an ideal society—and it had better be a Christian one. They are adamant that their tax dollars not be spent to finance someone else's penchant for what they deem "smut."
But I do care what happens to the First Amendment, and I think the disappearing book act isn't nearly as funny as the bleeps and cuckoos I heard on TV as a child.
These morality mongers might do well to have a look at the American Library Association's statement. it reads: "While anyone is free to reject books for himself, he cannot exercise the right of censorship to restrict the freedom of others."
Proposals must fight Congressional maze.
B. C. FRED BERGSTEN
WASHINGTON—The 96th Congress departed with a record that was less than brilliant. It was unable to vote appropriations for much of the government, which will thus be funded by contouring resolution. One program (foreign aid) was its second straight year of such fiscal purgatory.
New York Times Special Features
Even these lackluster results required marathon end-of-season bargaining that left even those individuals most directly involved in making sure they were for days to find out what finally did happen.
It is commonplace to criticize the Congress for these specific shortcomings. There is less recognition, however, that much of the problem lies not with any particular Congress but rather with the basic process of legislating that has evolved, particularly over the last decade.
In fact, today we have a virtual stalemate system of governance.
A major systemic problem is that any money program that does not enjoy permanent authorization must clear at least 27 separate legislative steps to become effective. Three difficult areas are involved: one or more budget resolutions, authorization and appropriation.
Each process usually encompasses nine steps: Each House votes on a bill at both the subcommittee and committee levels and then again in the final vote. The committee reconciling the inevitable differences and
shipping the bill back once more to each body to final passage. Even programs with permanent authorization face 20 or so separate Capitol Hill hurdles every year.
Successful running of such a guantlet requires enormous stamina on the part of program managers and a major dose of sheer luck to complete the process within a single year.
For most programs, very few of the 27 steps are pro forma. Even non-controversial proposals sometimes fail simply because of scheduling difficulties. One willful member can—and will be an entire program by delaying a single step long enough to render passage impossible.
It becomes extremely difficult to alter the status quo—not only for those who seek enactment of new initiatives or spending increases but also for those who wish to cut existing programs and to reduce government involvement in our society.
The result is a plethora of checks with very few balances.
Conservatives who in recent years have used the stalemate system to block liberal proposals may soon find their own efforts thwarted in a similar manner. The Democratic counterparts of Sen. Jesse Helms and Rep. Robert E. Bauman will appear early in the 97th Congress.
The costs of the stalemate system are enormous. New initiatives are virtually impossible to enact. The reputation of the Congress itself declines perceptibly. Program managers must understand that they can win the Hill" rather than improving their programs and must cater to the whims of that willful
minority that can stop the process dead in its tracks.
More importantly, a president can neither govern effectively nor be held truly accountable by the public, as Lloyd托林, the former White House counsel, points out in the fall issue of Foreign Affairs magazine. This is particularly so in foreign affairs, where historically presidential leadership has been supported by the Congress.
It is far easier to describe the problem than to present viable solutions to it. Perhaps each Congress should pass only one budget and one set of appropriation bills, covering its two years of existence at once rather than trying to repeat the process annually. Perhaps authorizations and applications could be considered simultaneously, as has happened on a few occasions.
Cutter has proposed more ambitious reforms that would move, to some extent, toward a parliamentary system by focusing greater authority in the president and asking Congress to provide broad policy mandates rather than detailed numbers.
It is very doubtful that either a Great Society program or a Reagan program to fight inflation could successfully run the gauntlet of today's stalent system.
Reform of the congressional process should stand high on the agenda of both the Reagan and Bush administrations.
C. Fred Bergsten, who was assistant secretary of the treasury for international affairs under President Carter, is now a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Page 5
Committees examine funding requests
Budget hearings continued last night as four Student Senate committees heard funding requests.
The Cultural Affairs Committee heard requests from five groups.
Latin American Club asked for $1,275. The club received $545 from the Senate last year.
Mindful of some Senate members' sentiments against funding political organizations, Krupa Billa, committee co-chairman, told the club not to become involved in politics.
THE CHINESE Student Association requested $1,249. JI-Tter Kuo, association president, said that his club served 250 students and that he would not mind sharing the money with either of the two other Chinese groups on campus. These groups are the Formosa Club and the Free China
Billa endorsed the association, saying that it was the most active foreign student club on
The three other groups presenting requests to Cultural Affairs were:
- The University Dance Company, requesting $2,018.13.
- Helenicum Society, requesting $500.
- Brazil-Portugal club, requesting $813.
No preliminary funding cuts were made by Cultural Affairs. Ron Heape, committee cochairman, said preliminary cuts would begin next week.
The Student Services Committee made
preliminary cuts in the Black Student Union's budget request, reducing it from $716,189 to
STUDENT SERVICES also heard requests from six groups.
KU-Y presented a request for $2,922.52, a $1,178
increase from last year's price.
Several committee members questioned Pamela. Johnson, director of about the group's staff, said she would not be relied on.
The Consumer Affairs Association requested
$ 748.88. All of the money the Senate allocates to the
Consumer Affairs Association will be used for these purposes.
DURING REVENUE CODE hearings in January, the group was denied status as a Revenue Code group. The Finance and Auditing Committee decided that its other sources of revenue were grants and revenue sharing, not stable enough to guarantee Senate (funding every year).
In his presentation last night, Clyde Chapman, Consumer Affairs director, said the organization probably would lose its CETA funds by Oct. 1. Employee pays salaries for three student employees.
- Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service, requesting $134.40
The other groups presenting requests to Student Services were:
Custodian, requesting $20.70.
Volunteer Clearinghouse, requesting
$1,131.71.
The Communications Committee gave women in Communications the $250 it asked for but cut $940.60 from the Blacks in Communications' proposed budget.
- KU Solar Energy International Club,
requesting $1,571.90.
Its original request of $2,175 was reduced to
$1,234.40.
The major expense for Blacks in Communications is the publication of its newspaper, Criterion. Each issue costs $275, but the group said it could cover half the cost with advertising.
The Academic Affairs Committee heard requests from six organizations, four of which were related to the School of Engineering. About half of them were in attendance were engineering students.
KANSAS ENGINEER MAGAZINE requested
said. The magazine has not received Senate
funds.
Women in Engineering requested $492,48 the
Engineering Student Council requested $2,099.70
and SCORMEBE, an organization for minority
students, $3,558.27, $3,608 more than
it received last year.
The School of Education Student Organization requested $521.40, and the Kansas Defender Project, a legal service organization that students at the School of Law extend to inmates at the Lansing and Leavenworth penitentiaries, requested $2,067.
From page one
His English, which is accented and rather
makes it make him for him to communicate
with people.
"I have to watch what I say. There are so many slang terms," he said.
"I like to get along with people," he said with a smile. "I like people. I have no grudges and don't hate anybody."
so, he usually keeps to himself and doesn't talk much. For that reason, he said, many people think he is a snob, but he emphatically denies that.
Fakhouy is $3, single and lives alone. The only family he has is a brother in Kansas City and his mother in Egypt. He said he was often lonely.
He said he sometimes felt uncomfortable in love because there were so many young people.
"I don't like small cities," he said. "In a small city you go around once, twice, and you know the whole thing. In a big city there is always someing new."
"I feel like the odd man out." He also said he thought Lawrence was too small and young.
"I've got a heart of glass," he said, grinning.
Also, he said he had had too many mishaps here. His home was destroyed by a fire about 18 months ago while he was out of town. He said his luck with women was bad in the past. He just broke off an engagement and said he was mending a broken heart.
Wheelchairs
From page one
overshadow my players," Washington said. "I got a rebound. Sandy got a steal and I'm not sure if I will be safe."
"All the people who didn't come don't know what they missed," he said. "This game had excitement, fun and was totally delightful. It was great."
Thomas Anderson, director of Facilities Operations and a game sponsor, said he wished there had been more spectators.
"It's great getting to play in a game like this,
and of us have serious games coming up. Gamble it."
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843-7333
BOKONON
541 3600
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2-6 PM DAILY
at "THE HAWK"
MISTER
GOY
The BLACK STUDENT UNION will hold an informational meeting for those interested in running for the following offices:
PRESIDENT
VICE-PRESIDENT
CORRESPONDING SECRETARY
RECORDING SECRETARY
TREASURER
PARLIAMENTARIAN
Place: Kansas Union - Governor's Room
Date: Thursday, March 5, 1981
Time: 6:00 p.m.
For more information, contact the Black Student Union B113 Phone 864-0907
Funded by Student Activity Fee
B113, Phone 864-3984.
Call the classified department at 864-4358
We'll Service Your Car For Less!
REMEMBER!
National Instructions for
Automobiles
SERVICE
EXPERIENCE
Ron Griffin
Service Manager
Jerry Sinovic Service Adviser
All Japanese Imports Coupons must be presented at time of write-up.
礼
PRE SPRING BREAK SPECIAL 10% DISCOUNT on Maintenance-Related Items
TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA
Includes:
-Oil changes
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191
-Brake Inspections
-Wheel bearings repacked
-Plus many more
Additional work needed also receives 10% discount on parts and labor.
10% discount does not Include Tune-Up Special)
(This form does not include tune-up special)
TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA
TUNE-UP SPECIAL
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191
engines slightly higher.)
with coupon
Includes all parts
and labor — (6cyl.
engines slightly higher.)
$3695 4cyl.
We'll:
install new spark plugs
replace points and cond. (if appl.)
set engine to recommended
manufacturer's specifications
inductors
inspect operation of choke
install new fuel filter
check all underhood fluid levels
---
-
Page 6 University Daily Kansan, March 5. 1981
On Campus
TODAY
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER
SENIOR Batch on "Remote Entry Entry from Time-Sharing" at noon in the auditorium of the Computer Services Facility.
THE STUDENT BAR ASSOCIATION FORUM presents Wendall Harnes, Topeka attorney for the elderly, on "Alternatives to Traditional Law" at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall.
MASTER CLASSES with Fleisher, pian-
er and 1:30 p.m. in the Swarthout
Recital Hall.
THE UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB pub-
lishes a quarterly, p.m. in the Wa-
kings Room of the Kansas Union.
LA MESA ESPANOLA (Spanish Table) will
meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 3059 Wescoe.
All native speakers and students of Spanish are welcome. The table is sponsored by Sigma Delta Pi.
THE GRADUATE SCHOOL TEA AND TALK LECTURE presents Tony Genova on "The Justification of Princess" at 3:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Union.
THE GERMAN CLUB will hold a Kaffe-
e at 3:00 p.m. in 2008 Wescoe, Everyone integra-
tates at 5:30 p.m.
THE PHOTOJOURNALISM STUDENTS ASSOCIATION will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 119 Flint Hall. Everyone interested in photojournalism is welcome.
THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SPIRITUAL
THE GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF KANSAS will meet at 7:30 in the International Room of the Union.
DISCIPLES will discuss "Simplicity" & 7 p.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Mission Center.
THE STOFFER NEIGHBOORHOOD ASSOCIATION will meet at 7:30 in the Satellite Union.
TOMORROW
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER will present an "Introduction to SCSS" at 8:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Computer Services Facility.
MASTER CLASSES with Leon Fleibler, who spent 30 p.m. in the Swarthout Reception Hall in March 1939.
KU CONCERT CHORALE will perform at 8 p.m. in the Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy.
Support group forms to help gays
The director of the program, who asked not to be identified out of fear of harassment, said you were okay that the new support groups would be there and that they are just coming out and for guys already out.
Gay support groups for men and women are being formed by the Gay and Lesbian Peer Counselors.
"It's one of the services we're trying to offer that will compliment our counseling program."
Gay and lesbian counseling, offered 24 hours a day, provides legal and medical information, as well as treatment.
"To get counseling, a caller should contact KU information or Headquarters of Lawrence, and they will take the caller's name and number," he said. "They contact one of our counselors, who
then contacts the caller. It is all very confidential."
The counseling service receives an average of 34 calls a week, he said.
"Usually our calls are just a one-shot deal," the director said. "Many calls concern lover relationships or the inability to deal with gay feelings. There is long-term counseling, though."
All counselors have had previous counseling experience and go through a rigorous screening
Anyone who calls the service can request a male or a female counselor, the director said, and all counselors are either gay themselves or have worked closely with gay people.
"We're not here to solve anyone's problems.
Basically we are just a sounding board," he said.
"We are here though, and we are willing to listen."
ZEN PRACTICE
Intensive Meditation Retreat, March 5-8
Public Talk
Sunday March 8, 2:30 pm
Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
with George Bowman
Master Dhaara Teacher
Providence Zen Center
842-7010
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA COMMONWEALTH
PAUL NEWMAN EDWARD ASNER
FORT APACHE, THE BROXX R
60 CENTURY ROAD
One of the years' to sail.
ALTERED ST.4TES
EVE 7:30 & 9:30 MAT SAT & SUN 2:00
HILLCREST
2 ACADEMY NOWINNATIONS
RICHARD DREYTUSS
THE COMPETITION
EVE 7-8 & 8:30
MAT SAT & SUN 2:15
HILLCREST 2
ROBERT DE NIRO
Nominated for Academy Awards,
including BEST PICTURE
SAVE $450.48 MAY SAT & SUN 213
RAGING BULL
JACK LEMMON
ROG DENSON
TRIBUTE
EVEN 7:00 & 9:00
MAT SAT & SUN 2:19
PC AT SAT
JANE FONDA
LILY TOMLIN 9 TO5 PG
CINEMA 1 TICKET AND WEB
LILY FONDA LIY LOMLIN 9 TO 5 PG
EVE. 7:30 & 8:30 MAT. SAT. & SUN. 2:00
CINEMA 2 TICKET AND WEB
Windwaker EVE.7/18 & 9:15 P.M. MAT.SAT.& SUN.2:00
Hear the world's winds of eternity
Windwalker
EVE 7:15 & 8:15, 1:30
MAT SAT & SUN 2:00
Note the walkers
are welcome at any time
SUA FILMS
Thursday. Mar. 5 Weekend
(1967)
The film it took Jeanne-Luc Godard thirteen years to recover from, a bittersweet, bitter tale of the past that, conscious society in the last decade, consumes and its own destructiveness bury it. It "a great, original work" told well, it treated with the视ings of the greatest." Pauline Kael, the new Writer. With Jean-Pierre Clemente (105 min) Color, French subtitles; 7:30.
Maupintour travel service
When Maryl Streep breaks out of her stifling marriage, ad exec Dustin Hoffman and his wife, a movie star to know and love the boy, Steve appears, beginning a custody fight. Robert Benton's film avoids polemics and creates an atmosphere of three people, brilliantly acted by Hoffman, Streep and young Justin Henry, with fine support from Jane Alexander as she navigates the complex world of Oscars including Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress, Best Director, an extraordinary film; Plus: John and Sarah Kane; (1050) color; 3:30, 7:00, 9:30.
Friday, Mar. 6
Kramer vs. Kramer
The reggae movie, Jimmy Cliff is a young singer amputated marijuana to support himself; he sells a cop and becomes an activist. The film also charts. A vibrant, immediate performance by CHIFF and the regular exegregi soundtrack make this an exciting, unique experience. It stars Michael ManCLaen's "Serenal" (10/32 min.) Color, 12:00 MIDnight.
The Harder They Come
900 MASS.
KANSAS UNION
843-1211
Unless otherwise noted; all film will be shown at Woodford Auditorium in the morning or evening. Monday-Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday rates are $15.80/hightlight fee is $2.00. Late fees apply. National Union, 4th level, information 864-370-1000, smoking or refresherals allowed.
(1973)
■ AIRLINE TICKETS
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VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1085
TOMMY SMITH
Re-elect Schumm For City Commissioner
"Don Andrew indicates the amount of water recently treated at the new Clinton Water Treatment Plant. Our new plant first began operation in Feb. 1979 and helped carry the city through an extreme drought last summer. Delivering city services has been an important part of my job and I will continue to monitor distributions of these services in the future."
Your Luncheon Alternative
THE CROSSING
Open 7 days a week
June 7, 2019 $30
Buffalo, NY $15
SR MOTOBECANE FRANCE Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
731 New Hampshire Monday-Saturday
9 am-5 pm
GRAND OPENING
Monday & Saturday
Room to rent? Use Kansan classifieds.
HARRIS
MEN SWEAR
WINTER CLEARANCE
Shirts
Reg. $16 to $30
BUY ONE
GET ONE FREE
Stacks
Reg. $30 to $55
BUY ONE
GET ONE FREE
Sweaters
Reg. 20 to $45
BUY ONE
GET ONE FREE
FAMOUS MANUFACTURERS
Suits • Sportcoats • Outerwear 30% to 50% Off
RRIS
N.S.W.E.A.R
Entire stock not included
HARRIS MENSWEAR • 811 Massachusetts • Lawrence Ks • 749-1800 • Mon-Sat. 10-6
SMOKEHOUSE
All Our Meats Are Slow Roasted Over a Hickory Log Fire to Give You the Finest in Deep Pit Smoked Barbeque Flavor
Back by Popular Request!
Ask to See The Moose!
719 Massachusetts
Kog
Heaven
Rib Special
Enjoy Coca-Cola
Wed. thru Sun.
March 4th thru March 8th
No coupons accepted with this offer.
HALF SLAB BIG END $3.49
HALF SLAB SMALL END $4.99
FULL SLAB (to go only) $6.99
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981 Page 7
MARCH MONEY SAVERS
Nelson's knows you want the best for less... that's why we've price cut these great components up to 50%!
1
2
3
6
AKG
4
FISHER
5
Kenwood
8
SANYO
9
SANYO
12
11
PIONEER
10
Panasonic
14
ALTEC
LANBING
15
17 GU8DORF
18
SANYO
| | LISTS | NOW |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. SANSUI 3900Z 80 watt digital receiver (NOT SHOWN) | $399.95 | $249.88 |
| SANSUI R-300 50 watt receiver | $249.95 | $149.88 |
| SANSUI 4900Z 110 watt digital receiver | $499.95 | $299.88 |
| 2. JVC R-S55 80 watt digital receiver | $399.95 | $249.88 |
| 3. TECHNICS SX-8011 50 watt amp/tuner combination | $349.90 | $174.88 |
| 4. FISHER MS-115 Air Dyne speaker system | $159.90 pr | $89.88 pr. |
| 5. SONY ICF-R30Q Table radio with weather band | $69.95 | $9.88 |
| 6. AKG K-140, K-141 or K-240 Light weight Headphones | | HALF PRICE! |
| 7. SANYO SP-760 30 watt triaxial car speakers | $89.95 | $69.88 pr. |
| 8. SANYO HP-620M AM/F radio with Tune Meter | $54.95 | $29.88 |
| 9. SANYO FT-606 Underdash cassette | $119.95 | $49.88 |
| 10. SANYO FT-690 AM/F in-digital Digital Scan cassette | $369.95 | $149.88 |
| 11. PIONER CL-70 40 watt 3-way speakers | $299.90 pr | $179.88 pr. |
| 12. PANASONIC RX-5280 PLATINUM SERIES portable radio | $319.95 | $199.88 pr. |
| 13. ALTEC D-20 120 watt 4-way speaker system | $439.90 pr | $199.88 pr. |
| 14. ALTEC D-10 80 watt bookshell speakers | $339.90 pr | $199.88 pr. |
| 15. SANYO FT-874 AM/F in-dash pushbutton 8-track | $199.95 | $99.88 |
| 16. TECHNICS SH-510A Audio cabinet | $129.95 | $79.88 |
| 17. GUSDORF 1930 Audio/Video cabinet | $399.95 | $199.88 |
| 18. SANYO M-5000 Deluxe mini-cassette recorder/player | $139.90 | $49.88 |
| 19. PANASONIC RO-2727 Deluxe mini-cassette recorder/player | $149.95 | $69.88 |
| 20. PANASONIC EAB-814 20 watt 4 x 10" co axial car speaker | $79.88 pr | $39.88 pr. |
| 21. PANASONIC RO-2720 Super Deluxe mini-cassette recorder/player | $224.90 | $89.88 |
| 22. PANASONIC RF-1089 AM/F portable radio with weather band | $49.95 | $24.88 |
OTHER GREAT VALUES NOT SHOWN
OTHER GREAT VALUES NOT SHOWN
ADVENT Speakers - All models, complete stock
BOSE Speakers - All models, complete stock
BIC Turntables - All models, complete stock
PANASONIC RF-1101 AM/FM portable radio with TV band
CODE-A PHONE Telephone answerers, complete stock
AUDIO VOX D400/600 In-dash cassette or 8-track
YOUR CHOICE!
CLARION PE-683 In-dash cassette
CLARION PE-6768 In-dash cassette
SANYO FTC-10 AM/FM in-dash digital cassette
PIONEER KP-250 Underdash AM/FM stereo cassette
PIONEER TP-727 Underdash 8-track
PIONEER TP-900 Underdash with FM stereo
PIONEER TS-694 20 watt x 6.9" co-axial car speakers
JENSEN J-1124 Triaxial system car speakers
All headphone radios - various brands
HALF PRICE!
HALF PRICE!
HALF PRICE!
$29.88
$29.88
HALF PRICE!
13
19
Panasonic
Technics
ALTEC
LANBING
16
2319 Louisiana Lawrence,KS 66044 841-3775
20
Panasonic.
21
22
Panasonic
Panasonic
master charge
VISA
Limited to in-store stock some items may not be displayed In all stores.
NOBODY...BUT NELSON'S
TEAMELECTRONICS
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1984
Lessons offered in water safety
The Red Cross is offering a water safety instructor class at the Lawrence High School pool, beginning at 7 tonight.
The class is open to anyone 17 or older who has a current advanced lifesaving certificate.
Classes will be every Thursday from 7 to 10 p.m. and every Saturday from 9 to noon, through April 4.
There is a $12 pool fee and a $3 charge for books.
For further information about the class, call Jo Byers at the Red Cross office in the Community Building.
Twelve to spend break in Moscow
By ROB STROUD
Staff Reporter
While others relax on the Florida beaches during spring break, 12 KU students will be basking in the winter chill of Moscow.
Larry Metger, chairman of the Student Senate Rights Committee and organizer of the trip, said the students were going on the trip principally for recreation, but he said the trip would serve two purposes.
“It’s semi-educational and semi-recreational,” he said. “The main thing we do is to get the students of the Konsonol. We’ll also get to see all the tourist attractions.”
The Komsomol is the Young Communist League, which most college students join.
"They are the link with the government for the indocrination of the Soviet youth," Metzger said.
The KU students, who are each paying $1,156 for the eight-day trip, will each have a chance to exchange questions and answers with representatives of the Komosomol, but they still need a translator.
Metzger said he had a three-year-old's vocabulary in Russian and that none of the others going on the trip spoke any Russian.
Metzger said he saw a benefit in this.
"The opportunity this trip offers that others don't is that people not proficient in the language are offered more than a tourist's "trip."
The students also will visit the Bolshoi Ballet, an art gallery, the Lenin Mausoleum and G.U.M. Department of Music, the Mayy of Moscow, Metzger队.
The students also can expect to discuss politics, according to Gerald Mikkelson, associate professor of Slavic language and literature.
"They can expect to be engaged in some rather active political debates," he said. "They'll try to present a very nice picture of what it's like there."
T.G.I.S.
(Thank Goodness It's Spring)
- at -
Lady Campbell's
CAROLINA LUCAS
This 100% cotton interlock knit by Norman Shrimtakers puts the accent on the stripe. Cool, comfortable and in style also, now's the time to coordinate a pair or two of our spring shoes by Asher, Lyle Thomson, or Gordon of Philadelphia.
Lady
Lady Campbell's
841 Massachusetts (Inside Campbell's Mena Store)
O
When you are through looking
You will probably get an engagement ring very much like this one. The big thing that will make your ring different is the diamond. Most of the value and cost of an engagement ring is in the center stone and no two diamonds are exactly alike. Ask us about diamonds and see our fine selection of engagement rings when you start looking. Who knows, you might decide you are through looking. Sets from $295.00
BRIMAN'S leading jewelers
Briman's Charge VISA AmericanExpress Master Charge 743 Massachusetts • 843-4366 OpenThursday's 'til 8:30 p.m.
SOUTH AFRICAN DINNER
March 11, Wed. St. Luke AME Church
6:00 P.M. 900 New York
Ticket advance, African Studies Dept. 2120 Wescoe $2.50
M. K. SADHIVAN
Reservations: 841-8733, 843-8926
"SOUTHERN AFRICA In CRISIS"
by Bill Sutherland
- Southern African Representative of American Friends Service Committee
Sponsored by the Ousted Friends Meeting and the KU Committee on South Africa with KU International Club, St. Luke AME Church, United Fellowship, Centenary United Methodist Pastor Hugh Unitenian Fellowship, Centenary Discus, Peace Network, African Studies Association
Athletic Director Bob Marcum left yesterday for the meeting, which convenes today in Kansas City, Mo., for conference athletic directors. The meeting will continue tomorrow with a joint meeting of athletic directors and faculty representatives and will end Saturday night after a meeting of the faculty representatives.
Eight faculty representatives, said the March conference meeting traditionally centered on arrangements involving the Big Eight post-season tournament, now in progress.
Paid for by the International Club
Conference officials discuss rule changes
Big Eight Conference officials said yesterday that this weekend's quarterly meeting of athletic directors and faculty representatives would focus on "housekeeping" matters.
"We'll discuss rules and regulations that need to be changed based on 1981 changes in NCAA regulations," Prentice Gautt, assistant commissioner of the Big Eight, said.
Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism and chairman of Big
Gauit said post-season basketball, television contracts, financial concerns of the conference and academic eligibility may also be taken. The instruction would be taken on these matters until the next meeting in May.
the agenda is full." Brinkman said, "but most of its routine. The commissioner will tell us what is in the way we need to act on the kinds of things need to be acted on."
Ladies' and Gents' Night
Every Thursday night—
everyone receives a free
drink coupon from 9 - 11
NO COVER!
GAMMONS
SNOWMEN
“I’LL TEACH BILLY TO BE A COWPUNCHER AS LONG AS HE DON’T PRACTICE ON MY COWS.”
Jim Shoulders and Billy Martin: Famous Cowboys
LITE BEER FROM MILLER. EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS.
1981 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Page 9
[Photo of]
Communication solves conflict, prof says
Roger Fisher
By DEBBY FOSTER Staff Reporter
Communication, not military force, is the key to resolving international disputes. Harvard law professor and specialist in international conflict aid last night.
The specialist, Roger Fisher, told 400 people in the Kansas Union that the threat of military force was not an effective weapon. It did not solve the Iranian crisis, he said, and it will not force the Soviets out of Afghanistan.
According to Fisher, the United States has made several mistakes in handling the Afghan situation.
"We treat ourselves as the target of every action," Fisher said. "We consider the attack on Afghanistan as an attack on the United States."
FISHER PLAYED a part in ending the Iranian crisis, though his role was not official. He acted as a mediator in cases when the Iranians were examining the final agreement, which they refused to sign because of one clause.
"It is far better for us and for the world to have this action seen in its light, as a conflict between the Soviet
Union and a non-aligned Moslem country."
Fisher had an Iranian official and a U.S. official on the telephone at the same time, discussing whether the clause should be in the agreement. The case, which stated that the Iranians would have the rights to negotiate further the dollar amount going into the escrow account, was removed and the matter was settled.
Fisher's advice on the Afghan situation is to have the CIA and news agencies get pictures and facts about what is really happening in Afghanistan and make that information available to the rest of the world.
last year's Summer Olympics in Moscow to have been inefficient.
Fisher also considers the boycott of
"We provided a diversion from the real problems to what Carter was doing to the athletes," he said.
ANOTHER PROBLEM with international relations is the way Americans view the Soviets. Fisher said President Reagan had slipped up last week when he referred to the Soviets as enemies.
"We have to understand their problems and our problems and come up with new strategies."
And the way to do that, he said, is to negotiate. The time to do so is now, not after the Soviets comply with international law, which could be never.
FISHER SUGGESTED that the United States and the Soviet Union draw up a non-binding cease-fire agreement to be supplemented immediately if it were needed.
"Negotiating is not backing down if you have something to say," he said.
"The objective is to work together and understand how each idea did and to
"Words are more powerful weapons than guns. War is a very bad way to settle differences."
The threat of force only drives minds further apart and makes the problem worse, he said.
THE PRESS, Fisher said, also makes the problem worse at times by giving legitimacy to terrorism.
According to Fisher, several of the demonstrations in Iran took place simply because the Iranians knew that the press would cover them.
Fisher has written five books concerning international conflict and occasionally writes columns for newspapers and magazines.
He is a professor at the Harvard School of Law and a consultant to the assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs.
TRACK MEET
Entry Deadline: 5 p.m.- Wed, March 4 208 Robinson
Meet: Thursday, March 5 at 7:00 p.m. Allen Field House
For More information call Recreational Services 864-3546
freelance, part-time & fulltime
WRITERS & RESEARCHERS NEEDED for research support
local consulting firm—human factors projects
Competent persons interested in designs for people from any discipline at any experience level invited to apply
Library Research and Communication Skills Essential
Send Resume or Vita and sample of your writing to
Research Department
Frgosyst Associate Inc
Ergosyst Associates Inc.
P.O. Box 3708
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Turn your Reading and Research into Money
SUA FILMS
Presents
YOUR LOVE IS IN THE MIND OF A DAD
AND A SON
Friday & Saturday, March 6 & 7 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 $1.50
DUSTIN
HOFFMAN
Kramer
vs. Kramer
PG
Landmark
Pictures
JIMMY CLIFF
THE HARDER
THEY COME.
JIMMY CARTER
Friday & Saturday, March 6 & 7
12:00 Midnight $2.00
Woodruff Aud.
— no refreshments allowed —
Summor Orientation Program 1981 STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS;
. . . leadership abilities
knowledge of University programs & activities
. . . interpersonal communication
. . . enthusiasm about program
enthusiasm about program
student in need of guidance
a. education about program
b. student in good academic standing
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS
and returning to KU for Fall 1981 term.
DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSION & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL
APPLICATIONS DUE BY WEDNESDAY, MARGIN OF
an equal opportunity employer
MARCH 25.
RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR
EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR
RETAIL
ROCI JALK
Study . . .
our excellent
wine selection!
Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor
A New Concept That's Long Overdue
Southwest Plaza Shopping Center
Licensed behind Horddee's
and next to Salway
123d St. town
841-2007
1:00 a.m. 1:09 p.m.
FREE
Alaskan Crab
Alaskan Snow Crab Clusters Buy 3 Ibs. — Get 2 Ibs. FREE 5 Ibs.for 11.97 (or 3.99 lb.)
1000
ROCIALK
Prairie Schooner
SEAFOOD
ROCI WALK
Market 841-6810
Maryland Fresh OYSTERS IN THE SHELL and shucked oysters
— no refreshments allowed —
$1.00 Woodruff Auditorium
935 Iowa Open 10 to 6 Mon thru Sat
FIRST WORLD MARathon
Get one (up to same value) for 1/2 price.
Thursday, March 5 7:30 p.m.
SUA FILMS
(selected items only)
Includes:
Buy one item and
Presents
- green plants
westRidge FLORAL
"The film must be seen for its power, ambition, humor, and scenes of really astonishing beauty. One of the most important films Godard has ever made. There's nothing like it all." — Renata Adler, The New York Times,
"Weekend is 'Godard's vision of Hell', and it ranks with the visions of the greatest."
brass and copper containers Silk and dried arrangements & wicker items This Weekend Only! (thru 3-8-81) 6th & Kasold
GODARD
WEEKEND
Pauline Kael.
749-2860
GODARD
فترة الطلب
الزيادة في الأسعار
في المستقبل النهائي
الاستثمار والتسويق أو الاستخدام النهائي
الملك بمنصور عبدالرحمن
بلد كيجس منصة الدولة
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
OREAD BOOKSHOP
and SATELLITE SHOP
BOOK SALE
Selected Hardbacks at 60-80% off original prices.
Bargains for $1.99 through $4.99.
Today Thru March 13
Two Locations:
Oread Bookshop
Level 3,
Kansas Union
Weekdays 8:30-5,
Sat. 10-4
864-4431
Satellite Shop Satellite Union 8:30-7 MTWTh 8:30-5 Fridays 864-5697
864-5697
Students who depend on a faculty member for employment or research support may find that support contingent on sexual favors.
By PENNI CRABTREE Staff Reporter
Sexual harassment crux of ethics code
OREAD BOOK SHOP
BEST QUALITY & BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
BEST QUALITY BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BUCKFIGHT
BOOKSTORES
Sexual harassment can take subtle or not-so-suble forms, from suggestive comments to physical aggressiveness. But no matter what form it takes, one quality member said, sexual harassment is an abuse of faculty power.
"When a faculty member implies that sexual cooperation is a condition for academic advancement," Rita Napier, associate professor of history, said, "a very important and very delicate mentor-student relationship, based on trust and the just use of power, is destroyed."
ONE MEMBER of the Affirmative Action advisory board, Barbara Ballard, the director of the Emily Taylor Resource Center, said that a sexual harassment code was much needed at the University.
waiting to hear from the administration."
at the University over this issue," Ballard said. "It's the kind of thing we talked about much but still exists.
Napier and other faculty members are working to implement a University of Chicago Engineering program.
UNDER PRESENT University policy, Napier said, the student has little recourse against sexual harassment. The only guideline the university provides is that the Civil Rights Act, a code that applies only to employees of the University.
would set down procedures for dealing with cases of sexual harassment.
"I've known women who will just stick it out and tolerate it, and then I've known some who quit good jobs because of it."
"We'll submit the idea of a University code of ethics to several campus groups," said Napier, who became involved in the issue when a graduate student came to her after being sexually harassed.
Segual harassment is also an area of concern for University administrators, Michael Edwards, director of Affirmative Action, said.
"We'd like to devise both a code and a set of procedures to enforce the code that will protect both the student and the faculty member who might be wrongly accused by a student," she said.
NAPIER SAID THAT the proposed code would deal with the issue of abuse of power in other areas as well.
said. "We also hope to cover areas like student research for faculty, making sure that a faculty member doesn't claim authorship of a student's work. But sexual harassment is an issue of great concern to us."
"Sexual harassment isn't the only thing we're concerned with." Napier
"Under Title VII, we can deal with sexual harassment complaints made by employees of the University." Edwards said. "When you get into the area of students being harrassed, what we can do get a lot fuzzier."
To clear up some of the fuziness, Edwards said, the Affirmative Action board has submitted a policy recommendation to the vice chancellors.
"We've gotten a lot of input from several sectors of the University, addressing the problem of student-faculty sexual harassment," Edwards said. "We recommended that some kind of code policy be formed, but we're still
Said Napier, "It's like rape. It's a serious issue that often goes unreported, so we don't know how many incidents of it there are. But I hardly knew a man who hasn't experienced some form of sexual harassment."
JACKSON
DEAD-LIFT CONTEST
Entry deadline Thurs., March 5 5:00 p.m., 208 Robinson Play begins: Sat., March 7, 10:00 a.m. Robinson Weight Room
For more information call Recreational Services 864-3546
G.P.
T
G.P. LOYD'S
701 Mass.
DOLLAR
DRINK
NIGHT
THURSDAY
'til 3 a.m.
House Drinks Just $1
A Private Club - Applications Available
DOLLAR DRINK NIGHT
2 FREE cokes-with pizza.
Open 'til 1:00AM EVERY NIGHT
$5.40 $6.65
12" one-topping 16" one-topping
PIZZA PIZZA
842-3232
WE PILE IT ON!
Good Thurs. Only
507 W. 14th
FREE,FAST,Delivery!
مصادر المؤلفين العلميين للباحثين والشاعرين والمعرفين العامة
النظر إلى الباحثين العلميين للباحثين والشاعرين والمعرفين العامة
المطلوب من المؤلفين العلميين للباحثين والشاعرين والمعرفين العامة
النظر إلى الباحثين العلميين للباحثين والشاعرين والمعرفين العامة
النظر إلى الباحثين العلميين للباحثين والشاعرين والمعرفين العامة
المطلوب من المؤلف
Pyramid
Pizza
Funky Junk Sale 20-50% off Selected Items!
Funky Junk Sale
20-50% off Selected Items!
Pente, stocking hats, ceramics,
mirrors, picture frames, stationery and more!
at
Footlights
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
open M-F 10:30-7
Th 10:30-9
Sat 11-8
841-8377
footlights Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa open M-F 10:30-7 Th 10:30-9 11-6
Bucky's DAIRY BAR OPEN!
Bucky's
DAIRY BAR OPEN!
Sundaes Banana Splits Parfaits
FREE Ice Cream Cone with the purchase of a Deluxe Bucky- 1/4 lb. hamburger.
good thru Sun. 3/8
Bucky's
2120 W. 9th Street
842-2930
Sundaes Banana Splits Parfaits
Garden Lettuce Sandwich Guacamole Mayonnaise Mushroom Bread Toppings Tomato Juice Cheese Burger Butter Mustard Hot Chocolate Sauce
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Page 11
It's the
It's the Battle of the Bands!
Come see 6 great bands compete tonight at the Opera House. Only $1 cover.
The action starts at 9 p.m.
KJHK 91
Don't miss it!
Partially Funded By Student Senate
Any Sunday or Monday
Bum Regular Sandwich
(Beef, Ham or Pork)
French Fries & n
THE
BUM STEER
(Beef, Ham or Pork) French Fries & medium drink
BAR-B-O
$2.90 + tax with coupon
a reg. $3.70 value
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
one twenty-five three four five six seven eight nine ten
(three words or fewer) $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.45 $4.55 $6.50
(two additional words) $1.75 $1.90 $2.00 $2.15 $2.25 $2.35 $2.45 $6.50
CLASSIFIED RATES
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Hillel and the School of Journalism present Israeli Journalist Elimelech Ram
go through the food lines and join us for lunch on
Friday, March 6
12-1:30
For more info call 864-3948
Meadowlark Room in the Kansas Union Cafeteria
ENTERTAINMENT
Visit the book End in Quantrill's Flat
price of New York, $129,000,
prices $199,000, New Hampshire, weekends
and holidays.
TRAVEL CENTER
TRAVEL CENTER
TAKING A TRIP?
Travel Is Our Business.
The LOWEST FARES available!
As close as your phone . .
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W 23rd St. (by Perkins)
9:00:5:00 M.F. • 9:30-2:00 Sat.
Special- All 6' beer 7.30-10.30 pm $50
Special- All 6' beer 8.30-11.30 pm $50
Monday - 7th, Friday and Saturday
Dine Non-drinkers welcome. Open Mon-
Mon 9 am to Sun 5 pm $20
Sunday - Thursday $20
Bacchus 296-300-3-0
"Say it with a song"
ASTA SINGING
TELEGRAMS
841-6169
Bass Player urgently needed to complete British rock-oriented band. Contact Jade Gurs 1-379-5523. 3-6
Employment Opportunities
Extra Money for Spring Break. Chip
Newspaper items for cash. Send long SASE
o-Rick, P.O. Box 514, Stillwater, OK
4674
3-5
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED
OWNER. Carry your own car;
Place: New York, shore lake, Hoboken,
Work: Housework, mowing, carriage,
repairing, cleaning, laundry, $13.00 weekly for the couple. Living quarters for up to four furnished bourne house, own time; June to August 12 or laker (your choice). Later pre-requisites: familiarity with cluding local references, to; Occupant: 1000 phone calls, Lawrence, KS 64064. No phone calls please.
FOR RENT
HANOVER PLACE TOWNHOUSES: Available immediately. New and contemporary. 2+ bedrooms are within walking distance to the riverfront. 8412-1812 or 8424-4555. **3-10**
TIRUHON TOWNHOUSES are new, spacious, and contemporary and are open for business. Available on 2 or 3 bedrooms starting at $45 per month. Must入住 at 9th and 18th floors. 841-350-6855 841-350-6865
**AIRONZA STREET DUPLEXES** Available at AIRONZA, bedroom suite, bathy room, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, central air conditioning carpet & ceiling panels $200 utilities. Call 843-9739 or email
For spring and summer, Naimish Hall of
technology offers a free advantage of an apartment. Good food and plenty of it. Weekly meal service to clean
up your home is free. Your activities and much more. If you're looking for a home or if an apartment isn't what you
want, please call Naimish Hall, 1800 Naimish Hall, 843-
SMITH HALL, 1800 Naimish Hall, 843-
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
for roommates, features wood burning fireplace,
weather/dryer/fuel, fully equipped
dining area at 2200 Princeton Bldk. or phone 842-357-1000
at 2200 Princeton Bldk. or phone 842-357-1000
Capit Capri Apt. Unfurnished studio, 1 & 2 bdm. apts, available. Central air, wall-to-wall carpet, quiet location, 21; blocks south of airport, 446-783-7081 after 5:30, anytime weekends.
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5. 843-3228. tf
3 bbrm, townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 943-7333. tf
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
3 br townhouse for rent now at Pine Haven
124 E 1st St, Brooklyn, NY 11209.
m wbrer & diner, close to shopping
nance. We pay water $8 per person de-
nance. We pay clothes $4 per married
& married. No calls. Pet $8124 or 8124
or married.
For rent, 2 bedroom Apt, air cond, 3 blocks from campus. Call 749-3469 after 6. 3-6
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 20th and Kasold. If you're tired of apartments in the city, visit feature 3 br., 1½ baths, all appliances, at least one en-suite, have openings for summer and Jail. Call Craig LaRie or Jim Bong at 749-1601 for more information on our modestly priced apartments.
Five bedroom house close to campus available for summer lease. Carpet, modern appliances, air conditioning and laundry $252. Call Daryl (841-8486, 1607 Kurtucky.
Med Center Bound*. Nice, 2-bedroom duplexes available for summer and fall. Carpet, A/C, appliance, and parking. Call 1-9131-381-2678.
roommate need to rent furnished apt. ktl., kleaner, wasser, p. dryer, cable tv, a. roel, p. central air, all utilities paid (excl. laundry), #119 /mo. Call Kevin 814-5470
2 bedroom, attached garage home. 2621
Mountview. Fenced yard. $290.00 mo. Available now. 843-0570, 843-6011. 3-10
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom. $1/2\mathrm{bath}$ at Heatherwood Apts. Rent + electricity. Call 841-7077 after 5:00. 3-9
ROOM FOR MASTER STUDENT. Share kitchen/bath. 14th and Kentucky, furnished, walk to campus. $95 + small utility. 841-2105, 841-3318. 3-11
ROOM FOR MALE STUDENT. Share hath
and refrigerator, 14th and Kentucky, renting
now, $85 + small utility. 841-2105.
841-3318. 3-11
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute walk to campus, 1821 Tennessee, $270 rent + utilities, $42-4822. 3-25
2 bedroom apt, close to campus $210 + 3
utilities. No pets. 842-1923 after 5:00. 3-11
FOR SALE
Mens 19" Giltane bicycle, custom bullt
$150.00. Call 864-2815. 3-6
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale! Makes sense to use them! Makes sense to use them! As a study game preparation, you will analyze the history of organization* the analysis of Criter The bookmark, and Oread Book.
GARAGE FOR RENT, clean, dry, 14th and Kentucky. $30. 841-2105. 841-3181. $318.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
ADVENTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9609, 3900
W. 6th. tf
Guitar: Ventura 12-string. Fairly good condition.
Newly restoring. $135 or best offer.
749-2750 ask for Jeff.
3-6
1956 Chevy, two door post, 327 eng. need
have minor work $650.00. 843-892. 3-9
Must sell four floor seats to Kansas concert.
Call 749-6581. Ask for Paul. 3-5
D.C. Marvel comes back issues for sale
cheap. 841-8279 3-9
Men's Sierra West rain jacket. 3-6
medium. $35. Call 811-3799. Blue. 3-6
Aiwa 1250 slant style casetee tape deck.
Fine condition. $125. 749-0486. 3-10
1975 Cutlass Supreme, V-8, Radials, PS, AC,
80,700 miles, $2,000, Call 841-1386, 3-10
Kansas concert tickets for sale cheap.
Friends can't come. Call 864-6371 and ask
for Glenn. 3-6
For Sale: 1970 Honda CB 550. Completely stocked, low mileage, excellent condition.
841-2665. 3-10
Reel to reel tape deck, Pioneer 1020L
$320.00 Call Don 842-6577 3-10
**66** Mustang Coupe, recently rebuilt 289 **67** Grand Coupe, newly rebuilt 289 **68** cylinders, new maintenance free battery, near new tires, new starter up storkship is in stock, new engine, new rattler, rent $700, Call Troy at 414-3444, 3-10
69 Cutless—Green. Mechanically good, 350.
Auto. Needs body work. $750. 749-0338
keep trying. $3-6
Receiver technics (30 w ch), turntable dual
2 speakers, $300 or best offer. 144 Louisiana
7 (2nd floor) 3-11
HP 39C Calculator, Programmable, statistical and business functions. 2 months old, barely used. $100. Call 843-7978, evenings. please. 3-11
78 Camero LL, 4 speed—39,000 miles, AM-FM radio, deluxe interior, like new, Call Kalam after 5:00 pm pm 841-5223. 1-211
1976 VW RABBIT. 48,600 ml, great looking and running + good gas mileage. Must see. Call 841-7762. 3-11
74 Chevellele excellent cond, new paint,
tires, engine. Alan Ross 843-1772. 3-10
3-SPEED GIRLS BIKE—EXCELLENT CON-
DITION. $35.00. Call 843-6995 after 5:00.
p.m. 3-6
72 Honda MC-MCNT 1030 Total Miles
Passport Style, Lug, Back, Eck, Start, Turn
Signals, New Battery, New mileage, 864-
382, after 5.00 841-0703.
FOUND
Two walking leases on big red dog—contain Rick Klausen News Room 3.5
TI calculator and small circuit board, left at Room 3018 Learned. Please claim at above address. 3-5
Ring found in Robinson weight room Thur.
Patients please without case at 9th and
10th floor. Call Rob at 249-7844. 3:55
Money found Friday morning in Spencer Art Museum, Call Daryl to identify 749-0966. 3-5
Lost keys behind Haworth Hall. Call 843-
9363. 3-5
Codl Shaven—brown check book with ID.
Call 864-1475. 3-6
Ladies' Eastman watch, found on side of Fraser. Mon 3/2. Call Denise and identify. 749-0444 3-6
Found Monday, coat and hat at Westridge car wash. Call to identify. Ask for John at 749-1553. 3-6
Calculator in Strong Hall. Call to identify.
749-2900. 3-6
CRUBS. CLUB MEDITERRANEAN, SAIL-
ANCE, STRUCTURE. Office Personnel, Counselors, Engra-
cers. Office Personnel. Custodians. Re-
sidential Facilities. DRAFT. CATION OPENING. CODE CRUB-
AGE. L52 152 Box 6029. S Sacramento, CA 94758.
HELP WANTED
Full or part time help wanted. Combination
hourly. Call 914-273-8000, tuned,
dancing start at $4.00 per hour.
Nude dancing $7.00 per hour. Your choice.
Dance lessons at 50% off of the
rente on Hwy 40. 379-9900. - $24
SUMMER RAPTING JOBBS! $1,200-$3,600
SAFETY AFFAIRS 8.95 for APPLIATION,
INFORMATION, GUIDE to WHITEWATER
APPLIATIONS $8.95 for APPLIATION,
Box 60129, Sacramento, Ca. 9586- 3600
Box 60129, Sacramento, Ca. 9586- 3600
Found-Ladies watch March 2 in O-zone parking lot i 843-603-00 to identify 3-9
COULD YOU USE SOME EXTRA MONEY?
A SECOND INCOME? If so, we can help
you. Please contact Job. Tech.
samples business to: Job. Tech.
352 Fireplaces 2 and 3,
Lawrence, KS 6004- 364-
Summer youth camp employment for pool and caning instructors (WST preferred), RN, EMT). Assistant Cook, Craft Director, Unit Leaders and Assistants. Homebase Kaw Valley Girl Scout Council, P.O. Box
To STUDENT NURSING HOUSE AIDES
experiences with us, as a public service to
nursing home residents? Our consumer or-
ganization needs your assistance in Nur-
sing Homes (KINH) needs your help and in nursing home condition and the input of our staff. We will assist the residents. All names and correspondence
915-842-3088 or 843-7107, or write us:
915-842-3088 or Mass. St. gl. Kauras, Lawrence, KI
Part time person to work as an observer M-F. Data collection graphics, some typing prefer Soph Jr. Must be prompt Ext 21 Hawthorne Hall 482-3-54 Ext 21 Hawthorne Hall 482
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF
accepted for the Summer Orientation student advertising in today's paper or come by Strong Hall. An equal opportunity
RADIologic TECHNOLOGIE Lawrence
Lawrence is an ARRT Technologies Technologist. Will be
available on an ARRT Technologies Technologist. Will be
16 hours awake. Appl at the Patent
843-380. Qualified handwritten urged to
843-380. Qualified handwritten urged to
Penalty Free Memorial Hospital, 525 Main Street,
Lawrence, 646-843-380 for questions or
requests.
Need female salesperson capable of working morning hours. Apply at Morris Sports or call 843-0412. 3-10
World's Largest Business needs you! Stay home -noaid weekly. Free details. Enclose stamped envelope. Peggy Jones. 3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, Kansas 60044. 36128
CRUISES CLUB MIDTERRANEAN, SAIL-
FORD, MI. Job Description:,
Structures, Office Personnel), Counselors,
Careters, Send $450 in handling for APC
CRISES WORLD 153 Box 60129 *SASI-
CRUISES WORLD 153 Box 60129*
REGISTERED PHYSICAL THERAPEIST
have own car, mileage or workweek. Flexible working hours; no evening or weekends. Must have own car mileage and workweek. Acceptable to enlistees in Kansas, interest in employment, education, or opportunity employer. Call Douglas County Visiting Nurses AS, 843-7280, for appointments.
HERSEARCH ASSISTANT (11) Position open on Monday, June 20. Supervise child care requirements. Current KC enrollment at month one hours. Duties include: child care见月每小时, and other responsibilities such as application deadlines March 16. Courses offered include: Application deadlines March 16. Course location: University of Kansas KU-3412. AA CO-OP 3-12
Bus driver for Saturday morning workshops.
Travel to Springfield, March 10 to Mid-May $125 each. Valid Kansas charter flight's license required. Contact Jennifer Goulden. 864-389-1488. An Equal Opportunity Employer. 864-389-1488.
LOST
Would雏 appreciate the return of my black leather jacket, Missing. Saturday Feb. 21. Reward. Call Kevin 799-0225. 3-5
Lost. Brown-suede sweater in Carrinh O'Leary or Wescoe 2-25. Call 843-4548, no answer call 843-3321 and ask for Jillice 3-6
Lost-a very sentimental gold serpent neckwear with seven little diamonds at Robbins-air.com on room Tuesday at 843-565-5000. Call Kim Miles at 843-565-5000. Reward. 5-9
Lost-5 keys attached to 3 keychains, somewhere between 10th & Arkansas and 11th & Indiana. Please call 864-6714. 3-6
Subtantal rewards for leather backpack,
two Spanish books, French book, red
notebook, and Gold Pendant Watch. Call 748-
1147.
Have you found a red-leather address & date book, with mold-oid cards? Please phone 842-1778. There's a reward! 3-9
HP-34-C Calculator Tues. 24. Reward. 841-
3025
3-13
Used and battered golf clubs and bags.
Wallpaper, window shades. Everything But Ice. 618 Vermont, open till 7 pm. 3-6
NOTICE
SKI WINTER PARK/MARY JANE $298MB
tickets, ski rental, lodging invites and
ski rental. 5th & 6th, 18th or 18hh or 18h-20h. Write ekt. i.e. 147.
Skis for Darryl. Three day Easter trip
to New York.
Growing skiing over Break? HEAT WAVE SKI Vests are ideal for Spring skiing and come in great designs and colors. Tel. evenings 864-3691, 842-5858. 3-13
PERSONAL
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports. Custom made portraits, color. B/W. Swells Studio 749-1611. 3-11
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
tf
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can capture. Study 149-611. Studie 149-611.
Bob Brown, Cosmetologist offering
- Individualized haircutting
* Soft, natural looking perm
* French braiding techniques
* Heena & protein conditioning
Winner of The Martin Parsons Designer Award in Toronto, Ontario, Canada
The Hair Station 18 E.8th 841-6599
Want to be a Priest? Sister? Ages 20-50?
Contact Father Nigro, Gonzaga University,
Spokane, 99258
3-24
NEXT EDGE CASH* TSH! Sell your old Gold &
Diamonds. Top prizes for class rings,
gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6777, 841-
7476.
SPRING POMAL RUSH MARCH 27, 29, 28
Register in the Registering Council of Health
Register in the University Council of Health
in Oliver Tempel, and JP on March 10 to
p.m. There will be a $15 register fee.
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? *Chiropractic Care Improve*
40-8389 consultation,
consultation, accepting Blue Cross and
Lone Star insurance plans.
If you have ever been a victim of safety violations on one of the buses operated by the Lawrence Bus Co., especially on campus, please call me. 841-8586. 3-6
Barry, What is involved music? Lawrence
Art Center Sat.; March 7, 8 p.m.
3-6
Want to go to skiing Spring Break? $18 per person.
Visit the Gymnastics Center at Condola in Beaumont. Look for 2 liberal women. Guaranteed good time. For details call 794-0830 or Dave. Dane has a number that allows large selection of scenic background available. Sweil Studio 794-1611. 3-25
Spring Colors
for
Spring Break
D.C. Painter Pants
18 great colors.
Izod & Hawaiian Prints
LTWINS
Bass Player wanted IMMEDIATELY. 749-
3649. Serious inquiries only. 3-9
Looking for someone going to CORNELL UNIVERSITY (NEW YORK) vicinity Spring Break. Will pay for transport of harmless laboratory specimen. Call Sarah K. 843-6674
DO YOU BELIEVE IN HUMAN RIGHTS? Support the Equal Rights Amendment. Attend a meeting at the p.m. union. Sponsored by Commission on the Status of Women. 3-6
Green's Tavern and Keg Shoppe KU ID
Priced Cut: Mon-Thurs, Pitchers $1.25, 5
Till: Fri 2 till 4 Big Draws 50r.
3-12
The Clean, an at present area band is seeking a 8th member with desire to play drums. Positive mental attitude, creativity, physical strength and willingness to work or metallize or mellite bars. 841-9546.
How do you separate the men from the boys in a Fratus Ratus house? Answer: With a crowbar. 3-5
Singing messages for all occasions ASTA
Singing Tollerans #141688 14
Suice up your life with heaps of hot, hearty,
homemade chili at the ADPI house, Sunday.
March 8. 12:5 p.m. $30. ticket $30.00 at
The Green House. Proceeds to Ronald McDonald House.
Singing Nuggets of Gospel A&M
Singing Telgrams 841-6169. tf
I will pay too price for two floor seats for
Kansas. 842-5872. 3-6
Anyone interested in the possibility of a White History Month, write Box 3783, Lawn-Service: Serious Inquiries Only. 3-6
Green's Fine Wines. Come see our selection.
Green's Liquor, 802 W. 23rd St. 841-2277
3-10
Last chance to go to Padre! Buy my
chaper SUA contract without transportation.
841-8228
3-6
On-airmed adventure wanted for lengthy World Bicycle tour to start spring 32.
Write: C.J. COP 5. S. Fern, Wichita, KS
67213
3-11
Party! Saturday, March 7th at Satellite
Student Union, featuring CARIBE. Beer
will be served. Bring your dancing shoes.
3-6
SERVICES OFFERED
Forget the hassle of tax forms, let me do your taxes. Low rates, experienced. Call Sabrina 749-5474. 3-9
JOB RESUMES prepared by a local personnel professional. Call Career Development Associates. 841-5644. 3-6
Tutoring in Biel. 104, 408; Charm 184, 188; Glenn 192, 188; Hamm 188, 186; Korn 188, 186; Lovett 187; Lovett 187; Lovett 187; Lovett 187; Lovett 187; Lovett 187; Organized disk on important concepts, old exams available for all courses. Old exams available for all courses.
Tutoring Math 000-800. Phax 100-600. Bus
384, 808, 804. Call 843-9036.
Drop off services. Drop your name, email, and contact information with wash, dry, hand, and fold your laundry for only one week pound from 8 a.m.-5 p.m., and keep in mind that servicing is limited by the Hillcrest building.
wheel
wheel
Do you have a Sports Car Mechanic that has been named Kansas Mechanic of the Year?
Wheel
Preparing for the MCAT and don't know what to do. The student veteran who did excellent on the exam (and who has been admitted to medical school) should hints about MCAT at 864-6414. S-10
TYPING
Experienced typist-term papers, thesis,
mise, electric IBM Selectric. Proreadring,
spelling corrected. 843-9543. Mrs. Wright.
*Jt*.
Experienced K.U. typist. IBM Correcting
Suetricite, Quality work. References available.
Sandy, Quality and weekends. 78-85.
9818. tt
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate. IBM pica/elite. ttf-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends.
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mice. IBM correcting selective.
Barb. after 5 p.m. 842-310. tf
842-2001
For Your Typing Objects
ENCRE COPYS CORP
~hairy~ Holden 842-2000
Dial
Bronx Community
Hospital
I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476.
RESUME-RESUME-RESUME-Professional
Resume Preparation and Printing. Encore
Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa. 842-2001. tf
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
141-4980. ff
Experienced typist-books, thesis, term papers, dissertations, and IBM correcting Selective. Terry evenings and weekends.
842-754 or 843-2671. **tt**
Closest thing to printing—IBM Executive typing, Reasonable rates. Call Bill 842-8772. 3-5
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editine, self-correct Selectric.
Caller Eller or Jeannan 841-2172. tf
GOLD, SILVER - DIAMONDS. Clams rings.
Wedding Bands, Silver Coin, Sterling. etc.
We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or
424-2868.
Roommate mails or female to share 3 bdr.
house close to campus $100/m. + 1/3 ua.
Call 843-2645 at 8:00 pm ask for Matt. 3-5
Female roommate to share extra nice furnished 2 bdr., 2 bath duplex $115 + 1% until Call 841-8390. 3-13
Bass player urgently needed to complete British rock-oriented band. Contact Jade Gurns 1-379-5523 3-6
Tutor for Math 102. Cheap rate wanted.
Call Dianne at 864-8743. 3-6
Roommate to share two bedroom furnished apt. on bus route near Gibson's. 842-6948. 3-9
Wanted: Tutors for lower & upper level courses in English, Mathematics and MEF 290. Introduced applicants with a 3 GPA in the subject may apply to Supplementary International Services Military 8-9. 664-3371.
The University Daily
Male roommate wanted for Jaynawaf.
Towers Apt. $108/month includes utilities.
Call Tom or Drew 749-3933. 3-10
ORDER FORM KANSAN
ORDER FORM
SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T!
If you've got it, Kansas classifieds can sell it! Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to: University Daily Kansas. 111 Flint Hall. Lawrence. Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write Ad Here:
Dates to Run:
RATES:
To
3 4
times on times on
$2.75 $3.00
-04 -05
2
filmos
$2.50
.03
additional words
1 time
2 times
3 times
4 times
5.25 8.25 8.50 8.75 9.00 9.25
8.25 8.50 8.75 9.00 9.25
NAME:
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75
NAME:
ADDRESS:
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PHONE:
2
113.2.1.1.1.1.1
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Ross Randall is a hard man to find. He's
seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KU golf teams.
ITS A CHALLENGE that Randall, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the Coyote Golf Club in Los Angeles when he began coaching the men's golf team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced Liam O'Neill as coach. Bahan is an assistant women's basketball coach.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. The cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised golfers fellows. But with last week's practice he was able to be able to practice on the Alvamar course.
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
prince legend.
"THEER IS NO competition." Randall said.
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 16-20 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be March 19 at the Tulsa Winter Games Invitational at Huntley, Texas, March 30-31.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the ProGolf Association program.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer graduated from Northwestern University in 1984.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
"TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, second, we need not on weekends. Second our budget is limited."
The optimistic Randall is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
"The outlook for leams next year will depend on the recruiting season." he said.
Randal said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together顺
**THAT SHOULDN'T be a problem, according**
*Marsh Burgess*, a member of the women's team.
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make any high school athlete."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
Bv United Press International
SAN ANTONIO, Texas--After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Snurs' home court.
Otis Bitschison scored a game-high 39 points, 20 in the second quarter, as the Kings defeated defense 114-90.
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hemisfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-101 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings to a new season-high 34. In the Midwest Division with a record of 34-36.
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-25 and have already clinched a spot in the top-four. The Suns have been unable to keep up.
Kings are still battling for a playoff berth, along with Cleveland. 33-34 before last night's game against Utah.
Besides breaking a winless streak in San Antonio, the Kings' upset victory also broke the Dodgers' hold.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 28-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game.
It was the play of San Antonio reserves Moore, Ron Brewer and Michele Wiley that brought the
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio out-
scores Kansas City 36-20 in the final quarter.
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brother Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers 99-98 Tuesday night, made more than 60 percent of their shots in the first three quarters against the Cavaliers on just 33 percent of their field goal attempts.
BIRDSDONG, THE FIVE leading scorer in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
By JIM SMALL
Sports Writer
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beaten Nebraska twice by a score of 71-58. But when he ended up taking the conference crown.
Kansas coach Bill Spahn said he hoped KU's 84-68 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against
the 19th-seeded Arizona State in the
year championship while the next year,
newcomer Kentucky, will face.
"We had beaten them twice in duals last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that beating a team in a dual meet and beating a conference meet are two different things."
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes, Spahn said.
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two Big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored in the meet.
Senior Steve Graves and sophomore Gardner Wright are the only swimmers on the KU team to have won conference championships. Graves set a conference mark in the 200 and
400 individual medleys and Wright is the back champion in the 100 and 300
basketball.
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to win in the Big Eight," Spahn said. "Their leadership is important to our team."
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship to KU.
SOPHOMORE BOB Vince, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Chuck Neumann in the 200 junior and junior Jian Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out-swimming them, we can beat them."
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
"The team has made great progress this year, and we've improved to the point where I don't think that we have any weak areas," Spaad said. "We're in a situation where we're relying on every individual on the team to do well. I feel very good about our chances."
WINE & BONBONS
Boones
RETAIL LIQUOR
A FINE SELECTION OF
IMPORTED & AMERICAN WINES
843-3339
Next to
Westlake's
Hardware
711 WEST 23
MALLS SHOPPING CTR.
ASSERTIVENESS BEHAVIOR
Saturday, March 7, 1981
10:00 AM - 1:00 PM
Walnut Room
Kansas Union
(pre-registration required by March 6th)
For further information, contact the women's
center.
Practice expressing feelings and thoughts clearly and directly, situations addressed will include personal, academic, and work settings.
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
843-2931
2340 Alabama
Lawrence, Kansas
Over 17 years in the business.
Snow tires available.
CAR FOR $7.95 A DAY + MILES
MASS. STREET DELL
041 MASSACHUSETTS
HOT OR MILD SMOKED SAUSAGE SPECIAL
$1.50 reg.$2.25 Wed. thru Sun., March 4 to 8
Enjoy
Coke
No coupons accepted with this offer
Vote SCHMITENDORF for City Commissioner
Truth has (now) arrived and falsehood perished; fearhood is by its nature bound to Perish.
EXHIBITION OF PICTURES
Of The Second Anniversary Of
THE ISLAMIC REVOLUTION OF IRAN
DATE- March 4 thru 6 (W.R.F)
PLACE - Parliment Room - UNION
إذا أردت ربط رسالة برابطة
أمرةك وملاحظتها - ٥٠٩ هـ
All the Toastados you can use
$2.99
Casa Do Taco
1105 Mesa.
offer offers Mar. 7
Spencer Museum Book Shop
Books Magazines Posters Cards On the Visual Arts
Open during gallery hours
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KANSAN
Friday, March 6, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
By KATHRYN KASE
Staff Reporter
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convocation after spring break, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankel declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
"the members of the AAPU executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I should convene an all-University meeting and I agreed."
The AUP was not the first group to express
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said various administrators talked to him as well.
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea, Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was a letter of welcome, similar to the letter in the Kansas Welcome.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletes. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article that claimed academic standards were lowered for athletes.
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not motivate his decision to assemble the convocation. Sharon
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
"We felt that was the time to bring some of these issues out into the open," she said.
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded Shankel's endorsement of the convocation.
these issues out into the open," she said. Swartz would not reveal what the AAUP and
Council were working on.
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
The place is also uncertain.
"It depends on whether I think there might be
things that I'm shocked." Shankar thinks that,
alter Field Hope doesn't upset the people.
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convocation was held.
Finding a home
University Daily Kansan
March 5, 1981
Inside
Energy savers . . . page 10
Greeks . . . page 15
Houses . . . page 14
Landlord profile . . . page 10
Landlord-Tenant Act . . page 2
Leases . . . page 12
Living expenses . . page 16
Minorities . . . page 17
Oread neighborhood...page 11
Residence halls...page 3
Room decorating...page 11
Roommates...page 6
Scholarship halls...page 18
Security...page 13
Tenants...page 19
Trailers...page 5
th addition
governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,005 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to action on their own, that they can conduct on their own or by the other.
The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth added drew the only debate yesterday.
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topke, said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate the problem will be the best interest of the University and the state.
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we saw there," Hein said, referring to the language
"That's correct," Hein answered.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steiniger, D-Kansas City, interrupted Hein and asked, "But we're not going to do anything about it?"
Steineger told the committee that this was an example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
Hayden shared Steiner's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to have students education) play fields (at Wichita State)."
He said the deep cuts were being made in his proposed budget to avoid a tax increase next year.
"Taking from one area and putting it in another does not mitigate the need for a tax extension."
Hayden said it it was not fair to ask some to office while others were told it was all right go after.
led, prof says
Honduras
SALVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
But Stansifer said the reform did not result in reduced violence.
"The right didn't like any form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough," he said.
There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1980. Stanser said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of not fully understanding that they are not really involved with the political struggle.
Stansifer said that he had been surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right.
Stanifer joined in El Salvador in August 1987, and called for a general strike against the government.
he said the strike was a failure. The govern-
see EL SALVADRAGE page 5
R
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Ross Randall is a hard man to find. He's
seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass grows greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KU golf teams.
IT'S A CHALLENGE that Randall, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the team's campus in Palm Bay, FL, when he began coaching the men's golf team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced Bahan as an assistant women's basketball coach.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. When the cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Ralland arranged for a
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell golfers. But with last week's tournament, he was able to practice on the Alvair course.
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
practice together.
(OPTIONS: NO, MORE THAN ONE) Don't forget!
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 16-20 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be March 31 in Houston. Both areInvitational at Hartsville, Texas, March 9-10.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer is an English major.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
"TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, not on weekends. Second, our budget is limited."
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
The optimistic Randal is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"The outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season." be said.
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together much.
**THAT SHOULDN'T be a problem, according to Sarah Burgess, a member of the women to visit the museum.**
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make any high school team."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
Kings are still battling for a playoff berth, along with the Chicago Bulls. 33-34 before last night's game against Utah.
Besides breaking a winless streak in San Antonio, the Kings' upset victory also broke the Pac-12 title record.
Otis Birdsong scored a game-high 39 points last night, in the second quarter, as the Kings won 7-6.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 26-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio out-scored Kansas City 30-20 in the final quarter.
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hemisfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-109 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings' lead and helped them win in the Midwest Division with a record of 34-38.
BIRDSONG, THE fifth leading scoring in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas--After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Sprints' home court.
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
90-79 Tuesday night made more than 60 percent
By JIM SMALL
Sports Writer
By United Press International
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beaten Nebraska twice by 3-2 in the final. They were who ended up taking the conference crown.
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-24 and have already clinched a spot in the playoffs. They are tied for first place.
KANSAW WILL BE OUT for revenge against
two-year championship winner Sampaio,
twoseveral championship winners and
two-time champion.
Kansas coach Billy Spahn he hoped KU's 84-68 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
"We had beaten them twice in duals last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that we team in a dual meet and beating them in a conference meet are two different things."
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two Big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored in the court.
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes, Spahn said.
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
400 individual medleys and Wright is the defending champion in the 100 and 200 races.
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to be a leader," Sparks said. "Their leadership is important to us."
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship to KU.
SOPHOMORE BOB Vince, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Chuck Neumann in the 300 intermediate and junior Jim Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out-swimming them, we can beat them."
Jo who plac adde It Ron
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
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Page 2 University Daily Kansan, March 5. 1981
The University Daily KANSAN
(USPS 68-449) Published at the University of Kansas Daily August through May and Thursday, June and July, and September on Sunday, holidays and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas; kindergarten school hours or $27 a month or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $34 a year outside the county. Student subsistence fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily office.
Editor David Lewis
Managing Editor ... David Lewis
Editorial Editor ... Ellen Iwamoto
Art Director ... Don Munday
Campus Editor ... Bob Schaud
Associate Campus Editor ... Scott Faunt
Assistant Campus Editors ... Gene Mayra
Assignment Editor ... Ray Formanek, Susan Schoenmaker
Sports Editor ... Kathy Braswell
Associate Sports Editor ... Kevin Bertels
Business Manager
Terri Fry
Retail Sales Manager Larry Leibengow
National Sales Manager Barb Light
Corporate Sales Manager Ricky Manupue
Production Manager Kevin Koutr
Claselfish Manager Amnette Corrand
Teambook Manager Jane Wenderott
General Manager and News Adviser Hugh Mussler
Kanadian Advisor Hick Musser
Chuck Chowman
DO YOU KNOW?
People say they can't find it anywhere but it's right here at the home of the Good Ol' Boys.
Bob at the friendly Jayhawk Food Mart and Jim at the Hole in the middle. You want you to come on in and experience it, and please say they can't find anywhere.
Our Quality, Friendly service and Price will bring you in and bring you back again and again.
Bob says "Come on in and experience our Friendly Country Store Service where one can come in join the talk around the round table. We just aren't like any other convenient store. We offer much more. If we don't have it you don't need it."
9th & Illinois
We cook and slice the meat, make potato salad, cole slaw, deviled eggs and so forth daily so we have the freshest food possible.
Jim says, "Friendly service, quality and the low prices" are why he's been in business for 12 years at the same location. "We use the finest ingredients possible and yet our most expensive sandwich cost less than $2.00 with chips and pickle included.
Remember, it's right here at the Home of the Good Ol' Boys at the Friendly Jayhaven with Mart Walters and Joe Tollettaissen and Sandwich Shop.
Open Early Close Late
Repairs provision faces defeat again
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
But for Solbach, that is nothing new.
TOPEKA—Opponents of a self-help amendment to the Landlord-Tenant Act will probably marshal their forces to kill Governor John Bolshac, to state Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence.
Sobubai, that is nothing new. Solbach and previous Lawrence-area lawmakers have been working to fund the law since its passage in 1758 to tenents to make minor repairs to their homes and charge the costs against the rent.
This year, Solbach is waiting for the Senate Judiciary Committee to act on an amendment by U.S. Sens. Jane Eldridge, R-Lewis-Mack, and Pele Cabeiano, D-Wichita.
The 1975 law set up the rights and responsibilities of both landlords and tenants.
Sobach said the original bill included a self-held clause but did not pass the House. The Republican-backed bill
His self-help amendment died on last year's House calendar and was then assigned to an interim committee for study.
"The majority report of the interim committee admitted the need for the self-help amendment in certain parts of the staircase of Obach said, "but it did not support it."
He said the absence of the self-help provision left the law "with no practical help."
He said the only alternative for a tenant who wants to be paid, he does not make requested repairs was to go to a college.
"The only recourse if the landlord fails to comply with the requests is to move out," he said.
Besides being expensive, "that's too complicated a procedure for most tenants" (as cited in the article).
Another bill in the Legislature this session would amend the Consumer Protection Act to allow tenants to sue in court if repairs were not made.
Sobach said landlords had opposed the amendment because they said it would fund a program that would pay for them.
But Eldredge said that dealt with willful or malicious misrepresentation and not a willful or malicious misrepresentation.
The self-help amendment would allow tenants to make repairs on their homes if the repair cost less than $100 or one-half of their periodic rent.
"It does not include frivolous claims or landmarks fix things that a tenant could find."
In the past, the landlords had been able to pressure lawmakers into letting the pressure build.
Landlords would also have a 14-day period to make the repairs before the landlord is required to repair.
"The political realities are not great for the bill," he said. "If it can get out of the Senate, it's possible that will happen again."
lawyers he said, 26 states had help-help laws, and six others had court decisions. "They were all part of the
"There's quite a need for the amendments, but don't think it would be used very much."
"But when it is used, it could make the refrigerator getting a refrigerator repaired or moved."
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Friday, March 6, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 110 USPS 650-640
KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
By KATHRYN KASE
Staff Reporter
Shankel to address issues
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convolution after spring break, Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
"the members of the AAPU executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "they asked if I should send them an enlightened all-University meeting and I agreed."
The AAUP was not the first group to express
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankel declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said various administrations talked to him as well.
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea, Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was a test university, similar to the letter in the Kansas Woman College.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletes. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article about the academic standards were lowered for athletes.
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation.
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of these issues out into the open," she said.
Stalked his 'shoot' semen of use convocation.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded Shankel's endorsement of the convocation.
these issues out into the open," she said.
Swartz would not reveal what the AAUP and
the SAUF were talking about.
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
No specific date for the convoction has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
"I depends on whether I think there might be 90 or 300 people," Shunkel said. "I think that ALL of them would be there."
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convocation was held.
Single room prices drive students away
By LISA BOLTON Staff Reporter
A slackening demand for single rooms is the most obvious side effect of rising KU residence hall costs, according to Joyce assistant director of residential programs.
Single rooms are not moving fast, said Sammie Messick, also of the residential programs office. She said that next year's housing contract states that requests for single rooms will be honored for all halls, Hall and Carbin Hall, as well as Sullard Hall and Carbin Hall, all of which they have filled 8 percent of their capacity. Although the new ceiling for singles is below that of previous years, the rooms have still not been in high demand.
Two years ago, all available singles were filled by the end of the first day for returning contracts. Last year, they were a few weeks late. But this year is different, Messick said.
"We still have single rooms for next year, and it's been two weeks," she said.
The cost of a single room will increase by at least $210, from a minimum of $2,292 this year to between $2,502 and $2,638 next year.
The cost of a double room ranges from $1,512 to $1,317 this year, depending on the hall and the method of payment. The same cost would be $1,798 next year, an increase of $10 to $18.
The difference in the increases may have caused students who were considering single rooms to lease apartments instead, Cliff said. She said that there were almost 100 students in all halls except Lewis Hall and the men's section of Hashinger Hall.
Bob Candlin, assistant director of housing, said the increase was not "really significant," considering the reduced dollar and higher rents for apartments.
The total price increase is distributed so that monthly payments for a double room will rise $10, from $140 to $150. The balance of the increase will be included in the down payment, which will be about 40 percent higher than this year's for a double room.
The non-refundable processing fee of $60 will not increase, he said.
Candilin cited two reasons for the significant increase of the down payment. First, the University simply needs more operating funds, he said.
He said that the higher down payment is also expected to insure "a more realistic commitment of intent from the students contracting for space."
Despite the higher costs of living in KU despite the constant 'ninja don't believe demand for space with that
"We can't price these kids out of the market."
"It's still the cheapest way to go," he said.
Since Feb. 10, the first day to submit contracts for next year, roughly 2,000 space contracts were filed. Denke, assistant director of residential programs, said the figure accounts for about 45 percent of the 4,731 spaces from previous year's space contracts.
Cliff said that Corbin, traditionally a fast-fitting women's hall, is already full.
"My best advice to students is that the sooner you can turn in your contracts, the earlier you can file."
Even if a particular hall is full, it may be HALL OF FACTION
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University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981 Page 3
Office is at 901 Kentucky Suite 205
CIVIL AIR
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If you detect an odor you think may be natural gas—
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(4) When the problem is solved, have a qualified person from the gas company, plumbing or climate control firms relight appliances.
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th addition
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their own bills, so that they can pay the bills.
governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,005 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth addition drew the only debate yesterday.
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we mean." He said, referring to the language in the report.
"That's correct," Hein answered.
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topek,
said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable
and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate
the best interest of the University and the state.
Steineger told the committee that this was an example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Stack Steiner, D-Kansas City, interrupted Hein and asked, "But what was that?"
Hayden shared Steinerge's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
He said the deep cuts were being made in Carl's proposed budget to avoid a tax increase that would
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to allow education) play fields (at Wichita State)."
"Taking from one area and putting it in another does not mitigate the need for a tax"
"in order to be more efficient."
Hayden said it was not fair to ask some to sacrifice while others were told it was all right to go ahead.
led,prof says
Honduras
VADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
But Stansifer said the reform did not result in reduced violence.
"The right didn't like any form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough," he said.
There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1980. Stanser said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of being involved in the violence, and not are really involved with the political struggle.
Stansifer said that he had been surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right.
Stanisfer arrived in El Salvador in August 1900, shortly after the leftists had called for a 1902 election.
He said the strike was a failure. The govern-
see EL SALVADOR page 5
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Ross Randall is a hard man to find. He's seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass grows greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's RUI golf teams.
IT'S A CHALLENGE that Randall, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the club where he learned to play when he began coaching the men's team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced Sanders in 2013. Bahan is an assistant women's basketball coach.
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell golfers. But with last week's win, the team had been able to practice on the Avlair course.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. When the cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
practices began,
"THERE IS NO competition," Randall said.
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast international, will be March 16-20 on Padre island, Texas. The women's outing will be March 17 in Staten Island at Hatschelle International at Hatschelle, Texas, March 30-31.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer works with the team to help grow the seed bank.
"TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, and second, the cost of not on weekends. Second, our budget is limited."
The optimistic Randall is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
"The outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season." be said.
THAT SHOULDN'T be a problem, according to Sarah Burgess, a member of the women's team.
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together.
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make any high school player."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
Kings are still battling for a playoff berth, along with Houston, 33-36, and Golden State, 33-34.
Besides breaking a winless streak in San Antonio, the Kings' upset victory also broke the Pac-10's losing streak.
Otis Birdsong scored a game-high 39 points
from 54.2 yards. As the Kings, he defended
the Lakers' 117-97.
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio outscored Kansas City 30-20 in the final quarter.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 26-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas-After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Snurs' home court.
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
BRDSONG, THE fifth leading score in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hemisfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-101 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings to a national title. The Midwest Division with a record of 34-38.
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
99-92 Tuesday night, made more than 60 percent
By United Press International
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beaten Nebraska twice by 38-25. The Big Eight men who ended up taking the conference crown.
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-25 and have already clinched a spot in the NBA for the first time since 1986.
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against Nebraska. The Huckers snapped KU's two-thirds lead in the game.
Kansas coach Bill Spahn said he hoped KU's 84 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
"We had beaten them twice in dues last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that we are a team in a dual meet and beating them in a conference meet are two different things."
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes. Sohn said.
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two Big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored in the roast.
400 individual medleys and Wright is the defender champion in the 100 and 300
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to win in the Big Eight," Spann said. "They're going for a win."
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship to KU.
SOPHOMORE BOB Vince, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Kansas also will seek support from freshen Krey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Chuck Neumann in the 200 junior and junior Jim Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out-swimming them, we can beat them."
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
"The team has made great progress this year."
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PLACE - Perlore, Boom - UN
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
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possible to be assigned there, because more spaces may open up in the summer, Cliff said.
Temporary housing is available for those who are too late to be assigned Cliff said the demand for the temporary space was very difficult to predict.
Last year, for example, a rush of men submitting contracts in August created an unexpected need for temporary space, she said.
"The year before that, we had an overflow of women," she said.
Corbin, GSP and Oliver Halls,
traditionally fill up for women's space
to ORP occupancy
reports. GSP-Corbin is occupied almost
entirely by freshmen.
"There is a tradition about living here," said Margaree Greenfield, GSP resident director. "Many of the girls are the children or the sisters and the cousins of women who lived here when they were in school."
The Office of Residential Programs has not yet compiled the statistics of the changes returned so far, but no drastic changes are anticipated. Partners who are anticlimates, Cliff and Candlin said.
Scott Miller, resident driver of Oliver, said the reputation of the largest co-dehall men in town had changed since 1976, when Oliver had survived a runover rate and was known as "the zoo."
"We've already handed out about 400 contests to Oliver residents who will be tested."
Lewis, the other all-women hall, is "pretty well distributed with some freshmen, a lot of juniors and sophomores, and a few seniors and graduate students."
Oliver now houses about 40 percent of the population that has a turnover rate of approximately 30%.
For men's space, Oliver, Ellsworth and Hashingter Halls fill fastest.
"Some residents were down at the desk the first day to pick up contracts for next year," said Jane Tuttle, resident director of Ellsworth.
according to Kathy Rose, assistant resident director of Lewis.
Ur La
About 25 percent of Ellsworth's residents are freshmen, she said.
McCollum Hall is traditionally the slowest residence hall to fill, according to occupancy reports. McCollum houses about 10 percent graduate students and 30 percent foreign students, but does not house freshmen under 19 years old.
The reports show that the male-female ratio among the nine residence halls has been about 40 percent men to 60 percent women, the past several years, and students living in residence halls comprise a little less than 20 percent of total KU enrollment.
Templin and Joseph E. Pearson Halls, both all-men halles, fill more slowly. According to Marvin Mickelson, JRP resident director, JRP houses about 60 percent freshmen, and is "a good place to live because it's rather quiet."
Hashinger's assistant resident director, Paul Nance, said that Hashinger housed about 50 percent returning students. Hashinger is the most expensive of the KU residence halls because of its theatre and other special arts facilities, he said.
"There tends to be more noise and more vandalism when there are more fresh-ly cleaned." Allen said, "because they don't have the role models that upperclassmen provide."
Glenn Allen, Templin's resident director, said that until this year, Templin had mostly upperclassmen. This year about half of Templin's resident were freshmen.
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The University Daily
KANSAN
Friday, March 6, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
EAST RIVER
Staff Reporter
Rv KATHRVN KASE.
Shankel to address issues
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convocation after spring break, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankel declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
"The members of the AAPU executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I should convene an all-University meeting and I agreed."
The AAUP was not the first group to express
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said various administrators talked to him as well.
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea, Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was a text-heavy letter, similar to the letter in the Kansan Wedding.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletes. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article on the KC City Times academic standards were lowered for athletes.
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation.
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
Swartz would not reveal the AAUP and Shankel thought were the major issues
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded
Shankel's endorsement of the conversation.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of these issues out into the open," she said.
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
Funds sought for Haworth addition
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convocation was held.
*18" depends on whether I think there might be a fieldhouse, or not, that allows me to alter Field House can be ridden up. thoppi.*
The place is also uncertain.
By CHRIS COBLER
More students are finding mobile home living better
Staff Reporter
Students who want the privacy of a house without the expense should consider buying or renting a mobile home, local dealers say.
Bill Webster, owner of Webster's Mobile Homes, said that more KU students would be living in mobile homes if they would go to school and check it out and see how good a deal it is."
Mobile homes are inexpensive, private and safe, said Webster, who owns four mobile home parks in Lawrence. Private driveways and more permanent neighbors are important advantages to living in a mobile home, he said.
if the students would compare what they're paying $200 for to u mail mobile
Webster's units usually contain an average space of 900 sq. ft, and include two bedrooms of 12 feet by 14 feet. They come furnished or unfurnished.
Mobile homes from Webster's rent for between $175 to $250, including trash pickup and water. Each of his mobile home parks also has a storm shelter, clubhouse, swimming pool, play area and laundry facilities.
Greg Kruger, manager of Ridgeview Estate, the second largest mobile home park in Lawrence, said 10 to 15 percent of his tenants were KU students.
Webster said students mistakenly believed that all mobile homes had tiny bedrooms and a long hallway down the center. The newer models have large bedrooms and different types of interior design, he said.
At Ridgeline, two-bedroom units rent
or $150 to $205 and three-bedroom units
$250.
hornes," Webster said, "they would prefer our mobile homes nine out of 10 times."
Brian Neis, Eudora junior, said he found that renting a trailer was cheaper than renting an apartment. Neis now owns his own mobile home.
"I decided to buy one because if you find a used one, you can make the payments practically equal the rent you would pay. I will get money back when I leave."
“It’s a little more private than in an apartment or residence hall where you have people above you, below on and each side of you,” Neis said. “It’s by itself. You have a little yard space and a driveway.”
Mike Newell, Lawrence senior, also bought a mobile home after renting first. Newell made his choice after he had gotten married and needed an affordable home.
"I could have found a $25,000 home that would have needed that much more in repairs and would also have been in a bad neighborhood," Hewell said. "This way I'm ready to sell I will get about $1,500 more than I paid for my mobile home and be able to make a down payment on a nicer house."
Newell, who is also the manager at Mobile Acres South, said mobile homes were now gaining in value. The prices of new mobile homes are up to $15,000, more mobile homes cost as much as $15,000.
Lockin said mobile home dwellers have got used to thunderstorms and hail hitting homes.
Steve Lockin, a 1974 graduate, has lived in a mobile home since he was in school.
"I couldn't afford a house," Lockin said,
"I and I didn't like apartment living. I
wouldn't go to the subway."
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governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,005 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their own bills, so that they can keep up with the cost of living.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth addrew the only debate yesterday.
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we saw there." Hein said, referring to the language in the book.
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topek,
said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable
and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate
the worst conditions at the best interest of the
University and the state.
Steineger told the committee that this was an example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
Hayden shared Steiner's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
*Taking from one area and putting it in another does not mitigate the need for a tax impact.*
"That's correct." Hein answered.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steinker, D- Kansas City, interrupted Heil and asked, "But what did you do?"
He said the deep cuts were being made in Carlin's proposed budget to avoid a tax increase in 2017.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to put up conditions (at KU) than to build (physician education) playing fields (at Wichita State)."
Hayden said it was not fair to ask some to sacrifice while others were told it was all right 68
led,prof says
Honduras
SALVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
"The right didn't like any form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough," he said.
But Stansifer said the reform did not result in reduced violence.
There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1980. Stansfer said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of being involved with the political struggle.
Stanislaus said that he had been surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right.
Stanauer arrived in El Salvador in August 1963 and called for a genealogist to attack the sow.
He said the strike was a failure. The govern-
see EL SALVADOR page 5
2
37
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Ross Randal is a hard man to find. He's seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass grows greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KU golf teams.
IT'S A CHALLENGE that Randall, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the St. Louis Country Club, when he began coaching the men's team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced Sandra Koehler as coach. Bahan is an assistant women's basketball coach.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. When the cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell golfers. But with last week's performance, he was able to practice on the Alvair course.
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
prince regent
"THEERE IS NO competition." Randall said.
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 16-20 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be March 19 at the Houston Marathon Invitational at Huntville, Texas, March 30-31.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer and his team analyzed the snow
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
"TRIPS are worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, not on weekends. Second, our budget is limited."
The optimistic Randal is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
"The outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season." he said.
THAT SHOULDn't be a problem, according to Sarah Burgesh, a member of the women's team.
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together and
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make any high school player come to this school."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
Kings are still batting for a playoff berth, along
with the Giants. Marte34-33 before last night's game against
the Giants.
Besides breaking a winless streak in San Francisco, the Spurs would strike the Suns' 17,4" winning streak at home.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 28-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game.
Otis Bitsch is scored a game-high 39 points in night, 20 in the second quarter, as the Kings lunge for it.
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio out-
scores Kansas City 30-20 in the final.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas-After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Spurs' home court.
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
ОРОШИ ТАПЕС
BRDSONG, THE fifth leading score in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
Tuesday night made more than 60 percent
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hemisfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-10 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings to 22-17. It was the second game in the Midwest Division with a record of 36-24.
By JIM SMALL
By United Press International
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against
the N.Y. Giants, snapping two-two-
year championship шейкер в snap.
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beat Nebraska twice by a score of 14-8. The team who ended up taking the conference crown.
Kansas coach B Spain haed he hoped KU's 84-85 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Nerman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-22 and have already clinched a spot in the NBA. The Spurs are one of the few teams
"We had beaten them twice in duals last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that putting a team in a dual meet and beating a conference meet are two different things."
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored in the roast.
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes, Spahn said.
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
400 individual medleys and Wright is the defending champion in the 100 and 200 backstrokes.
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to win in the Big Eight," Spahn said. "Their leadership is important to our team."
SOPHOMORE BOB Vince, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
erafs and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championships to Georgia.
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Clemm Neumann in the 300 swimming and junior Jian Rowlain in the 200 butterfly.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out-swimming them, we can beat them."
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
"The team has made great progress this year and will continue to do so."
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EXHIBITION
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REVOLUTION
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DATE - March 4th, 6th N.W.R.F.
PLACE - Partior Room - UNI
مهرجان عالمی از انقلاب اسلامی ایران
دستور سازمان نفسه و روان، اعلام نمودار
Page 6 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
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Sharing living space requires some rules
Staff Reporter
By WENDI WARNER Staff Reporter
There are hundreds of similar stories. There is something about sharing living space that tries the hardest spirit, not to touch people and until a way is found to match everyone and the roommate of his dreams, all will have to live with the reality across the room.
Sarah and Beth had been best friends all through high school. They had gone everywhere together, had shared a locker and had the same taste in guys and clothes. It seemed natural for them to room together in college.
One year later, they weren't on speaking terms.
The rules could govern such activities as cleaning jobs, buying and sharing food, borrowing possessions and the noise level, Rundquist said.
"People need to sit down and talk from the beginning," Rundquist said. "You can't go by unwritten rules and expectations."
Roommates should immediately set up ground rules when they move in together, Dick Rundquist, director of the University Counseling Center, said.
"But the rules have to make sense," he added. "You can't make rules covering every detail."
Dennis Karpowitz, also a director of the clinic, suggested roommates agree on a stationary bed.
"Find a way that each person can have some of what he needs," he said. "Or you could do a trade-off—messy one week, neat the next.
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But even the best-laid rules can go awry. A roommate eats all the peanut butter. Or borrows a favorite sweater without asking. It's nothing really, the victim assures himself. So he lets it go. But he can't forget it.
"If you let problems stay a little, they'll build up," Pauce Nance, assistant resident of Hassinger Hall, said. It would be enough in the pressure cooker, it'll explode."
lots of little things creep in, talk about rules."
"The purpose of any counseling is to help solve problems all of our experiences," he said. "Seeking counseling is a sign of common need for good tools and support that are available to us."
The center is open five days a week. Appointments are preferred but not required, and there is no charge. Room-mates individually, as is usually the case, or together.
The University Counseling Center can serve this purpose, Rundquist said.
Sometimes problems arise that roommates can't resolve without help. Perhaps they don't communicate. Or perhaps they let a problem go on for so long that the roommate never have gotten in the way. That's when a third party might come into the picture.
He suggested that roommates hold *pairs of times*, either each week or when needed.
Karpowitz compared little problems to picking up pebbles.
"In the beginning it would be a light load," he said. "Eventually, it would become a tremendous burden, too much for you to carry."
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KANSAN
The University Daily
Friday, March 6, 1981
Vol. 11, No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
1
Staff Reporter
Bv KATHRYN KASE
Shankel to address issues
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convocation after spring break, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankel declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
"the members of the AAUP executive board felt there were some maj issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I could convince an all-University meeting and I agreed."
The AAUP was not the first group to express
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said various administrators talked to him as well.
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea, Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was a lesson to the University, similar to the letter in the Kaiser.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletes. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article that called for academic standards were lowered for athletes.
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation,
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
these issues out into the open," she said. Swartz would not reveal what the AAUP and others were thinking.
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded Shankel's endorsement of the convocation.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of these issues out into the world," he said.
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
Funds sought for Haworth addition
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convoction was held.
The place is also uncertain.
"It depends on whether I think there might be 500 people. "Shankel said, "think that Alten Feld may have to wait."
Roommate
From page 6
"Students could come to the clinic in the fall when it's less crowded," Karpowitz added. "That's also the beginning of most roommate relationships."
According to Karpowitz, students with mild roommate problems would be better served at the counseling center than at the psychological clinic. The clinic, which has a sliding fee scale based on one's income and number of dependents, helps those with more intense personal problems and is heavily scheduled at this time.
University Daily Kansas, March 5, 1981 Page 7
Nance said he was sometimes the third party in roommate conflicts. He defined him as a "troublemaker."
"Problems can go too far," he added.
"Sometimes the best solution is a roommate change, but I look at that as a last resort."
"I might hold a joint conference, but I get both sides before doing so," he said. "I remember what both parties had told me, and I remember conference I stress openness and honesty."
From making rules to seeking counseling, nothing guarantees success with roommates. But working at a relationship has its rewards, according to Karowitz.
"I living with a roommate is great experience for later relationships," Karpowitz said. "For example, the real key to solving marriage is being able to problem solve."
Rundquist said it was not the fact of conflict itself, but how it was handled that mattered.
HR
"What determines whether the experience is destructive is how it's dealt with. A good counselor can deal with these conflicts as they cope up, it can be a very positive experience."
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governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,005 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth addition drew the only debate yesterday.
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their bills, so that they can cover the costs.
The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topke,
said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable
and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate
the burden in the best interest of the
University and the state.
"That's correct." Hein answered.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steinberger, D-keeps us updated, "But we are not going to do anything about what is happening."
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we saw there." He said, referring to the language in "The New York Times".
Steineger told the committee that this was an example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
Hayden shared Steiner's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to educate (at education) playing fields (at Wichita State)."
He said the deep cuts were being made in Carlin's proposed budget to avoid a tax increase in interest rates.
"Taking from one area and putting it in another does not mitigate the need for a tax increase."
Hayden said it it was not fair to ask some to sacrifice while others were told it was all right to do so.
led,prof says
Honduras
SALVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
But Stansifer said the reform did not result in reduced violence.
"The right didn't like any form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough." he said.
There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1980. Stanser said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of being involved in the political struggle.
Stansifer said that he had been surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right.
Stanifer added in El Salvador in August of 2014, for a general strike against the government.
he said the strike was a failure. The govern-
See EL SALVADOR page 5
-
410217 410217 410217 410217 410217
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1961
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Ross Randall is a hard man to find. He's seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KU golf teams.
IT'S A CHALLENGE that Randal, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the PGA Tour in 2015 and began when he began coaching the men's golf team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced Bahan as an assistant women's basketball coach. Bahan is an assistant women’s basketball coach.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. The cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell golfers. But with last week's absence, he was able to be able to practice on the Avrarnac course.
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
prepare to engage.
"THERE IS NO competition." Randall said.
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 16-29 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be March 30 at Houston, Texas. Invitational at Hartsville, Texas. March 30-31.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer is on the staff of the College of St. John's.
**TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, and second, we are not on weekends. Second, our budget is limited.**
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
The optimistic Randall is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"The outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season," he said.
THAT SHOULDN'T be a problem, according to Sarah Burgess, a member of the woman's party.
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together.
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make an high school principal."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
SAN ANTONIO, Texas—After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Sourns' home court.
By United Press International
Otis Bitshis scored a game-half 39 points,
night in, 20 in the quarter, as the Kings
defeat the Cardinals 114-9.
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hemisfair. Coupled with Booster's 108-101 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings in the Midwest Division with a record of 34-36.
Kings are still batting for a playoff birth, along
31-34 State. State 33-44 before last night's game against Utah.
Besides breaking a winless streak in San Antonio, the Kings' upset victory also broke the Spurs' drought.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 28-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game.
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-20 and have already clinched a play in the NBA. They are up to No. 1 in points.
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio out-scored Kansas City 30-20 in the final quarter.
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
99-84 Tuesday night made more than 60 percent
By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beat Nebraska twice by a single point. The two teams who ended up taking the conference crown.
Kansas coach Bill Spahn said he hoped KU's 84-65 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against
the SAN FRANCISCO Lakers last year,
year championship winning streak last year.
"We had beaten them twice in duals last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that them in a dual meet and beating them in a conference meet are two different things."
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes, Spahn said.
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two Big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored in the sport.
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much tougher than it was."
400 individual medals and Wright is the champion in the 100 and 200 backtracks.
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to
be a leader," said their leadership is important to our team.
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship to
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Chuck Neumann in the 300 junior and junior Jim Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
SOPHOMORE BOB Vince, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while outswimming them, we can beat them."
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
"The team has made great progress this
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Truth has now arrived and Perished; falsehood is by its nature bound to Parish.
EXHIBITION OF PICTURES
Of The Second Anniversary Of THE ISLAMIC REVOLUTION OF IRAN
DATE – March 4 Thru 6 N.W.R.F.
PLACE – Parlour, Room – UNI
Planning helps apartment-looking blues
By MARC HERTZFELD and STEVE ROBRAHN Staff Reporters
Looking for an apartment can be as much fun as enrolling at Allen Field House, but a counselor at the Consumer Affairs Association says that a little planning now could save a lot of anxiety and expense later.
"Students should start looking for an apartment right after spring break," the teacher said.
Landlords are glad to sign up tenants early, she said, especially because many of them are out of town during the summer.
Ruth Mikelson, associate director of residential programs, said, "Students should certainly have an apartment lined up by July if they want any choice at all."
According to KU Admissions and Records, 9,611 students rented off campus in Lawrence last fall, so it's important to keep track of the number of deserts the desperate apartment hunters in August.
Apartment complexes often cost more per month than houses, but many students are willing to pay a little more to live in a complex.
To Leslie Roach, Topeka senior, it was worthwhile to pay extra for a dishwasher, disposal and swimming pool, even though she was on a tight budget.
"We looked at houses, but for about the same price we got a lot better place," Kevin Yowell, Osatwatome sophomore and apartment resident, said.
"I spent all summer enjoying that pool," Roach said.
Tenants usually pay a premium price for proximity to campus, a large apartment and special features such as all-electric kitchens or swimming pools.
Warren suggested that a prospective tenant try to find out average utility bills by contacting the previous tenant or tenants in neighboring rooms.
When looking at an apartment, it is important to make sure that it is not a damp room.
Yowell said the manager at his apartment showed him an apartment with off-white walls, but the actual apartment turned out to be "ugly green."
Looking around the apartment for signs of poor maintenance before signing the lease can also pay off, Janie Hodkinson, manager of the Eldridge House Apartments, said. She advised renters to be aware of possible signs of mice or roaches. Neglected grounds or a dirty oven could be indications of poor maintenance.
The following is a break-down of prices and special features of Lawrence's anatomy.
ACORN APARTMENTS
1904 W. 24th St. B-824-461. Fall and current room, studio 305, all util.
| paid | 2 br; $270; paid | 10 mo. lease;
busline; access to pool
ALVAMAR QUAIL CREEK APARTMENTS
APPLIE CROFT APARTMENTS
1741 W. 19th St., B3-8220. Fall rates:
$145.00 per room, $160.00 per
util. except elec. for cooking paid; 12 mo.
lease; bus line; limit two neoerpleant
2115 Quail Creek Dr. $43-4300, Current rates: 1 rb. $235-$385; 2 rb. $405-$415; water paid: 12 mo. lease; pool, laundry, clubhouse, tennis and basketball courts.
AVALON APARTMENTS
905 Avalon Road, BAR 32-352. Current rates: 1 br; $295; b br; $310; all used, ip 12 mo, lease; bus line; access to pool.
BIRCHWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS
850 Avalon Road, BAR 83-0929. Current rates:
rates: 2 br. $24-$26; water paid; 10 mo.
bus; lease bus.
2125 W. 23rd St. 941-1000. Current and
fall rates: 1 br. 25 percent of income; gas
and water paid; 12 mo. lease; for han-
dred adults; bus line; laundry;
library.
BRADY APARTMENTS
1530 Tennessee St., 843-1433. Current rates: Furn. err. $185; furn. 1 br. $200; heat and water paid; 10 mo. lease; bus line.
CEDARWOOD APARTMENTS
2411 Oustaid, 843-1116. Current rates:
Studio $197.50; lt $21.75; br $2.25; br $7.50;
dl $12. mo. lease; laundry; bus
line; pool.
COLDWATER FLATS
**COLD WATER LASTS**
413 W. 114 st. B2-4455. Current and fall rates: br. $270;$280; furn. 2 br. $325;$340;
water paid: 1 no. lease; water placed
CRESENT CAPMENTS
1815 W. 21st St., #94-4461. Current and fall rates: 2 br. $250-$300; water paid; 10 mo. lease; busie lamp; pool; laundry.
7th and Massachusetts Streets, #45-5011.
Current rates: Sleeping rm. $135; irs$19; br.
$225; br$45; 2 br.$35; all util. paid; 12 msec.
cavision bedvision; laundry; busy
GASR19HAPARTMENTS
1515 Ibsp $28; 12pc $30; all suit. except.
elec. for cooking paid; 12 mo. lease; busie
lane; laundry.
GATESHOP APARTMENTS
210-685-2344
gall rail
2 br. b轨 $292-83; 2 br. with b轨
$300-310; water paid; 12 mo. lease; bus
line; pool; laundry; dishwasher; disposal.
209 Hanover Place, 841-1212. Fall rates:
Furn. studio $240; furn. 1 br. $200-$255;
furn. 2 br. $345-$360; house towers $359
$405; water paid; 12 mo. lease; bus line;
laundry; all-elec. kitchen.
2105 Harvard Road, 842-3232. Current rates: 2 br; $340; gas water and paid water; 6 mo. lease; bus line; pool; laundry; dishwasher; disposal.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
2040 Heatherwood Dr., #43-7454. Fall rates: br 1.250; br 2.250; br 3.250; br 3.850; water paid; 12 mo. lease; bus line; laundry; pool.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS
JAWHAKER TOWERS
1603 W. 15th St. 843-4939. Current rates:
2 br. $325-$375; all util. paid; 10 mo. lease;
laundry; pool.
APARTMENTS
JAYHAWK WEST APARTMENTS
524 Frontier Road, 842-4444. Pre-leasing rates,
before May 1: Studio $215; 1 br.
$320; 2 br. $360; 3 br. $420;
$330; all ill. payment; add $10 to all rates after
May 1; pool; or dishwasher; disposal
MALL'S OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
MEADOWBROOK APARTMENTS
241 Louisiana St. #343, 854-332. Fall and current rates: 1 br. $250; 2 br. $330; 3 br. $400; 12 extra per person other than renter; all utl. except /s c/paid; 12 mo. house; cubebuish; sauna; laundry; dishwasher; disposal; clubhouse.
MEADOWBROOK APARTMENTS
101 T-Windoser Place, 842-420-0. Current rates: Furn. stud; gas paid, $255; $235; br. $230; $255; br. $235; $360; br. $320; $390; water bus; line bus; laundry; pools; courts.
NAISMITH HALL.
1800 Naishtm Dr., 843-859, Fall rates: 2 people per room, $338 per month in 8 payments; pool; laundry; meals; maid;
SEA APARTMENTS pear 9
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KANSAN
The University Daily
Friday, March 6, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
400
Staff Reporter
Rv KATHVN KASE
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convocation after spring break, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankel declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
"The members of the AUP executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I should intervene an all-University meeting and I agreed."
The AAUP was not the first group to express
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said various administrators talked to him as well.
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea, Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was a test of the versatility, similar to the letter in the Kangan Penguin.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletes. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article that called for academic standards were lowered for athletes.
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation,
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
Swarth would not reveal what the AAPP and Shankel thought were the major issues.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of these issues out into the open," she said.
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded Shankel's endorsement of the conversation
Shankel thought were the major issues. "I think I have to respect his confidence on
these issues out into the open," she said.
Swartz would not reveal what the AAUP and
UNH had done.
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
Funds sought for Howorth addition
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convocation was held.
The place is also uncertain.
Apartments
"It depends on whether I think there might be 50 or 300 people, Shankel said. I think that America's population is going to out, but that's not a problem."
From page 8
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PARKWAY TERACE APARTMENTS
2340 Murphy DR. 911-155. Fall rates: 2
br. $250; br. $250; 2 br. $burn; $260; br.
furn. $225; studio $185; 10 mo. leas.
busline; bus线
PINE TREE TOWNHOUSES
NINE TREE
149 Pinecree Dr., 042-845-545. Fall rates:
Collective, (all) $400 (adjusted)
and rent; pay one fourth income in rent or pay
either maximum or minimum rent; 2 br.
$136-$239; 1 br. $123-$190 tull; paid except
gas and elec.; bus line; washer and dryer
hookups; stove; refrigerator; tennis and
basket courts; playground.
PRAIRIE RIDGE PLACE
PRINCETON PLACE APARTMENTS
2424 Melsee Lane, 841-8600. Fall rates:
For handicapped and disabled people; pay
one fourth of income in rent less util.
allowance; standard rent 2 br. $233 with
$36 util. allowance; 1 br. $295 with $28 util.
allowance; all utilized except elec; 12
mo. lease; handicapped facilities, laundry;
meeting rm.; craftrm; library.
RIDGIEWE ESTATE APARTMENTS
1208 E. 24th, St. 943-8600 Current rates:
eastward aps. $30 higher;
water; trash paid. -day lease; pool;
central air; club house.
2298 Princeton Blvd., 842-2575. Current rates: 2 br $395; no bills paid; 12 mo. lease; laundry hook-ups; 2-car garage; laundry hook-ups; tennis courts; dishwasher; disposal.
**RONNIE'S APARTMENTS**
1110 W. 24th St., 843-744-3931; current rates:
$200; 1 br. $160-$208; no utils; paid; no lease; 1 book from bus.
SPANISH CREST APARTMENTS
SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA
1704. W 218 St. B4-1160. Current rates:
2 br. $230; $324; 1 br. $177; $580; furnished
apps, $22 $31 higher; water paid; 12 mo.
leave; pool; laundry; bus line.
2706 Redbud Lane, 841-6886. Current rates: 2 br. $250; no utils. guard; 6 and 12 mo. lease; bus; laundry; pool; dishwasher; disposal; garage.
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981 Page 9
STADIUM APARTMENTS
1123 Indiana St., 841-216. Current rates:
2 br. $255; 1 br. average $200; 2 br. furm.
$255; 8curs, with vap at 10 and 12 mo. leases; bus line; sun porch; party area: some free ciselevation; laundry.
STADIUM APARTMENTS
SUMMIT HOUSE APMENTS
1105 Louisiana St., 841-8280. Current rates:
2 br. furn. $290; 1 br. furn. $260;
wash; 12 mo. insulation; bus line;
laudryw.
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
1549 Lunch Court, 841-555. Fall rates:
rain; br. and loa. bristles $200-237; water;
patio; 12 mo. lease; laundry; dispersal; busl
TOWN MANOR APARMETS
611 W. 6th St., 843-8000. Fail rates: 1 br.
kit. furn. $200. furn. studio. $130-$155.
room. furn. $150. util. paid
except elec.; and $12,000. leases
VILLAGE SQUARE APARTMENTS
850 Avalon Road, 452-949. Current rates: 2 br. $250; larger 2 br. $25; 10 and 12 mo. lease; busline; laundry; pool.
TRAILRIDGE APARTMENTS
2500 W. 86 st., B43-733. Fall rates: 2 br.
$350; 1 br, $290; all utils, paid except elec.
br, 2 townhouse $360 plus all util; bus line;
pools; laundry; racquet club; tennis
courts.
WOOD CREEK APARTMENTS
255 N. Michigan St., 842-5930. Current rates: b $2, br $24; b $2, br $21; b 1 br $10; water and gas paid; deposit and monthly lease; washer, dryer hookups; playgrounds.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Road, 841-350. 2 br. $290; 1 br.
br. $235; 2 brs. paid except elect; allelect.
apartments. 10 mo. lease; bus line;
laundry; poolside.
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governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,065 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their bills, so that they can pay them.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth added drew the only debate yesterday.
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we saw there." Hein said, referring to the language in them.
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topek,
said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable
and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate
the burden will be the best interest of the
University and the state.
"That's correct," Hein answered.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steineger, D-
Kansas City, interrupted Hein and asked,
"But we're not going to do anything about it?"
Steineger told the committee that this was an example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
Hayden shared Steinerge's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
He said the deep cuts were being made in Carlson's proposed budget to avoid a tax increase that could have a devastating effect.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to pay for education) playing fields (at Wichita State)."
"Taking from one area and putting it in another does not mitigate the need for a tax exemption."
Hayden said it was not fair to ask some to die while others were told it was all right. He
led, prof says
"The right didn't like any form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough," he said.
Honduras
SALVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
But Stansifer said the reform did not result in reduced violence.
There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1980. Stanser said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of being involved in the political strife, not really involved with the political struggle.
Stanisander said that he had been surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right.
Stanifer arrived in El Salvador in August shortly after the wars had called for a general ceasefire.
He said the strike was a failure. The govern-
see EL SALVADOR pose 5
1
10.
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Ross Randall is a hard man to find. He's seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass grows greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course, Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KIJ golf teams.
IT'S A CHALLENGE that Randall, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the university where he started coaching the men's team when he began coaching the men's team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and gliving private lessons. Randall replaced Erik Gunawan as Bahan. Bahan is an assistant women's basketball coach.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. When the cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell golfers. But with last week's training, he was able to be able to practice on the Avarnar course.
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
"THERE IS NO competition." Randall said.
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 16-20 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be March 23, 24 in Houston and the Invitational at Huntville, Texas, March 30-31.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer is a math teacher at West Covina High School.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
"TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, and second, the opportunities are not on weekends. Second our budget."
The optimistic Randall is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"The outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season." he said.
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together as a team.
THEAT SHOULDN'T be a problem, according to Sarah Burgess, a member of the women's team.
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make any high school player."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
SAN ANTONIO, Texas—After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Sour's home court.
Otis Bitshong scored a game-high 39 points last night, 20 in the second quarter, as the Kings tied it.
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Herselfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-101 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings to a 75-62 victory. It was in the Midwest Division with a record of 34-36.
Kings are still batting for a playoff berth, along with Cincinnati. State, 33-24 before last night's game against Ohio.
By United Press International
Besides breaking a winnless streak in San Francisco, he broke the Screws 37-seat winning streak at home.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 28-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game.
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-20 and have already clinched a spot in the NFC East. They are 16-7, 3-0.
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio out-
sended Kansas City 39-20 in the final quarter.
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
BIRDSDON, THE fifth leading scoring in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
49-38 Tuesday night made more than 60 percent
By JIM SMALL
Sports Writer
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beaten Nebraska twice by a wide margin. The winner was who ended up taking the conference crown.
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against Nebraska. The Huskies snapped KU's two-year championship winning streak last year.
Kansas coach B Spain said he hoped KU's 84-85 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
"We had beaten them twice in duals last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little over-confident. The team failed to realize that we are team in a dual meet and beating them in a conference meet are two different things."
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes, Spahn said.
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored the most.
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
400 individual medleys and 100 is the defending champion in the 100 and 200
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to win in the Big Eight. Spahn said, "Their team has a lot of success."
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship to KU.
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Chuck Neumann in the 300 and junior Jim Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
SOPHOMORE BOB Vince, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out-swimming them, we can beat them."
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Truth has now
handed and
fatehood
Perished;
famehood is
by its nature
bound to
Perish.
EXHIBITION
OF PICTURES
Of The Second
Anniversary Of
THE ISLAMIC
REVOLUTION
OF IRAN
DATE-- March 4th 6 W.R.
PLACE-- Parlour, Room - UN
Family builds housing empire together
By KATHY MAAG Staff Reporter
The landlord rose gruffy and answered the telephone call with a tired sigh. Another phone rang.
This time it wasn't a wild and crazy dog, but a tenant breaking her wrist.
Well, he thought, maybe it's the full moon.
He rushed to the apartment, hesitating at the door. The tenant, "Crazy Kate," was renowned as the local weirdo, a woman not to be trusted.
He opened the door and found her naked, standing in the middle of the apartment, a bucket of red paint dripping down her body.
Now the landlord has an unlabeled home number tapes to live in the house and makes a bid for his
"I gave her a break the first time she weired out on me," Glen Lemessy, the doctor, said. "I hate kicking people out. But I had w to do it whether I liked it or not."
Glen is one of four Lemesey children who manages the family's numerous rental property. It is an empire television station called "Dallas," but one made of real estate, not oil.
"Someone suggested we call our ourselves 'Lawrence,'" Sheryl, the oldest child, said. "Actually I don't like the notoriety. I try to keep a low profile.
"I can't go anywhere in this town without someone saying," Oh, I know your father, brother, etc. "Lemesany is not a hard name to remember."
William Lemesay, the father and monarch of the empire, convinced all but himself to help rule the domain. Lemesay, 55, said his dog, Buffalo, was his financial advisor.
But managing apartments meant with perspiration problems, as the children were.
But the Lemenas's worries have proven profitable. The family currently owns the University Terrace Apartments, Old Mill Apartments, Parkway Terrace, Park Plaza South, Emery Apartments, Brady Apartments, West Hills Apartments, Strathride Plaza, Oread Apartments and several houses.
"Why do I buy apartments?" the elder
lawsman said. "Because they're there. Me,
they're here."
"I'm not particularly interested in buying apartments, but I hear of them.
"My younger sister was smart," Glen
years ago lives in Wyoming and doesn't
have to leave.
People usually want to sell to someone experienced in the business."
Some of the family fear he is stretching out too far.
"I think he definitely has enough property now," Leland, the youngest Lemesany, said. "He's running out of kids."
A former roofer and lawyer, Leland's father entered the rental business in 1964.
"I got tired of making a living, so I decided to make some money," Lemesay said.
There is a fortune to be made from college-town housing. But the king insists he
"I never had any money and I still don't," Lemenasy said. "I'll be in debt the rest of my life. But let's not talk about causing my wife will go into hysterics."
Ninety-eight percent of his tenants are students, he said.
Taking care of apartments is the most important aspect of renting, he said.
"I like renting to students very much," Lemesany said. "They're the best tenants in the world. They're young, intelligent and have money."
A good landlord fixes stuff when it 's
time. He works on the gets the
real mad when the job doesn't exist.
children vouch for this statement.
All four children flew into a rage when problems arose.
"My sister Sheryl is a lot like my dad."
Bill Jr. said, "She can bitch real good."
Nicknamed "Wild Bill," father
Lewis has his own way of doing things,
learning.
"I just let him yell and get mad," he
told. I was working under him, I
hated him.
The two men do not hold the same views on apartment owning, the younger Lady.
"You will make more money by scrounging, but I just can't do that," he said. "He's not a slum lord, though. He's old-fashioned."
A tenant wanting to pay her late rent interrupted Glen's thoughts. She would be moving out by the end of the month, she said shyly.
"I'd suggest you try remering." Glen said, eyes down, shuffling the papers on the desk. "My dad hasn't been giving back deposits."
"My dad's fairly hard-core about getting rent in," he said. "He's ready to throw them out if it's not paid on time. But I'm
After the tenant left, Glen confided that he hid the rental sheets when his father came into the office.
MARK MCDONALD/Kansan staff
CAROLINE
William Lemesany, a Lawrence landlord, with his dog, Buffalo, owns several apartment complexes in Lawrence. His four children help him manage his rental properties "empire."
more lenient. Since I'm younger, I know students have a hard time paying rent."
Leland shared Glen's views about his father.
"He's tyrannical about his apartments." Leland said. "You have to do it his way or he gets mad. We disagree with him in virtually every way, but he's managed apartments this long, he must be doing something right."
Un L
He must indeed. The empire is constantly changing with new purchases and profits, and the family remains together.
Bill Jr. said, "We're a fairly close family."
The children agreed they had learned a lot from their father.
"He instructed me to deal with the damage," he indicted to him for the rest of my life.
Students can slow soaring utility costs
By MARJORIE GRONNIGER Staff Reporter
Students who live off campus face soaring utility prices with every bill. Kansas Public Service Co. has increased residential customer's gas bills five times and has dropped 28 percent—and Bill Salome, company president, expects another raise in April.
To update Ben Franklin, a dollar saved is a dollar earned. One way to save a buck in these days of double-digit desperation is by outwitting high energy costs.
Both Salome and Fred Bryan, division manager of KP&L, emphasized turning the system around.
The Kansas Power and Light Company's rate per kilowatt hour varies with the cost of fuel for power generation, but a rough average is 5.5 cents per KWH.
How to slow those gas and electric meters from a race to a pace?
It doesn't hurt to turn the thermostat all the way down when leaving the house, Salome said, and he also advised setting it lower at night.
Students should ask to examine the gas bills for the previous 12 months before they decide on a rental, Salome said. They should also ask about insulation, check for storm windows and look for "lots of glass on the south," he said.
Bryan also stressed insulation, especially in attics, because the heat goes up and out through the ceiling if it isn't stopped.
Much heat is lost around ill-fitting windows and doors. If windows lack a strap, they can be filled with plastic. The heavier the weight the better. Place the plastic on the outside of the
If an apartment or house is on the ground floor with no basement beneath, carpeting would make it warmer. Floors insulated would be cold unless insulated on the underside
Caulking can be done only when the temperature is above 40 degrees.
window, and tack or nail into place through a thin strip of wood.
Drapes, preferably with insulated linings, provide still another layer of protection between the student and bitter winds. An apartment on the south or east sides of a building will usually be warmer than one on the north or west.
Weather stripping and caulking will diminish air leaks around windows and doors. Weather stripping is inexpensive and oil-base caulking, sold in an applicator kit, reduces cracks, costs less than 75 cents a tube. It provides a quality acrylic latex sells for about $1.75.
Salome warned, "Watch the hot water.
Appliances add up in an electric bill, and a hot water heater is one of the more costly. An electric water heater uses an average of 600 KWH per month, while a gas water heater uses 3,000 cubic feet of gas.
and if you have a dishwasher, don't run it until it is full of dirty dishes."
Water heaters operate more efficiently if the sediment is drained from them once a month.
A standard refrigerator will use 80 KWH per month, but a frostless model will have more each month. A standard refrigerator will use 240 KWH when frost accumulates to one-fourth size.
Frequent opening and closing of a refrigerator door adds to the cost of operation, Bryan said. Each time the door is opened, warm air gets inside.
In using energy no two families are alike, Bryan said. For an example he used a room Place. Two families could live side by side on the same apartments, with exactly the same appliances mix in each, but their electric bills might vary a great deal, he said.
Differences in study habits, entertainment habits and cooking methods can account for the variation, Bryan said.
KANSAN
The University Daily
Friday, March 6, 1981 Vol. 19, No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
THE POWER LINE IS NOW STRAKTED. THE STORM THREADS THE CABLE, DRIVERING A RAPID BREAK IN THE WIRE. THE ELECTRICIAN WORKS TO RESTRAINT THE CABLE. THE ELECTRICIAN KEEPS THE WIRE TURNED UP. THE ELECTRICIAN KEEPS THE WIRE TURNED UP. THE ELECTRICIAN KEEPS THE WIRE TURNED UP. THE ELECTRICIAN KEEPS THE WIRE TURNED UP. THE ELECTRICIAN KEEPS THE WIRE TURNED UP.
By KATHRYN KASE
Staff Reporter
Shankel to address issues
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convocation after spring acting, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankke declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
"the members of the AAPU executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I should provide an envean all-University meeting and I agreed."
The AAUP was not the first group to express
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said
various administrators talked to him as well.
The approach Shankel had planned was a test of the similarity, similar to the letter in the Kanada Welsh.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea. Shankel said.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletics. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article that identified academic standards were lowered for athletics.
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation. SHELBY
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
Swarf'd would not reevaluate the AAPU and Shankel thought were the major issues.
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded Shankel's endorsement of the convocation.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of these images together."
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that." she said.
these issues out into the open," she said.
swarz would not reveal what the AAUP and
the AAUP had done.
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
The place is also uncertain.
"It depends on whether I think there might be 50 or 60 people. Shankel said that, AIAA, it's tough to find," he added.
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convolution was held.
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981 Page 11
Oread Neighborhood offers everything University Daily Kansan, March 5,1981 Pay
The crime prevention program also sponsors workshops and classes on self-
By MARK ZIEMAN Staff Renorter
"Make personal contacts in the neigh-
The best way for students to find an apartment is by starting early and looking at places that appeal to them from the landlord, because themselves to the tenants or owners, she said.
"There is a real problem in that the best apartments go from friend to friend and are never advertised." Harper said.
If you live close to campus, rent a charming house with a dozen of your friends and have bats in your attic, or you live in the Oread Neighborhood.
Nancy Harper, director of the Oread Neighborhood Association, said that the neighborhood offered a lot more than just a cheap place to hang your hat.
"Besides the closeness of Oread to campus and the charm of some of the old houses and apartments, you have got a chance to spend time with you care to take the advantage," she said.
"We represent the lowest political level taking control of its own destiny and its own existence."
Student-age tenants make up a majority of the neighborhood's 5,000 residents. Last year those residents contributed more than 2,600 hours of alley clean up, snow removal, community development and other volunteer services.
purpose of the neighborhood association is to help people find a sense of community and belonging. In areas in which no one lives there, they live next door there are more crimes."
Crime, a major problem in the neighborhood, was the main reason the neighborhood association started. Although the area is low in violent crimes, in 1978 26 percent of all residential burglaries in Lawrence occurred north and east of campus between Massachusetts and Ninth and 17th streets, or roughly the Oread area. Most of the burglaries involved stolen bicycles.
"We offer a free security check by people trained in the police department," he said, who loan at no charge light timers, engraving pens, and have tools for changing a lock."
In 1979, the first year of the Oread Crime Prevention Program, there was a 20 percent reduction in neighborhood that percentage has grown each year.
Bats are not the biggest problem for students looking for an Oread apartment, but they are the most popular.
defense and rape prevention. Information on how to lock bicycles and secure homes before going on trips is distributed to students.
One recent problem the newsletter reported was that a large group of undesirable tenants were making their homes in Oread—bats. The bats had migrated to the area from Memorial Stadium.
A monthly newsletter offers other preventive information, and informs residents of any crime trends that may be related to a specific part of the neighborhood.
borhood." Harper said. "Pick a place and go after it. By the first of July people are frantic."
And start early
The best time to look for an Oread apartment is from now until the end of the spring semester. The Journal-World and the Kansan now list more than 25 houses and apartments available in the Oread Neighborhood.
Single rooms in Oread range from around $75 to $200, with the average room about $150. Most tenants in rooms under $120 share a bathroom and kitchen with each other. However almost any combination of bedroom, kitchen and utilities is available.
The number of housemates a tenant might have varies widely. A good rule of thumb for predicting their number is by counting the mailboxes on the house.
Oread is one of the lowest income neighborhoods in Lawrence and many of the houses are in need of a paint job or an even more serious face-life.
See OREAD page 12
Handy tips to revitalize dull rooms
Staff Reporter
By CRAIG PARKHURST Staff Reporter
Clay Bridge, Olathe sophomore, said he didn't like his residence hall room when he first arrived at the University of Kansas; he was the duliness of the room or its furnishings.
But his room has changed since he moved into Joseph R. Pearson hall in August. Like many other hall residents, he used a personal staircase on his cinder block cubicle.
THE REPUBLIC
Bridge filled his blank bulletin board with pictures of bikini-clad women. On the wall opposite to the woman, he painted a picture of a muscular man, with a woman by his side, brandishing a sword over his head.
"It's my personality," Bridge said of his room. "There's no other room like it."
Bridge is like many students who decorate their residence hall rooms to suit a particular taste or to change the conformity of the small living spaces.
There are many ways a student can make over a residence hall room, many of them inexpensive and only a few demanding much time.
According to Lynn Zook, K & M Decorating Center employee, accessories like pillows, bedspreads, graphic pictures painted on the walls and posters go a long way toward changing a room's appearance.
Dan Scott, Springfield, Mo., sophomore, Dave Williams, Blue Springs, Mo., sophomore, and Clay Bridge, Fallinrias, Texas, junior, left to right, in a room in Joseph R. Pearson, Phrontown. bridge has decorated he room to match his personality.
Plants can revitalize a room too, Zook said, especially the cactus, because it can grow in the limited environment of a residence hall room. Zook said caring for other plants was more of a risk because the student must be careful to give them the proper amount of sunlight. Because a residence hall room faces only one direction, a plant might be exposed to too much sunlight or not enough.
"A lot of it (the way a room is decorated)
depends on accessories," she said.
When hanging light pictures or other light decorations on a bulletin board or on wood, Zook recommended using a needle. The length of the weight, she said, despite its small size.
Also, a needle will do little damage to a room, while a nail might cause damage the resident would have to pay for. Nails and strong adhesives aren't allowed on cinder block walls, but strong tape is an alternative.
Students who want to soften their rooms with carpeting must bear in mind that it has to meet a minimum fire code standard. The manufacturer should be able to provide the student with the carpet's fire code rating.
Dean Howlett, KU housing interior designer, said that any carpet with a fire spread factor of less than 75, a fuel contribution factor of less than 100 and a smoke density factor of less than 200 was acceptable.
The residence hall itself provides several means for changing a room. Bunk beds, some types of furniture, bookshelves from the hall. Refrigerators cost $24 per person from the hall.
A new painting policy approved in November by the housing department requires the house manager's approval of plans for graphic designs. The policy is
Painting the wall is a time-honored
practice. It allows them to give
them from an interior life step by
step.
According to the new policy, the house manager can deny permission to paint if the design has too many dark colors in it or if he considers its obscene.
aimed at insuring that the designs meet a list of standards.
If a student just wants to change the basic color of his room, paint and painting equipment are available to him without charge. The student must sign a painting contract also, and is limited to a choice of seven KU-approved colors.
Once a design is approved, the student must sign a contract taking responsibility for the work. When the student finishes making, the house manager will inspect it.
According to J.J. Wilson, director of housing at KU, decorating a room with paneling, wallpaper, mirrors, cork board or shingles is frowned upon.
have to be put up in such a way so as not to damage the room when taken down.
"The place has to look good for the next person," he said.
He said not only would the materials he to meet a fire code, but they would
Wilson said that there were exceptions to his policy. If the student can prove that an illness is for his health, he said, then the housing department will take a look at his request.
Wilson said that a person "has to have really strong reasons for exceptions."
Wilson said that most wood furniture would meet the necessary fire code standards. He also said that for structural and fire safety reasons, nothing should be suspended from the ceilings of residence hall rooms.
According to the AURH Housing Services Committee chairman, Kevin Nelson, the rules governing decorations aren't that strict.
"We're really very lenient," he said. "There's still tremendous room for creativity on the student's part."
The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,055 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their own bills, so that they can help keep the city running.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth addition drew the only debate yesterday.
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Toppea, said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate it would be the best interest of the University and the state.
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we saw there." Hein said, referring to the language in the book.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steinker, D-Kansas City, interrupted Heel and asked, "But were you going to go home?"
"That's correct." Hein answered
Steineger told the committee that this was an
example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
Hayden shared Steiner's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to move the education) playing fields (at Wichita State)."
He said the deep cuts were being made in Carlin's proposed budget to avoid a tax increase near him.
"Taking from one area and putting it in another does not mitigate the need for a tuxedo."
Hayden said it was not fair to ask some to sacrifice while others were told it was all right to fight.
iled, prof says
Honduras
LVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
all ve all the lly to ten ap, 11 lyce 12 and of as she the
But Stansifer said the reform did not result in reduced violence.
"The right needn't like an form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough." he said.
There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1980. Stansler said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of being involved with the militants who are not really involved with the militants.
Stansifer said that he had been surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right.
Stanifer arrived in El Salvador in August 2016. He was called for a tenure against the government.
He said the strike was a failure. The govern-
see EL SALVADOR page 5.
1.
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
Ross Randall is a hard man to find. He's seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass grows greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KU golf teams.
IT'S A CHALLENGE that Randall, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the team when he began coaching the men's golf team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced M. Bahan as coach. Bahan is an assistant women's basketball coach.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. When the cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell student. But with last week's practice he was able to be able to practice on the Alvamar course.
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
practice together. "THERE IS NO competition." Randall said.
THERE is no competition. The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 15-20 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be the Waterwood-Sam Houston State University Invitational at Huntsville, Texas. March 30-31.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Owetland Park, comes in. Fischer is one of the few students who can see
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
“TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, and second, we don’t get out on weekends. Second, our budget is limited.”
The optimistic Randal is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"The outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season," he said.
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
THAT SHOULDN't be a problem, according to Sarah Burgess, a member of the women's_to_help organization.
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together more.
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make any high school player come to this school."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
Otis Birdson is scored a high-39 points
night, 20 in the second quarter, as the Kings
defend at 11:19.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas--After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Sourns' home court.
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hemisfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-101 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings to a third straight victory in the Midwest Division with a record of 34-16.
Kings are still batting for a playoff belt, along with Houston, 33-36, and Golden State, 33-4
By United Press International
Besides breaking a winless streak in San Antonio, the Kings' upset victory also broke the Spurs' record.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 28-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game.
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio out-scored Kansas City 30-20 in the final quarter.
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-23 and have already clinched a spot in the NBA's Top 10.
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
BIRDSONG, THE fifth leading score in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
@ 9:00 Tuesday, made more than 60 percent
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
Bv JIM SMALL
By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beaten Nebraska twice by 13-4 in the second round that ended up taking the conference crown.
Kansas coach Bill Spain said he hoped KU's 84-85 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against
the Clippers, who snapped a last year-
year championship win last year.
"We had beaten them twice in dues last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that we team in a dual meet and beating them in a conference meet are two different things."
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes, Spahn said.
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored the road.
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
400 individual medals and Wright is the defending champion in the 100 and 200
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to
their leadership is important to our team.
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship to KU.
SOPHOMORE BOVIN, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Chuck Neumann in the 200 junior and junior Jim Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out-swimming them, we can beat them."
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
"The team has made great progress this
year, and will improve upon the next one."
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DATE - March 4th, 6th / R.I.
PLACE - Parlour Room - UN
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
No coupons accepted wi
Enjoy
Coke
Lease is key to successful apartment
By SHARON APPELBAUM Staff Reporter
Many problems, especially those arising from security deposits and termination of tenancy, could be avoided if students understood their rights and obligations, he said.
"For many students, a license is the first contract they sign," Chapman said. "If there's any part they don't understand they can always bring it in to Consumer Affairs or Student Legal Services or ask the landlord."
Students who plan to rent an apartment should read and understand their leases and the law, Clyde Chapman, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, said.
For example, the law limits the amount a landlord can charge for a security deposit. The equivalent of one month's rent on an unfurnished apartment.
Students should also be acquainted with the Kansas Residential Landlord and
Tenant Act, which is the primary source of landlord-tenant law, he said.
If the apartment is furnished, the landlord may charge up to a month-and-a-half.
According to the law, the security deposit is used to pay the landlord's expenses in cleaning and repairing damages that are considered "normal wear and tear."
Many landlords, however, deduct for damages caused by previous tenants, chancery and
To prevent this loss, tenants should fill out an inventory of the premises with their receipts.
note anything that is dirty, damaged or worn, he said.
The law requires this joint inventory, but some landlords don't always follow it.
"They always seem to do that final inspection but not the initial one," he said.
If the landlord refuses to do an initial inspection, Chapman suggested that students conduct one themselves with a witness to co-sign it.
A sample inventory checklist is included in pamphlets on rental housing available from Legal Services and Consumer Affairs.
A completed copy of the inventory should be sent to the landlord, he said. This gives the tenant some leverage at the end of the year.
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Landlords deduct from the deposit when cleaning is needed. The landlord may decide to accept a tenant's offer to clean as a substitute for payment, he said.
Gold Crown Properties, Inc., which owns Jayhawk West and Gatehouse apartments, provides a list of cleaning charges. For all rooms costing $2 and a dirty oven costs $10.
"Why not take 10 minutes to clean a bathtub instead of paying $10?" he said.
Chapman warned that the security deposit cannot be used to pay the last rent, and the tenant wants to do it, the landlord has the right to keep the deposit and sue for back rent.
After the last month of rent is paid and the tenant has moved out, the landlord is required to return the remaining deposit and receive a list of any deductions within 30 days.
Another major problem for student apartment dwellers is termination of the lease, Chapman said.
Many students are caught with an unwanted lease, Chapman said.
Most leases require 30 days written notice for termination, but some require 60 days notice. Others include a provision that allows the lease for another year if no notice is given.
"About the end of the last week of school and the week after, our office is packed," Chapman said. "Most of these students failed to read their leases."
Students may also have problems with a coommate who wants to break the lease, Clemens said.
"It ites six months down the road and they find they can't stand each other. Or a roommate may decide he just wants to leave."
The remaining tenants are still liable for the entire rent.
If a tenant breaks the lease, the "cleanest" way out is to sublease. The tenant must subletting tenant does not pay rent, however, the original tenant must cover for it.
Ultimately, the landlord decides who is going to sublet," Chapman said. "But tenants also should screen the applicants because they may carry the burden later."
Oread
From page 11
A student who checks with the neighborhood association, located at 407 W. 12th Street, before renting can usually get a idea of how much work may be involved in restoring his dream house. The neighborhood association has a book with photographs and basic statistics for every house in the neighborhood.
"Some of the houses are pits," Harper said.
One of Lawrence's newest and most energy efficient complexes is now leasing for summer and fall semesters.
Heatherwood Valley is a new, energy efficient complex conveniently located two blocks east of the intersection of 23rd & Kasold in the southwest section of Lawrence. We are less than 1 mile from campus and only a few short blocks from the Alvamar Golf Course.
Heatherwood Valley Apts. offer 1,2 and 3 bedroom models with multiple baths, featuring the latest in appliances including frost-free refrigerator and dishwasher in every unit. Other features are free covered parking, swimming pool with sun deck and cabana, children's playground, and a 4-acre tree filled picnic and recreation area. We offer laundry facilities, plenty of storage space and individually controlled heating and cooling.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY EXTRAS:
- One of the newest and most energy efficient complexes in Lawrence
- Individually controlled high efficiency heating and air conditioning
- Free covered parking
- Two and three bedroom units from $290 to $360 per month
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
2040 Heatherwood Dr. No. 203
Phone 913-843-4754
The University Daily
KANSAN
Friday, March 6, 1981 Vol. 91. No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
1234567890
Shankel to address issues
By KATHRYN KASE
Staff Reporter
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convolution after spring break, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankel declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
The AAUP was not the first group to express
"The members of the AAPU executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I would convene an all-University meeting and I agreed."
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said
various administrators talked to him as well.
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea, Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was a tactical strategy, similar to the letter in the Kansan Wedgeheads.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletes. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article describing how academic standards were lowered for athletes.
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation,
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of these issues out into the ooen." she said.
Swartz would not reveal what the AAUP and Shankel thought were the major issues.
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded Shankel's endorsement of the convention
these issues out into the open, 'she said,
'Sarah would not reveal what the AAUP and
their group are doing.'
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
Funds sought for Howorth addition
The place is also uncertain.
"It depends on whether I think there might be 50 or 300 people. Shankel said, "think that Armenia could have a population of 1 million."
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convoitation was held.
By LAUREL RANSOM Staff Reporter
When students are away, the burglars will play.
That's the pre-spring break warning to students from Lawrence preventive intervention program.
"We expect to see burglaries go up in student areas during long vacations and breaks," Mark Brothers, Lawrence Police analyst, said. "During Christmas break this year, there were 81 burglaries in one apartment complex alone."
"When students leave for break, they don't take precaution." Harper said.
Nan Harper, director of the Oread Neighborhood Association, accrès
Mark Denke, assistant director of residential programs, said student negligence was the major security problem in residence halls.
Similarly, residence halls are prime targets during vacations, Mary Ann Robinson, sergeant of community services for the KU police, said.
Burglaries in residence halls numbered 32 last semester, and there were 71 thefts. This semester nine burglaries and seven thefts have occurred at the hall, Robinson said.
He said that students didn't close their doors and that when they did, they didn't open them.
He cited an example of a student leaving the door to his room open with the key to his drawer left in plain sight. The result was that he had been locked in the drawer.
"Students are very good targets because the last thing in their minds is the lock," Brothers said. "They think the door was locked, but they aren't sure."
While students in residence halls are stuck with available security, those in apartments can do something about themselves and their possessions.
Brothers suggested that students look at an apartment's security measures before renting. The best kind of lock, he said, is a rooftop that can be only opened with a key.
If an apartment lacks such a lock, Brothers' advice is "buy one."
*Forty or $0$ to install a lock is a drip in the hole compared to what they have lose.
A landlord's obligation to have secure apartments is limited to the Kansas Landlord Tenant Act's statement that in cases where an tenant can expect "protected habitation,
Harper said most landlords installed new locks after a tenant moved out, but students should always check and get a new lock if it's needed.
In addition to door locks, students should
lock all window locks and use them if
they are locked.
Engraving valuables is another way to discourage break-ins. Both ONA and the Lawrence police have electric engravers available. They suggest using driver's license numbers preceded by the letters KSDL, for Kansas Driver's License.
Harper said the ONA had tools available to attach to pin window frames for security.
'My advice to others is : write down all
See SECURITY BOOK.
During Christmas break, Liz Hose, Overland Park park, learned the value of engraving. The house that she rents with five other girls was burglared and over $700 in stereo equipment was stolen. None of it had been engraved.
University Daily Kansan, March 5. 1981 Page 13
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governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,065 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their own bills, so that they can avoid the federal debt limit.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth addition drew the only debate yesterday.
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we saw there." Hein said, referring to the language in
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topke, said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate the burden would be the best interest of the University and the state.
"That's correct." Hein answered.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steineger, D- Kansas City, Charge for doing anything, but "but"
Steineger told the committee that this was an example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
Hayden shared Steineger's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to teach education) playing fields at Wichita State."
He said the deep cuts were being made in Carlson's proposed budget to avoid a tax increase near the end of the year.
*Taking from one area and putting it in another does not mitigate the need for a tax
Hayden said it was not fair to ask some to sacrifice while others were told it was all right to go ahead.
iled, prof says
Honduras
LVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
calaveall the
illyto ten
up.ilce
theandof
wasthe
"The right hadn't like any form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough." he said.
But Stansifer said the reform did not result in reduced violence.
There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1980. Stansler said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of being involved in the political struggle.
Stansifer said that he had been surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right.
Stanisuer attached in El Salvador in August 2013 to the group that called for a general strike against the government.
He said the strike was a failure. The govern-
see EL SALVADOR naze 5
10000000000
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Ross Randal is a hard man to find. He's seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass grows greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KU golf teams.
IT'S A CHALLENGE that Randall, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the St. Louis Country Club, when he began coaching the men's golf team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced Linda Perry as basketball coach. Bahan is an assistant women's basketball coach.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. When the cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell golfers. But with last week's weather, he has been able to practice on the Alvamar course.
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
"THEER IS NO competition," Randall said.
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 16-20 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be March 25 at the University of Texas Invitational at Huntsville, Texas, March 30-31.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer is a teacher and has been teaching at the
bending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
"TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, and second, we can't get on weekends. Second, our budget is limited."
The optimistic Randall is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"The outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season." he said.
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together and
"THAT SHOULDN'T be a problem, according to Marsh Bussage, a member of the women's group."
"Our coach is a lot of help, definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make any high school athlete."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
SAN ANTONIO, Texas-After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Spurs' home court.
Otis Bitsondy scored a game-high 39 points last night, in the second quarter, as the Kings made it 4-1.
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hemisfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-101 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings' lead in the Midwest division with a record of 34-36.
By United Press International
Kings are still battling for a playoff berth, along with Cardinals. 33-34 before last night's game against Utah.
Besides breaking a winless streak in San Antonio, the Kings' upset victory also broke the Rangers' six-game winning streak.
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-25 and have already clinched a spot in the top 10 in NBA history.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 28-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game
Jo
whc
plac
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio outscored Kansas City 38-20 in the final quarter.
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
BIRDSONG, THE fifth leading scoring in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
9-08 Tuesday night made more than 60 percent
By JIM SMALL
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against
two-year championship winning team.
Sports Writer
Kansas coach Bill Spahn said he hoped KU's 84-65 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omens as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
"We had beaten them twice in duals last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that we team in a dual meet and beating them in a conference meet are two different things."
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beaten Nebraska twice by a combined score of 35-27. They ended up taking the crown.
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two Big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored in the stand.
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes, Soahn said.
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
400 individual medleys and Wright is the champion in the 100 and 200 backtracks.
"Seve and Gardner know what it takes to
'Their leadership is important to our team.'"
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Chuck Neumann in the 200 junior and junior Jim Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
SOPHOMORE BOB Vince, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out-swimming them, we can beat them."
Page 10 University Delft K..
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
"The team has made great progress this year, and we are impressed by the spirit of our team."
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PLACE – Perlard Room – UN
Page 14 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Security
From page 13
your serial numbers and engrave values, "Hope said, "You increase the chance of recovery if you have them."
The single most effective deterrent to crime may be the most enjoyable. Getting to know neighbors is often a way to insure that you will be keeping watch while you're gone.
Harper said that Oread used to be a relatively anonymous neighborhood. Now, the ONA educates residents to get to know their neighbors.
But he said that since residents organized two years ago into a cohesive, cooperative neighborhood, crime had dropped markedly.
Brothers, who works closely with ONA's anti-crime program, said that Oread had once been riddled with crime compared with other areas in Lawrence.
Last summer, for instance, burglaries in the NEighborhood dropped 78 percent.
The ONA offers other suggestions for protecting homes or apartments over burglar bars.
- Secure sliding glass doors with lower-tier bars or安装 pins through the frame.
- Stop all mail and newspapers.
- Make a list of all model and serial numbers.
- Take expensive items home or store them with a friend.
- Use small electric timers on lights and make it appear someone is home. Call the doctor.*
Students who want to know just how burglar-proof their houses and apartments are can call the Lawrence police or ONA for a free security check.
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Home buying: best alternative to rent
BySTEVEHERBERT
KU students in lawrence rent-
er a house to buy a house to do it.
But students have to buy a house to do it.
Staff Reporter
Although buying a house requires an expensive down payment, monthly payments will be the same as or less than monthly rent payments, according to Cory Brinkerhoff, an agent for McGrew Real Estate Inc.
“If you look at the numbers.”
Brinkerhoff said, “buying a house is the best alternative. Everyone would want to know they could come up with the capital to do it.”
"There's a big tax benefit for the parents, especially in the upper-income bracket, be ahead."
Lack of capital is the reason few students do buy. Most undergraduate students cannot afford the initial down payment and have to have parental help.
For parents, buying a house for their children can be a good investment, according to Phil Harrison, agent for Gill Real Estate Agency. The money they shell out for their children's housing is money they will get back when they sell the house.
Harrison said that parents could get a tax break if they bought. Monthly payments, upkeep and depreciation on the house are all tax-free.
The situation is different for graduate students. With a PhD, graduate students are able to participate.
they often are working, they can afford the monthly payments.
Brinkerhoft said graduate students, being a step closer to full-time work, were often looking for the advantages home buying offered.
*Most undergraduate students are not concerned about their financial future.
"Graduate students tend to be investment oriented," he said. "They are old enough that they realize the value of home ownership."
"It depends on the area," he said.
Between the way he saw and the time
he was there, it could be some
something.
Houses are not all that students are buying, Barry Nall of Martin Real Estate Inc., said. Duplexes, condominiums and townhouses are other options.
"If the area improves rapidly, the gain is larger."
Students typically look for property close to campus in the $35,000 or $40,000 price range. Brinkerhoff said. That property, though, is hard to find.
"It's hard to find anything decent in a good location for that kind of money," he added. "There's a lot of good property for that money, but it's a long way from campus."
Students who do buy a house can increase its resale value if they do remodeling, Steve Jones, a broker for McGrew, said.
And if their neighborhood improves
they own the house, the resale value
improves.
"You have to be creative in this kind of market," he said.
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KANSAN
The University Daily
Friday, March 6, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
A man in a hat is standing next to a telephone pole. The pole is attached to two wires, which are hanging down from the top of the pole. There is also a wire visible on the left side of the pole.
Shankel to address issues
Staff Reporter
By KATHRYN KASE
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convocation after spring break, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankel declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
"the members of the AAPU executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I should convene an all-University meeting and I agreed."
The AAUP was not the first group to express
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said various administrators talked to him as well.
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea, Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was a letter to the president, similar to the letter in the Kansan Wednesday.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletes. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article titled, "Academic standards were lowered for athletes."
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of these issues out into the open," she said.
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded Shankel's endorsement of the convocation.
Swartz would not reveal what the AAU and Shankel thought were the major issues
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
Funds sought for Howorth addition
The place is also uncertain.
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convocation was held.
Greek organizations see popularity rise
"It depends on whether I think there is night at 6 or 300 people. Shankel said, "that Amanda knows, but I don't know."
By STU LITCHFIELD Staff Reporter
For more than a century, supporters of the KU Greek system have stressed the need for fraternities and sororities, and representatives continue to assert this need.
In 1888 a fraternity supporter said that Greek societies were necessary for the stakes.
Ninety-three years later students still see a need for the Greek way of life.
"Social and literary organizations of some kind seem to be as essential to the life of students as tea parties to old maids," the supporter said.
"It's an excellent way to meet people, and it encourages scholarship, leadership and community."
Sara Snyder, Panhellenic Association president and Priaile Village Junior, said Greek system was a culmination of all things that make college life more rewarding.
Powell's explanation of the increases
Many students seem to be in agreement with Snyder. Despite an average cost of $1,775 to $2,150 to live in a Greek house, the system is growing.
in 1978, 6.2 percent of the total student body lived in fraternities. Now, according to Tim Powell, Interfraternity Council vice president, they were two-thirds junior, one senior, they make up to 10 to 15 percent.
In 1978, members of sororities composed 5.2 percent of the total student body and today, according to Lydia Belot, Panhellenic adviser, this number has also increased, although no statistics are available.
was that more and more students wanted what the Greek system had to offer.
"The demand for fraternities especially has gone up," Powell said. "In a house you can meet a lot of people right off. It is amazing." He used the punchup, and a lot of new students realize this.
The addition of two new fraternities on campus, Theta Chi and Pi Kappa Phi, and one new sorority, Alpha Omicron Pi, also points to this trend toward Greek living.
To meet this growth of fraternities the Interfraternity Council has added a spring rush, in addition to its present rush procedures. According to Powell, until this year rush procedures had consisted of a formal fall rush, which is mostly for new freshmen, and rush activities held by individual houses.
Both spring and fall rush last for approximately one week and includes visit to the museum.
See GREEKS page 16
According to Snyder, the reasons for the decline may range from a higher, peri-
The 1981 sorority rush saw a decline in the number of participants. Last year approximately 645 women participated, with 10 percent dropping out during week. This year approximately 650 women participated, but 15 percent dropped out.
University Daily Kansan, March 5. 1981 Page 15
Sororites, however, have a different rush format. All of the sororites cooperate on one formal rush held in January. This procedure, called a deferred rush, means the freshman woman may participate after she has completed one semester of college work.
"Although fewer people registered in the law school," Snyder said, "the sororities are laureate."
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The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,005 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their own bills, so that they can pay them.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth addition drew the only debate yesterday.
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we saw there." Hein said, referring to the language in his book.
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topena,
said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable
and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate
the need are the best interest of the
University and the state.
"That's correct," Hein answered.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steiniger, D-Kansas City, interrupted Hein and asked, "But we're not going to do anything about it?"
*Statenieriq tilt the commaire that this is as an
*Stationierq tilt the commaire that this is as an
Hayden shared Steiniger's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to educate (at education) playing fields (at Wichita State)."
*Taking from one area and putting it in another does not mitigate the need for a tax adjustment.*
He said the deep cuts were being made in Carl's proposed budget to avoid a tax increase in the next year.
Hayden said it was not fair to ask some to sacrifice while others were told it was all right to
ailed, prof says
Honduras
ALVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
deal But Stansifer the reform did not result in aave reduced violence. Stansifer didn't like any form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough, 'he said There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1980. Stansifer said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing. But both sides have accused each other of being involved with the police, especially involved with the police. Stansifer said that he had been surprised to The find that most of the people he talked with in El and Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right. Stansifer arrived in El Salvador in August 1980 when he called for a general strike against the government. He said the strike was a failure. The govern-
id the strike was a failure. The govern-
see EL SALVADOR page 5
See EL SALVADOR page 5
[ ]
(3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19) (20) (21) (22) (23) (24) (25) (26) (27) (28) (29) (30) (31) (32) (33) (34) (35) (36) (37) (38) (39) (40) (41) (42) (43) (44) (45) (46) (47) (48) (49) (50) (51) (52) (53) (54) (55) (56) (57) (58) (59) (60) (61) (62) (63) (64) (65) (66) (67) (68) (69) (70) (71) (72) (73) (74) (75) (76) (77) (78) (79) (80) (81) (82) (83) (84) (85) (86) (87) (88) (89) (90) (91) (92) (93) (94) (95) (96) (97) (98) (99) (100)
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
Ross Randall is a hard man to find. He's seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass grows greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KUU golf teams.
ITS A CHALLENGE that Randall, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the team's facility in Fresno, and when he began coaching the men's team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced Terry Litton as coach. Bahan is an assistant women's basketball coach.
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell golfers. But with last week's victory, Haskell has been able to practice on the Alvarnar course.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. When the cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
practice together.
"THERE IS NO competition." Randall said.
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 16-20 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be May 9 at Huntville, Louisiana. Invitational at Huntville, Texas, March 20-21.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer is also a member of the college's sports teams.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
"TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, and second, we can't go on weekends. Second, our budget is limited."
The optimistic Randall is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"The outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season," he said.
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
THEAT SHOULDN'T be a problem, according to Sarah Burgesh, a member of the women's team.
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make any high school athlete."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio 111-97
SAN ANTONIO, Texas-After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Sour's home court.
Otis Birdsong scored a game-half 19 points last night, 20 in the second quarter, as the Kings dominated.
By United Press International
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hemisfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-109 victory over Houston, it boasted the Kings to a fourth consecutive victory in the Midwest Division with a record of 34-62.
Kings are still battling for a playoff berth, along
with the Storm. State-34
before last night's game is over.
Besides breaking a winniness streak in San Diego, the Chargers broke the Spurs' 17-season winning streak at home.
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-23 and have already clinched a spot in the NBA's West Division.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 28-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game.
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio outscored Kansas City 30-20 in the final quarter.
BRIDSONG, THE fifth leading scoring in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
9:00 Tuesday night made more than 60 percent
By JIM SMALL
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
Sports Writer
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had bested Nebraska twice by 50 points. They won after who ended up taking the conference crown.
Kansas coach Bill Spain said he hoped KU's 84-68 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against Nebraska. The Huskers snapped KU's two year championship winning streak last year.
Jo whe pla
"We had beaten them twice in duals last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that beating a team in a dual meet and beating a conference meet are two different things."
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes, Spahn said.
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two Big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored in the road.
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
400 individual medleys and Wright is the champion in the 100 and 200 backtrackers.
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to lead a team," he said. "Their leadership is important to our team."
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Chuck Neumann in the 500 team and junior Junior Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship to KU.
SOPHOMORE BOB Vince, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out-swimming them, we can beat them."
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
"The team has made great progress this year and we are impressed to the extent where."
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EXHIBITION OF PICTURES
Of The Second Anniversary Of
THE ISLAMIC REVOLUTION OF IRAN
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PLACE - Parfory Room - UNI
Page 16 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
But the majority of KU students looking for an apartment don't ask about the extra costs of apartment living until they have committed themselves to a lease or contract. Mark Denk, assistant director of KU Residential Programs said
Mike Smith, Topeka freshman, looked at the stucco ceiling of his Naismith Hall room and sighed.
Denke said the added costs of living off campus usually forced students into dormitories.
Off-campus living provides added costs
"I thought off campus would be really great at first because I was independent," Smith said. "But after awhile, it was pretty boring—there's not much excitement in washing dishes and cooking."
By MIKE GAUERT Staff Reporter
Smith, who moved to Naismith Hall after sharing a duplex his first semester at said that the advantages of off-campus housing are overshadowed by some unseminar details—such as the utility bills, food bills and the isolation from campus activities.
For many KU students, like Smith, the in-
dependance of off-campus living may be
one of the challenges.
"I didn't want to live in a dorm right off," Smith said. "The duplex was a lot quieter and I could get more studying space, and I had many chances to meet people or be involved on it."
Despite the expenses and potential isolation, off-campus housing is popular with KU students in Lawrence. The KU Office of Admissions and Records reported that 45.5 percent of students lived in apartments during the fall 1980 semester.
"You really have to work hard to make off-campus living successful," DaKe said,
Christian Echavarria, Colombia senior, said that even though he has two roommates to share expenses with, living in an apartment was an expensive surprise.
It was especially hard at the beginning to get things to cook with." Echavarria业
and went to go out and find utensils, pans and a knife. You might say you
might not think about before moving on.
Echavarria said he enjoyed the privacy of apartment living, but was not too happy about some of the responsibilities involved.
"I wanted to be independent. That was my main reason for moving out of the halls," he said. "But sometimes, you have to eat out—which is expensive."
Echavarria said that his monthly telephone bill was usually expensive because he frequently called his home in the kitchen and his roommates try to save money on utilities by turning off unnecessary lights and by washing their dishes by hand.
Food and utilities were not Echavaria's only expenses when he moved into his Park 25 apartment, 3401 W. 25th St. The apartment he rented was unfurnished, he said, so he and his roommates had to rent furniture from a local store.
"You need other things like posters and plants to make an apartment look better." "But some people I know have had to spend $20 just to buy four 'houseplants.'"
Furnishing an apartment was also a problem for Bill Dare, Wellington junior. It two roommates share a three-bedroom apartment at the West 7th Court Duplexes.
"We had trouble finding enough stuff to
fill the apartment up with," Dare said. "I finally ended up moving most of my furniture in from home."
Dare said that an apartment resident could reduce his monthly utility bills if he was willing to alter some living habits.
'We could lower our heating bills, for example, if we all agreed to turn down the thermostat and live in colder rooms,' Dare said.
Dare, who moved into the apartment last summer after living two years in a fraternity, said that saving money was easier him now that when he lived on campus.
To save money on setting up the apartment, Dare said that he and his roommates had often gone to auctions in Lawrence and Kansas City, Mo., to find second-hand kitchen equipment and furniture.
"Fraternities divide up the monthly food and utility bills, but fraternity people use a lot of utilities," Dare said. "They sometimes leave lights on, windows open or let showers run when nobody is using them."
Dare said he was satisfied with apartment living.
While the advantages of off-campus living are many and varied, more students should know the differences in cost between off-campus housing and KU residence hills, Denke said.
"It's quieter than a frat," he said, "I can go to bed sooner or study a lot later."
Costs typically involved in establishing an off-campus residence in Lawrence, excluding rent, include:
- Electricity—a $40 deposit is required for the initial look-up. The minimum monthly charge is $150.
- Gas—a $30 deposit is required for the initial hookup. The minimum monthly charge is $4.35 for the first 1,000 cubic feet
of gas, and $2.96 per 1,000 cubic feet of gas
thereafter.
- *Telephone*—The cost is $$ if the residence has a jack-plug and the resident installs the phone. The cost is $32.25 if the residence installs both the jack-plug and the phone. The minimum monthly charge for a dial, one-party telephone is $6.50.
The maximum charge for a two-party telephone hook-up is $35.25, and the minimum monthly charge is $0.05.
U L
- Food—prices ranged from $25-$35 a month, according to those interviewed
- *Water—the minimum monthly charge for water, sewer and storm service in Lawrence is $2.40 for 2,000 gallons or less of use.*
- Cable television-Sunview
Cablevision charges $10.35 for the basic cable hook-up. There is an $18.30 monthly fee.
- Pet fees—many landlords require an additional $10 per month.
- Garage fees—many landlords charge an additional fee for use of an apartment carport.
- Furniture rental—approximately $18 per month.
From nave 15
Greeks
"We're investigating what might have happened," Snyder said. "Right now it's really up in the air. We don't know why there were fewer participants."
From page 15
centage of women who were ineligible
because of poor grades, to a rush fee of
*70*—almost double the price of last year's
Women interested in next year's rush
shown at the Panhellenic office in the
Kansas Union.
Homes for Jayhawks
- University Terrace Apartments swimming pool 1529 W. 9th 843-1433
- West Hills Apartments swimming pool and laundry facilities 1012 Emery 841-3800
- Parkway Terrace Apartments swimming pool 2340 Murphy 841-1155
- Southridge Plaza Apartments swimming pool and laundry facilities 1704 W.24th842-1160
- Old Mill Apartments 905 Emery 841-3192
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KANSAN
The University Daily
Friday, March 6, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
C
By KATHRYN KASE
By KATHRYN KASI Staff Reporter
Shankel to address issues
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convocation after spring break, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday...
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankke declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
The AAUP was not the first group to express
"the members of the AAPU executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I would convene an all-University meeting and I agreed."
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said various administrators talked to him as well.
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea, Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was a test of the letter, similar to the letter in the Kansan Wednesday.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletes. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article about a student's academic standards were lowered for athletes.
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation.
Swartz would not reveal what the AAUP and Shankel thought were the major issues.
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
'We felt that this was the time to bring some of these issues out into the open,' she said.
Braided Method of our conversation.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of
these issues out into the open," she said. Swartz would not reveal what the AAPJ and
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded Shankel's endorsement of the convention.
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
Funds sought for Howorth addition
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convocation was held.
The place is also uncertain.
"It depends on whether I think there might be 50 or 500 people," Shankel said. "I think that Allen Field House can be ruled out, though."
Greek officers assert no prejudice intended
By LENDA WALTON Staff Reporter
Offices of KU's residential fraternities and sororites deny they discriminate when accepting members. But members of minority groups are scarce in KU's Greek system. Of the 3,000 fraternity and sorority members, fewer than 200 are active in their groups, and most of this minority membership is in the black Greek organizations.
The Alpha Phi Alpha is the only one of the back Greek organizations at KU with a host.
"It's more or less segregation by choice or force," David Raban president of Alpha Phi.
But membership in both fraternities and sororites is open regardless of race, race, or national origin.
The Black Panhellenic Council coordinates KU's eight black Greek organizations. None except Alpha Phi Alpha participate, the interfraternity board is formed by students because they are non-residential chapters.
Neither the Panhellenic Association, which coordinates KU's 13 residential sororities, or the Interfraternity Council, which coordinates the 23 residential fraternities, makes any attempt to activity recruit minority members, accepts students and president Sara Snyer and Interfraternity council president Mark McClanahan.
"The way we look at it, there should be no discrimination for anything—height, weight, race," Mary Murgua, vice president of Panhellenic and a Mexican-American, said. "Our only requirement is 12 hours and a 2.0 grade average."
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981 Page 17
In January, the Panhellenic Association held its rush. More than 600 women registered, and 384 plued a sorority. But only about one other minority women went through rush.
These fraternities and sororites also admit members regardless of race, but Raban said the average white student would feel uncomfortable, just as a black student would feel uncomfortable in a white Greek organization.
The seven black Greek non-residential groups are Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta, Sigma Gamma Rho and Zeta Phi Beta sororites and Kappa Alpha Psi, Omega Psi Phi and Phi Beta Sigma fraternities.
Rabon said that lack of support and recognition from the University was the reason blacks had only one residential Greek house.
For the most part, black Greek groups
support from alumni at other Greek hawks.
"For more of them to get involved in other groups would be defeating our purpose."
"The black Greek organizations were formed to fill the needs of blacks and minorities," Wilson, Atchison graduate professor, said there are to promote the education of minorities.
But black Greek leaders said they are intentionally about the future of their race.
optimistic about the future of those groups. A former president of the Black Panther Party, who later there was a movement toward more involvement in the Greek system. But she does not think more minority students will be able to participate nationally white fraternities and sororites.
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lor
governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $184,005 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their own bills that they can comply with.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth
addrew the only debate yesterday.
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we have. Hein said, referring to the language in the sport
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topke, said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable because of the steps that he took to alleviate those conditions were in the best interest of the University and the state.
"That's correct," Hein answered.
Steineger told the committee that this was an example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steineger, D-Kansas City, interrupted Hein and asked, "But what did you do?"
Hayden shared Steinger's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to pursue education (playing lids at Wichita State)."
He said the deep cuts were being made in his proposed budget to avoid a tax increase next year.
"Taking from one area and putting it in another does not mitigate the need for a tax law."
Hayden said it was not fair to ask some to sacrifice while others were told it all right to get
iled,prof says
Honduras
SALVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
calv But Stansifer said the reform did not result in reduced violence.
nall "The right didn't like any form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough," he said.
There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1800. Stansifer said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of bungling sloppy killing people who are not really involved in the struggle.
Stansifer said that he had surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El and Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right.
Stansifer arrived in El Salvador in August was 1800, shortly after the leftists had called for the general strike against the government.
He said the strike was a failure. The govern-
did the strike was a failure. The govern-
See EL SALVADOR page 5
2
57
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Ross Randall is a hard man to find. He's seldom in his office and rarely is at home.
As the grass grows greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KU1 soft teams.
ITS A CRALLENGE that Randall, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the University of Arizona and when he began coaching the men's golf team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced Bradley as a coach. Bahan is an assistant women's basketball coach.
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell golfers. With but last week's practice he was able to be able to practice on the Alvarmar course.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. When the cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
practice together. "THERE IS NO competition." Randall said.
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 16-20 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be May 5-7 at Hattiesburg, Kentucky. Invitational at Huntsville, Texas, March 30-31.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer is a former football player.
"TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, and second, the lack of out on weekends. Second, our budget is limited."
The optimistic Randall is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"the outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season," he said.
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together.
**THAT SHOULD'N'T be a problem, according to Sarah Burgess, a member of the women's wing.**
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make an high school principal."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
Otis Birdsong scored a game-half 39 points
from the first quarter, as the Kings def
gained 57 to 11. The Saints 117-82.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas-After nine consecutive losses, the Kansas City Kings have finally beaten the San Antonio Spurs on the Shuns' home court.
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hermisfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-101 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings to the No. 3 spot in the Midwest Division with a record of 34-16
Kings are still batting for a playoff berth, along with Rangers. The game will be 33-34 before last night's game against U.S.
Besides breaking a winless streak in San Antonio, the Kings' upset victory also broke the record for most wins by a team.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 28-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio out-of-score Kansas City 30-20 in the final quarter.
By United Press International
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
BIRDSDING, THE fifth leading scoring in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
9-9-8 Tuesday night made more than 60 percent
The Spurs lead the division with a record of 45-22 and have already clinched a spot in the NBA. They also are up by 10 points.
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beaten Nebraska twice by a single margin. But he ended up taking the conference crown.
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against
the swamp. The Hunters snapped the two-
way kite.
Jo whc plac
Kansas coach Spillain said he hoped KU's 84-68 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
"We had beaten them twice in duals last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that beating a team in a dual meet and beating a conference meet are two different things."
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes. Snaph said...
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored in the race.
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, sophomore Chuck Neumann in the 200 intermediate and junior Jim Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship to KU.
400 individual medals and Wright in the defending champion in the 100 and 200
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to win in the Big Eight," Spahn said. "They're not going to make that happen."
SOPHOMORE BOV BIN, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraska is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out-swimming them, we can beat them."
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
"The team has made great progress this year, and will improve to the point ahead."
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Page 18 University Daily Kansan, March 5. 1987
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PLACE- Parlure. Room - UN
YOU PROBABLY DON'T KNOW ALL WE DO —
For example:
A roommate listing service Whether you need one, or are in need
Off campus housing listings Look for a home or advertise your own
The Office of Residential Programs
123 Strong 864-3611 Serving Students in Residence Halls, Scholarship Halls, and Off Campus Housing
Schol halls combine other housing options
By LINDA LANG Staff Reporter
Scholarship halls combine the advantages of Greek, residence hall and off-campus living—and a few of the disadvantages—the options share, the halls' residents say.
The halls are relatively inexpensive, provide cooperative living with 50 students and are close to campus.
The rates for the fall 1981 academic year were not available at deadline, but living in a scholarship hall costs roughly $300 less than living in a residence hall this year. The rate was $1,152 for the men's scholarship halls and $1,068 for two of the women's, compared with $1,357 for the men's and two women's hall costs cost $295 for the rooms. In addition to that sum, residents buy their food cooperatively in groups of seven.
Chris Budd, Independence, Mo., senior,
has lived in a scholarship hall, an apartment
and a residence hall. He prefers
a scholarship halls to the other housing options.
Budd said he felt isolated in an apartment and thought there was more opportunity to build stronger friendships in a scholarship hall.
He said he "despised" living in a residence hall because of the unavailability and difficulty.
Michael Regier, president of the All-Scholarship Hall Council, also thought students in scholarship halls had excellent chances of developing friendships.
"When your living group consists of 50 people, you are difficult to be anonymous," he said.
Regier and Joyce Cliff, assistant director of the office of residential programs, agreed that scholarship halls were not for students who wanted a cheap place to live but were unwilling to make a commitment to their living group.
Scholarship hall residents must commit about five hours weekly to cooking and household tasks, assigned by a proctor or house manager.
Students also have many opportunities to become involved in student governance, something Regner said he saw as ad-hoc. He recalled resumes or graduate school applications.
Every hall has its own set of officers to conduct internal business as well as representatives to the All-Scholarship Hall Council.
Residents have the option of participating in athletic events from range from athletics or athletic to academic.
Every scholarship hall has one large kitchen, where residents do the cooking, except for the two women's halls with seven smaller kitchens.
"The biggest complaints I hear from students are lack of privacy and the noise created by 50 people living in one room," Cliff said.
Sleeping and study quarters fall into three patterns: Typical residence hall rooms designed for two people to sleep and study, one large sleeping porch for everyone in the hall combined with study rooms for a few people each, or fourpeople suits with study rooms adjacent to two bedrooms.
This compacted lifestyle sometimes leads to problems for school hall residents.
This complaint was echoed by Regier, See SCHOLARSHIP page 19
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The University Daily
Friday, March 6, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
N. H. H.
Staff Reporter
By KATHRYN KASE
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convolution after spring break, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Shankel to address issues
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankel declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
"the members of the AAPU executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I should continue an all- university meeting and I agreed."
The AAUP was not the first group to express
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said various administrators talked to him as well.
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted me to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUF's idea, Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was a letter to the University, similar to the letter in the Kansas Wedding.
That letter discussed academic standards for athletes. Those standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article about the academic standards were lowered for athletes.
Adverse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation,
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
I even what the AAPU and
smank think were the major issues.
I think I love them.
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded
Shankel's endorsement of the convocation.
some or these issues out into the open," she said. Swartz would not reveal what the AAUF and I did, but he noted.
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
Funds sought for Haworth addition
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
The place is also uncertain.
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convocation was held.
"It depends on whether I think there might be another reason," she thinks, "that think that Algen Field Hockey would put them up."
Scholarship
From page 18
who said it was not always possible to be alone and that he began to feel the lack of comfort.
Regier also said students in the halls were "relatively homogeneous, mostly from Kansas, mostly from small towns." Regier said the extensive recruiting system was needed.
Cliff said the Office of Residential Programs was taking steps to encourage minority students and those from out of state to apply live in scholarship halls.
This year every applicant is being asked to fill out self-description car and mail it in.
The card asks whether the student is handicapped, what his ethnic background is, and whether he is in school.
halls. The office hopes to find out how many minority students are applying and how it might attract a variety of students.
The most important qualification for being accepted is the ability to live cooperatively with other students, judged by their answers to questions on the application form.
Letters of recommendation and academic performance are taken into account, but the only prerequisite for a KU student is a 2.5 grade point average on a 4.0 scale. Financial need is considered, but it is not mandatory.
Students not bad tenants
J. J. WILSON, director of the KU housing office, said by the end of this summer, Pearson and Miller Halls should be accessible to students in wheelchairs.
Staff Reporter
By EILEEN MARKEY Staff Reporter
The stereotype of students as careless tenants is a misconception, say many Lawrence landlords.
"That's a popular fallacy," Joe Stroup,
owner of Village Square Apartments said.
He also said the city was losing $18.7M.
Gary Stevenson, manager of Park-25 Apartments, said that each apartment deteriorated differently, but that per person cost more, sometimes more conscientious tenents.
"I just depends on the people that are in there," he said. "Very seldom do you get a request from the permanent residents, but many of them with leases are always having a problem."
Landlords said they spent more time repairing the normal wear and tear on carpeting and plumbing, instead of on
University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981 Page 19
specific problems involving carelessness and vandalism.
Managers said bad weather affected the deterioration of carpeting because tenants track in mud and snow, especially in hallways and lobbies.
"Your carpeting is the first thing to go, Stroup said. "It's a constant problem."
Weather also affects the deterioration of the landscaping around an apartment complex.
"Our units have disposals and students have a tendency to put things in them that are too large."
Juanita Hubbard, manager of The Malls Old English Village apartments, said plumbing was the main problem, because the apartments aggravated plumbing problems for her.
Above all, preventive maintenance was the key to keeping an apartment complex functional and nice-looking, the managers said.
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m- th
he
on
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8
get
16
to
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gul out
at to
use ter
lər
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led
art
for
the
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their own bills, so that they can pay taxes.
governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,065 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
The full committee will finish hearing subcommittee reports today and will take final action on the individual and system-wide budgets.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth added drew the only debate yesterday.
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topek, said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate the best interest of the University and the state.
"Maybe those are euphemisms for what we saw there. He said, referring to the language in support
"That's correct," Hein answered.
Steinger told the committee that this was an example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steineger, D-Kansas City, interrupted Hein and asked, "But we're not going to do anything about it?"
Hayden shared Steiniger's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
He said the deep cuts were being made in Carlin's proposed budget to avoid a tax increase near the end of the year.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to do education) playing fields (at Wichita State)."
*Taking from one area and putting it in another data mine the benefit for the tax*
Hayden said it was not fair to ask some to sacrifice while others were told it was all right to go ahead.
ailed, prof says
Honduras
ALVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
i cave
naill
alll
to ten
up. lly
ally
the and of
was the
the
ical nailem theall
ally to tenen
uply once
the and of
was thethe
But Stansifer said the reform did not result in reduced violence. "The right didn't like any form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough," he said. There were an estimated 13,000 people killed in El Salvador in 1980. Stansifer said that it was impossible to determine which side,左 or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of taking the people who are not really involved with the political strife. Stansifer said that he had been surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right. Stansifer arrived in El Salvador in August 1980, shortly after the leftists had called for a general strike against the government. He said the strike was a failure. The govern-
He said the strike was a failure. The govern-
see EL SALVADOR page 5
V
0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5 8.0 8.5 9.0
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
Randall enjoys two coaching positions
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Sports Writer
Ross Randall is a hard man to find. He's seldom in his office and is at home.
As the grass grows greener and greener, the more often Randall can be found on the golf course. Randall, for the first time, is coaching both the men's and women's KU golf teams.
IT'S A CHALLENGE that Randal, a California native, enthusiastically accepts. He took the position of director of golf at the San Diego Country Club and when he began coaching the men's golf team.
Randall's other duties include administrative work, running the junior golf programs and giving private lessons. Randall replaced Curtis Katz as basketball coach. Bahan is an assistant women's basketball coach.
Both teams have been practicing since the beginning of this semester, preparing for spring tournaments. When the cold weather prohibited their outdoor practice, Randall arranged for a
practice area inside one of the buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College. In return, he advised Haskell student. But with last week's lesson, he was able to be seen able to practice on the Alvamar course.
"Every day we get like this is a bonus," he said last week.
The two teams get along well and sometimes practice together.
practice together. "THERE IS NO competition." Rendell said.
The first men's tournament, the Gulf Coast International, will be March 16-20 on Padre Island, Texas. The women's first outing will be March 17 at Montana High School Invitational at Huntville, Texas, March 30-31.
The men are scheduled to golf in five tournaments this spring, the women in four. Both teams will finish their regular season with the Big Eight Championships at Alvamar. The number of tournaments can present time conflicts for Randall.
tending meets. Fischer is also an apprentice in the Pro Golf Association program.
That's where Tommy Fischer, a graduate student from Overland Park, comes in. Fischer is the son of Tommy Fischer and Katherine.
Randall has no plans to expand the number of tours the two teams take next year.
"TRIPS ARE worthwhile, but there are two things that stop us from expanding. First, the amount of school the team members can miss, and second, we don't get out on weekends. Second, our budget is limited."
Randall said he thought that he and the KU athletic department were working together, and he added,
"They are doing all they can do to help us," he said.
The optimistic Randall is already looking ahead to recruiting for next year.
"The outlook for teams next year will depend on the recruiting season." be said.
**THAT SHOULDN'T be a problem, according to Marsh Burgess, a member of the women's team.**
"Our coach is a lot of help, a definite addition," she said. "He is enough to make any high school student feel confident."
Birdsong leads Kings past San Antonio, 111-97
By United Press International
Otis Birdsong scored a game-high 39 points last night, 20 in the second quarter, as the Kings won 8-7.
IT WAS the first victory for the Kings in 10 games at the Hemisfair. Coupled with Boston's 108-101 victory over Houston, it boosted the Kings to a sixth straight win. It was the Midwest Division with a record of 34-36.
Kings are still battling for a playoff berth, along with Celtics. The 33-34 before last night's game against Utah.
Besides breaking a winnless streak in San Jose, the Cardinals broke the Spurs' 17 score winning streak at home.
THE KINGS outscored the Spurs 27-14 in the second quarter and took a 56-40 lead at the half. Kansas City built a 28-point advantage early in the fourth quarter before the Spurs pulled to within eight points, 102-94, with 3:39 remaining in the game
Spurs back into contention. San Antonio outscored Kansas City 38-20 in the final quarter.
Besides Moore's 16 points, Brewer and Wiley each scored eight. Other San Antonio scorers in double figures were Rich Johnson with 12 points and Paul Silas with 11.
Jo
BRDSONG, THE fifth leading score in the NBA, has scored in double figures in every game except one this season and has scored more than 20 points in 46 games.
The Kings, who lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
40-39 Tuesday, made more than 60 percent
Swimmers want to swipe Big 8 title from Huskers
By JIM SMALL
Sports Writer
Heading into last year's Big Eight men's swimming championship, the Kansas men's swim team had beaten Nebraska twice by a score of 10-7. The team who ended up taking the conference crown.
Kansas coach B Spain said he hoped KU's 84-68 victory over Nebraska two weeks ago was not a bad omen as the Jayhawks compete at this year's Big Eight Championship in Norman, Okla. The meet starts today and runs through Saturday.
KANSAS WILL BE out for revenge against Nebraska. The Huskers snapped KU's two-year championship winning streak last year.
"We had beaten them twice in duals last year," Spahn said. "I think that our team entered the conference meet a little overconfident. The team failed to realize that we had been in a dual meet and beating them in a conference meet are two different things."
"We know better now," he said. "Our attitude heading into conference is much superior to what it was last year."
But the Jayhawks have learned from their mistakes, Spahn said.
THE PROPER ATTITUDE and two Big Eight Championships might help the Jayhawks upset Nebraska, which is favored in the next.
400 individual medleys and Wright is the defending champion in the 100 and 200 backstrokes.
"Steve and Gardner know what it takes to be a leader," he said. " Their leadership is important to our team."
Graves and Wright won't be alone in their efforts to return the conference championship to KU.
SOPHOMORE BOB Vince, who recorded the top conference time in the 500 freestyle, broke the school record in the 1,000 freestyle earlier this year.
Kansas also will seek support from freshman Ken Grey in the 400 individual medley, soprano Chuck Neumann in the 200 butterfly and junior Jim Rowland in the 200 butterfly.
Spahn said the key to the meet would be the diving events.
"Nebraka is, by far, the strongest diving team in the conference," he said. "If we can stay with them in the diving while out swimming them, we can beat them."
ALTHOUGH MOST Big Eight coaches have picked Nebraska to repeat as conference champion, Kansas holds several of the best regular-season times in the conference.
Jayhawk swimmers now hold top conference marks in the 200 individual medley, the 200 breaststroke and the 500 freestyle events.
"The team has made great progress this week."
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Page 20 University Daily Kansan, March 5, 1981
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EXHIBITION OF PICTURES
Of The Second Anniversary Of
THE ISLAMIC REVOLUTION OF IRAN
DATE - March 4, Thru 6 R.F.
PLACE - Perlata Room - UNI
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The University Daily
KANSAN
Friday, March 6, 1981
Vol. 91. No. 110 USPS 650-640
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
100
Stan Vandiveri reaches for another tool as he transfers a television cable from an old pole to the new one he has climbed. Vandiveri, a lineman for Sunflower Cablevision, climbs up to 90 poles a day as the team works on replacing broken cables and fixing other issues.
Senate fund misuse, criteria discussed at budget hearings
Staff Reporter
By KAREN SCHLUETER
Three committee head requests from 16 groups and made some preliminary budget cuts.
Questions about possible misuse of funds by the Iranian Student Association surfaced last night as Student Senate budget hearings continued.
The Iranian Student Association presented its respect for $75 to the Culture Committee. Last year,
Shahrok Azedi, association president, answered several questions following his budget presentation concerning the group's use of acronyms and the Senate's funding philosophy and regulations.
Loren Busby, Finance and Auditing Committee chairman, told Azeidi that he had heard the group was not open to all students.
AZEDI SAID THAT the 17-year-old organization was open to all Iranian students and later said that all KU students were eligible to join.
"Some students try to say we are communist and socialist," he said. "The important thing to remember is that the group doesn't have any tendency towards anything political."
But azen later told the committee that any Iranian cultural organization could not avoid touching on political issues because politics were an inherent part of Iranian culture.
"The majority of the Iranian people are involved in politics," he said. "Any association that wanted to be truly representative must touch on political issues."
Busby also asked Azied whether the group's New HEARINGS page 5
Debate on severance tax continues
Rv BRAD STERTZ
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-A a morning of meetings and an evening of compromise failed to get the proposed mineral severance tax off the House floor yesterday.
What has certainly been the most lengthy debate on any issue during this legislative session will continue today, despite many changes in the bill he would be on in his way to the Senate by now.
The House was able to decide yesterday on an amendment to the tax, which legislators say will give the bill an extremely good chance to pass today.
But now that those changes plus modifications for smaller producers have been added, final approval appears more likely than it did two days ago.
Although, the amendment to lower the percentage of the well-head mineral production tax from 8 percent to 5 percent for oil and gas, and 2 percent for coal, salt and cement narrowly passed. 64-61.
That was before Gov. John Carlin expressed his willingness to go along with a compromise
Opponents to the tax say that it would unfairly discriminate against the smaller mineral producer. The opposition, centering around Western Kansas Republicans, also has said that the tax would reduce gasoline sales to the gasoline pump. Supporters claim that the tax would lower property and sales taxes.
CARLIN PROPOSED the tax at the beginning of the session as a way to raise funds for secondary education and a way to increase highway renewal funds.
"Nothing is guaranteed at this point," State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said yesterday. "Right now, though, I would give the tax a high chance for passage."
amendment. Before Carlin made his statement, the bill appeared to be doomed.
Another Lawrence representative, Democrat Jessie Brannon, said that she and other long-time supporters of the tax were very pleased with the compromise and the bill's chances.
PLEASANT
Branson said that if the amended bill was
See SEVERANCE NOTE 4.
Weather
It will be mostly sunny today with a high near 45, according to the KU Weather Service. The winds will be from the east at 10-12 mph.
Tonight's low will approach 27 under cloudy skies, with winds ranging from 10-28 mph.
Tomorrow's outlook calls for cloudy skies with a chance of snow. The high will be in the mid 30s.
Major issues facing the University of Kansas will be addressed at a University-wide convocation after spring break, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Staff Reporter
Bv KATHRYN KASE
Designated as the convocation's feature speaker, Shankel declined to say what issues would be addressed. He said that the convocation was suggested yesterday by KU's chapter of the American Association of University Professors executive board.
"The members of the AAPU executive board felt there were some major issues the University needed to address," he said. "They asked if I should convene an all-University meeting and I agreed."
The AAUP was not the first group to express
But he denied that the convocation would be held as an emergency measure.
concern about the issues facing KU. Shankel said various administrators talked to him as well.
"There are just a number of major issues that they wanted to address," he said.
However, the convocation was the AAUP's idea. Shankel said.
The approach Shankel had planned was to write the University, similar to the letter in the Krugler.
t letter discussed academic standards for athletes. These standards have been in question since the Kansas City Times published an article on the Kansas City academic standards were lowered for athletes.
Averse public reaction to the letter did not affect his decision to assemble the convocation,
issues
He said it was too early to tell about reaction to the letter.
Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, lauded Ehvelyn's endorsement of the convocation.
Swartz would not reveal what the AAUP and Shankel thought were the major issues.
"We felt that this was the time to bring some of these issues out into the open," he said.
these issues out into the open," she said. Swartz would not reveal what the AAUP and
"I think I have to respect his confidence on that," she said.
Funds sought for Haworth addition
The place is also uncertain.
No specific date for the convocation has been set, Shankel said, but it will occur after spring break, which ends March 22. He said the date would be announced next week.
"It depends on whether I think there might be a field where it could be possible that Allen Field House can be filled out," thought.
Neither Shankel nor Swartz could remember the last time such a convocation was held.
BvGENE GEORGE
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-KU officials had written off the Haworth Hall addition as a lost cause in the 1982 budget—that is until Senate President Ross Dowen took an interest.
Doyen, who says that he has been looking for money for the project this past week, suggested at yesterday's Senate Ways and Means Committee meeting that the public television fund to the Haworth project.
Doyen's unexpected suggestion, made when the committee considered individual budget requests from the seven Board of Regents in response, was supported by his fellow committee members.
THE KU BUGETT subcommittee agreed with Gov. John Carlin's recommendation not to fund the Haworth addition next year, but added in its report that four were found, construction should be financed.
Doyen's proposal would take the $1.8 million that the Legislature cut from the Public Television Board and apply it toward the Haworth project.
If the proposal gets out of the Senate, it may not survive hearing in the House Ways and Measures.
The Haworth addition, expected to cost a total of $12 million, was started last year when the Legislature allocated about $500,000 for an architect's study. The University of Kansas asked the governor this year for $3.6 million to start construction next year.
House committee chairman Mike Hayden, M.P., advises the House rejection), but it does not sound good.
Richard Von Ende, KU executive secretary, said that he had not talked with Doyen, R-Corcanda, about his idea, and could not comment until he studied the subcommittee report.
THE ADDITION would allow the biology of the worm out of the clamped condition at Snow Hall.
The KU subcommittee's other recommendations followed the trend set last month when the full committee cut $3 million from the Regents system-wide budget.
The full committee is trying to cut $25 million from Carlo's promised $28 billion budget.
The subcommittee's recommendations were to delete:
$478.116 from the governor's faculty pay raise recommendation. That cuts the raye from 8
+$62,959 from the governor's operating budget recommendation. This cut increases the 6%
- The governor's recommendation of $338,569 to cover increases in enrollment this year.
*$2,363,109* from the governor's recommendation to cover projected enrollment next week.
The committee approved a 15 percent average tuition increase last month, and Chairman Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said KU should generate about 2.4 million from the increase next year.
The tuition increase was tied to a proviso that the universities not ask for additional money to cover enrollment increases unless the increase was greater than 1.5 percent for the larger universities and 1 percent for the smaller universities.
KU students, who now pay about 20 percent of the total cost of their education, would pay 23 percent next semester, according to the committee's researchers.
THE SUBCOMMITTEE also recommended that the almost $1 million requested to build a utility tunnel at Allen Field House be spread over the next two fiscal years, instead of just next year, and recommended allocating £70,000 for the re-roofing project at Murphy Hall.
In addition, the subcommittee asked the
governor to offer an amendment to his recommendations to put back the $188,005 to cover the University's expected deficit in its contributions to the employee retirement fund.
Both houses are facing a March 13 deadline to take action on their own bills, so that they can pay.
The KU subcommittee's stand on the Haworth addition drew the only debate yesterday.
Subcommittee chairman Ron Hein, R-Topke, said that Snow Hall was inadequate, unsuitable and overcrowded and that steps to alleviate the burden on the best interest of the University and the state.
"Maybe they are euphemisms for what we
are there. Hein said, referring to the language in
the report."
COMMITTEE MEMBER Jack Steininger, D- Kansas City, interrupted Heil and asked, "But what was he doing?"
"That's correct." Hein answered.
Steineger told the committee that this was an example of why the public criticized lawmakers.
"We in government can't figure out how to work things around," he said. "It would be more important to fix up conditions (at KU) than to put it into education) playing fields (at Wichita State)."
Hayden shared Steingener's feelings about the Legislature, but for a different reason.
He said the deep cuts were being made in Carlson's proposed budget to avoid a tax increase that
Hayden said it was not fair to ask some to
walk while others were told it was all right
go ahead.
Staff Reporter
*Taking from one area and putting it in another, do not mitigate the need for a tax break.
By KIRK TINDALL
El Salvador revolution has failed,prof says
The U.S. policy in El Salvador may be creating a Marxist revolution rather than preventing one, the latter of which is already occurring.
Charles Stansifer, professor of history, who visited El Salvador in August 1800, said that the emperor was a friend and a benefactor.
But the State Department announced on Monday that the United States was sending an
See related story page 11
KEY
National Capital
International Boundary
Guatemala
Honduras
EL SALVADOR
SAN SALVADOR
United States
Gulf Of Mexico
Mexico
Cuba
Jamaica
Haiti
North Atlantic Ocean
Bahamas
North Pacific Ocean
EL SALVADOR
North Pacific Ocean
South America
additional 20 military advisers to El Salvador and increasing military aid to that country by $25 million. The additional 20 advisers will bring the total U.S. military presence in El Salvador to 56.
"To create a revolution you need three elements that are missing in El Salvador." Stansifer, whose area of study is Central America, said. "There has to be a consensus of ideology, a strong revolutionary figure to follow and enemy for the people to unite against."
Stansifer said that the revolution in El Salvador didn't have a unified ideology or a leader capable of inspiring the people. The revolution also lacked a readily identifiable oppressor for the revolutionaries to oppose, he said.
THE UNITED STATES, however, could provide a part of the revolutionary equation. Stamper said that the presence of U.S. advisers represented as imperialism by the revolutionaries.
U. S. imperialism has never been as large an American傲or as it has been in other Latin American countries.
"The U.S. has never had troops in El Salvador, as they did in Nicaragua, and the big American corporations like United Fruit haven't been there either." he said.
Salvadorans have already been to react to American policy in their country. Right-wing gunman rucked the U.S. Embassy on Wednesday with automatic rifle fire. On Nov. 20 leftist guerrilla members—masks-made rocket grenades at the building. There were no injuries in either incident.
Marxist revolution is not new to El Salvador. In 1832, 30,000 people were killed when government troops put down a peasant uprising supported by the military. The military has ruled the country since then.
But according to Foreign Affairs, a political science journal, the military juntas that have controlled El Salvador have done so with a small number of drivers who control most of the country's wealth.
IT HAS BEEN ESTIMATED that this group, known as the 14 families, which actually amounts to several thousand people, once received 50 percent of the national income. The farmland and not controlled the banking system along with most of the nation's industry.
The wealth and power of this oligarchy was reduced in 1979 when the banking system and the insurance industry were nationalized and the largest estates were broken up.
"The right didn't like an form of reform and the left said that it hadn't been enough." he said.
There were an estimated 13,000 people killed... El Salvador in 1980. Stanser said that it was impossible to determine which side, left or right, was doing most of the killing.
But both sides have accused each other of being involved in the political strife.
Stansifer said that he had been surprised to find that most of the people he talked with in El Salvador were more upset with the leftist terrorists than with those of the right.
Stanifer arrived in El Salvador in August 1983 and had called for a general strike against the government.
she said the strike was a failure. The govern-
see NL SALVATOR page 5
See EL SALVADOR page 5
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, March 6, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
El Salvador names election council
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — The U.S.-backed junta yesterday named an election council which would be charged with setting up elections for a national assembly and would have the power to write a new constitution for the war-ravaged country.
President Jose Napoleon Duarte, leader of the Salvadoran Christian Democratic party, said the new commission offered the opportunity for 50 years of accumulated political frustration of the people to end in totally free elections.
The national assembly probably will be elected next March and is expected to have 56 members. Its main goal will be to set up a presidential
Duarte, whose own 1972 presidential victory was stolen by the military, also said that the extreme left and the extreme right without a doubt would oppose the process, but no one could impede the people in the exercise of their own right.
In another development, the church-run legal aid society said political violence lashed El Salvador claimed 3,000 lives in the first two months of
LOS ANGELES - A pistol-wielding would-be hijacker seized a jetstream from an International Airport yesterday and held six people for several hours.
Jet seized; two women held hostage
FBI agents secretly boarded the plane and struck up "face-to-face" negotiations with the gunman. He released four of the hostages unharmed a
FBI spokesman John Hoas said negotiators had not given the gunman anything in exchange for the release of the fox, and said the two who stayed inside were either dead or dead.
He said the man did not indicate why he wanted the money or whether he wanted to go some place with it.
Atlanta gets aid to fight side effects
ATLANTA—The federal government gave Atlanta nearly $1 million yesterday to combat the social repercussions of the city's child slayings, but made no commitment on the city's plea for money to help fund the investigation.
A White House aide said the administration still was studying Atlanta mayor Maynard Jackson's request for $1.5 million to help pay overtime and other expenses for the special police task force investigating the killing of 19 black youngsters and disgracement of two others.
President Reagan announced the grants in Washington, saying the city would get $650,000 from the Justice Department's Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention and $230,000 from other government agencies in an effort to end the "nightmare."
Reagan called the unsolved crimes "one of the most tragic problems facing our nation."
In Atlanta, police located 18-year-old Orlando Carter Robinson, one of the two youngsters reported missing this week. They said Robinson was unharmed. The other, Joseph Bell, 15, remained unaccounted for, but police said that they considered him a runaway.
Release of computer tapes blocked
WASHINGTON—Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens in an unusual review said that yesterday temporarily blocked the release of a report that the government had submitted to the judge.
Stevens stepped into the dispute at the government's request after Justice William Rehquebam requested for turning over the Internal Revenue Bureau, Believeen, Wash., back.
The full high-court is scheduled to consider the issue at its regular Friday closed-door conference and is expected to announce by Monday whether it
The tapes were compiled from some 50,000 random audits of income tax returns between 1972 and 1976. The IRS then drew up a profile of the types of entries on fax forms that indicated taxpayers had erased or cheated on their returns.
Philip and Susan Long, the couple seeking the tapes say the information is outdated and there is no way an outsider can know which items the IRS selected for its audit formula. But the government contends that studying the tapes could allow tax cheaters to figure out how to avoid audits.
Chairman cuts Reagan's proposal
WASHINGTON—The chairman of the House Budget Committee said yesterday that President Reagan's budget proposal was developed in such haste that it overlooked "waste, fraud and abuse" and he pledged to pursue solutions.
Rep. James Jones, D-Okla., said the failure to attack government mismanagement was a "major deficiency" in the Reagan budget-cutting plan and could make some of the President's proposals cost more than they saved.
Mindful of Reagan's campaign boast that he could cut two percent from the federal budget just by eliminating the three evils, Jones' committee heard testimony from five agency inspectors on measures—so far not mentioned by the president—that Jones said could save billions of dollars.
Jones said later that his attack on mismanagement would accompany the program cuts rather than predece them.
OMB Amtrak proposals rejected
WASHINGTON-Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis yesterday assured a congressional panel that he would not follow budget office rules on the expansion of the railway.
"It is unfair to indicate this budget has been jammed down our throats by OBB (Office of Management and Budget)," Lewis told the House Transplant
"We don't plan to run OMB's program on how to run Amtrak," he said, emphasizing that operational changes would continue to come under consideration. The Federal Railroad Administration
The OMB has called for Amtrak fares to cover 80 percent of the costs by January 1, when they will be available. The OMB said its department was only considering fare increases of 13 to 20 percent.
WASHINGTON—An irate Congressman, Democrat William Hughes of New Jersey, took the House floor yesterday to defend his colleagues as hardworking and moral, and to declare that Rita Jenrette's Washington "is not the Washington I know."
Congressman disputes Rita's views
Mrs. Jennette is divoring former Rep. John Jennette, the South Carolina Governor, and designated his congressional seat after being convicted in the Abacus bribery case.
She has received considerable publicity over her semi-ude pictures in Playboy magazine and her tell-all stories of sex and high life in the nation's press.
"We have heard a lot more of Rita Jennette lately, both on the talk show circuit and in the pages of Playboy magazine." Hughes said. "She has become an expert or at least she claims to be—on the Congress, its members and our morality.
"Whatever our shortcomings might be, I know the overwhelming majority of our colleagues to be decent, God-fearing, sincere and hard-working individuals who have given every effort toward doing what they believe is right."
It was incorrectly reported yesterday that Jayhawk West Apartments had dishwashers and paid all utilities.
Correction
The complex pays no utilities except for water in gas-heated one-bedroom apartments. The Kansas regrets the error.
Cronkite bids farewell
By United Press International
The rival networks wished him godsped. But even they were happy in a sad way. When the king departs, it is a time for honor.
NEW YORK—Uncle Walter leaves the living room tonight.
Eighteen million nieces and nephews of Walter Cronek, the kinfok who are his nightly television audience, were uneasy at the prospect of not being able to see the world clearly and with warmth for half an hour at dinner time.
But that's the way it is. The man who came to dinner on April 16, 1962, as anarchist and former foray near Istanbul, brought away a CBCE Evening News with Walter Crorken.
Tonight, Reynolds will do a salute to Cronkite.
"It's great to be whatever I've managed by luck to be," he says, "but it's certainly time to have the freedom to not be here every day."
"Thank you, Walter," says archival ABC News in full-page advertisements carried in newspapers of major U.S. cities.
The ad says ABC thanks him for his "extraordinary contributions to our profession" and adds that "throughout his distinguished career, Walter helped establish American's trust in television as a reliable, accurate news medium."
ABC SCHEDULED its Washington anchorman Frank Reynolds to appear with Eric Severeid, a long-time coach, and co-curator to Walter during an overall segment about the Cronkite career on today's "Good Morning America."
CBS News was making live feeds of the final minutes of Cronkite's goodbye program tonight available to radio and television stations throughout the country. The farewell news broadcast was to be regular news—as managing editor, Cronkite is a news-only man to the last.
John Chancellor of archival NBC planned to speak a farewell to Walter on his anchorspot during tonight's news.
Walter, nobody has ever called him Walt, isn't telling anybody how he plans to sign off the final evening stint. He is expected to say something ex-actually the broadest there will be a closed party for the staff of the evening news.
THE CRUSH of press requests to attend the final program has been such that the set will be closed off to all visitors, and the broadcast center also will be closed.
Cronite is fond of the man who will succeed him starting Monday, Dan Rather. His thought for Rather might be the same that he uttered when the first moon rocket lifted off: "Aw, go baby, go!"
Walter leaves this month "on a working vacation" to Russia, where he will make one part of a five-part CBS series on U.S. defense. He plans to continue making specials and documentaries for CBS.
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University Daily Kansan, March 6, 1981
Page 3
Wichita State fouls out on calls
By United Press International
WICHTA—Athletes at Wichita State University, already the subject of an NCAA investigation, allegedly charged more than $2,000 in long-distance telephone calls to the school's athletic association in recent years.
The Wichita Eagle-Beacon reported yesterday that among the phone calls, more than $1,700 in calls were billed to basketball office telephones in fiscal 1980 during an apparent breakdown in internal controls.
Wichita State Athletic Director Ted Bredehoff said one employee of the school's athletic association had been accused of using with lax controls of unauthorized biking.
Cliff Levinson, a sophomore starter on the Shocker basketball team, said he had repaid about $1,000 in phone calls
but that university officials had been unable to find $400 of that amount.
Levington said he made 200 calls as a freshman to his friends and mother in California, and agreed to repay the money when informed of school policy.
THE ATHELITIC association has not been reimbursed for $30 in calls by a former basketball star, Lynbert player, Billy Wilson over $255.
Head coaches are required to notify the athletic association of unauthorized calls, but Bredehoft said unauthorized calls often were not checked for three months because of delays in receiving phone bills.
National Collegiate Athletic Association rules forbid athletics to bill calls to a school without an athletic association's knowledge or approval. Wichita State officials said the athletic association never approved the calls
Hashinger band wins contest
and billed the athletes as soon as calls were found.
The NCAA last month began a preliminary inquiry into allegations that Wichita State basketball players got gifts from Shocker coaches and fans.
Waiting for the Coup, a band made up of residents of Hashinger Hall, won the competition. It has also won "Battle of the Bands" contexts last night at the Lawrence Opera House.
Original Singer, a Kansas City band,
finished in second place with two votes.
Jimmy Lee and Rock-n-Roll Souglers,
the Gear and Lawrence's Three Kitchen
Chairs and Table, which included
members of local bands the Clean and
Get Smart, each received one vote.
Wichita State was the hardest hit last month in a series of Kansas City Times articles on alleged athletic violations at Wichita State University and the University of Kansas.
THE TIMES REPORTED that coaches financed everything from clothes to one player's former girlfriend's abortion. This week's cover story asks us what that the "wheatshoppers lead the nation in sham as well as slam."
The five-piece band combined originals with covers of songs by the Rumones, Devo and the Kinks and was one of the top 10 bands, each playing a half-hour long set.
The six bands were chosen to participate by KJKH staff members from audition tapes submitted by 11 bands. They also participated in five plays played publicly in Lawrence before.
Waiting for the Coup received three votes from the eight-judge panel. The
Despite the charges in those articles and the ongoing NCAA inquiry, the Wichita State basketball team has continued to win, often being ranked in the nation's top 20. The team won theiley championship with a 12-15 record.
This weekend the team plays for an NCAA playoff berth in the conference's post-season tournament.
The Times' charges did not include any reports of telephone abuse. But now all three major universities in Kansas have been accused of such abuse.
The Times said that K-State track athletes misused an athletic department telephone credit card. The Kansan said that KU basketball players misused an assistant coach's telephone credit card.
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Diet is important for good health
You are what you eat, the saying goes and according to the dietician at Watkins Memorial Hospital. KU students should eat more wisely.
By ALVIN A. REID Staff Reporter
The dietician, Mang Pumgran,
said that being overweight was a
health hazard often overlooked on
college campuses.
overweight are No. 1 problems on college campuses, but they don't receive enough concern because the complications that go with them haven't arisen yet." Mangrum said. "Being overweight can cause health problems and need to back problems, heart attacks or stroke."
Mangrum, who was a staff dietician at the National Institute of
Health in Bethesda, Maryland,
before coming to KU last month,
said she had noticed an upswain
in concern about weight problems.
"Weight, nutrition and health are becoming popular subjects with people today," she said. "This attitude is good because it signals that more people are concerned about their weight."
Mangrum said it was essential for a student to see a doctor before seeking dietary help.
"While losing weight should not be considered dangerous, all students interested in dieting should have a doctor's permission," she said. "Once they receive a clean bill of credit, they can proceed with the program."
Mangrum said she sometimes helped students needing special diets, such as diabetics, but she
usually helped students determine daily caloric requirements.
She said a weight-loss diet could be incorporated into a residence hall menu for students who lived on campus.
Mangrum said more females sought dietary help than males, but only a few more.
"More women are participating in physical activities such as aerobics, and more men are concerned about their waistlines."
"Women, as a general rule, are more concerned about weight reduction than men and men generally get more exercise, but this situation is changing quickly;" she said.
All dietary services are covered by the student health fee. The dietary offices are located on the campus of Watkins Memorial Hospital.
Shuttle bus breakdown irks students
Jayhawk West Apartment residents learned this week that the four-mile trip to campus could be expensive without a service provided by the apartments.
The bus broke down Monday, leaving residents without transportation to school. The bus is expected to be fixed by next week.
"They haven't rented another bus and don't intend to," Bob Scott,
"We rented here because of the shuttle bus to campus, but it's terrible to advertise that if it's not true."
Lawrence senior, said. "People have been taking taxis to campus at $4 to $5 a shot. My wife and I have had to pay $10 to 6 a day for parking meters."
Apartment manager Rita Knollman said that the bus needed a new engine and probably would not be fixed until next week. Repairs will cost more than $1,000.
"I can understand they're having problems getting back and forth to school, but we're doing everything humanly possible," she said. "We've spent a lot of time and a lot of money on that bus."
In the meantime, residents will have to continue to provide their own transportation.
"It is kind of annoying that it's broken," Jim Vicew, Westchester, Ill., junior, said. "But I just take my own car to school."
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Pasima 2:1 and Acts 4:25
"WHY DO THE HEATHER RAGE" Why? what is the cause? It must be to rid of the Government of God, His King, His Moral Law, His Ten Commandments: "To break the bands, cast away the coats" of restraint the Almighy has thrown on our paths to hold us back from damming ourselves, children and posturity in time and eternity!
The writer has been asked more than once the purpose of these articles. Thought it had been made plain, as a personal Christian witness. The above Scriptures give the basis and inspiration for these articles.
WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE RAGE OF THOSE WHO DO NOT BELIEVE IN THE GOD OF THE BIBLE? "HE THAT SITTETH IN THE HEAVENS SHALL LAUGH. THE LORD SHALL HAVE THEM IN DERSION; WHEN SHALL HE SPEAK UNTO THEM IN HIS WRATH; AND WHEN THEM IN THE SORE DISCREPLE." *Psalm 2:4.5*
Today we are asking: Why the rise in Communism? Why the race situation? Why the labor troubles? Why the youth rebellion? Why the horrible breakdown in the family and the economy? Why the antagonism in anarchy just about all over the world? All the answers are in the above Scriptures and they come from God Almighty. You may not find them and the way out on account of unbelief.
A heathen is one who does not believe in the God of the Bible, and so he rages against Him. His Anointed, His Moral Law and Ten Commandments, with the result of his anger leading to a great scorpion that suffresse! His Word reveals that when God's House is exalted above all else in the earth and the nations flow up to it to be taught God's ways and walk in His paths. He will give peace on the earth, and man will live happily and peacefully. A heathen is individual, or nation, by repentance and submission to Christ, receiving Him as our sacrifice and atonement for sin, and being given a new heart where we are written in Christ's name.
But we are 'sorter' refined heathen, devoted friends of science and its study, but not capable or deriving from the study of Scripture nourishment for heart and mind. "It is with the heart, not the heart, that man doth his highest God," he writes. "Christianity offering man a saviour that saves him" "in his sin" rather than "from his sin." He is not the Christ of the Scriptures; but of man, a non-virgin non-miracle worker, non-resurrested, non-God: IN FACT it IS SATAN IMMELF TRANSFORMEIED INTO AN ALIES OF LIGHT" titulam it if choose, and in and in the angles of etern!
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 8, 1981
That's the way it is
One of the most unpopular jobs in the world has got to be that of the bearer of bad news. In ancient times, if the news the messenger brought was bad, the bearer often lost his head.
But there's one bearer of bad news, and good news, too, who brings America the news tonight for the last time. Walter Cronkite—CBS news anchorman, recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom and possibly the most recognized man in the country—and ends his 19-year reign on the evening news tonight. That's 19 years of bringing America the news "the way it is."
Cronkite's popularity can probably be traced to the element of trust. Quite simply, for most Americans, if Walter Cronkite says it's so, it's so. And in case you have any uncertainty about it, he ends each newscast by reaffirming the way it is.
Not many prominent public figures are trusted these days, but Walter Cronkite is. It's the sort of trust you have with your own family—in this case, the TV family—and you just know your Uncle Walter wouldn't lie to you.
When he began as CBS anchorman in 1962, television network news was in its infancy, a bare experiment. Then as now, he stood out above the other news people. These days, TV anchormen are slick, glossy plastic people turned out on assembly lines and trained to deliver the most superficial news possible, but that's not the way Walter Cronek did it.
Cronkite is different because his personality manages to come through. When covering moon shots, he was just like a little kid on Christmas morning; you'd almost be ready to believe that it was his exuberance, and not a Saturn 5 rocket, that made each mission successful. And his leveheadedness was like the Rock of Gibraltar amid the mayhem of a political convention. Chicago '68 was bedlam, but as long as Walter Cronkite was there reporting it, you knew things couldn't stay bad forever.
And no matter how famous he became, he was still basically a Missouri boy at heart. He may have brought American its news from New York or Cairo or Vietnam, but he was still one of us.
For almost two decades, he's presented the news for CBS without the sensationalism of ABC or the gray monotony of NBC. And unlike his cinematic counterpart Howard Beale, he didn't crack. He didn't a bause the power he held.
Somehow, America must now manage without his trusted presence at the TV helm. His successor, ace reporter Dan Rather, will probably do an admirable job, but of course it won't be a Cronkite job. Cronkite will still be around to do occasional documentaries, but it won't be the same. A 19-year chapter of American life closes tonight. Sad as it may be, that's the way it is.
Letters to the Editor
Green ribbons on campus symbolize Atlanta's tragedy
To the editor:
I know for most Americans there was a heavy sigh of relief when the hostages returned from Iran. We watched on TV as the nation prayed for them, cried for them, and in a fruitless rescue attempt, several Americans died for them. We also watched and saw symbolic yellow ribbons being worn and displayed in a dramatic gesture to say that we were concerned for the quick return and well beine of our fellow Americans.
Today we have a similar "crisis" that can show our concern and empathy for—the
people affected.
"America hosts hostage," the subtitle of the former late-night news program, could now be changed to "Atlanta held hostage while America looks on." Children in Atlanta are often by themselves, to go outside and play, and many of them are even afraid to go to school.
They are afraid of a killer (or group of killers) who has thus far left a grafty trail of 19 murdered black children. They have been shot, stabbed, asphyxied, strangled, beaten, gunned, and killed; they badly decomposed and mutilated that the cause of death was hard to determine.
The parents and children in Atlanta feel helpless as well as terrified. Black Mayor Maynard Jackson has established a $100,000 reward fund; the Georgia Bureau of Injury Prevention has provided hundreds of volunteers are patrolling the streets and neighborhood for missing youth.
We can also show support by wearing our ribbons again. This time we will wear green ribbons as a symbol to our brothers and sisters in Atlanta, whom America cares for, prays for and is just as concerned about as it was about the hostage crisis.
There is a feeling in Atlanta and all over American that blacks as well as whites have a general indifference to the civil rights gains made in the '60s. This feeling is perpetuated by the seeming lack of concern about these vicious murders. Is this true? Are we content with the way things are now? Don't we even know where we stand? Do we senselessly and brutally kill? Let's show we care—make a donation and let's te a green ribbon 'round that old oak tree.
Dereck J. Rovaris
Topeka Junior
Architectural atrocity
I feel that I cannot let pass without comment the recent publicity about the proposed museum project. Acceptance of this design is to simultaneously reject both contemporary architecture and
the best of our historical past in architecture.
In these instances in which we have control over the important decisions being made, we can choose the best building for our choice. The proposed building will not bring distinction to the University. Charles Kahn
To build a building such as this in the last quarter of the 20th century under the aegis of the University is to make a finite statement of a lack of concern about the aesthetic quality of our physical environment, which will not be lost on the students who have come here to study architecture as an art and as a profession.
To the editor:
Professor of architecture
One may certainly feel that the modern movement is dead and choose to substitute in its stead one of the more historical styles, or take a less radical approach from that seems to be so seductive in its attraction to students and professionals alike. It is inexcusable to accept a building that is neither good contemporary design nor a well-proportioned building of a gast period.
Subsidies hypocritical
To the editor:
In regard to the Kansan editorial of Feb. 27, 1981, concerning the self-sufficiency of the United States Postal Service and the proposed postal rate increases:
Perhaps the reason the proposed postal increases are so distasteful to many people is that postal rates have been held at an art rate for years, and it has not subsided. Just imagine what it would cost to have someone pick a letter up at your front door, sort it out from thousands of others, transport it across the country, re-sort it and then deliver it to your friend's house in another city or town. Or about 20 cents seems very reasonable for such a service, if not downright insensitive.
One must remember that each taxpayer must pay for government spending, either through taxes or deficit-spawned inflation. But on top of this, subsidizing the postal service actually would be unjust. There is no reason for a person who sends five letters a month to subsidize another person who sends 2,000 letters a month.
This is exactly what government subsidies do—benefit one at the expense of another. It actually would be forcing the first person to pay for the other's mail. It is only legalized theft. Surely the more equitable system would be for each to pay for what he uses.
In light of the unjustness of this (or any) government subsidy, it is highly hypocritical of the University Daily Kansan to condone it. The Kansan has always tried to further justice and human rights. Though it may be sweet in the short run for lower postage rates, clearly, government support of the United States Postal Service is floridly unjust.
Edwin Martin Cooley Wichita junior
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after publication, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
AND THIS DETAILED POLICY UPDATE OUGHT TO PUT TO REST ANY NOTION THAT WE ARE AMATEURS AT THIS SORT OF THING.
EL SALVADOR JUNTA (GOOD GUYS)
EL SALVADOR REBELS (COMMIES)
COMMIES GANG UP ON GOOD GUYS
US. CAVALRY RIDES IN
BAD GUYS ARE WIPED OUT
GOOD GUYS LIVE HAPPILY EVER AFTER
ADMINISTRATION
Such ethical decisions unfit for kids
Down through the history of public education in this country, public schools have been the battlegrounds of some of society's most fiery controversies. First it was the teaching of evolution. And then it was racial integration. And after that, voluntary waver.
The most recent controversy to hit public schools has been the one that now rages over the teaching of "values clarification." "Values clarification, or "situational ethics" as it is also called (another name is "secular humanism"), is a new approach to moral education by which students, guidance by their teachers, figure out for themselves what to do in difficult dilemmas that constantly confront them in life.
Concerned parents objecting to the approach have correctly argued, first, that high school is not the place to teach ethics as such, especially not a brand of ethics with which many may happen to disagree, and, second, that in any event high school students are too young and inexperienced to be able to sort out in any way their own complexities related to a given ethical question.
However, Laura Becker, principal of New York School, one of the three elementary schools
School administrators across the country have chosen a most novel way to meet these criticisms. They recently have expanded "values clarification" programs to include junior high and even grade school students. One such expansion has just occurred. OTIBES Lawrence, a teacher at McCarrick's Teaming for Responsibility, Identity and Belongingness in Education Systems.
These, of course, are just a few of the ethical issues that are constantly confronting the legal 10-year-old.
Needless to say, if local parents were concerned about the previous programs, they are up in arms over TRIBES. Housewives Barbara Hanna of Eudora and Janet Hoover of Perry have become so outraged that they assembled a 22-page critique of the program.
Under this program, which consists of more than 100 different "values clarification activities," the students, beginning in kindergarten, are asked, in front of their classmates, such questions as, "If you could smash one thing and only one thing, what would you smush?" Or, "For what do you think you would lay down your life?"
in Lawrence where the program is now being tested, is all goab about TRIBES.
"I think it's wonderful because kids are developing listening skills and mutual respect for each other, and they're stopping to think about it," she said. "They really act." She said in a recent newspaper interview.
Let's see. Kids are "developing listening skills." Could Principal Becker be saying that
ERIC
BRENDE
1950
kids find it easier to pay attention to a teacher who asks, "If the atomic bomb were going to fall in 10 minutes, what would you do in that last 10 seconds?" The answer to one who asks them to do their arithmetic.
Furthermore, the particular brand of ethics being used in this case is not necessarily a valid one. Situational ethics teach that there are no absolutes, that what's right or wrong depends on the situation and the person's frame of mind at the time. For example, an athlete of grade 12 may or more likely, "feels," it is best, situational ethics is a dubious approach to morality.
But even if the children were mature enough to handle TRIBES, with its inducible hypothetical life-and death situations, ethics as such should not be taught in public school in the first place. For good reason, that subject has traditionally been reserved for the family and the church.
But then, kids are also "developing mutual respect for each other" and "stopping to think about their behavior before they act." Who could argue with those results? The answer is anyone who realizes that it is important "for kids to be kids."
At worst, it is an open invitation to amorality. At the two distracted Kansas women were particularly incensed over one character "Indie" of the novel *Murder by Numbers* named Karen Horney, who, as a doctor, "Will
Simply put, grade school kids are at an age at which they just have to be told what's right and
teach you to be an ideal sexual partner, to enjoy
bring pleasure and fulfillment to your life.
Any criticism of TRIBES altogether mystifies its creator, Jeanne Gibbs, La Fayette, Calif. The program, she has said, is "used as a model in 15 states, with about 25,000 teachers using the program nationally." The 22-page attack ever on two outraged Kansans was "the first attack ever on TRIBES." On the critique specifically, Gibbs said, "I think it's very dangerous. . . In their protests, they are trying to impose a minority opinion on a majority."
But who is imposing a "minority opinion" on whom? Gibbs fails compliance of TRIBES by the majority with lack of awareness of TRIBES in society. Why does this happen, knows that TRIBES was all about it, seems doubtful that they would give their wholehearted assent to it. In truth, Gibbs can only speak confidently for an elite band of secular humanists, who constitute a definite minority of the population. It is their "opinion" that she is now imposing on the real, but unsuspecting,
Gibbs is guilty not only of intellectual dishonesty but also of the very offense that she accuses others of committing. That's hardly model behavior for the person who designed the ethics program now being taught in thousands of university's public elementary and junior high schools.
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Pot Shots
You see, my body's trying to kill me again. I think of my mind and my body as two separate, mutually hostile entities. Every semester at midterms, my mind tells my body, "You won't drink coffee or cigarettes and read text book gibberling until your eyes blur. And you'd better like it."
My body retaliates by slamming itself into
Midterms are here. It's time to self-destruct.
H
Grown-ups often can be found at the unit end of long, skincare cigarettes. They refuse to dance and are very shy.
They are boring and overbearing, and, fortunately, they are easily identified.
All grown-ups should be prohibited from attending parties.
Grown-ups come in all ages and In fact, I encountered my first at my party for my ninth
I'm not alone. When a friend walked out in front of a car, I mentioned rather loudly to her that she had nearly been turned into a pancake. "So?" she said.
It was, I think, the only appropriate response.
Jane Newbold
walls and trying to walk through doors without opening them first. This has its advantages. The day I got my body up before it wanted, to my foot althered angrily off the ladder to my bunk bed in the bathroom. I was walking when waking me up before my Vivarin for the first time in three years. I may make it a routine.
I can take a few bruises and permanent scars, but my body's beginning to get insistent about the battle. Lately it's been taking me out into the backyard, where I got a little bit of a rabbit in front of the oncoming headlights.
B
Vanessa Herron
THE PRESIDENT OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMIC GAMBELLE IN AMERICA
birthday.
At their own gatherings, grown-ups like their drinks dry, their wirt wry, and they make sure that all four food groups are represented on their refreshment tables.
"I think we are too old to eat cupcakes," she said. "Don't you?"
A surplus of grown-ups usually spells the end of any other party, so count them carefully. And watch out for the kind who turn into grown-ups only after they are safely inside.
In general, if the doorbell rings and a growup is standing on your porch, don't 'answer the door,
"The grown-up wouldn't contribute much to the
game," he said. "I probably wants to
drink up all your gin and tonic."
Saturday nights were fun. Used to be able to catch an early movie or some late dinner, maybe even do some studying before 10 p.m. Then there was time enough for 30 minutes of casual intoxication (nothing too intense) before the evening's main event. Sit back, feet up, tune in to NBC and prepare for laughter.
Ony Killan
Ony Hhun
Ah, sweet laughter that is no longer; they have given their show away! That's right. "Saturday Night Live" is dead. Say it: "Saturday Night Live" is dead. Sit up straight, take a deep breath and face that somber little Sonny staring back 'C'mon, big college kids don't cry, Rosanne Rosannadanna could've told you that much.
Not that the "new generation" hasn't be-
given a chance. ("God, I'm sure! Excuse me for
living!) But (sigh) it just isn't, well, the same,
exactly, without Gilda and Dan Lorraine and
laugh. Didn't they all go, anyway?
Remember, used to see what the smiling Sony ...
yeah, that's when Saturday nights were, well,
fun.
@
University Daily Kansan, March 6, 1981
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Hearings
From page 1
officer elections were open and well-publicized, a requirement under the funding philosophy.
Azeed said that the group called Iranian students and printed leaflets announcing the
Mahmoud Amani, engineering senator, and Krupa Billa, cultural committee co-chairman, said that the International Club gave ISA money for a project to install in the Kansas announcing the elections.
THEY SAID THAT the advertisement was printed in Persian, and was for a film about the
"I feel that was cheating, and a very dishonest one of dealing with the International Club," Audrey said.
Ron Heape, committee co-chairman, ruled
that any questions concerning misuse of funds
or that a director should be directed to the
Finance and Auditing Committee.
Before ISA presented its request, Larry Metzger, student rights committee chairman, presented a line of questioning to Busby and Billa, to determine criteria for funding groups.
"There are a couple of groups that have come light recent, that would warrant further inroads," she said.
Metzger would not name the groups. He also referred to a political group who applied for funding under the guise of being a cultural group.
*request from IVE Hive, requesting $3,911.85.
*KU International Club, requesting $3,911.85.
HEASE ruled Metzger's questions out of order.
THE CULTURAL COMMITTEE heard
- Nigerian Students Association, requesting $590.
- Polish Club. requesting $533.25.
- POISON Club, requesting $1,530.
* KI India Club, requesting $1,530.
- KU Formosan Club, requesting $842.50.
The Solar Energy International Club presented a request for $1,719.90.
The student services committee heard requests from four groups and made preliminary cuts in seven budget requests. Final cuts in budget requests are to be made next month.
El Salvador
The committee acknowledged the importance of the group, but members said they felt that the club was more academically oriented and did not fall within the realm of Student Services. The committee removed all funding for the group in its preliminary cut.
ment was originally considered to be leftist, he said, but the dynamics of the political situation had caused it to be viewed as moderate or even rightist, as the left became more radical.
From page 1
"Because of the general strike there were very few buses running," Stansifer said. "The bus
drivers had ignored the strike and the left was taking remisures."
HE SAID THAT the left was more visible because more people suffered when the buses did not run, or when the blew up a power station and there wasn't any light.
The failure of the general strike is another
Beta Theta Pi awarded Chancellor's Trophy
Beta Theta Pi fraternity has received the Chancellor's Trophy for fraternity scholarship for the 3.15 cumulative house grade point average it achieved during the fall semester.
This is the first time a trophy has been given.
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel donated the
trophy to the Interfraternity Council last semester to promote fraternity scholarship.
"The top five fraternities average about a 3.0
percentage of FCC secretary," he said.
"No house above a 2.2 FCC."
The Panhellenic Association does not keep track of sorbidity grade point averages, according to the NCEA.
indication that the revolution in El Salvador has already failed. Stansfer said.
Summiter said the threat of international communism had prompted the United States to send advisers and weapons to the government in El Salvador.
"There was no identifiable enemy in Vietnam until the U.S. went in and started murdering them."
He said he would like the United States to provide aid and government in El Salvador but not urinate on his wards.
The problems in El Salvador were internal, reaction conditions within the country, Santiago.
Stanley said the United States was making a gesture by sending advisers, instead of trying to win them.
'What can our advisers tell them that they don't already know?' Stanifier asked.
Latin American Solidarity asks a request for $1,645, a $1,550 increase from last year's allocation. Rhonda Neugebauer, budget coordinator for the group, said that news coverage of Latin America had grown enough during the past decade to cause a much greater interest among students.
The committee questioned the substantial increase in the budget, and voted to reduce the budget.
OTHER GROUPS PRESENTING reports to Student Services were :
- MECHA, an Hispanic organization,
requesting $1,355.
- Native American Alliance, requesting $15.
The committee decided to cut the Non-Traditional Student Organization's budget request, reducing it from $1,175 to $129.
The Academic Affairs Committee cut $595.77
from SCOFMERE's $595.99 request.
Academic affairs heard requests from six organizations.
Le Certe Francais requested $548, of which a committee voted to make a preliminary cut of $168.
The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence asked for $495, the Architecture-Urban Design Student Council, $671 and the Chancery Club, a pre-law group, $232.
The Photojournalism Students Association, which has not received Senate funding before, requested $722.40. The committee decided not to make any preliminary cuts on the group.
The committee also heard a $488 request from the Biology Club, and voted to make a decision.
The committee will complete deliberations on their final recommendations on the plan.
Also working on this story were reporters Rob Stroud and Mark Zieman.
The full Senate will vote on the recommendations March 24 and 25.
From page 1
Severance
passed it would generate $138 million in revenue, but it would also free up some funds for the University of Kigali.
However, Branson said the bill might not get final action today if opponents of the bill could provide it.
SHE SAID THAT because the amendment had passed, the opponents of the tax were trying to tack on changes that would further water down the tax.
"One representative offered an amendment that would have given the money right back to the oil companies." Branson said. "Hopefully that kind of amending will not go on too long tomorrow, but I have a strong feeling that it will."
Sobach agreed that the efforts of the opposition to the tax could seriously stall the bill today. He said that he had noticed an amendment similar in purpose to the one Branson had提议.
"Rep. Rolfs (R-Junction City) stood up and offered an amendment that would remove food from the sales tax, take property taxes off farm machinery and livestock and take the tax off merchants' inventory, Solbach said. "Now these are very difficult things to vote against, but they would have taken more out of the revenues than the severance税 would put in, so they failed."
But the toughest challenge the tax bill faced all day and night, was a motion to kill it by voting to strike the enacting clause. That motion was easily defeated, 71-82.
WITHOUT COMING out on the floor to defend the tax, the Lawrence delegation was active in trying to convince other members of the House to vote for the tax.
"What helped us out tremendously was that the entire Democratic delegation voted for the bill as a bloc." Branson said. "It was also good that nearly all of the Johnson County and the Wyandotte delegations voted for the bill—both Republicans and Democrats."
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 6, 1981
That's the way it is
One of the most unpopular jobs in the world has got to be that of the bearer of bad news. In ancient times, if the news the messenger brought was bad, the bearer often lost his head.
But there one's one bearer of bad news, and good news, too, who brings America the news tonight for the last time. Walter Cronkite—CBS news anchorman, recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom and possibly the most recognized man in the country—and ends his 19-year reign on the evening news tonight. That's 19 years of bringing America the news "the way it is."
Not many prominent public figures are trusted these days, but Walter Crontite is. It's the sort of trust you have with your own family—in this case, the TV family—and you just know your Uncle Walter wouldn't lie to you.
Cronkite's popularity can probably be traced to the element of trust. Quite simply, for most Americans, if Walter Cronkite says it's so, it's so. And in case you have any uncertainty about it, he ends each newscast by reaffirming the way it is.
When he began as CBS anchorman in 1962, television network news was in its infancy, a bare experiment. Then as now, he stood out above the other news people. These days, TV anchormen are slick, glossy plastic people turned out on assembly lines and trained to deliver the most superficial news possible, but that's not the way Walter Cronek did it.
Cronkite is different because his personality manages to come through. When covering moon shots, he was just like a little kid on Christmas morning; you'd almost be ready to believe that it was his exuberance, and not a Saturn 5 rocket, that made each mission successful. And his levelheadedness was like the Rock of Gibraltar amid the mayhem of a political convention. Chicago '68 was bedlam, but as long as Walter Cronkite was there reporting it, you knew things couldn't stay bad forever.
For almost two decades, he's presented the news for CBS without the sensationalism of ABC or the gray monotony of NBC. And unlike his cinematic counterpart Howard Beale, he didn't crack. He didn't abuse the power he held.
And no matter how famous he became, he was still basically a Missouri boy at heart. He may have brought American its news from New York or Cairo or Vietnam, but he was still one of us.
Somehow, America must now manage without his trusted presence at the TV helm. His successor, ace reporter Dan Rather, will probably do an admirable job, but of course it won't be a Cronkite job. Cronkite will still be around to do occasional documentaries, but it won't be the same. A 19-year chapter of American life closes tonight. Sad as it may be, that's the way it is.
Green ribbons on campus symbolize Atlanta's tragedy
Letters to the Editor
To the editor:
I know for most Americans there was a heavy sigh of relief when the hostages returned from Iran. We watched on TV as the nazi prayed for them, cried for them, and in a fruitless rescue attempt, several Americans died for them. We also watched and saw symbolic yellow ribbons being worn and displayed in a dramatic gesture to say that we were concerned for the quick return and well being of our fellow Americans.
Today we have a similar "crisis" that can show us one comfort and empathy for—the other.
"America host holdage," the subtitle of the former late-night news program, could now be changed to "Atlanta host holdage while America looks on." Children in Atlanta are afraid to be by themselves, to go outside and many of them are even afraid to go to school.
The parents and children in Atlanta feel helpless as well as terrified. Black Mayor Maynard Jackson has established a $100,000 reward fund; the Georgia Bureau of Investigation has a very large task force out; and the city's police have streets and neighborhoods for missing youth.
They are afraid of a killer (or group of killers) who has thus far left a grisly trail of 19 murdered black children. They have been shot, stabbed, asphyxicated, strangled, and killed, but he has been so badly decomposed and mutilated that the cause of death was hard to determine.
We can also show support by wearing our ribbons again. This time we will wear green ribbons as a symbol to our brothers and sisters in Atlanta, whom America cares for, prays for and is just as concerned about as it was about the hostage crisis.
There is a feeling in Atlanta and all over American that blacks as well as whites have a general indifference to the civil rights gains made in the 80s. This feeling is perpetuated by the seeming lack of concern about these vicious murders. Is this true? Are we content with the way things are now? Don't we even be content with how much more we are misleaved and brutally killed? Let's show care—make a donation and let's tie a green ribbon 'round' on old oak tree.
Dereck J. Rovaris Topeka Junior
Architectural atrocity
I feel that I cannot let pass without comment the recent publicity about the proposed Adams Alumni Center here on the campus. I will continue to reject both contemporary architecture and
To the editor:
the best of our historical past in architecture.
To build a building such as this in the last quarter of the 20th century under the aegis of the National Architecture Foundation, a lack of concern about the aesthetic quality of our physical environment, which will not be lost on the students who have come here to study architecture as an art and as a profession.
Professor of architecture
One may certainly feel that the modern movement is dead and choose to substitute in its stead one of the more historical styles, either in its pure form or in the neo-mannerist from that seems to be so seductive in its attraction to students and professionals alike. It is inexcusable to accept a building that is neither good contemporary design nor a sensitively designed, detailed and well-proportioned building of a past period.
In those instances in which we have control over the important decisions being made, we must by the results of our choice. The proposed building has a distinction to the University. Charles Kahn
Subsidies hypocritical
In regard to the Kansan editorial of Feb. 27, 1981, concerning the self-sufficiency of the United States Postal Service and the proposed postal rate increases:
To the editor:
Perhaps the reason the proposed postal increases are so distasteful to many people is that postal rates have been held at an artificially low level in the past by government subsidies. Just imagine what it would cost to have someone pick a letter up at your front door, sort it out from thousands of others, transport it across the country, re-sort it and then deliver it right to your friend's house in New York City. When you really think about it, 20 cents seems very reasonable for such a service, if not downright inexpensive.
One must remember that each taxpayer must pay for government spending, either through taxes or deficit-spawned inflation. But on top of this, subsiding the postal service actually would be unjust. There is no reason for a person who sends five letters a month to subsidize another person who sends 2,000 letters a month.
In light of the unjustness of this (or any) government subsidy, it is highly hypocritical of the University Daily Kanasa to condone it. The Kanansa has always tried to further justice and human rights. Though it may be sweet in the short run for lower postage rates, clearly, government support of the United States Postal Service is flirrantly unjust.
This is exactly what government subsidies do—benefit one at the expense of another. It actually would be forcing the first person to pay for the other's mail. It is only legalized theft. Surely the more equitable system would be for each to pay for what he uses.
Letters Policy
Edwin Martin Cooley Wichita junior
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after the first line of the article, you should include the writer's class and home town or faculty and staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
AND THIS DETAILED POLKY UPDATE OUGHT TO PUT TO REST ANY NOTION THAT WE ARE AMATEURS AT THIS SORT OF THING.
EL SALVADOR JUNTA (GOOD GUYS)
EL SALVADOR REBELS (COMMIES)
COMMIES GANG UP ON GOOD GUYS
US CAVALRY RIDES IN
BAD GUYS ARE WIPED OUT
GOOD GUYS LIVE HAPPILY EVER AFTER
ADMINISTRATION
Such ethical decisions unfit for kids
Down through the history of public education in this country, public schools have been the battlegrounds of some of society's most fiery controversies. First it was the teaching of evolution. And then it was racial integration. And after that, voluntary praver.
The most recent controversy to hit public schools has been the one that now rages over the teaching of "values clarification." "Values clarification," or "situational ethics" as it is also called (another name is "secular humanism") is a new approach for guiding students by their teachers, figure out for themselves how to sort out the complex ethical dilemmas that constantly confront them in life.
However, Laura Becker, principal of New York School, one of the three elementary schools
Concerned parents objecting to the approach have correctly argued, first, that high school is not the place to teach ethics as such, especially not a brand of ethics with which many may happen to disagree, and, second, that in any event, school students are too young and immature to understand the meaningful way the philosophical complexities related to a given ethical question.
School administrators across the country have chosen a most novel way to meet these criticisms. They recently have expanded "values clarification" programs to include junior high and even grade school students. One such expansion has just occurred in Lawrence. The department of Education (DBE) Teaming for Responsibility, Identity and Belongingness in Education Systems.
Under this program, which consists of more than 100 different "values clarification activities," the students, beginning in kindergarten, are asked, in front of their classmates, such questions as, "If you could smash one thing and only one thing, what would you smush?" Or, "For what do you think you would lay down your life?"
Needless to say, if local parents were concerned about the previous programs, they are up in arms over TRIBES. Housewives Barbara Hanna of Eudora and Janet Hoover of Perry have become so outraged that they assembled a 22-page critique of the program.
These, of course, are just a few of the ethical problems that are constantly confronting the author.
in Lawrence where the program is now being tested, is all about TRIBES.
"I think it's wonderful because kids are developing listening skills and mutual respect for each other, and they're stopping to think about it," she said in a recent newspaper interview.
Let's see. Kids are "developing listening skills." Could Principal Becker be saying that
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
BROOKLYN N.Y.
ERIC
BRENDE
kids find it easier to pay attention to a teacher who asks, "If the atomic bomb were going to fall in 10 minutes, what would you do in that last 10 seconds?" or to one who asks them to do their arithmetic?
But then, kids are also "developing mutual respect for each other" and "stopping to think about their behavior before they act." Who could argue with those results? The answer is anyone who realizes that it is important "for kids to be kids."
Furthermore, the particular brand of ethics being used in this case is not necessarily a valid one. Situational ethics teach that there are no absolutes, that what's right or wrong depends on the situation and the person's frame of mind at the time. Morality is what the fourth grade learns, or more likely, "fee." It is. All, situational ethics is a dubious approach to morality.
But even if the children were mature enough to handle TRIBES, with its ludicrous hypothetical life-and-death situations, ethics as such should not be taught in public school in the first place. For good reason, that subject has traditionally been reserved for the family and the church.
Simply put, grade school kids are at an age at which they just have to be told 'what's right and what's wrong.'
At worst, it is an open invitation to amorality. The two distracted Kansas women were paraded incensed over one character severely viciously and the excuse named Karen Horne, who as a doctor, "Will
teach you to be an ideal sexual partner, to enjoy pleasure and bring pleasure, and fulfillment to other people.
Any criticism of TRIBES altogether mystifies its creator, Jeanne Gibbs, La Fayette, Calif. The program, she has said, is used as a model in 15 states, with about 25,000 teachers using the program nationally." The 22-page critique of the two outraged Kanans was "the first attack ever on TRIBES." On the critique specifically, Gibbs said, "I think it's very dangerous . . . In their protests, they are trying to impose a minority opinion on a majority."
But who is imposing a "minority opinion" on whom? Gibbs confirms approval of TRIBES by the majority with lack of awareness of TRIBES by the majority. If a majority of parents actually support their children, they are doubtful that they would give their wholehearted assent to it. In truth, Gibbs can only speak confidently for an elite band of secular humanists, who constitute a definite minority of the population. It is their "opinion" that she is pressuring on the real, but unspectacular, majority.
Gibbs is guilty not only of intellectual dishonesty but also of the very offense that she accuses others of committing. That's hardly model behavior for the person who designed the program now being taught in thousands of our nation's public elementary and junior high schools.
The University Daily KANSAN
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Editor
David Lerner
Managing Editor ... Ellen Iwamoto
Business Manager
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Retail Sales Manager Larry Lebenood
You see, my body's trying to kill me again. I think of my mind and my body as two separate, mutually hostile entities. Every semester at mildermys, my mind tells my body, "You won't drink coffee or coffee and cigarettes and read textbook gibberish until your eyes blew. And you'd better like it!"
Midterms are here. It's time to self-destruct.
My body retaliates by slamming itself into
They are boring and overbearing, and, fortunately, they are easily identified.
Grown-ups often can be found at the unit end of, long skinny cigarettes. They refuse to dance if they are around.
All grown-ups should be prohibited from attending parties.
H
Grown-ups come in all ages and sizes. In fact, I encountered my first at my party for my ninth
It was, I think, the only appropriate response.
I'm not alone. When a friend walked out in front of a car, I mentioned rather loudly to her that she had nearly been turned into a pancake. "So?" she said.
Jane Neubelt
Vanessa Nerron
walls and trying to walk through doors without opening them first. This has its advantages. The day I got my body up before it wanted to, my foot alithered angrily off the ladder to my bunk bed before climbing in. I slipped down, waking me up before my Vivarin for the first time in three years. I may make it a routine.
I can take a few bruises and permanent scars, but my body's beginning to get insistent about the battle. Lately it's been taking me out into the world and I've been trying to eat a rabbit in front of the oncoming headlights.
PARKA CROSSON
I didn't.
---
birthday
At their own gatherings, grown-ups like their drinks dry, their wirt wry, and they make sure that all four food groups are represented on their refreshment tables.
"I think we are too old to eat cupcakes," she said. "Don't you?"
A surplus of grown-ups usually spell the end of any other party, so count them carefully. And watch out for the kind who turn into grown-ups only after they are safely inside.
The "grown-up would" contribute much to the
treatment, but probably wants to
drink up all your gills and tonic.
In general, if the doorbell rings and a grow-up is standing on your porch, don't answer the door.
Saturday nights were fun. Used to be able to catch an early movie or some late dinner, maybe even do some studying before 10 p.m. Then there was time enough for 30 minutes of casual intoxication (nothing too intense) before the evening's main event. Sit back, feet up, tune in to NBC and prepare for laughter.
Cary Hahn
Ouyy HHhh
1
Ah, sweet laughter that is no longer; they have given their show away! That's right. "Saturday Night Live" is dead. Say it: "Saturday Night Live" is dead. Sit up straight, take a deep breath and face that somber little Sonia staring back C'mon, big college kids don't cry, Rosamadana could've told you that much.
Not that the "new generation" hasn't been giving a chance. ("God, I'm sure! Excuse me for living!" But (sigh) it just isn't, well, the same, exactly, without Gilda and Dan and Lorraine and Jane and . . . and where'd they all go, anyway? And she's not sitting on the couch, and laugh and . . . sit back and the smiling Song yeah, that's when Saturday nights were, well, fun.
300
University Dally Kansan, March 6, 1981
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Page 5
Hearings
From nage 1
officer elections were open and well-publicized, a requirement under the funding philosophy.
Azeed said that the group called Iranian students and printed leaflets announcing the
Mahmoud Amani, engineering senator, and Krupa Billa, cultural committee co-chairman, said that the International Club gave ISA money to support the investment in the Kanan announcing the elections.
THEY SAID THAT the advertisement was
intended, and was for a film about
the Chinese Revolution.
"I feel that was cheating, and a very dishonest way of dealing with the International Club,"
Ron Heape, committee co-chairman, ruled
that any questions concerning minute of funds
are directed to the Finance and Audit Companies.
Before ISA presented its request, Larry Metzgert, student rights committee chairman, presented a line of questioning to Busby and Billa, to determine criteria for funding groups.
"There are a couple of groups that have come to light recently that would warrant further investigation."
Metzger would not name the groups. He also referred to a political group who applied for funding under the guise of being a cultural group.
repeal rupel Metzger's questions out of order.
THE CULTURAL COMMITTEE heard
**requesce I have not received**
*KU International Club, requesting $3,911.85.*
- Nigerian Students Association, requesting $590.
- POLARIS Club, requesting $500.00
• KU Udahl Club requesting $1,530
- Polish Club, requesting $533.25.
KU Man Club, requesting $842.50
* KU Formosan Club, requesting $842.50
The Solar Energy International Club presented a request for $1,571.90.
The student services committee heard requests from four groups and made preliminary cuts in seven budget requests. Final budget requests are to be made next week.
El Salvador
From page 1
The committee acknowledged the importance of the group, but members said they felt that the club was more academically oriented and did not fall within the realm of Student Services. The committee removed all funding for the group in its preliminary cut.
ment was originally considered to be leftist, he said, but the dynamics of the political situation had caused it to be viewed as moderate or even rightist, as the left became more radical.
"Because the general strike there were very bus runs, running Stannister said. "The bus
drivers had ignored the strike and the left was taking reprisals."
HE SAID THAT the left was more visible because more people suffered when the buses did not run, or when the blew up a power station and there wasn't any light.
The failure of the general strike is another
Beta Theta Pi awarded Chancellor's Trophy
Beta Theta Pi fraternity has received the Chancellor's Trophy for fraternity scholarship for the 3.15 cumulative house grade point average it achieved during the fall semester.
This is the first time a trophy has been given.
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel donated the
trophy to the Interfraternity Council last semester to promote fraternity scholarship.
"The top five fraternities averaged about a 3.0
percentage of the SEC secretary," said.
No booze had undergone during the session.
The Panhellenic Association does not keep track of sorbidity grade point averages, accuracy of predictive models and other metrics.
indication that the revolution in El Salvador has already failed, Stanser said.
Stasierlaid said the threat of international communism had prompted the United States to send advisers and weapons to the government in EL Salvador.
He said he would like the United States to provide aid to the government in EL Salvador but
"There was no identifiable enemy in Vietnam and in started murdering people," he said.
The problems in El Salvador were internal, reacts to conditions within the country, SUSPENSION.
Stanfler said the United States was making a waiver to send advisers, instead of trying to get them.
"What can our advisers tell them that they don't already know?" Stasler asked.
Latin American Solidarity present a request for $1,845, a $1,550 increase from last year's allocation. Rhonda Neugebauer, budget coordinator for the group, said that news coverage of Latin America had grown enough during the past week to cause a much greater interest among students.
The committee questioned the substantial increase in the budget, and voted to reduce the budget.
OTHER GROUPS PRESENTING reports to Student Services were:
- MECHA, an Hispanic organization,
requiring $1.355.
- Native American Alliance, requesting $519.
*Native American Alliance, requesting $1.50.
The committee decided to cut the Non-
Traditional Student Organization's budget
request, reducing it from $1,175 to $925.
The Academic Affairs Committee cut $595.77 from SGQMEBF# $5527 request.
Academic affairs heard requests from six organizations.
Le Cercle Français契约 $548, of which the committee voted to make a preliminary cut
the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence asked for $495, the Architecture-Urban Design Student Council, $671 and the Chancery Club, a pre-law group. $292.
The Photojournalism Students Association, which has not received Senate funding before, requested $272.40. The committee decided not to make any preliminary cuts on the group.
The committee also heard a $408 request from
the Biology Department and voted to make a
budget cut of $232.
The committees will complete deliberations on
the final recommendations on the
organization's action plan.
Also working on this story were reporters Rob Stroud and Mark Zieman.
The full Senate will vote on the recommendations March 24 and 25.
Severance
From page 1
passed it would generate $138 in revenue, the extra money we would free up some funds or the U.S. government to pay.
However, Branson said, the bill might not get action today if opportunities of the bill could not be taken.
SHE SAID THAT because the amendment had passed, the opponents of the tax were trying to tack on changes that would further water down the tax.
"One representative offered an amendment that would have given the money right back to the oil companies." Branson said. "Hopefully that kind of amending will not go on too long tomorrow, but I have a strong feeling that it will."
Sobach agreed that the efforts of the opposition to the tax could seriously stall the bill today. He said that he had noticed an amendment in similar purpose to the one Branson had noticed.
"Rep. Rolf (R-Junction City) stood up and offered an amendment that would remove food from the sales tax, take property taxes off farm machinery and livestock and take the tax off merchants' inventory, Solbach said. "Now these are very difficult things to vote against, but they would have taken more out of the revenues than the severance税 would put in, so they failed."
But the toughest challenge the tax bill faced all day and night, was a motion to kill it by voting to strike the enacting clause. That motion was easily defeated. 71-52.
WITHOUT COMING out on the floor to defend the tax, the Lawrence delegation was active in trying to convince other members of the House to vote for the tax.
"What helped us out tremendously was that the entire Democratic delegation voted for the bill as a bloc," Branson said. "It was also good that nearly all of the Johnson County and the Wyandotte delegations voted for the bill—both Republicans and Democrats."
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, March 8, 1981
Pinter play enigmatic but rewarding
By PAUL STEPHEN LIM Contributing Reviewer
"Old Times" by Harold Pinter. Presented by the Seem-ToBe Players, directed by Judy Anthony Wright, set by Judy Anthony Wright, lights and sound by Jim Powers, costumes and make-up by Eleanor Patton. Final performance at 8 onstage at the Lawrence Arts Center.
Playright Harold Pinter revealed in an interview some years ago that he often rode the buses in London with a pocket recorder concealed somewhere on his person because he found conversations he overheard infinitely more interesting and intriguing than any he could conceive invent. He has been known to have taped conversations verbatim in his plays.
Given such "sources" for his plays, it is therefore not unusual for one to spend a couple of hours with the characters in Pinter's plays and still not know exactly who they are, why they say what they say and do what they do, whether their concerns and anxieties are real or imagined and, whatever anything, is resolved after the "talk," with all the accompanying pauses and silences is over.
This is not to say that Pinter's plays are not carefully crafted to convey "meaning." That we do not always immediately understand his plays is not his fault, but ours. Thanks to playwrights like Neil Simon and Alan Ayckbourn, who feed one-liners instead of extended ideas, we simply are not accustomed anymore to doing much thinking in the theatre.
"Old Times" is about as oblique as anything Pinter has ever evealed, and the playwright will have plenty of plenty to use in plenty.
we might interpret the play—in a variety of wavs, as a matter of fact, and all quite viable.
On the surface, the plot is quite simple. A married couple living an a converted farmhouse near London is visited by the wife's best friend, a woman whom she used to room with but has not seen for twenty years her terminus, they sing old songs, they jabber, they jab. Before very long, the husband breaks down and weeps, and the play is over.
Although it is not likely that we can fully comprehend a play like "Old Times" with just one viewing, still we do not leave the theater dissatisfied. Such is the playwright's skill. He makes us buy a copy of the script to peruse and work out the puzzle for ourselves.
I have now seen "Old Times" three times—including the original London production—and I am happy to report that the current production at the Lawrence Arts Center by Ric Averill's Seem-To-Be Players continues to illuminate the
Seeing this production, under the very able direction of Judy Anthony Wright, it suddenly occurred to me that the two women in the play were not two, but one. They are two aspects of the same self—one younger, the other older; the former, the id; the latter, the super-ego.
It all makes perfect sense, especially with Heather Laird playing the wife and Jean Averill playing the "friend." These two women not only look alike, but their rapport on stage is such that the husband is truly the "odd man out." Since he finds himself married to a woman no longer recognizes and loves, he has true cause for weening.
What clues are there in the script to suggest
that the two women are one and the same? To cite only a few—the "friend" is never seen arriving or leaving (when the play begins, even though she has not yet arrived, she is seen lurking in the background of the living room) and on the first night of her visit, after having been away for 20 years, she already knows all about the neighbors.
I could present more evidence, but ultimately it does not make much difference how one interprets this play. Even if there were no "meaning," watching Laird, Averill and Rusty Laushman at work is a joy. These three are among the finer actors to come out of KU's theatre department, and with each production they continue to surprise and delight.
Judy Anthony Wright must have had fun directing them. Now, if only she can get Pinter to come to Lawrence with her tape recorder. What students do in this class is students are surely just as—if not more—puzzling.
Weekend
FRIDAY
FOOLS FACE will perform at 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St. Doors open at 8 p.m.
THE ROCK CHALK REVUE, titled "The Last Laugh," will be presented at a p.m. in Hoeh Auditionium. Tickets are $3.75 and are available online at www.rockchalkrevue.com. Kell's Records and Nray Drug stores.
THE SUA FILM "Kramer vs. Kramer" will be shown at 7 and 9 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets are $1.50.
THE SUA FILM "The Harder They Come"
will be shown at midnight in Woodruff
Auditorium in the Union. Tickets are $2.
SATURDAY
FOOLS FACE will perform at 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House. Doors open at 8 p.m.
THE ROCK CHALK REVUE, titled "The Last Laugh," will be presented at 1:30 and 8 p.m. Tickets are $2 for the matinee and $4.50 for the evening performance.
THE SUA FILM "The Marriage of Maria Braun" will be shown at 2 p.m. in woodwright Auditorium in the Union. Tickets are $1.50.
THE LYNCH AND MBCBE DUO will convene at 9 p.m. in the cellar of the Opera House.
THE ROCK GROUP KANSAS will perform at 8 p.m. in Allen Field House. Tickets are on sale at the SUA Box Office and Kief's Records. Tickets are $5.50 and $5.50.
On Campus
TODAY
MASTER CLASSES with Leon Fleisher, pianist, will be 5 p.m. in the Residency Hall in Marlhay Hill.
THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
KU CONCERT CHORALE will perform at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
THE MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY will sponsor a workshop with Martha Driepe on "Native American Family Life" from 9 a.m. until noon, Call 884-4173 for reservations.
THE JAYHAWK INVITATIONAL JAZZ
Concert will be present in m.a. in Mupain Hall.
Concerts will be present in m.a. in Mupain Hall.
SUNDAY
THE KANASKS RENAISSANCE CONSORY will perform at 2 p.m. in Swarthout Reception Hall.
THE UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SPRING CONCERT will be at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy. In the evening, members of Austria will be the guest conductor.
meet at 1 p.m. in 207 Robinson. Beginners are welcome.
MONDAY
A MASTER'S RECITAL with Martin Murray
plans will be at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital
II.
THE RENAISSANCE DANCE CLASS will
THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES MINI-
CONFERENCE will host Anson D. Shupr. Jr.
on "Religious Cults and the Religious Anti-Cultists"
at 10:30 a.m. in 103 Smith Hall.
TGIF at THE HAWK
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL GROUP 172
8:00 p.m. in the International Room of
the Union.
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COLUMBIA PICTURES DECALE
EVE 7:30 & 9:30 SAT & SUN MAY 2:00
VARSITY
Some films you watch, others you feel.
DONALD SUTHERLAND
MARTY TILGER MOORE
BRIANEY PEASE
HILLCREST 1
2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
RICHARD DENTYLL
THE
COMPETITION
PG
MAT SAT & SUN 2:15
Some films
GRANADA
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AMERICAN POP
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FU 7:30 & 9:30 SAT & SUN MAY 2:00
HILLCREST 1 THE NOON AND
2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEES
RICHARD DREYTYUS
THE
COMPETITION
BAT SAT 8:30
PG MAT SAT 8:15
Midnight Madness - Fri & Sat
HILLCREST 2
ROBERT DE NIRO
Nominated for 8 Academy Awards,
including BEST PICTURE
(LEE 7:15, 8:49 MAR 21 AND SUN 2:13)
RAGING BUCK
COMMONWEALTH FESTIVALS
GRANADA
TELEVISION STORE
ART in Living Animation.
AMERICAN POP
PACIFIC PICTURES RELEASE
EVE 7:30 8:30 SAT & SUN MAT 2:00
VARSITY
Some films you watch, others you feel.
DONALD SUTHERLAND
MARY TWAIN MOORE
Ordinary People
PACIFIC PICTURES RELEASE
EVE 7:30 8:30 SAT & SUN 2:00
HILLCREST 1
2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
RICHARD DREYFUSS
COMPETITION
PACIFIC PICTURES RELEASE
EVE 7:30 8:30 SAT & SUN 2:15
HILLCREST 2
ROBERT DE NIRO
Nonmated for 8 Academy Awards,
including BEST PICTURE
EVE 7:30 8:45 SAT & SUN 2:15
RAGING BUILT
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JACK LEMONNIMANUO 'BEST ACTION'
FROM JACK LEMONNIMANUO
ROBBY BENSON
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EVE 7:30 8:30 SAT & SUN 2:15
CINEMA 1
HANGAR 18
STARRING
DARREN McGAVIN 8:15
MARC CATHERMAN 9:15
ROBERT WADNER 9:20
CINEMA 2
WINDWAKER
MAST SAT 2:00
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JAMES HOLLAND
HANGAR 18
STARRING
GARDEN McGAVIN 8:15
BURKE KUNN 9:30
ROBBERT VANHIKMAT Z.80
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JAMES HOLLAND
Windwalker
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The Human Adventure Is Just Beginning.
STAR TREK
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The Humon Adventure Is Just Beginning.
Spring Formal Rush March27,28,29
VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1065
Registration:
February 23-March 24
Register in the Interfraternity
Council Office or call 864-3559.
Booths will be set up in Oliver,
Templin and JRP on
March 10, 7-9 p.m.
There will be a $10 registration fee.
TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU.
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2 Ask them to call Western Union's toll-free number, 800-325-6000 (in Missouri, 800-342-6700), anytime, day or night. They charge the money and the service fee to their MasterCard* or
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SNA FILMS
(1979)
The Harder They Come
Friday, Mar. 6
Kramer vs. Kramer
When Meryl Streep break out of her stifling marriage, ad exec Dustin Hoffman is left to raise their son, as the grown-up heir begins his career, beginning a custody灯 night. Robert Benton's film avoids polemics and creations of three people, brilliantly acted by Hoffman, Streep and young Justin Henry, with fine support from Jane Alexander as she navigates the high stakes of Oscars including Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress, Best Director; an extraordinary film. Plus: John G. Lucas (1098) *Color*; 3:30, 7:00, 9:30
The reggae movie, Jimmy Cliff is a young singer smugging marijuana to support himself; he kills a cop and becomes an entertainer. He plays a chart. A vibrant, ambient performance by Cliff and the excellent reggae soundtrack make this an unique, unique work. Hear Harrell Rusi Nurse man McLanen's "Serenade" (1099 min). Color: 120/Midnight
Saturday, Mar. 7
Kramer vs. Kramer
3:30, 7:00, 9:30
The Harder They Come
12:00 Midnight
Sunday, Mar. 8
The Marriage of
Maria Braun
Perhaps the best film of Rainer Fassbinder, the prolific German director of Mother Kusters Goes to Heaven and Mary's Marriage, is Kirsten, who, while waiting for her long-lost soldier husband, decides to become upward mobile in post-war German society. Her story is Germany's story. It is a woman's story. The authorating, and Maria herself is stunning, "The Marriage of Maria Braun reminds us of the still immense possibilities of our world." In Canby, The New York Times (120)印尼
Unless otherwise noted, all film will be furnished by the Kansas Union Weekday films are $100; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $150. Midnight film is $200. Monday through Saturday films are $300. Kansas Union, 4th level, Information 864-5477, no smoking or refresher admissions.
University Daily Kansan, March 6, 1981
Page 7
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KU receives grant to study handicap problems
By FRED MARKHAM Staff Writer
The University of Kansas has been granted $200,000 by the National Institute on Handicapped Research to study problems facing disabled people
KU was one of 30 schools around the country to receive such a grant this fall. The grant was given to the University's Training and Research Center to study problems related to independent living for the severely mentally or physically disabled. Clark, director of the center, said.
"We believe that persons with disabilities can overcome many of society's attitudinal barriers without help," Clark said.
"But we can speed up the process by attacking the roots of the problem, and
No advance notice given for early audit of KU
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
In the wake of massive KU budget cut proposals by the Legislature, there have been rumors of a "down-to-bone" legislative audit of University Press.
Monday those rumors will, at least in part, come true and they will come true earlier than the KU administration had expected.
The audit is expected to be nothing more than a routine biennial bookkeeping check-up, but University officials said that they were not given the expected advance notice that the audit was coming.
"We think that the Legislative Post-Audit Office will simply conduct a routine audit and we will be ready when they arrive," Keith Nitcher, director of the office of business affairs, said. "I wonder, though, why they did not give us a call saying they were coming early."
Niccher said that his office had been noticing the audit around March 15. Acting Chancellor Del Shakel also said he had been "involved in the post-auditors to come at that time."
Last fall the center submitted five
new areas of independent living
study.
"I have heard that they were going to do this for some time now," Shankel said. "But it surprises me that they are coming to start Monday. I had thought they would have given a little more notice."
that is what we hope to accomplish with this research."
Brown said that everything his office would do at KU would be above-the-board research.
"We have told Acting Chancellor Shankel and Kite Nicher that we will be coming down to work with them on this project, as early as we sneak around looking for things."
"The point of the audit does not include anything exceptional," he said. "It will be a financial audit that will look at the University's financial statements, expense voucher and receipts for federal grants."
TUY for approval by NIH. THE AREAS of research include:
THE AREAS of research include
a need to be able to
that can be used by both the disabled
themselfs and by professionals to
promote the independent living
Letters to each of the Kansas Regents institutions were sent out earlier in the week, letting the schools know when the audit would start, according to Richard Brown, director of the Legislative Post-Audit Office.
"This is really not all that extraordinary," Brown said. "I think that a lot of people are jumpy because of all the play in the newspapers about the budget cuts and the tenure hearings and the sports funding investigations.
- Comparing the effectiveness of different types of independent living situations, including apartments and homes.
- Analyzing current state funding for independent living and informing legislators on what funding will be needed to spur to sponsor more independent living.
- Studying the stigma associated with disability and the impact of those public attitudes on treatment
Clark said KU was not new to research on independent living.
"The University has a long history of research on problems related to disabilities." Clark said, "and with the center's involvement with the planning of Independence Inc., a center designed to assist the handicapped develop a more independent life-style, we think KU is a natural for doing such research.
"The staff operates on the basic assumption that most of the barriers and obstacles to the independent living community lie within the non-disabled population."
IN A LECTURE on campus last month, Gerber Dejong, senior research associate at the Tufts-New England College, will be in Boston echoed Clark's comments.
Dejong said that one common method used to define and measure severe disability was the inability to work or to carry out daily activities.
"The movement has always counted the severely disabled as its primary target group or constituency," DeJong said. "We are the disabled and how many are there?"
"Independent living for the severely disabled is more than a social movement," Dejong said. "It is an analytic paradigm that is reshaping the thinking of rehabilitation professionals and researchers alike."
All the international students are requested to attend the general body meeting to consider the proposed amendments to KU International Club constitution.
But Dejong said the study covered only a small fraction of all disabilities.
Notice
Time & Date: 7:00 P.M. Monday, March 9,1981
Based on results from a 1974 survey by the National Center for Health Statistics, about 3.3 percent (6.8 million) of the nation's population are unable to work or take care of themselves.
Rimsky-Korsakov Sheherazade
Beethoven Symphony No. 6 (Pastorale)
Place: Pine Room (Kansas Union)
The University of Kansas
Symphony Orchestra
KU INTERNATIONAL CLUB
George Lawner, Conductor
Helmuth WIllenberg, Guest Conductor
(Mozartem, Salzburg)
3:30 pm
Sunday, March 8, 1981
University Theatre
Admission Free
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WRITERS & RESEARCHERS NEEDED for research support
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Competent persons interested in designs for people from any discipline at any experience level invited to apply
Library Research and Communication Skills Essential
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Bargains for $1.99 through $4.99.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, March 6, 1981
Med Center course fills educational void
By BRIAN LEVINSON Staff Reporter
KANAS CITY, Kan.-To fill a void in their medical education, students at the University of Kansas Medical Center are taking advantage of the chance to learn first-hand about the professions' ethical problems.
Students in the clinical processes class confront issues such as, homosexuality, alcoholism, suicide, the presence of a living patient and the disabled physician.
Robert Hudson, professor of internal medicine, said he wanted students to examine early in their careers some of the skills and values that physicians had.
Twin planets, equinox visible this month
Hudson said the 200 students in his class were presented with a case study of a particular problem presented by a panel of Med Center faculty. Then they discussed with the faculty discussions about the issue with a live patient, who has had to deal with the problem.
"It gives the students a chance to try out what they have learned against
Jupiter and Saturn continue to highlight the night sky this month.
He said there was a growing movement to put medical ethics classes into medical school curriculums.
someone who deals with the problem every day," Hudson said.
The twin planets can be spotted in the constellation Virgo, rising in the east at sunset and appearing overhead at night. The planet is the brightest of the two planets.
"If you look at the public's dissatisfaction with medicine, it is not with the scientific advances and discoveries, but with the economic and medical of medicine." Hudson said. "They are the problems the class deals with."
The Gallian satellites, Jupiter's four largest moons, will be visible by a telescope. The KU observatory, on top
HUDSON SAID the students were enthusiastic about the class.
of Lindley Hall, is open to the public every clear Friday night at 7:30 p.m.
The vernal equator also occurs in March. On Friday, March 20, the sun will be directly over the equator, and all earth will have 12 hours of daylight.
"They are so happy to have something other than straight science," he said. "This class gives meaning to their basic science learning."
The moon will be new tonight and full on March 20.
The number of students in the class and their evaluation of it, back up Hudson's claims. An average of 90 percent of the students in the class gave above average ratings to a number of different topics listed on the course evaluation, including how helpful they thought the class was to them.
Hudson said there was so much pressure on first-year students, that they were having problems finding
time to take the class. The class discussions are half as long as they used to be. He said he thought more about the classes should be offered, not less.
"Medical ethics really became an issue 20 years ago, when medicine became able to sustain dying patients on respirators," he said. "Doctors today are facing decisions they would not have faced 20 years ago."
A STUDENT in the class went to a rural Kansas town for a rural health weekend, a program run by the Med Center to get medical students out into communities for first-hand experience, he said.
"The physician the student was working with got together with the family of a dying patient and together they decided to end the patient's life," Hudson said. "The student came back to class with his mouth hanging open.
"These are the kinds of decisions today's doctors face."
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Patients expect their doctor to be able to advise them on human sexuality, terminal illness, and other issues, have little training in, Hudson said.
"Society simply attaches global competence to the physician, and assumes he has been educated in all of what he says," he said. "But they haven't."
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PROVEN LEADERSHIP FOR LAWRENCE AND K.U.
Paid For by Hambleton for Commission Committee, N. Cushing, TREAS.
كتابة
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محاور الإنسان العلمي
الاستدعاء للشركة والسوق الرئيسية
نشرات
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بالنسبة لمحافظة تحديد العدد البالغ
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---
SVA FILMS
Presents a film by
Rainer Werner Fassbinder
The Marriage of Maria Braun starring Hanna Schygulla
Sunday, March 8 2.00 p.m.
$1.50 Woodruff Aud.
- no refreshments allowed -
Summer employment job for KU center
By CORAL BEACH Staff Reporter
Market research and product promotion may be topics of discussion in a basic marketing course, but they are also the key ingredients in finding summer employment, according to Vern Gelsaier, director of the University of Kansas Placement Center.
"The most important thing is to sell yourself to the employer, to promote yourself," Gelisher said. "To do that you need a good resume.
"You have to go in looking like you mean business. Ask yourself, if I were hiring someone, what would I be looking for, what would impress me, what would I remember? Then present yourself to the employer in that way."
Geisler said that his office, 223
Carruth L'Oréal Hall, or one of the
other six placement offices on campus
would help students with their resumes.
THE OTHER PLACEMENT offices are:
- Architecture and Urban Design
Placement. 324 Art and Design
- Business Placement, 202 Summerfield Hall Engineering Placement 4101
- Engineering Placement, 4010
Learned Hall
- Law Placement, 20B8 Green Hall
* Social Welfare Placement, Twente
Hall
He also said that the writing lab in 4056 Wescoe Hall would assist students with the resumes.
After completing a resume, Geissier said that the next step in a job hunt was
to make personal contact with the employer.
"For students looking for summer jobs during spring break the most important thing is to have a schedule and stick to it." he said. "Just because you don't want to work down, doesn't mean you should have a cake and waste the rest of the day.
"You have to do the same things when you are looking for a summer job that you do when you are looking for your career job. It's really too late for students to try to find a summer internship in their chosen career field now, but there are a lot of other jobs still out there."
GEISLER ALSO stressed the importance of being organized for a job interview. He said that it was often helpful to research the job market and the background of prospective employers before interviewing.
"The key in preparing for an interview is to make note of your strong points, such as leadership, responsibility, et cetera. It is also important for the employer to know that you are organized." Geisler said.
Geisler said that the Placement Center was mainly geared toward helping students find career-related jobs, but that they had workshops that would help people prepare to look for any type of job.
Several workshops on interviewing and what to do after the interview, are scheduled before spring break. There is also a resume writing workshop scheduled after spring break. All 2011 Carruth O'Leary Hall. Students should contact the Placement Center for the exact times of the workshops.
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University Daily Kansan, March 6, 1981
Page 9
wing , are there is shop all of truth intact exact
Enrollment ceilings could hit programs
By DAN BOWERS Staff Reporter
Enrollment ceilings is some of KU's "high cost programs," such as engineering and the sciences, may be one way of coping with legislative budget cuts, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday.
Shankel said that because KU was an open enrollment institution, it could not limit University enrollment, but cellings could be placed on programs that were more expensive to operate, or where demand was high.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said programs in computer science, geology and engineering were located where walls could be placed.
He noted that enrollment limits were already in effect for the Schools of Pharmacy, and Architecture and Urban Design because those programs didn't have the physical capacities to accommodate demand."
SHANKEL SAID that enrollment ceilings would help cut costs in those areas without affecting the quality of the programs.
"We must attempt to preserve the quality of education available to the student, while working with budgets he says, cause some belt tightening," he said.
Cobb emphasized that considerations for well-being, killings were "still questions that not answer."
Enrollment could be limited by placing "implicit constraints" on programs, or using the system of alternating enrollment by semester between odd and even student numbers in high-demand courses. Cobb siad.
Introductory courses in biology and psychology already use a system of alternating student numbers between semesters.
THE IMPLICIT constraints, Cobb said, include measures such as more stringent GPA requirements for a program or school to curtail demand.
Cobb said that outright enrollment ceilings probably could not be implemented by next fall because of the short notice if a decision were made to install them. The use of alternating between odd and even student numbers probably could be.
He said that the student number system would not be closing enrollment in certain classes, but simply appear the demand out over two semesters."
Shankel said that no academic programs were in immediate danger of being dropped because of budet cuts, but that administrative efforts to cut would be "more dramatic if the financial situation continues to get worse."
Student Health Insurance Policy Public Hearing
Date: Monday, March 9
Time: 6:30 p.m.
Place: Council Room, Kansas Union
Truth has (now) arrived and falsehood perished. Falsehood is by its nature bound to Perish.
EXHIBITION OF PICTURES
Of The Second Anniversary Of
THE ISLAMIC REVOLUTION OF IRAN
DATE- March 4 through 6 (W.R.F)
PLACE- Parlora Room - UNION
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NASA, KU program combine resources
The University of Kansas and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration are pooling resources to provide experience for students in NASA with student students and to help NASA with its research projects.
The KU-NASA program, which started this semester, gives selected students professional experience in engineering and familiarizes the students with NASA problems and solutions to those problems, William Shipman, assistant professor of aerospace engineering, said yesterday.
Schwekhard, who devised the program, said, "It will accommodate the students' need, the need and University requirements."
He said the three-year program was designed to help increase the number of doctoral candidates, the United States in the last 10 years.
"NASA is a great user of graduate
degree people and needs to maintain a source of supply," Schwelkhard said.
During the first year of the program, the student works at a NASA research center earning a Ph.D. and that of a beginning NASA engineer.
In the second year, the student returns to KU and begins graduate academic work and continues with research of aspects of research done the first year.
The third year, the student can continue research at KU or, if NASA facilities are needed, complete the research at the NASA center. The last two years students are assisted financially by NASA.
To qualify, Schweikhard said, a student must be qualified to enter graduate school and be interested in doing research.
This semester, two aerospace graduates are working at Dryden, the NASA flight research center in Edwards, Calif.
Clique
--sponsored by the Kansas University Advertising Club
is here this weekend at THE ROCK PALACE!
Wed. AURH night
Other Attractions:
Thurs.
Ladies night
Pladinm
Open 8-12
900 Miss.
--sponsored by the Kansas University Advertising Club
You can meet advertising professionals on the spring media tour of Kansas City.
The tour includes stops at:
- Kansas City Star-Times
- Valentine-Radford advertising agency
- Macy's Department Store
The tour is Wednesday, March 11.
We'll be gone from about 12 noon-6 p.m.
See the large poster in the lobby
We're trying to arrange transportation, but car-pooling may be necessary.
See the large post of Flint Hall for more information.
RENTAL HOUSING: IT NEEDS A LITTLE WORK.
The city must encourage an adequate supply of sale and affordable rental housing, both for students and non-students.
Lawrence has a duty to enforce its health and safety
codes for rental property.
A tenant who points out unsafe conditions now runs the risk of eviction. The city must prevent such retaliation if its codes are to have any effect.
THE YEAR OF THE DEATH OF
MICHAEL LOPEZ
TomGleason
Lawrence City Commission
POLITICAL ADV. TOM GLEASON FOR CITY COMMISSION, LANCE BURR-TREASURER
Unless more residence hall residents sign up by the end of the week for housing during spring break, the halls will be closed, according to Mark Denke, assistant director of residential programs.
Halls may close during break
Council appoints adviser
A KU graduate student was appointed this week as temporary adviser for the Interfaternity Council.
Art Farmer, graduate student in counseling, was selected by the Student Organizations and Activities office to replace Chuck Chapin.
Shifts in responsibilities last month at the Student Organizations and Activities office resulted in new duties for Chaoin.
A permanent IFC adviser will be chosen by the end of the year.
A hall needed a minimum of 50 people before it would be kept open during the recess, he said. Only 17 people had to stay in the late-IIime housing by Friday's deadline.
"We're urging people to sign up as soon as possible," DENE said. "If there is a sudden demand, we'll provide for it, not, we probably won't be open."
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
843-2931
2340 Alabama
Lawrence, Kansas
Over 17 years in the business.
Snow tires available.
Residents can stay in the halls for $8 a night, paid in advance. No food service will be provided.
Payment covers the costs of keeping the hall open, including staff salaries, utilities, maintenance and housekeeping.
During the holiday break, from Dec.
19 to Jan. 10, a range of 11 to 68
residents lived in the only open hall,
McCollum.
RENT A CAR FOR $7.95 A.DAY + MILES
Maupintour travel service
AIRLINETICKETS
■ AIRLINE TICKETS
■ HOTEL RESERVATIONS
■ CAR RENTAL
RENTAL
EURAL PASSES
TRAVEL INSURANCE
ENSORED TOURS
travel service
900 MASS
KANSAS UNION
843-1211
CALL TODAY!
Any Sunday or Monday
Bum Regular Sandwich
THE BUM STEER
BAR-B-O
French Fries & medium drink
EAR-B-Q
$2.90 + tax with coupon
a reg. $3.70 value
J. HOOD
BOOKS
THE SCHOLARS' BOOKSTORE
SELLER
ALL 25,000 PAPERBACKS 1/2 PRICE 1401 Mass. 841-4644
1048
Re-elect Schumm For City Commissioner
LYONS PARK
CITY OF DAMVERT
"The city commission was awarded a parks improvement grant which allowed us to return to Park in North Lawrence.
Two new tennis courts and one new softball diamond were built along with many general park improvements.
The upgrading of parks reflects the high quality of life for Lawrence which I greatly support."
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, March 6, 198
Medicine still a challenge for doctor
By KARI ELLIOTT Staff Reporter
If it's a sprained ankle, then it must be to do something else day or day mescales, then it has to be purged.
"I can almost tell the season by the type of illness or injury," Margaret Haggan, physician at Watkins Hospital, said. "During basketball season I treat any sprained ankle. In the fall we get all the injuries from intramural foot-ball."
"We dread that thoroughly. It's tackle football without equipment. There are broken collar bones, broken arms and concussions."
The beeyt intramural football players tower over the five-foot Haggag, who has been practicing medicine for nearly 40 years, including 12 years at KU.
For the doctor, whose long, white medical coat accents her gray hair, winter also has its own type of accidents.
"In slippery weather people are injured when they fall down," she said. "When it snows, there are severe concussions from trarying accidents. When it was more or less a vegetable from a trarying accident until she died."
Haggan, who has two daughters and three granddaughters, regards early summer as a "pediatrics practice" since the Midwestern Music and Art Camp and Boys' and Girls' State are held on the KU campus each summer.
"Some campers suffer physical injuries and also a great deal of home-sickness," she said. "Some feel lost, but when they come to the Health Service, they are a person rather than a number.
"It's a little bit of mental health and just plain mothering."
HAGAN'S GRAY HAIR and warm smile may help with the mothering. Even college students seem to benefit from her grandmotherly appearance.
"I's wonderful having gray hair," she laughed. "I do a lot of gynecology, but I also have guys come in with me." She seems less embarrassed with me.
Haggan, who is 62, graduated from the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor in 1942. At first she wanted to be a doctor, but she decided to persist in gynecology and obstetrics.
At Michigan, the study of pediatrics discouraged her because many of her young patients were terminal. But when she switched to obstetrics, she had a chance to avoid the conflict between late night deliveries and caring for her own young children.
She seemed to have trouble finding the area of medicine that was best for her.
After an internship at Westchester City Hospital in New York, she applied for education in obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Then Haggan worked in Kansas City with Dr. Joseph Webster in obstetrics and gynecology until her first child was born.
From 1982 to 1968, while her two daughters were growing up, Haggan was one of the school physicians for the Kansas City M., public school district.
THE MED CENTER was the only school that accepted Haggan, but then she left after a year.
1985
"I was not happy there and I left by mutual consent," she said.
Haggan said school health was rather frustrating because she always had to refer the patients to a clinic or their personal physician.
MARK MCDONALD/Kansan staff
"I did find anything, I couldn't take care of it," she said. "During the year before we worked, the same bad teeth year after year until the dentist took them out."
"I arrived right at the time of the riots," she said. "The great unwashed was the favorite appearance of the students."
Spencer Museum Book Shop Books Magazines Posters Cards On the Visual Arts Open during gallery hours
Dr. Margaret Haggan, a physician at Watkins Hospital, peers down the throat of Tom Rassler, a hospital employee. Haggan has practiced medicine for 40 years, including 12 years at the University.
A COUPLE YEARS later drugs were quite prominent, she said.
"I remember one of my first occupations was to babysit someone who had gotten an overdose of LSD," she said. "Later I shepherded a methadone clinic for several years when heron was a bit problem here."
One of the advantages of working in student health service is the doctors see many kinds of health problems, Hawaiian said.
"We do almost everything here," she said. "One time a student needs a dermatologist and you see him. The patient is an internal medicine, and you see him.
"The health service is like a group practice. The doctors here have different specialties, so if you are a little damped, you can always ask for help."
HAGGAN SPECIALIZES in gynecology and obstetrics.
"We don't do much obstetrics here, obviously," she said. "We don't deliver babies except by accident and even that happened to another doctor.
"We spend most of our time stamping out pregnancy. We do a lot of Paps and pelvic examinations, and we prescribe the pill."
Another of her jobs is advising women students who are pregnant.
"I've had girls who arrived in my office and say, 'I'm afraid I pregnant,' " Haggan said. "We do not do abortions here, we do with talk
the student about her plans and advise her if she wishes to terminate the pregnancy."
When Haggan first came to KU, abortions were not legal in Kansas, and most of the time there was at least one woman in the hospital suffering from an infection because of an unsafe abortion, she said.
"Since it is legal now, we can refer
to it," he said. "We rarely have an
infected abortion now."
Haggan said she was personally against abortion, but sometimes there wasn't any other option.
العلماء والشيعة لم يكنوا بشرط هذا
فيما يتعلق بذلك ، فإنهم في العقل والهوامر
الحكومية لا ينظرون إلى الحياة النفسية
بين المدرسة .
"If somebody decides that the way she wants to go, I can't see any point in having two deaths, rather than one," she said in a low voice.
السنة الثانية V. 368 والسنة الثانية V. 370
السنة الثانية (147) والسنة الثانية (152)
تقوم بإخفاء النسبة التي تؤدي إلى تعريفها من خلال التسلسل
السائق الرومي vv - 4. 9 - وليا فيه العلوم
الدينية البحثية ٢٠/٣ ملك المؤمنين vv. ٤٦
اللهم اتقان الله صلاةً وليس بكراً في الارض حتى يصحبه
كما في الحرمين والملوك المؤمنين في السنة الآخرة
النماذج ... وإنما لك الحصول على النماذج التالية
الحل في العديد من المشاكل التي تسبب في الانعكاس التالي:
1. تعطيل عملية الحفاظ على معاملات التنفيذ المختلفة.
2. عدم ترميز أي نوع من العوامل المخاطرة.
يُعين الحصول على معلومات الأدوية
مَنْ بِالقُرْآنِ أَبْعَلَهُ وَ
الامتثال في الأعمال المدرجة في الاسم البريدية
يأتي بما في ذلك الاتصالات اللازمة للاستخدام في المعلومات
. من الحق الائتماني في احدى
السلام عليكم أهل الدين
من الحسن بن محمد
Summer Orientation Program 1981 STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
"If the student needs a prescription refilled, it may take five minutes, but a serious problem may take a half hour or 45 minutes," she said. "Sometimes it does feel as if it's one right after the other."
leadership abilities
. . . knowledge of University programs & activities
Although Haggan's official work week is about 40 hours, it usually averages about 60 hours. On her days out, she visits a clinic in order to see how a patient is doing, she said.
"I make out laboratory skips by the ton," she said. "In private practice a doctor makes out lab records, but not 18 hours or one person. I'm delayed by paper."
interpersonal communication skills
Haggan sees between 20 to 30 patients a day depending upon the complexity of the medical problem.
. enthusiasm about program
student in good academic standing and returning to KU for Fall 1981 term.
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS
Independent HAIR
AVAILABLE IN ADMISSION & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL
Proceeds Go to Ronald
McDonald's House!!
APPLICATIONS DUE BY WEDNESDAY,
Alpha Delta Pi
She said she had wanted to be a physician since the seventh grade.
March 8/Sunday 12-7 pm
an equal opportunity employer
CHILI DINNER
Alaskan Crab
Alaskan Snow Crab Clusters
Prairie Schooner
SEAFOOD
FREE
Buy 3 lbs. — Get 2 lbs.
5 lbs. for 11.97 (or 3.99 lb.)
MOTOR VEHICLE
Maryland Fresh
and shucked oysters.
Market 841-6810
935 Iowa
Open 10 to 6
Mon thru Sat
One of the disadvantages to working in school health is the low pay, according to Haggan.
Ryland Fresh
OYSTERS IN THE SHELL
"Just one day I decided I wanted to be a doctor," she said. "Don't ask me why. It certainly wasn't the doctors. I had come in contact with since I didn't like any of them. Maybe I thought I could do better."
PERM
Special
Only
$20
without haircut
good thru 3-14-81
Open 10-8
Shampoo,
Haircut
& Blow-dry
Only $10
(reg. price)
7 days a week
Independent
HAIR
9th Mississippi
Owner/Stylist, James Cox
Next to Independent Coin-Op
749-4231
Save With Our Campus Discount!
20% OFF
EYE
WEAR.
Show us your campus identification for 20% savings
on prescription eyewear for you and your immediate
family. (Offer may not be combined with any other.)
Come to the Eyewear Experts for quality, service and
value.
"I enjoy the students," Haggan said. "That's my main compensation."
ANOTHER DEADVANTAGE to the job is the paperwork, she said from behind a desk almost covered with medical forms.
Royal Optical
5 Convenient Kansas City Locations
Consult Your Yellow Pages For
Offices Open Nearest You
MasterCard
Offices Open Nearest You.
GOKONON
841 3600
12 EAST 57TH ST
THE CROSSING
Vote SCHMITENDORF for City Commissioner
LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE
Protect your valuable personal property
John E. Dudley
842-7820
Prudential
the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong
Drinking Myth of the Week No.7
"WHAT A MAN!" STILL ON HIS FEET
AFTER A WHOLE FIFTH.
When we stop thinking it's manly to
drink too much, we have begun to
grow up. It's no more manly to
over-drink than it is to over-eat.
Funky Junk Sale Selected 20-50% off Items! stocking hats, ceramics,
footlights
Footlights
Footlights
Footlights
Funky Junk Sale
20-50% off Selected
Items!
Pente, stocking hats, ceramics,
mirrors, picture frames, stationery and more!
at
footlights
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
open M-F 10:30-7
Th 10:30-9
Sat 11-6
841-6377
footlights
---
University Daily Kansan, March 6, 1981
Page 11
ansan staff
Haggan
s by the practice a but not 15 uged by
patients lexity of
description lies, but a half hour tetimes it after the
al work usually other days come in to aid.
to be a de.
wanted to
t ask me
doctors I
e I didn't
thought I
ner
property
RF
ong
1-6377
3
Salvador unsettles Solidarity
El Salvador's sudden pre-eminence in U.S. affairs this week caught many by surprise, but not one KU organization.
By PENNI CRABTREE Staff Reporter
Latin American Solidarity, a campus group supporting Latin American self-determination, began protesting U.S. involvement in Latin America two years before the Reagan administration took an interest in El Salvador.
--had worked closely with campus and community organizations to educate people about El Salvador's political situation.
"Sure, we're a bit cynical, we've been slightly," Jorge Valdergado, president of Solidarity, said. "We've been telling students for two years that the U.S. was an island, El Salvador; and that this could be another Vietnamese, but no one listened."
"No one responds until President Raeben suddenly announces that he'll send in more military advisers. Then, when there seems to be a chance that U.S. young will be fighting in another Vietnam, people respond."
VALVERDE SAID that Solidarity
"El Salvador faces its most critical time," Valverde said. "Forces organized by the people are in a position to overthrow a dictatorship and take control of the country." United States is interfering because, they say, there is a communist threat.
"What the United States is really concerned about is losing power over smaller countries that seek self-determination. The United States wants to stop group on Latin America, and wants to stop the disintegration of its power."
Valverde, who visited the country's capital, San Salvador, in 1977, denied that El Salvador guerrilla forces were fighting with the Soviet Union, via Nicaragua and Cuba.
Lynn Pickett, a Lawrence resident who is a member of the Respect Life Committee, an organization sponsored by St. John's Catholic Church, said that the group has raised "a 'matter of human rights, not just a matter of wanting to go to war.'"
OTHER CAMPUS and community groups have also expressed concern over the growing U.S. involvement in El Salvador.
force in El Salvador, has been working for 10 years to overthrow the government." Valverde said. "They've been building up their own supply of arms, either by raiding the regular army, or building their own."
"The Frente Democratico Revolutionario, the main guerrilla
"The United States says that it's worried about communication, that the communists are going to take over and murder these people," she said. "But it is the rightest government that is killing people, so which is worse?"
"If we were really concerned with communism, wouldn't we be doing things that encourage the far left, in response to the moderate left, to take over."
"I was in San Salvador last Christmas, and the fighting in the city was terrible." Maria Carpio said. "If you happen to be in the wrong place you are killed. You can't be sure that if you leave your house you will make it harder."
the El Salvadorans themselves, the issue is simpler. According to one KU sophomore from San Salvador, stopping the bloodshed that has cost more than 12,000 lives is the central concern.
Her husband, Leon, also a member of the committee, said he doubted that the
KU men interested in fraternities will have a chance to pledge during the Interfraternity Council's spring formal rush March 27-28.
"My government has done many bad things, and so have the guerrillas. But the killing needs to be stopped before anything can be changed."
United States involved itself with El Salvador just to protect it from communism.
Registration is through March 24 in the IPC office, Room 120 in Level 3 of the Kansas Union. There is a $10 fee.
IFC sponsors spring rush
The University Daily
Tuesday, registration will be from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at Templin, Joseph R. Pearson and Oliver residence halls.
“This rush gives older men not presently in houses an opportunity to see the fraternities and decide whether they want to pledge.” Jeff Sharp, IFC vice president for membership, said.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time two times three times four times five times six times eight times ten times
1 word of power 2.25 3.25 4.25 5.25 6.25 7.25 8.25 9.25 10.25
Each additional word 1.25 2.25 3.25 4.25 5.25 6.25 7.25 8.25 9.25 10.25
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friurday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised free of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online by calling the business office at 800-267-1498.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ENTERTAINMENT
Visit the Book End. In Quantrill's Flea
Market, for quality used books at reasonable
prices 811 New Hampshire, weekends
10-5
3.6
Domestic & International Reservations
TRAVEL CENTER
- Airline * Escorted Tours
* Hotel/Rest * Skip Packages
* Car Rental * Group Rates
* International Student Specialists
Southern Hills Shopping Center
Southern Striping Center
1601 W. 23rd St. (by Perkins)
9:00-5:00 M-F. 9:30-2:00 Sat.
Free services to students and faculty 841-7117
Special—All 6% Beer 7:30-10:30 pm. $50
Special—All 6% Beer 7:30-10:30 pm. $50
evening-Mon, Tues, Friday and Saturday
Din-Non drinkers welcome. Open Mon-
Sat, 1月, sun 2月, headphones, 617 W
phone, 617 W phone, 617 W phone
"Say it with a song"
ASTA SINGING
TELEGRAMS
841-6169
TIBURON TOWNHOUSES are new, spacious apartments. Furnished or unfurnished, 2 or 3 bedrooms at $45 per month. Must住于第 8 and 第 9 年房,841-50-365 - 843-465.
FOR RENT
Bass Player urgently needed to complete British rock-oriented band. Contact Jade Gursi 1-379-5523. 3-6
For spring and summer, Nalmish Hall of Fall and the advantage of dormitory buildings and the advent of a private facility of it. Weekly midday service to clean up the grounds and activities more and more. If you're looking for a place to stay in an apartment厅 you want, stop in on our driveway at **SIMMH STALL**, 1800 Mallinah Drive, 542-676-3494.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect
furniture, easy to clean. Washroom,
place, 2 car garage with electric oven,
dryer/dayer hookups, fully - equipped
Kitchen, quiet surround, Open house 15
weeks prior to delivery. 810-453-
2575 for additional information. tf
MANOVER PLACE TOWNHOUSES: Available immediately. Now and contemporary.
4- bedrooms are within walking distance
8- bathrooms.
K-1814 or 8212 - BILL 4455. $ - 10
K-1814 or 8212 - BILL 4455. $ - 10
**AIRZONA STREET DUPLEXES Available**
**Airconditioning, study room, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, study room, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, central air conditioning carpet & stairs $400; supplies $800. **Hotel 64-732-871 or 64-732-884** $400; supplies $800.
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5, 843-3228. tf
Victoria Capri Apt. Unfurnished studios, 1 wall & 2 bdm. apts. available. Central air, 1 wall-to-wall carpet. quiet room, 25' x blocks south of the building. 484-2933; after 5:30 am/any weekdays
3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W.
6th. 843-7333. tf
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
3 bk warehouse for rent now at Pine Haven
1800 W. 4th St, #105; contact m/wather & dryer close to shopping
nancees. We pay water $50 per person des-
tance. No pets. Call 824-283 or 6777.
gottie.com
For rent, 2 bedroom Appt. air cond., 3 blocks from campus. Call. 749-3469 after 8. 3-6
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 205 and Kasold. If you are tired of apartments in the city, consider a feature 3 brs. 1/3 baths, all appliances, at least two bedrooms, have openings for summer and fall. Call Craig Leila or Jim Rong at 748-1697 for more information on our modestly priced apartments.
Summer sublease 2 bedroom, $1\frac{1}{2}$ bath at Heatherwood Apts. Rent + electricity. Call 841-707 after 5:00.
Five bedroom house close to campus available for summer leave. Carpet, modern appliances, air conditioning and laundry. $425. Call Darryl 841-5886, 107 Kurtzky-3
Med Center Bound? Nice. 2-bedroom
duplexes available for summer and fall.
Carpet, A/C, appliances, and parking. C-
1-91) (381-287.
2 bedroom, attached garage home, 2621
Mountview. Fenced yard. $290.00 mo. Available now. 843-6570. 843-6011. 3-10
Male roommate should rent furnished apt, kitchen, washer, p. dryer, driver tv, a. tv, r. central air, all utilities paid (exel. r. electricity; ttl $1/mo.) Call Kevin 614-847-3400.
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute walk to campus, 1831 Tennessee; $270 rent + utilities. 842-4822. 3-25
2 bedroom apt, close to campus $210 +
Bathroom apartment after 52 weeks.
WOOD FROOM MALE STUDENTS kitchen/bath,
14th and Kentucky, furnished,
2 rooms. $50 small appliance.
805-953-1188
ROOM FOR MALE STUDENT. Share bath
and refrigerator, 14th and Kentucky, renting
now, $83 + small utility. 841-2105,
841-5318.
3-11
GARAGE FOR RENT. Clean, dry, near 14th and Kentucky. 841- 72105, 841- 72605, 3-11 Sublease this summer. Two bedroom apt; on 10th street near campus. Al 841- 6782.
Sublease furnished apt. loft, one bedroom,
available April 1st, excellent view of Lawrence.
Call 841-5255 or 843-7828. 3-12
3 BR ranch. Fenced yard. Closed porch.
Available March 15. Crestline Dr. Hillcrest
area. $225 + 1 mo. deposit. 842-3946. 3-
12
**88 Mustang Coupe, recently rebuilt 280**
**My new front brakes, four new brake kits**
**The tires are excellent. Very good condition. Body needs restoration. $700. Call T89 at trodden-34. 3-10**
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale!
Makes sense to use them — As study makes sense to use them — As study makes sense to use them — Analysis of Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale!
The Bookmark, and Oread Book
The Bookmark, and Oread Book
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 2900 W.
6th. tf
Mens 19" Gltane bicycle, custom built
$150.00. Call 864-2815. 3-6
Receiver techniques (30 w/ch), turntable dual
2 speakers, $300 or best offer. 1144 Louisiana
7 (2nd floor). 3-11
69 Cutlass-Green. Mechanically good. 350.
Auto, Needs body work. $750. 749-6538
keep trying. 3-6
Guitar: Ventura 12-string. Fairly good condition. Newly restrung. $135 or best offer. 748-2750 ask for Jeff. 3-6
HP 38C Calculator, Programmable, statistical and business functions. 2 months old, barely used. $100. Call 843-7978, evenings. please. 3-11
1976 VW RABBIT. 48,600 mi. great looking and running + good gas mileage. Must see. Call 841-7762. 3-11
For Sale: 1976 Honda CB 550, Completely stocked, low mileage, excellent condition.
841-2665. 3-10
1956 Chevy, two door post, 327 eng, should have minor work $650.00, 843-8892. 3-9
78 Cameron Lt. 4 speed -39,000 miles, like AM-FM radio, deluxe interior, like new. Call Kamal after 7:00 pm 841-5223. 3-11
3-SPEED GIRLS BIKE—EXCELLENT CONDITION. $35.00. Call 843-6995 after 5:00 p.m.
D.C. Marvel comics back issues for sale
cheap. 841-8279. 3-9
Men's Sierra West rain jacket. Blue. Size medium. $35. Call 841-3799. 3-6 Alun 1920 skirt size teen tee t-shirt neck
88,700 miles, $2,000. Call 841-1386. 3-10
Kansas concert tickets for sale cheap.
Friends can't come. Call 864-6371 and
3-6
for Glenn.
73 Honda M-CM-CMT, 1030 Total Miles.
Passport Style. Lug. Rack. EZ Start. Turn
Signals. New Battery. Super mileage. 864-
362, after 950. 841-0703. 3-11
Alwa 1250 slant style cassette tape deck.
Fine condition. $125. 749-0486. 3-10
Reel to reel tape deck, Pioneer 1020L
$320.00. Call Don 842-6577. 3-10
Men's Sierra West rain jacket. Blue. Size
Olds Cutlass 68, Blue AM radio, Air-conditioned, Runs good. $549. 842-4372 after 3 p.m.
3-10
1975. Cutlass Supreme, V-8, Radials, PS, AC.
Mini-Korg Electronic Music Synthesizer, excellent condition, must sell, first $200 takes 3-12. 841-8720, Curt.
Three $50 discount certificate for United Airlines flights between K.C. and Chicago or Chicago and Houston for sale Expires March 31, 2011. Call 841-2376. 3-10
Opticonia System stereu system & amp 80 watt, cassette, turntable, with 2 ESS speakers. Ex. condition, must sell before break.
941-965 Make offer.
**Ladies' Eastman flight, found on side of**
**phonebook 3/2 Call Denise and iden**
**749-6444**
**3.6**
35 mm Canon camera. Tele-converter, 50 mm, 135 mm 200 m, and 85 mm wide angle lenses. All in excellent condition—Best offer. Anytime at 844-2621. 3-11
74 Chevette, excellent cond, new paint,
tires, engine, Alain Ross 843-1772. 3-10
FOUND
Codl Shaven-brown check book with ID.
Codl 864-1475.
3-6
Calculator in Strong Hall. Call to identify. 3-6
749-2000.
HELP WANTED
Found Monday, coat and hat at Westidge car wash. Call to identify. Ask for John at 749-1553. 3-6
Found-Ladies watch March 2 in O-ine-
parking lot. Call 843-9030 to identify.
Found: small amount of money outloud
Flint call to Eric. 842-9850. 3-9
Cross pencil on sidewalk near Fraser Hall.
Call 749-3941. 3-10
CRUISERS, CLUB MEDIATERMEANE. SAIL-
CHASER. STUDENTS. Office Personnel. Counselors.
Rent. Send $ 50. $ 10. $ 20. Rent. Send $ 50. $ 10. $ 20.
WARDING. 152 WARDING. 152 WARDING. Cars.
152 WARDING. 152 WARDING. Cars.
Full or part time help wanted. Combination dancers for a summer program at the New York Dance Center. Dancing start $4.00 per hour. Nude dancing $7.00 per hour. Your choice. Nude dance only. Hwy 40, #3-980-900. - $24
COULD YOU USE SOME EXTRA MONEY?
A SECOND INFOI? If so, we can help!
We can assist with:
sample analysis to Job Tech. Associates;
sample reports to Job Tech. Associates;
$351 Reside zz. law; KSCH 6004- 3-4
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES
You will share your work with
experiences with our nursing home residents! Our consumer or-
ganization nurse (KNIM) needs your help in
Nursing Homes (KNIM) needs your help in
your opinion on the care and treatment of
the residents. All names and correspondent
numbers are listed at 913-823-3988 or 813-7107, or write us
at 913-823-3988, Mass. St. 45, Lawrence, KS 66045.
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF
accepted for the Summer Orientation student
advertisement in today's paper or come by
Strong Hail! An equal opportunity en-
rollment.
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Lost. Brown-suede sweater in Carruth O'Leary or Wescue 2-25. Call 842-4548, 3-6 answer call 843-3231 and ask for Jance-3.
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SKI WINTER PARK/MARY JANE SPRING
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Going skiing over Brooks HEAT WAVE SKI Vests are ideal for Spring skiing and come in great designs and colors. Tel. evenings 864-391, 862-5588. 3-13
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If you have ever been a victim of safety violations on one of the buses operated by the Lawrence Bus Co. especially on campus, please call mc. 841-8856. 3-6
Want to go skiing Spring Break? $18 per night—willing distance from village and city, but good for a small formal woman. Guaranteed good time. Dale call detail 740-6282 ask for Dave. 3-9 Serent portrait special, studio taken with a softbox. See above or able. Swizzle Studio. 740-1611. 3-25
Bass Player wanted IMIDEMETALLY 769-
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DO YOU BELIEVE IN HUMAN RIGHTS?
Support the Equal Rights Amendment.
Be on the floor. 8:11 am-2
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Green's Fine Wines. Come see our selection.
Green's Liquor. 802 W. 23rd St. 814-2727.
Party! Saturday, March 7th at Satellite Student Union, featuring CARIBE. Beer will be served. Bring your dancing shoes.
Open-minded adventure hunter for lengthy World Bicycle tour to start spring 82. Write: C.J. S. COP. S. Fern, Wichita, KS 67213
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Sports
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 6, 1981
'Hawks seek sure NCAA bid in Big 8 tourney
By KEVIN BERTELS
Sports Editor
KU has a good chance of advancing to the NCAA post-season tournament, but Jayhawks' Coach Ted Owens would rather not have to wait for the invitations.
Tigers say they'll be ready for KU this year
He can avoid that if KU wins the Big Eight post-season tournament. KU can take a step toward that tonight with a victory over Missouri at 7:10 at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
"However, if we go in and win two games, we
will receive a bill. The only sure thing is if you
win.
Missouri has an extra motive to win "over there" this season. Besides the fact that Coach Norm Stewart and the Tigers would like to take the Big Eight's automatic bid to the NCAA, they would also like to beat KU. The Tigers were 0-2 in second-round tournament games the last season.
"I believe as I look at records, we should get great consideration," Owens said. "I believe that we will. We played a good schedule and got a fine record.
Last season, the Tigers advanced to the tournament as the Big Eight regular season champion with a 22- record and a no. 9 national
ranking. They were virtually assured of an NCAA tournament bid.
"I DIDN'T THINK we responded quite well to the tournament last year." Stewart said. "I think we felt comfortable at having won the championship. We didn't think the tourney could do us much good last year. That's not to take anything away from the teams we played. We just didn't see how it could benefit in any way. This year we think it can help our ball club."
If KU's recent play is any indication, the Jayhawks have a chance to do some damage to Missouri. KU has won its last three games, one of which was Oklahoma Oklahoma State, by an average of 22.7 points.
KU RECEIVED surprising play from several players, especially 6-foot-10 Art House who hit nine of 11 shots, scored 21 points and grabbed 15 points. They were the only team Owens of what he could do, scoring 20 points.
mostly from long range. David Magley had 9 rebounds and 4 assists. Tony Guey had 6 assists.
The point is that KU had solid individual performances and will need them again to beat Missouri, the 20th-ranked team in the country in the latest United Press International poll.
They embarrassed us down there (KU lost 79-64, feel like we have something to establish).
"That's what we want," Guy said. "We want to play the best in the conference. Win or lose, we want to play the best. We're not looking for the easy way out.
At Columbia, the Tigers led by 11 points at tuia and Ricky Frazier scored 22 points as Missouri came up behind was the opposite in Lawrence, when KU was 6-5-5 before the first sellout crowd of the season.
"MU PLAYED well there," Owens said about the loss in Columbia. "We caught them at a bad time. What it comes down to is that we must compete with them on the boards."
Competing with MU on the boards is always
difficult. Coaches have said that the Tigers' front line of 6-11 Steve Pinavonov, 6-8 Curtis Berry and 6-8 Ricky Frazier should move, as a group, to the NBA.
According to Colorado Coach Bill Blair, whose team plays K-State in the second game tonight at 9:10, Missouri is the best team in the tournament because of those three.
"I thought Kansas State was the best when they played us." he said. "But when Berry plays he has been and Fraser plays normal and Mississippi," he said. "Mark Rink Missouri has the best front line in the league."
KU's front line should not be be. Housey played the best game of his Kansas career today. Magley rebounded well and has been especially fancy with his passing the last two games.
John Crawford has filled in well for 8-4 center Victor Mitchell since a knee injury three games ago. He grabbed 12 rebounds against Oklahoma and pitched to Mitchell is completely recovered from his injury.
"Victor has come back, but John has done a good job," Owens said. "We're perfectly in the way Magley has played." Body NBA has done his work. Huskey tweets to improve. We're maturing as a team.
"IM HAPPY FOR the seniors. They started their career with a conference championship and stayed together and it looks like they are going to have a good finish."
JAHYAWK NOTES: Kansas State plays Colorado to determine the other team for Saturday's roleplay relationship tonight at 8:10. The Red Roster Roldan expects it to be a tough game for the Wildcats
"We just have to stick it to everybody we play," he said. "Colorado is a strong, physical team. Rebounding is important. We have to play because I'm sure that Colorado will play hard."
K-State has won the last 10 games between the two teams. Tickets are still available for Saturday's game and can be purchased at ticket outlets in Kansas City. Tickets for tonight's games are sold out, but both games will be televised by Channel 13.
Ricks wants last laugh at NCAA sprint finals
By PAUL D. BOWKER Sports Writer
All season long it was a joke. Teammates kidded and needled KU sprinter Mike Ricks as the season progressed.
Opposing coaches and athletes looked on in amazement as Ricks, a senior, continued to win races but failed in his attempts to qualify for the playoffs. He was the first playoff winner in an event which Ricks is the national champion.
A week ago, in a preliminary race at the Big Eight indoor championships, Ricks finally ended the embarrassment with a first place time of 1:09.87. The mark not only qualified Ricks for the national championships, but was the fastest time in the event this season in the Big Eight.
"THE GUYS ON the team were making little jokes about it, the coaches were making jokes about it." Ricks said. "But to me it was serious, our national champion and not yet qualifying."
When the final race of the 600 rolled around on Saturday, though, Ricks wasn't as lucky. After a slow start, he settled for a sixth-seat finish and a time of 1:19.91.
Ricks fell behind early in the race, a position he is unacustomed to, and could never catch up as KU junior Mark Rau won the race with a time of 1:09.30.
The misery did not end there for Ricks. Although he helped the Jayhawks set a conference record in the mile relay, he pulled a groin muscle in the meet.
The injury was not thought very serious earlier in the week, but after treatments a day, the risk is now about 50%.
"It's a very bad strain," Ricks said. "It's beginning to loosen up. It's very tight."
Ricks said he hopes to run today and start preparations for next week's national meet.
RICKS REALIZES he made some errors in his race at the conference championships.
"I was feeling pretty good." Ricks said. "I ran too不太 Smart of a race. I bead.
"Iused up gill my energy trying to get back up front when I should have stayed back, played it cool, and made my move on the final lap. I am controlling the race. I got behind and panicked."
Rau, who won the race, couldn't believe it
"Shocking," he said. "I expected Mike (Rick) to be right there. I expected to trail Mike all the way and endure. I think it was the meet, just the pressure.
"He's (Rick) ready. He just ran a bad race. He never run from behind before. He made scorers crash."
KU Coach Bob Timmons was also aware of Ricks' mistakes in the race.
"He made a couple of them," Timmons said. "He hopes that he loss his loss as something can be forgiven."
LAST YEAR, after setting a Big Eight record of 1:08.9 in the conference championships, Ricks won the 600 in the nationals with a time of 1:10.06. Times are usually slower at the national meet because it is held on a board track at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit.
Ricks, however, does not see the board track as a problem.
"I don't think so," he said. "I think it might be to naught. We've run on the boards a couple of times."
Tennis team to travel to NU
The recent rains have kept people indoors lately and that includes the Kansas men's tennis team.
KU will travel to Nebraska for a match Friday and Saturday with Nebraska, Kansas State and Oak Roberts. This match, like KU's previous two this spring, will be indoor. The Jayhawks were to play Bethany outdoor Wednesday but the rain caused a cancellation.
In the fall, the Jayhawks defeated K-State, 63-3. In the second half, Sakura, 5-4, which was a superior Coach Randy White.
Even though the match will be indoor, KU's players are excited about the chance to compete with Big Eight schools.
"IM LOOKING forward to it," junior Ed Bolen said.
McGrath would not speculate on KU's chances. After this fall's loss to Nebraska, which KU was heavily favored to win, he said that he avoided speculation.
McGrath said the Cornhuskers had the best team they ever had, but Oral Roberts had the best team in the tournament this weekend.
Bolen said that KU did not play as well as it could have at Nebraska last fall and McGrath agreed, saying that the team had improved, with each player improving.
That improvement came despite practicing only four times a week. During the winter the team practices at a local tennis club. Because of this practice, the team can afford to pay for no more than four days.
"We'll show up and see what happens," he said.
Surgery delays tennis player's plans
By BRENDA DURR
Sports Writer
00000000
Marci Esry wasn't concerned last November when she entered the hospital for removal of cartilage from both her knees. She never considered cancelling plans to go to a gym, as the sports confident that, in the spring, she would be able to sing one single for the KU women's tennis team.
Instead, Eary spent the next two weeks in length-length braces and is still unable to handle them.
The surgery was necessary not just to play
sims but to be able to walk again without
pain.
"I took some tests, and cartilage in both my knees had been torn and worm away," she said. "As the cartilage tears, the harder it is to kill. If I played, great, but that was extra."
Ersry never expected to need so much time to recuperate.
Marcel Easy, a KU tennis player, works out in her room with a 20-pound weight. Easy lifts the bag 80 times each day as she rehabilitates both her knees after knee surgery in November.
"I THOUGHT that I'd be out and about and be playing again by spring," she said. "We were never prepared for the time and the pain."
The pain after the operation was so intense, Esry said, that she would "cry out if someone touched my hospital bed and then when I was off, it hurt more because it tightened my muscles.
DAVE KRAUS/Kansan staff
"I felt like a big train was sitting across my legs and every once in a while it would move. There was nothing I could do. My mom and dad had to do everything for me.
"Just to move one inch either way, my mom had to pick up my legs to move them and to get out of bed she had to lift my legs. It was a mess."
But with the help of KU trainer Cynthia "Sam" Booth, Esry is undergoing physical therapy to regain the strength in her legs. She works on her legs by jogging, lifting weights and using a whirlpool.
"I HAD TO REBUILD my legs all over
the bones, was nothing but skin and
bones," she said.
The pain was made bearable by knowing that her family and friends cared, she said.
Even though she is physically better, Eary said she is unable to forget the mental pain from her illness.
she was depressed and upset a lot, "Erys said, 'I don't think we will do this again.'" reason. It was tough on my whole family. If
"the pain in my mind, I haven't forgotten," she said as she still appreciating things people take for granted.
She enjoys simple things, she says, "like just going the bathroom, sleeping on your bed." She's quiet.
anything came out of this it was that I love my family so much more and I appreciate them. Friends showed so much interest and care that it made a big difference in my life.
"I'm PRETTY MUCH a fighter but I was
not a fighter and I needed help from
other people," she said.
But even three months after the operation, Esry said the mental part is difficult. "I'm still fighting with my emotions," she said. "My mind is ready to go but my body is not."
"I have to keep a rein on my training but
I don't need it, go out and meet my knee
up the stairs might never be here."
Esry began playing tennis when she was a freshman in high school in Independence, Mo., fairly late for most players involved in serious competition.
"In my first summer of playing tennis I got the title, 18-year-old. We are now nationally ranked."
beat me, she had been playing twice as long as I had."
But by the time she was a senior in high school, she had won her conference and the Missouri state championship and was headed for Texas Christian University until former KU tennis coach Torn Kivisto persuaded her to attend KU.
EVEN THOUGH she cannot play for KU this spring, Eary said she is hoping to compete.
"Tennis is a big part of my life," she said,
but added that "one was pushing her back in."
"I used to play because I thought my parents wanted me to, but they told me that if I couldn't play, they'd still stand behind me and I wouldn't be letting them down.
"I don't have to be a star to enjoy what I'm doing. The day that I don't enjoy what I'm doing I'll quit and it'll be my own decision."
JOHN BROWNE
DAVE KRAUB/Kansen staff
Lynette Woodard, KU's record-setting basketball player accepts a commendation from Gov. John Carlin. Carlin officials, Carlin and the Legislature officially recognized Woodard for her achievements at KU, including being picked three times to the national All-America team.
Woodard's feats get Carlin's approval
By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
TOPEKA-Even though she has received more than 30 awards and titles, including three All-America honors, Lynette Woodard still gets nerves at the mention of the word "award."
Sports Writer
Woodard's modest style was evident yesterday when she received a special commendation for her basketball achievements from Gov. John Carlin at the state house.
"MY VERY NERVOUS," Woodard said after
he spoke. "I am confident it makes me feel
good. This means a lot to me."
The presentation was organized by State Sen. Norma Daniels, D-Valley center, who conceived the idea while watching the KU-Kansas State game that year in game in which Woodward's number was retired.
"WHEN I SAW THEM retiring her jersey and heard her long lists of accomplishments, I thought that something like this would be in line." Daniels said.
The 5-foot-8 Carlin began the ceremony on a flat surface, but the size difference between Woodard and him was
"TD RATHER SIT down and admit it short," he said as the 6-1 Woodard stood next to him at his desk, "than remain standing and remove all doubt."
But Carlin switched to a more serious note later.
"I'd like to present this to you on behalf of a lot of fine Kansas basketball fans," he said. "You're a fine athlete and I'd like to wish the best of luck."
The award came as a big surprise to Woodard, who didn't know about it until minutes before it willed him.
"She (Kansas Coach Marian Washington) never tells me too much," Woodard said. "She told me last night that we would be going to try to win the game. I did not ask any questions until we got here."
WASHINGTON SAID that keeping the secret from Woodard for more than a week was not difficult.
Carlin said that although a ceremony like yesterday's was not a first, it wasn't routine.
"She trusts me," Washington said. "Besides, she is such a shy, modest person that it is easier to hit her with things like these at the last moment."
"This is not a routine thing," he said. "Lynette Woodards don't come along routinely. She's a special person, a great athlete and a great individual."
The Governor's presentation came eight days before Kansas takes on South Dakota in the first round of the basketball championships at Minnesota, Minn. Kansas is the top-trained team in the tournament.
Two other sunflower state teams will also compete for the region crown.
WICHITA STATE, which beat Kansas State last week to become the Region VI southern division runner-up, is seeded seventh in the nation for a tournament host Minnesota in the first round.
Surprisingly, Kansas State, which received an at large berth to the tournament after the loss to Wichita State, is seeded ahead of the Shockers. K-State is the tournament's No. 5 seed.
Fourth-quarter rally lifts Kings, 106-100
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UOP1)-The Kansas City Kings outsided Portland 10-3 in the final 2:38 last night, and beat the Trail Blazers, 106-100, at Kemper Arena.
The victory was the Kings' second in as many nights and lifted them one full game ahead of third place Houston in the Midwest Division with 13-7. The win broke the Kings' two-game losing streak at home.
TRAILING 97-96, the Kings scored eight consecutive points to take a 7-point lead with 10 seconds remaining. Kansas City's Otis Birdsong led all scores with 26 points.
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
The University Daily
KANSAN
Monday, March 9, 1981 Vol.91, No.111 USPS 650-640
Ex-legislator, Dykes accused of hurting KU
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
The Legislature, with help from a former state senator and former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, has launched "a carefully orchestrated assault" against University, according to State Sen. Jane Eldredge.
Eldredge, speaking at Saturday's "Eggs and Issues" breakfast sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, charged that Dykes and the former senator, Arnold Berman, were helping some lawmakers "diminish the reputation of Kansas University."
Their goal, she said, was to attempt to justify dee cuts in next year's KU budget.
Eldridge, R-Lawrence, said that Berman was involved because "he was disappointed in the judgment of the voters of Douglas County and that he thought the voters were politically not very wise, and so perhaps it was time for them to get their just desserts."
SHE SAID THAT Berman, a Democrat now working as a lobbyist, wanted to lower faculty pay raises to 6 percent. The Senate Ways and Means Committee trimmed the faculty pay raise from Gov. John Carlin's recommended 8 percent increase. But the governor demanded the governor to propose a 10 percent increase.
Berman, who publicly has expressed bitterness at losing the senate race to Eldridge last November, said he was "shocked and amazed" Sen. Eldridge would make a comment like that.
He said maybe she made those comments to cover up for campaign promises she could not
Dykes, now president of the Security Benefit
Group in Topeka, could not be reached for comment.
Eldredge, in her comments, referred to last month's controversy about the management of the University of Kansas Medical Center. Some lawmakers, including Senate Ways and Means Chairman Paul Hess, R-Wichita, had a surprise inspection of the Med Center last month.
HESS AND OTHER lawmakers then held a closed-door session with the Board of Regents. According to press reports, the legislators told the Regents that if they did not resolve the lawmakers' list of complaints by the end of the Legislature would cut the Regents budget.
"After the tour of the Medical Center was completed," Eldredge said, "those legislators chose to discuss their concerns with other parties who were no longer part of the Legislature (Berman), who were no longer part of the University family (Dykes)."
Hess and the others kept their complaints from Acting Chancellor D. Shankel, however, Pillar was killed in a car crash.
"It was, I believe, more than a lack of common courtesy (not) to either inform Chancellor Shankel that the visit was being made, or that after it was made to inform him of the concerns that the members of the Legislature had," she said.
RFN BIGLER/Kansan staff
KANSAS
BERMAN CONFIRMED that Dykes and he
so SUPERDEEP page 5
KU's Tony Guy and John Crawford hoist the Big Eight postseason tournament trophy for the sellout crowd at Kemper Arena Saturday night. Kansas defeated K-State, 80-68, to win the tournament and earn a spot in NCAA regional competition.
NCAA tournament awaits Javhawks
By KEVIN BERTELS
Sports Editor
KANSAS CITY—Mo.-Kansas' basketball tradition has been slipping in recent years, but the Jayhawks' opponent in the first round of the NCAA tournament has no tradition.
See ELDREDGE page 5
KU, now 22-7 and Big Eight postseason tournament champions, will face Mississippi, 16-13 and Southeastern Conference tournament champs, at 8:08 p.m. Friday in Wichita's Henry Levitt Arena. The winner plays Arizona State Sunday afternoon.
THE JAYHAWKS, the third winning team in college basketball history, at least slowed down their recent slide by beating Kansas State 80-68 Saturday night in Kemper Arena. The victory gave KU its first post-season tournament win and was the first time someone had more memories of an 18-10 season two years ago and a 15-14 record last year. Both years KU lost in the tournament finals.
"in my years at Kansas this is the only championship to escape me."
"I'm delighted," Head Coach Ted Owens said. "It was our goal at the beginning of the season to get an NCAN bid and to win 20 games. We figured to win 20 awards and the bid would follow along."
OWENS WAS pleased with both the Jayhawks in round assignment and the site of the first-round game.
KU, seeded seventh in the 12-tair Midwest regional, will be among six teams at the Wichita sub-regional. The other sub-regional site is Austin, Texas.
THE REGIONAL'S top four seeds receive byes and in the second round will meet the four winners of the sub-regional's first-round games. The four winners of the second-round games advance to the regional semifinals in the Louisiana Suncreed in New Orleans.
After the KU game Friday Wichita State will
soon southern University. The winner plays Iowa
Southern.
The top four seeds, in order, are Louisiana State. Arizona State and Louisville, the defending national semifinalists.
"I have some fond memories of playing in winters," he said. In 1971 we won the Midwest Western Conference.
the final Four during my tenure here. It was a moment in my coaching career I will never forget.
"But the important thing is to make it to the NCAA. The fact that it's in Wichita makes it especially nice because it gives our fans a better opportunity to be there."
Henry Levitt Arena holds about 11.000.
JUST HOW many fans will be there, however, is uncertain. Nanyce Wylsh, KU ticket manager, said that some tickets would be sold in Lawrence and that details would be available today.
Mississippi, with its 16-13 record, has the worst record of any team in the NCAA tournament. The Rebels qualified when they won the Southeastern Conference postseason tournament, defeating Tennessee in the first round, and积分 in the semifinals and Georgia in the finals.
The results of that tournament greatly affected the at-large bids for the NCAA tournament because of the Top 20 teams. No. 3 Tennessee were three of Kentucky and No. 12 Tennessee were defeated.
OLE MISS, however, has never played in the NCAA tournament before.
The Rebels have an all-SEC forward, 6-foot-5 senior Elton Turner, and a well-coached team.
"Their coach, Bob Wettlich, is a Bobby Knight protege," Owens said. "They play tough man-to-man defense and have a lot of movement on offense.
"It's kind of a fairy tale story. People just
have to do it, but you have to have
more talent than people give us credit for."
Two months ago the Rebels were far back in the race with a 1-8 record. An NCAA bid looked timid.
ALTHOUGH THE game will be Ole Misa's first NCA-tournament appearance, it will be KU's 12th. Only three schools in the nation—UCLA, Michigan and Ohio have made trips to the NCAA tournament.
"They are a well-coached team and I expect a physical game."
"We never lost the faith," Wettlich said. "We made some lineup adjustments and got it to work."
The Jayhawks have played in the Final Four six of those times, including twice under
See NCAApage 5
KU Iranian group to be investigated
Staff Reporter
By KAREN SCHLUETER
In the complaint, Heape said there was reasonable cause for an investigation based on allegations made by committee members Thursday.
The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee will begin an investigation this week into charges of misuse of student funds by the Iranian Students Association.
Ron Hape, Cultural Committee co-chairman, filed a complaint Friday as a result of questioning during Thursday's budget hearings about the costs of funds in compliance with Senate regulations.
The allegations, made at the meeting by Krupa
See related story page 7
Billa. Cultural Committee co-chairman, and Mahmoud engineering senator, con-
tributes the SAFF officer with gratitude.
BILLA AND AMANI, both officers of the International Club, said that ISA was given Senate money to run an advertisement announcing its officer elections, and used the money to advertise a film about the Chilean revolution.
The other allegation in the complaint was that ISA did not hold open and well-publicized elections, one of the stipulations of the Senate's funding philosophy.
Heape said he hoped the Cultural Committee would vote to table ISA's budget request for next year until the Finance and Auditing Committee completed its investigation.
See ISA page 5
Printing error makes severance bill unacceptable
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Director
Staff Reporter
For just a moment the mineral severance tax seemed ready to fly triumphantly out of the House chamber today and to wind its way across the hall into a cautiously waiting Senate.
But something happened to the bill over the weekend. Because of a printing error in the House journal, the record of Friday's session, including votes to enable to everyone, included Gov. John Carlin.
The mistake was made when the printers, following the pattern of Texas' severance tax, wrote that the tax would "include" rather than "exclude" private royalty owners. That one
provision was a point that Carlin wanted specifically made in the bill.
"I really don't think that too much will become of the misprint, along the lines of having to start all over," State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Dawrence, said. "I think it will end up like a vote that there will be enough votes to prevent the bill from going back into committee."
BUT NOW because of the printing mistake that provision is absent and the whole cycle of debate, committee hearings and floor votes could begin again. Or it might not.
The amendment that Branson referred to was one on which new action had to be taken. After a few months, the decision was made.
Branson said she thought that after the vote on the mistake were re-opened, a vote would be taken and a final vote on the entire tax would come by today.
"It is not going to be simple to fix the problem," Farrar, a staunch opponent of the bill, said. "Even on the federal level it has been required in figure out how to exempt the royalty owners."
ment, the matter was passed quickly after the motion.
FARRAR SAID that he would like to see the ball go back into committee for further study on this.
State Rep. Kearn Farrar, R-Huguenot, however, thought that the question underlying the mistake was not important.
Other options to deal with the mistake include taking final action despite the printing mistake or re-considering the bill and voting again after the change has been fixed on the floor.
"I don't think that it would be a good idea to go through all the details of this issue on the House floor." Farrar said. "What you would get is less money and you want to fix a complicated bill. It just won't work."
AS THE BILL stands with the mistake, Farrar said, it will not stand a chance of passing the final vote. Branson, however, said there would be no challenge to the reconsideration and then a quick final vote.
Farrar said one problem that the opponents faced in re-shaping the bill was that they could
See SEVERANCE page 5
By AMY S. COLLINS Staff Reporter
Kansas axes KU concert
Kansas couldn't come to Lawrence last night. But the group may make it in April.
The concert was cancelled about 10 a.m. yesterday, just 10 hours before the 8 p.m. concert. The stage had been set up Saturday and was dissembled yesterday morning.
Robby Steinhardt, group violinist, announced yesterday in KLZR-FM that a member member was ill and that they would take the next two days off from their tour. Steinhardt would not reveal the name of the sick member of the six-member band.
The band hopes to reschedule the concert for the middle of April when the tour ends, Steinhardt said. The tour is scheduled to end April 14.
According to John Conrad, KLZR program director, the station received more than 100 calls concerning the rescheduling of the show. Are they asking if they should hold on to tickets
Eight thousand tickets had been sold for the assurance that was to be held in Allen Field Hockey.
A spokesman for KYYS F in Kansas City,
see KANSAS PAGE 2
Weather
PEASANT
Terminal abuse does not compute
It will be warmer today with the high in the lower 50s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
The low tonight will be in the upper 20s. Winds will be light and variable from the west and northwest.
Tomorrow's high will be in the lower 50s.
BY DOUG BURSON and BOR MOEN
The Academic Computer Center has the most sophisticated security system on campus. Its James Bond architecture is riddled with card keys and electric doors and the system is constantly updated.
But every time a student sits down at a computer terminal there is the possibility of theft or valuation computer time along with data.
Staff Writers
While the total cost of known abuse so far this fiscal year has only been a little more than $600, out of an $800,000 budget, there is the potential for large scale abuse of the computer center's Honeywell 66/60.
"It's not the biggest problem we have, but it's a nuisance—move of a hassle than anything else," Warren Carrington, a former staff member of Microsoft.
We just don't know how much abuse there really is that we need about, "Paul Wolfe, coordinator of computer services."
THE PROBLEM, felt nationwide, has been compounded by the phenomenal growth of KU's computer use. Since 1977, use of KU computers was up 35 percent.
The number of students and courses using the computer has
increased as well. This year alone, 17,475 students will have some kind of instructional use of the computer.
The computer science department is the biggest user of the computer with a 37.7 percent share of the use, followed by the School of Engineering, 24.1 percent, and the physical sciences, 21 percent.
Much of the misuse takes place because the system is set up
Monday Morning
with a network of accounts that have different amounts of money in them.
Computer money is actually time with regard to computer accounts. The computer center charges each account according to the amount of computer time used. Money does not have a limit, so each department that the account is assigned to is charged.
All computer-related courses have accounts and almost any student, with an instructor's approval, has the opportunity to establish a computer account to run programs or work on research projects.
AFTER A STUDENT obtains an account, he chooses a 12-character identification number and a password. With these,
See COMPUTERS page 9
Where does KU's computer time go?
Hazeltine 1420
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 9, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
A penny saved—will go for gas
LOS ANGELES—The average price of all grades of gasoline increased a penny during the past two weeks, to 172.58 cents a gallon, despite a gasoline tax of $0.13 per gallon.
The weekly newsletter noted that some oil producers had begun closing refineries because of weakened demand for products, mostly gasoline.
"But the public can't make a difference in the price, except that price increases will be moderate," Landsberg said in an interview. "This is the result of increased demand."
Landberg said the concept, which is the basis of President Reagan's economic plan to lower inflation, worked well with most products.
"The oil industry is suffering from a case of premature supply-side imbalance."
"But we have stimulated oil exploration and drilling by decontrol of prices, and we have built up more gasoline inventory that we can use," he said. "Now we have to wind down our refineries, which also winds down transportation and production so recently stimulated."
The newsletter noted that AMCO used only 73 percent of its 1.2 million barrel a day refining capacity last year, down from 90 percent in 1978
Soviets renew call for arms talks
MOSCOW—The Soviet Union yesterday renewed its call for a summit meeting between Soviet President Leonid Breshnev and President Reagan on Monday.
Brezhnev sent secret weekend messages to Western European leaders, reportedly appealing for support for a Brezhnev-Seagan summit and for his
Spokesmen for West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, French President Valery Giscard d'Estating and Danish Prime Minister Anker Jorgensen confirmed receipt of the letters but refused to divulge their contents.
In London, officials said the Soviet ambassador was to meet today with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, apparently to deliver the same letter that she sent to the United States.
The move required to signal a campaign by Moscow on various fronts to convince Reagan that the Soviet Union sincerely wants to improve relations.
Reagan has expressed interest in meeting with Breshenvich and with resuming arms control talks but has emphasized that U.S. allies must first
Atlantic City bomb threat a hoax
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. - A written threat to blow up the Caesars Board-Affiliated Registry Hotel has an extortion demanding $6.5 million paid for an office building.
The letter demanding the money in $50 bills set a deadline of noon yesterday, which passed without incident.
The hotel evacuated its 750 guests and 1,200 employees, and police emptied homes in a one-block radius of the $105 million, 504-room complex as a precaution. But the guests and hotel workers headed back for the casinos just a few minutes after noon.
Authorities said a sweep of the hotel turned up no evidence of explosive devices.
The Atlantic City police and the state attorney general's office declined to comment on the bomb threat except to say the matter remained under in-
Some guests who were evacuated went to a temporary shelter set up by Caesar's at a nearby junior high school, but many of them gathered behind the walls.
When the deadline passed, spectators began joking among themselves and began streaming back into the hotel.
U.S. translator buried in Colombia
BOGOTA,Colombia-Theresa and two daughters of alain American Bible translator Chester Bitterman left Colombia yesterday after fulfilling his promise to return to the country.
Bitterman was shot to death Saturday by leftist guerrillas who held him captive for 49 days demanding that the Summer Institute of Languages, the school where he taught, be closed.
Bitterman, N. of Lancaster, Pa., was buried Saturday afternoon, hours after his body was found wrapped in a left guardtrial flag. He had a single
The leftist guerrilla who kidnapped Bitternan, Jan. 10 have threatened to continue their terror campaign against the Institute's volunteers until the end of June.
The Institute and its parent organization, the Wycliffe Bible Translators of Huntington Beach, Calif., denied the accusations and said the group planned to reconstruct the translation.
Hijacked jet headed toward Syria
ISILAMABAD, Pakistan-A hijacked Pakistani汀旅 with as many as 30 hatties on August 15, night after next september on days the ground was cleared of last night.
The three hijackers who seized the aircraft last Monday apparently ordered the plane to leave because Pakistan refused to meet their demands to deliver the weapons.
Defense Ministry officials in Islamabad said early today that the plane off about midnight Kaleb time (1 p.m. CET) despite repeated appeals by Pakistan.
But Soviet-controlled Radio Kabul said the negotiators were ordered to break contact when the hijackers demanded that 43 additional political prisoners be released. The gunmen originally had demanded that 90 inmates be freed in exchange for the captives, including three Americans.
The unexpected move came hours after Pakistan officials offered to release 15 prisoners in exchange for the hostages and the gunmen, who already had killed a Pakistani diplomat, let pass a deadline to begin slaughtering the cantives "one by one."
British civil servants begin strikes
The Pakistani government said it would not be bullied "under pistol point."
LONDON—Britain's 500,000 civil servants will begin a series of strikes today that could paralyze the government to protest Prime Minister
The strikes will affect almost all sectors of the bureaucracy, from driving tests to welfare payments and tax collection.
In a major challenge to Thatcher's 22-month-old government union officials said they would paralyze the nation's revenue machinery by halting the oil and gas industry.
The action could cost the government an estimated $1.3 billion a week in delayed revenue and could force it to borrow heavily to keep going, union leaders said.
The civil servants are demanding a 15 percent pay hike. Thatchter, pledged to cutting back government spending and reducing inflation from its current level, said the plan would be "a real deal."
Government workers will walk out again tomorrow to sabotage the national budget Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir Geoffrey Howe's announcement, which is expected to include sharp immediate hikes in taxes on income, gasoline, tobacco and alcohol.
The action could cost the government an estimated $1.3 billion a week in delayed revenue and could force it to borrow heavily to keep going, union officials said.
The civil servants are demanding a 15 percent pay hike. Thatcher, pledged to tutting back government spending and reducing inflation from its current 14 percent rise in 2006, said:
FacEx urges sufficient funding for library
Fearful of a deterioration in the quality of KU's library, the Faculty Executive Committee approved a further funding effort to sufficient funding for library acquisitions.
By DAN BOWERS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The resolution, partially drafted by Wallace Johnson, professor of east Asian studies, was co-signed by 41 professors.
"Enmasse as adequate library collections are essential for quality research and learning," the statement read, "it is imperative that sufficient funds be provided to prevent any further deterioration of the library and journal acquisitions program."
THE RESOLUTION will be for-
warded to the Faculty Council for app-
lication.
According to the introduction to the resolution, the library would be forced to cancel 1,000 journal subscriptions and purchase 2,000 fewer books next year if the Kansas Legislature stuck to its proposed budget cuts.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee has proposed a 5.5 percent increase in appropriations for operating libraries, which include library expenses.
The University originally requested a 9 percent increase for Other Operating Expenses, and Gov. John Carlin shaved the percent in his recommendations.
THE RESOLUTION'S introduction said that the library staff already was forced to cancel 800 journals and 1,500 books last year.
The cut to OOE represents a total reduction of 9.9 million from what KU did in 2017.
"Clearly the University library is facing a crisis which, if not averted, would substantially reduce its ability to research and instruction. It said.
If the trend of decreasing funds for library acquisitions continues, the statement warned that the quality of KU's library holdings would suffer.
George Worth, FacEx chairman, noted that such cuts in library acquisitions were reminiscent of accords during the Depression days of the 1930s.
He cited a letter from James Seaver, director of the Western Civilization program, that said the library had made drastic reductions in subscriptions to journals and book purchases during that period.
WORTH SAID THAT the library was "devastated" by the cuts at the time, and that it had since been unable to acquire much of the literature that was published during the Depression and World War II.
Felix Moos, professor of anthropology, said he was fearful that the resolution would not be considered outside of the University. Members of the faculty should direct the resolution should be directed to the State Legislature and the governor.
"Again in 1801, we are on the verge of damaging our library as we did during the Depression," Worth read from a letter from Johnson.
Ernest Anglin, professor of geology,
said that although he agreed it was
damaging to cut a great number of
acquisitions, there were journals that
could be cut because they were never
used.
HE NOTED THAT the geology department once subscribed to the Norwegian Hydrology Journal. Upon checking back issues, Angie said he
"What we cut last year isn't going to hurt the geology department."
"While there are some key journals that you should have," he said, "there are some that you just don't need.
found that none of the publications had been checked out in the last 10 years.
FacEx members also discussed the relationship between the Legislature and the University, in view of extensive budget cuts and two bills that would shift responsibility for tenure approval to the University away from the individual universities.
Worth said some of the legislative action may stem from misconceptions of the University, its faculty and policies.
THE SUGGESTED that part of the problem may be that the faculty members were not acquainted with the enough to be effective as lobbists.
the year we turn ourselves into lobbyists, and then when the legislators go home, we stop this," he said.
"For four, six or eight months out of
He suggested that faculty members should keep in contact with legislators for the entire year, and take a new attitude in dealings with the legislators.
"We need to drop the assumption that they can't or won't go along with us," he said.
He also cited a statement by State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, made last week when he said professors augment their income by 25 percent through consulting with private industry.
He said those were indicative of misconceptions and generalizations that the legislators have made about the university.
"We don't stand a chance unless we get those (misconceptions) removed," he said.
Kansas
From nage 1
Mo., said that the station had received more than 200 calls from ticketholders. Irene Carr, Student Union Activities director, said that she would know within three days whether the concert would be rescheduled. Carr said that if it were rescheduled, it was not possible to predict when the concert would be rescheduled.
"The band and everyone involved has worked very hard to do it," Duke Devine, SUA special events chairman, said. "We won't lose any money on this, but Beaver Productions stands to lose if the concert isn't rescheduled."
and illness was being kept secret
baby about the concert cancellation.
Devine said the band member's name
Ticket holders wanting refunds can begin picking them up after 1 p.m. today in the SUA office, Carr said. After today, she said, refunds were available during SUA's regular 8:30 to 5 office hours.
Out-of-town ticket holders and others desiring refresh by mail should send a self-addressed, stamped envelop along with the tickets, to SUA Kansas Union, the University of Kansas, Lawrence, 6044. Carr advised anyone deciding to mail in tickets to photocopy them before sending them in.
AURH ELECTIONS
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Vote in your hall at dinner March 10 and 11,1981 Hall ID required
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By CI Staff
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The memh Univer
adviser matter
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University Daily Kansan, March 9, 1981
Page 3
KU arts festival, council formed
By CINDY CAMPBELL Staff Reporter
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel and Executive Vice Chancellor Robert Cobert recently killed two stone by naming a 19-member committee and by announcing the date of the first-ever University Arts Festival.
The 19 KU faculty and staff members appointed to the new University Council on the Arts will advise the administration on arts matters, will coordinate activities on campus arts groups and will serve between the University and local, state and national arts agencies.
The council also will coordinate arts fund-raising activities and will become the standing committee for the University Festival of the Arts. The festival is scheduled from March 23 to April 12.
James Moeser, arts council chairman and dean of the School of Fine Arts, said. "There are so many different art groups on campus that felt we needed an organizational committee so that we could get together and discuss common issues."
"We needed something to represent all the various art factions here at KU," she said. "The arts are becoming more important in today's world, beginning to recognize the need for art and are supporting the art more."
CHARLA JENKINS, council member and public relations director for the school of Fine Arts, said that because of the prominence gained by the various arts departments at KU, "it became obvious that there needed to be one central arts committee to organize things."
Moeser said the council would be responsible for developing proposals for a performing arts center, making decisions on acquisition and placement of works on campus, and for developing an artist-in-residence program.
ALTHOUGH PLANS for a new performing arts center are still in the "hopeful" stage, he said that plans were being laid now so that the project could be carried out within five to 10 years.
lack of office, library and rehearsal space for many years, Moeser said.
The School of Fine Arts, located in Murphy Hall, has been plagued by a
Under consideration now is either a major addition to Murphy Hall to house the arts center or a new building on West Campus.
"The longer we wait, the more it's going to cost," Moeser said. "A seat-of-the-pants type of estimate would be between $20 to $40 million."
THE UNIVERSITY ART Festival,
also announced by the
administration, is an attempt to focus
on art programs in the various arts
programs at KU.
"KU has a spring program in performing and visual arts that is really special worldwide," Jenkins said. "We need to call extra attention all of the events are going on at KU in a six-week period."
The Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Andre Previn, will open the festival. A solo performance by Matsislav Rostropovich, the world's premiere cellist, will follow on April 2, along with other concerts, lectures, play and opera performances.
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KU decides on Centrex II
By KATHRYN KASE Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas has chosen a modified Centrex II telephone system, which will mean $40,000 to provide in increased costs to provide telephone service until 1985. Acting Chancellor Del Shulker, said yesterday.
"I'm not sure of the exact cost because we do not yet know how the company Corporation Commission's approval of the latest rate increase will affect us," he said.
The effects of the rate increase would be known by tomorrow, William Hogan, associate executive vice chancellor, said last week.
CHOOSING THE MODIFIED system means KU would retain rotary dialing phones and have 4,000 station lines on campus. Shankel said. Under a regular Centre II system, KU would have to add one phone and 6,900 station lines.
"The basic reason we chose the modified Centrex II, was that if we had
gone to the other alternative of keeping our present Centre I system, we would have had to pay a penalty for terminating the contract," Khanel said.
The University will pay for the modified Centrex II system out of its Other Operating Expenses fund in the 1982 fiscal year budget, Shankel said.
"If that doesn't cover it, we are going to put in a request for the money the governor set aside for state agencies and telecommunications costs," he said.
KU's search for a new telephone system began in October 1979, when the University signed a contract with Bell for a Centrix II system at no additional cost per phone. At that time, the monthly rate per phone was $8.75
BUT IN FEBRUARY 1980, monthly rates per phone jumped to $14.56, after the Kansas Corporation Commission approved a Bell rate increase.
Because KU had 2,000 station lines and the contract would have increased that number to 6,500, the University
"It was unfortunate, but the original
from any rate change," Shankar said.
met with Bell officials to discuss phone service alternatives.
The final two alternatives were either a modified Centrix II system or a standard Centrix II system and later buying a separate interconnecting campus phone system.
"Staying with the Centre I system would have cost us $27,000 in penalties to terminate the Centre II contract," Shankel said. "Then we would have had an additional $500,000 penalty to pay if we had wanted to terminate our Centre I contract early and go to the Interconnect system."
The University residence halls have a regular Centrex II phone system, Shankel said, because the funds for the increased costs were available.
FURTHERMORE, retaining the Centrel I would have cost the University from $50,000 to $60,000 yearly in increased costs, he said. But the University had original Centrel II contract would be paid to $100,000 in increased annual costs.
Conversion to the modified Centrex system has already begun, Shankel said. He did not know when conversion would be completed.
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Dear KU Students,
I strongly urge all KU students who are Lawrence residents to vote tomorrow in our city election. Progressive city government is important to you. For example, we need to maintain a police department which is sensitive to the special problems of a university campus. We need to expand recreational opportunities for students, from primitive areas at Clinton Lake to bike trails along the Kansas River. We need to expand part-time employment opportunities. We need to maintain a strong and attractive downtown, which is so entwined with the needs of students living and going to school close by.And we need to keep solid bridges between "town" and "gown."
I have served two terms as city commissioner and
Mayor of Lawrence. I teach at the KU Law School. I ask for your support in the election tomorrow.
Thank You.
Buckley Clock
Barkley Clark
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 9, 1981
Opinion
'No' to legalization
"Scientists make it, teachers take it, why can't we? Why can't we?"
"Marijuana, marijuana, LSD, LSD!"
You might have heard that little song (to the tune of "Freres Jacques") chanted by grade-schoolers on a playground in the late '80s. Most of the kids had probably never tried marijuana or LSD; they were simply reflecting what they saw as "adult" society.
Time hasn't changed society's views on LSD. It is still condemned as the destructive drug that it is, Marijuana, on the other hand, isn't like LD. Years after kids sang that little ditty, some of them were smoking pot. Marijuana's image has changed enough to allow a successful decriminalization effort in many states, with the seemingly logical next step being legalization. That step is debated on this page today.
But after years of testing, particularly in the last decade, questions do still remain about the long-term effects of marijuana use. The short-term effects have been generally agreed to be negligible; long-term ones have been only hinted at. It seems that for every study proving a particular side of the marijuana controversy, there's a study to contradict it.
The decriminalization movement makes sense. Mere possession or use of marijuana shouldn't be equated with violent crimes. The questions surrounding marijuana use certainly don't warrant a user spending time in prison over it.
Indisputable results about marijuana's long-time effects probably won't come for some time. They may indeed vindicate the use of marijuana as a harmless intoxicant. But there's also the chance that pot may prove harmful if used for long periods of time—in which case, governmental sanctioning of pot use through the process of legalization would be viewed as a very unwise move.
Keeping marijuana a minor offense won't necessarily deter its use, but on the grounds of potential hazard alone, legalization is a questionable step, and certainly one that won't come until conclusive results are in.
Decriminalization, yes. Legalization, no.
America's view of Russia often more fiction than fact
By GEORGE F. KEENAN New York Times Special Features
These deeply perceptive words by Shakespeare have their relevance to a sizable section of U.S. opinion, official and private, on the Soviet Union.
PRINCTON, N.J.—"Take but degree away, untrue that string, and, hark! What discorff follows."—"Trollus and Cressida"
It is not that there is no truth in many of the things that people say and believe about the Russians; it is rather that what they say and believe involves a great deal of exaggeration and oversimplification. And this is because, because of their generation, use of simplification, being harder than falsehood to spot, can be fully as pernicious.
We are told that the official Soviet outlook is one of total cynicism and power-hungry opportunism. Is this view wrong? Not entirely. But it is overdrawn. The way in which the outlooks of the present Soviet leaders, tempered as these outlooks are by the discipline of long political experience and responsibility, relate to the sanguine ruthlessness of a generation ago 60 years ago in the heat of the revolutionary struggle is complicated. There is traditional lip service to established doctrine; there is also considerable inner detachment.
The Soviet leadership, we are told, is fanatically devoted to the early achievement of world revolution. Is this allegation wrong? Partly, and it is certainly misleading. It ignores the fact that communists think would be ideally desirable and what they see as necessary or possible to try achieve at the present moment. It also ignores the distinction between what they claim they will ultimately occur and what they intend to bring about by their own actions.
We hear much about the menacing scale of Soviet military programs and the resulting tilting of the arms balance in our disfavor. Wrong? Again, not entirely, but often exaggerated. Part of this view rests on "worst-case" calculations, particularly regarding conventional armaments. Often, it ignores our own contribution to the adversely developing balance, by our unrestrained inflation and by the various unnecessary deficiencies of our conventional forces. Much of it is corrupted by the fundamental weakness of our weapon, against another country's armaments instead of against one's own needs, as though the needs of any two great countries were identical and any statistical disparity between their arsenals was a mark of somebody's superiority of inferior.
We hear of the menace of Soviet expansionism or “adventures” in the Third World. Is this all wrong? No, not all. The Soviet presence in Cuba, in which we should never have tacitly acquiesced in the first place, is not indefinitely compatible with our vital interests. Soviet collaboration with, and support for, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, the Libyan leader, is a signal disservice to the stability of the Near East. The occupation of Afghanistan has created serious international complications.
Yet, in general, such Soviet efforts have not been very successful. The Soviet Union's position in the Third World is actually weaker than it was years ago, before the disruption of Moscow's relationships with Peking, Cairo and Jakarta. And the methods used to maintain a balance gain influence in the Third World, primarily the dispatch of arms and military advisers, resemble too closely our own for us to indulge gracefully in transports of moral indignation.
It is alleged that the Soviet leaders never respect international agreements. Right? Mainly not. Their record in the fulfillment of clear and specific written obligations, especially those that avoid questions of motivation and simply state precisely what each side will do and when, has not been bad at all. Vague assurances of high-mindedness have been used to exclude those embedded in the Helsinki agreements, are viewed by them with the same cynicism they attribute to the other party who signs such documents.
It is asserted that no useful collaboration with the Soviet Union is possible. True? Not really. There is indeed an extensive area within which what we would consider normal and intimate relations are not possible, their being precluded by Soviet ideological commitments, procedural轧验 and other old ways of seeing the face of war there is another area, admittedly limited, involving certain forms of travel, trade, scholarly exchange and collaboration in cultural and other non-political fields, where things are different. And it is important that this area not be neglected, for interaction of this sort, in addition to increasing our knowledge and understanding of Soviet society, absorbing some of the shock of the misunderstandings and conflicts that may occur in other fields.
Soviet society is made up of human beings like ourselves. Because it is human, it is complex. It is not, as many of the oversimplifications would suggest, a static unchanging phenomenon. It too evolves; and the direction in which it evolves is influenced to some degree by our vision of it and our treatment of it.
In a relationship of such immense importance as the Soviet-American one, there should be no room for such extremisms and oversimplifications. Not only do they produce their counterparts on the other side, but they also contribute to the unsolvable a problem that is only partly so.
What is needed on our part is not an effort to prove our own virtue by dramatizing Soviet iniquities, but rather a serious effort to study Soviet society in all its complexity and to form realistic, sophisticated judgments about the nature and dimensions of the problem it presents for us. If we do this, there is no reason to suppose that the conflicts of interest and tensions between different nations are different in geography, in history and in tradition, should lead to the sort of disastrous climax that modern weapons, most tragically, now make possible.
(George F. Keenan, historian and former ambassador to the Soviet Union, is professor emeritus at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.)
The University Daily KANSAN
(BUPS 696-840) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday; during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas or $35 outside the county. Students subscribes are a $25 fee, but $85 outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $25 fee, passed during the student activity. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Klamath. Flint Hall, The University of Kansas.
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REEFER
Although marijuana does not lead to physical dependence and cannot therefore be considered addictive, the federal government was convinced enough that chronic (daily) users do become psychologically dependent upon its use. Psychological dependence has that a fact that a drug is not addictive however, has little relationship to its harmfulness, because dependence—whether psychological or physical—is a serious matter. And the belief that medical research has not proved marijuana to be harmful is a myth. Marijuana's 61 cannabinoids are soluble in fat; they are attracted to the body's fatty organs—especially the brain. Marijuana has also been shown to psychactive cannabinoid is delta-9 THC, and it takes five to eight days for just half the THC in one joint to clear from the body.
In 1974, Gabriel Nails, of Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, and a
"Drug addict!"
Marijuana has lost its connotations of long-haired radicalism and become accepted by a wide cross section of the community—from high-school teenagers to well-to-do businessmen, and it is this broadening of the social base of users that has been an element in moves to legalize marijuana's possession and use. Nevertheless, the state has also taken steps to "stance" under federal statutes. This classifies it as having no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.
People's views on marjaina are bound up in the way they feel about permissiveness, the role of politics and of pleasure. These views change as people grow older. I can see no reason why regular users of marjaina should be eager to supply them so long as their source of supply isn't disrupted.
The Controlled Substances Act of 1970 substantially lessened federal penalties for marijuana usage, and a 1972 federal commission report recommended that state laws be changed so as not to make possession a crime. By 1974, most states had followed this sensible lead in criminal penalties. But criminalization is one thing; legalization of marijuana is another matter.
Laws banning marijuana are justified
40c3a+0c 81
pioneer in marijuana research, discovered that THC inhibition formation of DNA in cells, resulting in cellular death and abnormality. As well, some 50 researchers from 14 countries at the International Symposium on Marijuana held in Reims, France, in 1978 presented new studies on marijuana's injurious effects on reproduction, lungs, cellular metabolism and the brain.
The experience of California, which decriminalized marijuana in 1974, does not bear witness to the high costs and risks associated with it.
PETER
SOMERVILLE
legally available, only a minority would remain users. California law enforcement officials found that seizures of marjuna skroekyted by 539 percent the first year under the new law. It seems that when pot is readily available its use increases; this was the experience of U.S. ser-ius officers Germany and Vietnam where supplies of marjuna and other drugs were plentiful and chean.
Law has many functions in society. It is partly a control mechanism, and also serves to uphold what is productive and acceptable in society as well as the general welfare of the people it serves. To say that current penalties for wrongdoing are ineffective ignores the point that just because a law isn't perfectly kept does not mean that it's ineffectual.
Some would argue that the continued illegality of marijuana infringes upon the personal "rights" of Americans. Already three legal addictive substances are available to the American public—caffine, nicotine and alcohol. The remaining two are tobacco and alcohol are accountable for 100,000 to 300,000 deaths annually. It would seem more logical to deal with our thousands of alcohols and lung
cancer patients than to add another legal chemical to our existing problem.
The International Narcotics Enforcement Officers Association and the International Association of Chiefs of Police absolutely oppose the legalization of marijuana. Is anyone naive enough to believe that the sophisticated in international criminal organizations hauling it out? I don't think so. The government disband just because one of the drugs they deal in-marijuana-is legalized?
Although it is true that we have always taken intoxicants—humanity has snorted and sniffed, smoked and drunk its way through them, we do not know what knowledge about marijuana's harmful effect does not mean that we should be changing law to legalize and condone its use. Early testing of radiation, tobacco and saccharin showed no increase either; 30 years later we find that there are.
If we want to enrich the coffers of the bi tobacco companies when they take over distribution, if we want to disregard the health and welfare of America, then let's legalize marijuana. Then we'll really see this country go to pot.
In all of history, no generation of young people have ever before used marijuana regularly on a mass scale. Therefore, the legalization of marijuana is only serving to exacerbate people into becoming human guinea pigs in what could quite possibly be a tragic experiment. So far medical research suggests we may be in for some real problem. We should indictment of our affluent society that we should even need to debate the issue of marijuana legalization.
Besides, America is party to an agreement that was ratified by the United Nations Singh Convention of 1961, which included cannabi among the stupifying drugs to be controlled Just what would be the international implications. America must ban marijuana? I argue it doesn't have to Mexico and other producing countries that the United States is no serious about marijuana—or any other drug
Legalization of marjana is no longer a pipe dream. Pot has shed its scary pretence in today's society; reefer madness has gone up in smoke. The more we learn that the marjana have been legitimized in some communities for those 18 and older. Public consumption of marjana, once a paranoidiac nightmare, is now acceptable in the more liberal and relaxed of locales. The more legalization is eradication of all marjanta restrictions.
'Reefer Madness' myths cloud real issues
Lawmakers would say that the law is designed to protect society. But exactly who is being protected from what is uncertain. Marjuriana does not produce violent, lewd or unpatriotic behavior. Any harmful side effects have yet to be identified. When an individual that pot is harmful, there is an opposing study that says it's not. In fact, marjuriana's potential as a medical aid has only recently been realized. Glaucoma victims can gain relief from the pressure of fluids that accumulate in their eyes by smoking or ingesting pot. There also is evidence of glaucoma in children and children with cerebrovascular patients, and can treat symptoms of multiple sclerosis, arthritis, asthma and spinal cord injuries.
Despite the victimless nature of marijuana "crimes," legislators—operating on antiquated morals, political fears or misguided benevolence—have refused to cast their imprimatur on innocuous tokens. Smoking marijuana for relaxation or recreation is legally tantamount to committing a violent crime in some states.
individual in some manner, that does not obviate the individual's right to decide whether he wants to take the risk. Obvious legal parallels are the laws regulating liquor and tobacco. Both liquor and tobacco produce known physical drawbacks in both cases the discretion is left to each individual.
Just as Prohibition failed to deter alcoholic consumption, so do marijuana laws prove that the law is ineffective.
Medically speaking, the bottom line is that marijuana is not physically addictive, does not harm the lungs irrepairable, and is not harmful to "drug" users. Even if it is incontrovertably true that marijuana harms an incestrator
KEVIN MILLS
P. W. Grace
California's School of Public Health indicates that marijuana laws fail to deter even those caught红-handed. Out of 5,000 people who were arrested for possession of pot, use of marijuana or drug use, 38 percent did not decline thereafter. People smoke marijuana for social considerations and not legal ones.
Prohibition of marijuana also give rise to a black market, which is noted for its violence and underworld ties. Florida has suffered a wave of violence in recent years because of the influx of marijuana and cocaine from Colombia. The illicit drug business is one of the mob's large operations, and reaps incredible sums of money by providing an equalization of power that would eliminate the extent of underworld involvement. It also would ensure quality control, meaning that marijuana smokers could breathe easier without worrying about things like paraguat and PCP.
Legalization also would eliminate the outlandish expenditure of tax money that is use to enforce the archaic laws. Police and the FE will be charged for the crimes that who have committed crimes involving victims The tax money given to narcisses could be transferred to programs for the poor. Additional mony would be accrued from the taxation or sales and taxation of marijuana.
Transition to a legalized marjuriana stat would be quick and painless. The major tobacco companies already have the facilities, desire an plans to market marjuriana, right down to the registration of various trademark names. Law regulating the sales and consumption c marijuana are a simple matter as well. Liquor stores in Mexico sold liquor 'laws'. Liquor or tobacco stores could sell jarjuriana to the public. All that is needed is little legislative effort.
Legalization would not foster a widespread increase in the use of marijuana. Those who are not smoking it now are abstaining for moral or personal reasons, not legal ones. Despite recent decriminalization push in some states, nationwide扮 high school seniors indicate they want to be declining, demonstrating that marjuana use i contingent on social values and not legal ones.
As Aldous Huxley suggested in "The Doors or Perception," people always have turned the chemical means of escape or entertainment. T this think will change is to deny an inherent drive in human beings. Instead of denying human feelings, they would be worr on improving the rest of reality itself. Perhaps then marijuana would be irrelevant to the human condition.
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Page 5
ISA
From page 1
on page
ISA requested $723 for office supplies and cultural events. Last year it received $698.
DAVID VAN PARYS, Senate treasurer, said Saturday that he would like to freeze ISA's funds during the investigation.
Van Parys said that if the committee found the obligation about the advertisement to be true, it would receive second time in two years that ISA had requested for one purpose and used them for another.
n e s s s r t c e t c a n u r c o n h a r o . e l d o t T r a n p a
According to VanParys, in July 1979, ISA requested $100 to print brochures. VanParys, who was treasurer at the time, said he later discovered that Mr. Parys had been used to print a student's master's theory.
"I'm going to go before the committee and ask that their funds be frozen because they don't act in good faith," Van Parys said. "We operate on the assumption that groups act in good faith and when they say they are using money for one purpose, we assume that's what it's for."
"When you add it all up, they are violating their contract with the Revenue Code and the Student Senate."
VAN PARWS SAID that although the treasurer's office should be responsible for keeping track of student funds, it should not have to police a particular group.
"I can't take the time to baby-sit that group," he said.
Loren Busy, Finance and Auditing Committee chairman, said he was not convinced that an investigation was necessary.
"All there is now is a lot of alleged violations," he said. "As long as they can prove that they're being neutral with Senate funds, it doesn't matter what they do with their other money."
The only stipulation against political activity in the Senate's regulations prohibits using ac-
trity fee money to promote issues or candidates in elections or referendum.
"I don't think that there's any place we can get them for misuse of funds." Bubby said.
Billa said that ISA probably should be funded under the Student Services Committee rather than the Cultural Committee, because of political filers printed by the association.
"I'm having second thoughts about them being funded under the Cultural Committee," he said. "I have nothing against them being political, but I cannot claim itself as a cultural organization."
AMANI AGREED with Billa, saying that ISA was not representative of Iranian culture.
"I don't think politics becomes the culture of any society," he said. "They only present a ensided view, and that view comes from outside the country and has no roots with the people."
In the past, Amiani has said that ISA represents a communist viewpoint.
Shahrok Azedi, an ISA member, said that the association was open to all students.
"There are some groups of Iranian students who don't want to join with us because we think that people should have rights to oppose and support Khomeini," he said.
"The members of the Muslim Student Association, the ones who support Khomeini, can join us, but those who oppose him can't join them."
He said that ISA allowed its name to be put on the leaflets to support free speech.
AZEDI SAID THAT all political leaflets published by the association were paid for by association members and not by activity fee money.
"That means to us that we are supporting freedom of speech," he said.
Azied said that he did not think the association would be in favor of being funded under the assessee.
"What we want is to be recognized as the representatives of the Iranian students, and the only organization who is qualified to do so," he said.
Heape said changing the committee that ISA was funded under was not solution to the problem.
AZEDI, ANDRHONDA NEUGEBAUER, a member of Latin American Solidarity, said there was a feeling among some groups that the Inter-American Union over the use of Senate funds by cultural groups.
"The leadership of the International Club, without being asked, has intervened in the publication of leaflets and ads, and the leadership doesn't have that right." Neuweizauer said.
Van Parss said that all the accounts of the cultural groups were separate and not under the same jurisdiction.
"Any group that is named in the budget, has a separate account," he said. "A lot of times ask Krupa Bla to process their forms, but they go through Krupa or the International Club."
met with Hess and other lawmakers after the Med Center inspection.
Eldredge
From page 1
"We had a meeting that was designed to in effect get from former Chancellor Dykes, and myself, because of our past experience with the KU Medical Center, our advice relative to what could be done to address some of the concerns," Berman said.
He said the meeting was meant to help the University and any statements contrary to that were "absolute and palpable nonsense."
"It's a fundamental absurdity to suggest that there is any association, any nexus whatsoever between the budget cuts and November's elections," he said.
"That frugality is being expressed completely across the board."
"If the Legislature, if the Ways and Means Committees, are taking a frugal approach to appropriations that this particular year, it has to do with the financial situation of the state," Berman said.
NCAA
From page 1
The only championship for KU came in 1952 under Dr. F.C. "Poph" Allen. In 1967 KU lost in the finals to North Carolina 54-33 in triple play, a junior center named Wilt Chamberlain.
Owens-1970 and 1971. The Jayhawks finished fourth both times.
John Crawford was on the team for the first part of the season but sat out the second half with problems.
Seniors Darnell Valentine and Body Neal are the only players on this year's team to have played in an NCAA tournament game. Both played in KU's 83-76 loss to UCLA in 18th. Senior
"I'm in the NCAA," Crawford said after KU beat K-State Saturday. "My hopes for my college career had not been fulfilled until now. We went when I was a freshman and I was not able to go."
Severance
From page 1
THE WISHES of the Big Eight's coaches and officials came true when the NCAA announced its at-large bids yesterday and both Missouri and K-State received one.
FARRAR SAID that he did not expect Carlin to support the bill with the mistake.
not recommend any changes. Because the hill passed in general orders action, the only way that the change could come would be to have a proponent ask that the mistake be corrected
Farrar said that he was confident that somebody would suggest the change.
"It would be political suicide," Farrar said, "because of all the royalty in the state."
Branson, maintaining that the mistake was a minor matter, said that the opponents of the bill might be making too big of a deal about the mistake.
Missouri will play Lamar in the first round of the Midwest sub-regional at Austin and K-State will play the winner of the West Coast Athletic Conference in the West sub-regional at Los Angeles. The playoff is between San Francisco and Pepperdine.
Carlin wants the royalty owners to be totally exempted from the tax and the mistake in print could have been acceptable to him. He said he hoped that a quick solution to the misprint could be found by them.
The Missouri-Lamar winner will face Louisiana State and the K-State-wheever winner will face Oregon State, last week's first-rated team.
"I expect that this will all get done fairly easily," Branson said. "I don't think that too many votes will be changed because of this."
K-State Coach Jack Hartman had parents about a trip to Los Angeles for his WWW.com visit.
"Southern Cal is a great place to be at this time of year," he said. "We're really pleased. Now we just anxious to out of who we're going to play."
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A REQUEST OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY
I was recently informed that the important service provided by the Audio-Reader Network for the Visually Handicapped in Kansas would be greatly reduced, if not eliminated, by the implementation of quadraphonic broadcasting either at KANU, Kansas University's public radio station, or other stations along the Audio-Reader intranet network. As this system of broadcasting must first be approved by the State Commission (FCF) before it could be used anywhere, it was disturbing to find, in a representative Tom Hagemed, Mr. Richard Shiben, Chief of the Broadcast Bureau of the USDA, a belief that permitting quadraphonic broadcasting would mean the end of Subsidiary Communications Authorizations (SCA) services, which include background music and reading services for the blind . . . in fact, is not true." This swearing statement, unsupported by data or explanatory material of any kind, pales along the following two opinions which I obtained from the Association of Radio Reading Services.
Mr. Robert D. Watson, senior engineer, Minnesota State Services for the Blind, finds "the greatest concern . . . the possible authorization of the 4-4-4 method of quadraphonic transmission which would use the 61 to 91 KHr part of the channel spectrum for quadraphonic information, and suggest the use of SCA's be relocated at 5k Hz." The use of 95kHz SCA with 4-4-4 quadraphonic transmission will not work with usable speech programming.
Mr. Jules Cohen, an engineer well known to the Federal Communications Commission, is described as concluding that "... systems employ three quadraphonic subcarriers, would in effect, eliminate the subsidiary services now so successfully provided with the 67 KHz subcarrier, the 95 KHz subcarrier, with its limited bandwidth, functions to so degrade system performance that the SCA is useless except for a narrow band need such as telemetry."
Section One of the Fourth Amendment prohibits the states from making or enforcing "any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States." Audio-Reader is indisputably a privilege, an immunity i.e., a freedom granted to a special category of persons, cherished by its listeners. Our legal system disguises corporate mergers or consolidations which could still competition thereby protecting the individual; yet the implementation of quadraphondic broadcasting will work just such mischief by severing the communicatory lifetime of several thousand print-handicapped individuals. Black's Law Dictionary lives public both as "everybody", the community at large, "the people" and as "a", a part of the inhabitants of a community. "This second definition of public is the one Mr. Wailson used when he said: "The services occupying the 6 KHz SCA channels are important public assets which deserve to be, and must be, protected."
There are many people in the community who sincerely hope that Kansas University will remain committed to this standard of public broadcasting.
William Dann
2702 W, 24th St. Terr.
Lawrence, KS 66044
G.P. Loyds 701 Mass.
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Lawrence Commission Primary
Page 6 University Dally Kansan, March 9, 1981
The issue of downtown redevelopment, a much-debated and much-written-about subject for more than two years, looms large over *Waukee*'s city Commission primary election.
The primary, made necessary by a large 13-candidate field, will narrow the field to six finalists, who will then run in the April 7 general election.
Two incumbents—Barkley Clark and Bob Schumm—are contesting for three seats becoming open on the commission. Ed Carter, the current mayor, is not running in the race, but that he has "done his hit" on the commission, and that it was time to step aside for others.
The other two commissioners, Don Binn and Marc Francisco, do not come up for re-election.
The efforts of Cleveland developer Jacobs, Visciori and Jacobs to rezone a 61-acre tract in south Lawrence for a suburban, "cornfield" mail, is the most pressing issue facing downtown. The city agreed. Several cited the more general issue of downtown redevelopment as also being
important. The Kansan's questions were designed accordingly.
1. What experience do you have in community organizations that you think qualifies you?
The questions were:
2. Why are you running for the City Commission?
The candidates' answers are given in that order
suburban, "command" the city should play in downtown development, if any?
Do you support rezoning the 61-acre tract at a suburban, "corffield" mall?
Voters will be allowed to select three candidates of the 13 on the ballot, with the top six vote-givers advancing to the general election. Lawrence polls will be open tomorrow at 7 a.m., and registered voters will be able to cast city limits will be allowed to cast ballots.
According to the clerk's office, primary turnout is traditionally light, and a big influx of voters to the polls is not expected. The governor may find more enthusiasm, the clerk's office said.
Mike Amvx
ALEXANDER MARTINEZ
Mike Amyx, 27,
works as a barber in
his father's shop. He
2612 Redbud Leap.
His answers:
- Although I am not involved in any community groups, I think my Lawrence business experience qualifies me for the job. My personal contacts come from all walks of life and they could help me hear all sides of each issue and to make sure we made decisions that every citizen could benefit from.
- 1 - i am running for City Commission to give the
city more accessible and
hard-wiring commission.
- No, I don't. I think we need to look farther into the downtown before we make a final decision. However, I recognize the necessity for us and realize the needs of the downtown community.
- The city should take a dominant role, using financial tools to enhance competition and to provide a more fruitful retail market. I think the town should be blended into the city as a whole.
Barklev Clark
Barkley Clark, 42,
is a KU law professor
who was elected to the
City Commission
in 1973 and was elected
in 1977. He lives at
1511 Crescent Rd.
- I served on the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission from 1970 until 1973, including two terms as chairman. I was first elected to the City Commission in 1973 and reelected in 1977. I have served two terms as mayor of Lawrence.
- Since 1970, I would guess that I have spent an average of 15 hours per week—every week on local government. I am a lawyer, a member of the law faculty, a teach local government law at the KU law school.
- I am running for a third term because I think my experience in city government can be helpful in working on the important issues that lie ahead, such as downtown verses the "corridor field." I am also running because I have a strong belief in the local government under our political system.
- I am opposed to the corriedale mall reorganizing plan. It violates our comprehensive plan and it would slowly strangle downtown. We need to have some more department store shopping space that would be of a size and scale which fits into the historic fabric of Massachusetts Street.
- The City Commission should vigorously support downtown redevelopment. Downtown is the center of our city, an element that sets it apart and makes it special.
Sherri Dietz
A. P. A. M.
Sherri Dietz, 26, is a KU law student. She drives at 2018 Miller Dr.
*In my work as a legal assistant in the at-
torney office, I spend time with community- based issues daily on a local service provider.
Her answers:
If you don't get involved with something like this, you can't complain when a city issue isn't decided your way. I don't think the local council will be going on. They need to be more fully represented.
- Without access to the total research data on this mall, it's difficult to forsee all the potential detrimental or beneficial aspects a mall like this could provide. The commissioners have all this information and still in a dilemma. Obviously, there is no easy answer to an issue as important as this one.
- The city's role should be one of protecting the balance between new retailers and already established businesses in the downtown area. We have to make sure that businesses detriment of businesses already established.
David Frve
1234567890
Dry Frye, 31, is an independent hous ing contractor. He lives at 2714
His answers:
- My only qualification is my concern for what is happening in the city. I think experience could be a detriment. If you get too much experience, you get above the people you're trying to deal with.
- We need someone in there who's concerned with what the people want and not with some special interest. A city commissioner should be concerned with what the citizens want.
- I don't believe the city needs a mail. I personally think it would hurt other retailers in the city. I don't feel the city is large enough at this point, but the other retail businesses that are already here.
- The city has no place in the actual operation of retail businesses, but if some disaster takes place, the city should come in with some type of bonds for redevelopment.
Tom Gleason
His answers:
Ton Gleason, 32, is a Lawrence attorney He lives at 1647 Vermont St.
- in a past president of the Oreal Neighbourhood Association and presently serve on its board of directors. I currently serve the city as the chairman of its Community Development Committee, and I am also representative taking part in the city's Teska and Associates downtown study development.
- I think the City Commission has not given significant attention to all the different attitudes and interest in Lawrence. Also, I have lived there for 15 years and the city means a great deal to me.
Scott Nesbitt
- The first thing the city should do is complete a comprehensive plan for the downtown. That would be the first step. After that, the city has to make sure that it doesn't involve taxpayer expenditure.
- No. I think the cornfield mall would create more problems than it would solve. It would cause substantial dislocation of businesses and a degeneration of the downtown.
Nancy Hambleton
- I served as city commissioner (1971-1975) and as mayor (1973-1974). I am present president of Cottonwood Board and vice president for community affairs for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. I helped to initiate housing rehabilitation, neighborhood organizations and downtown redevelopment on my past tenure on the commission.
- Lawrence is facing some important decisions and anticipates reduced resources and increasing demands. Although, these problems will be difficult, it's an exciting and challenging time to be involved in city affairs. I'm part of the team that helps retailing and a strong downtown, but realize we must not neglect other areas of the city or demands for resources.
Her answers
Nancy Hambleton,
56, is director of
business development
with Design Build
Architects. She lives at
1312 Rainy Place.
M. BALDINI
- No, I don't. Although, this is the easiest and quick way to add additional retailing, it will inevitably weaken the heart of the city, which is so important as a cultural and business center. We should be strengthening development there, building up our 24-hour activity, not pulling out retailing.
- The city has to work with private developers and retailers. One reason downtowns show deterioration in so many places is that it is expensive and difficult to redevelop areas.
*I'm a former reporter and editor for newspapers in Buffalo, N.Y., Kansas City and Chicago. I've also taught journalism at the University of Illinois for two years. I hold a doctorate and a master's in journalism with secondary concentrations in political science and sociology.
Nossen Stkitt, 34, is the owner of S.R. Nossen and Sons, a small-engine repair business. He lives at 622 Illinois Street.
His answers:
- Basically, I've had quite a few negative experiences dealing with the commission, particularly in the area of competitive bidding. I think the City Commission does an excellent job responding to interest groups, but if you are not an interest group, you have a hard time getting heard.
- I. Yes, I think if someone wants to bring money into the city when the construction business is really hurt, it would bring more jobs into the city. It would cause some economic dislocation, but economic dislocation is what causes people to get off their rumps and compete or die. We need to return to a sense of economic competitiveness. To stop growing is to die.
I *think the city should treat the downtown just like any other business district. The city's IRB policy is grossly discriminatory. It's just unfair to unfair to have a geographical zone that
ALEXANDER
Jerry Riling
Jerry Rilling, 26, is a self-employed janitor. He lives at 320 Pioneer.
His answers:
- I's not a member of any organization, but I have attended the City Commission meetings regularly for the past five or six years, and the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission meetings four years before that, I'm not a newcomer to the City Commission.
- I *think now, at this point in my life, I can contribute much more to the City Commission than I can as a private citizen attending the peace and justice council in peace of mind, because I think I can do the job.
- No. The mail would destroy the downtown, and make the city of Lawrence just like Topeka or Kansas City, Kan. I don't want to see board-up businesses downtown. I think that if the mall is put in, the downstown would die a slow, but sure, death, and that would be tragic.
*I think city support with bond revenue, mixed in with private development money, is the best method. I don't think Richard Inn (lawyer for Jacobs, VissiSON and Jacobs, the proposed mall's developers) understands that the city of Lawrence won't own any of the downtown stores if the city helps to build them. The stores will be owned by the private merchants and developers.
Bob Schumm
M. M. SALVADOR
- I have had two years' experience on the commission, and I think that's a terrific asset. I also have my business experience, over 10 years of owning and operating my own businesses (Schumm owns four Lawrence restaurants) and beats self-employed.
- The major issue that I've been following during my tenure on the commission hasn't been decided yet, and that's the question of the suburban mall and downtown retailing. I've read the information, both pro and con, on the mall and what it could do to the downtown.
Chester Schmitendorf
Bob Schumm, 34, is a two-year incumbent City Commissioner and a Lawrence restaurant owner. He works at St. Andrew Drive.
- Not going to say yes or no at this time. I have, however, in the past, issued statements strongly supporting the downtown area and the central business district. I've worked hard to gather information on where to locate free-standing stores in the downtown area, if we can enlist some major retailers into going along with this concept.
I've met a lot of people in different cities, and talked to a lot of people here, and I've gotten an awful lot of information on this question. I think I'm ready for the next command, and I hope I'm on it.
- I think we should use every kind of tool at the city's disposal to rebuild that central business district. These tools would be in the form of industrial revenue bonds, Urban Development Action Grants, tax increment financing, and items we can use to entice firms into our city.
Another device that's being considered right now in the Legislature is the special tax benefit for businesses that have made a commitment to business. These taxing districts could be very, very important to our city. At one of the National League of Cities meetings (the conference took place in Washington, D.C., Feb. 28-March 4), the legislators said they believed the parameters that the federal government has set. We're right on line, right on target.
Chester Schmittendor, 21, is a part-time employee of George's Ufurniture and Antiques, and a part-time student in the University Business. He lives at 121 Kentucky St.
I've never been much for joining organizations, and I don't consider myself an organization candidate. I was in the Air Force during the 1950s. I'm proudly a member of the Kansas Air National Guard.
His answers
- At the time I filed, there were only two or three people running, and I thought I would give the voters a choice. I believe in continued improvements in the East Lawrence and Cread neighborhood, but again I don't consider myself a neighborhood candidate.
- I still have to look at the reports the reports Commission has now, but I'm not sure the cornfield mall would be as bad a thing as everyone makes it out to be. I need to look at the issue in a new way. And I don't think the downtown mall proposal is very wise; a downtown mall would look out of place.
- I really don't know what the proper city role for the downtown would be. The city has spent a lot of money in improving downtown, and it will have the new city hall there. I would advocate supporting downtown a jitter, not too much. I wouldn't support any major construction projects.
Nancy Shontz
Nancy Shontz, 52,
lists "community volunteer" as her occupation at 3243 Saddlehill.
A. A. G.
- I am a very active member of the League of Women Voters, and have been for 18 years. I am currently on the Douglas County Environmental Improvement Council, and am a member of the Community Development Block Grant Advisory Committee. I am also a member of the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center.
Her answers:
The Advisory Board is a self-organized citizens' group that deals with environmental issues. The Block Grant Advisory Board helps manage the community's Lawrence's older, "targeted" neighborhoods.
- My decision to run is a combination of many years' experience in government issues and community activities. No one issue motivated me to run, but the upcoming mall decision should be the downstairs should be revitalized and should be the center of most of our retail expansion.
- No. I think it's a very poor location for intensive commercial use. It would trigger an explosion of development in the outlying city and it might not be supported two regional shopping centers.
- The city has at its disposal a number of methods to redevelop the downtown, and most do not involve tax money or public funds. There are industrial revenue bonds, the Urban Development Action Grant, and several other ways to raise money. Some spin-off expenses from redevelopment, such as street improvement and enlarging utility capacity, will involve public funds, and we'll have to be careful about how we spend those.
I have been involved in all the city's major issues for the past five or six years. I've also studied city government through the League of City Males, and I believe it a good working knowledge of city government.
Aaron G. Serrault
PETER M. KOWALS
Aaron G. Serrault,
2% is a custodian for KU Facilities Opera-
tions lives at 133 in Ohio.
Ohio St.
His answers:
- None that I can think of. I've never really been an organization joiner.
F
- There are a few things I would like the city to do, and I would push for those things. I favor the cornfield mall, and I think the north bank of the Kansas River, across from City Hall, should be more extensively developed. Perhaps a new civic center could be built there.
- Yes. It's a good location, I think, and the city needs the new stores. I think the mail is essential to Lawrence for economic reasons. I don't think the effect on downtown will be that bad.
- Under certain circumstances. I don't think the city should get too heavily involved unless it's a life-or-death situation. Otherwise, I don't think city involvement would be too good.
- I think the city should issue low-interest loans or some form of financing that would not cause increases in taxes, to make sure that these buildings are structurally sound. It has been reported to me that many of the basements are in very bad shape.
Pat Slick
I've learned a lesson from the East Coast, where I used to live. I rode on the bus from New York to Philadelphia, and I never realized that I lived in York, because of the extensive development.
BABA
Pat Slick, 32, is a graduate student in religious studies. He lives at 1123 Oregon.
"The City Commission has the final say over the granting of a district," Eldredge said. "The City Commission can dissolve it, but if 40 percent of its residents vote it to maintain the district, it will be maintained."
- "I'm a member of the Sunflower Alliance and the Kansas Natural Guard (two anti-nuclear organizations). I'm also a member of the East Lawrence Improvement Association, and the Oread Neighborhood Association. I lived until just recently at 1340 Tennessee St.
*Absolutely not. I am in favor of keeping Lawrence as green as possible. I can remember when I used to walk a mile through the fields from 23rd Street to 33rd and Iowa to visit a local business, but now I'm in a suburb of Topeka or Kansas City through continued expansion. With the addition of a mall, you may be invited in more jobs, but you also bring in a need for increased city services, along with some prime farmland and introducing pollution, noise and traffic congestion into the area.
It might also be a good idea to close off a couple of streets, say, between Seventh and 11th on Massachusetts, and make it sort of a pedestrian mall.
His answers:
A Kansas Senate Bill backed by State Sen. Jane Eldredge, Lawrence city commissioner Barkley Clark and city manager Buford Watson, would allow downtown Lawrence merchants to improve apartment improvement districts" to finance construction and other improvements within that district.
- I have found, that in all the places that I've lived, that Lawrence is the only place where I have gotten as much, if not more, out of the city than I've put into it. I want to run just for one day. And I want to share the people of Lawrence and give back to them some of the nice things that they've given to me.
"If 25 percent of the merchants file a protest petition (to dissolve the district after it has been formed), it will take a 4-1 City Commission vote to reverse their decision. If 40 percent to petition
"We wanted to expand that so that the merchants could, in effect, tax themselves in order to purchase buildings, build mini-parks, parking areas and so on. They could, for instance, build a new building and then lease it to Macy's or what you have."
Downtown retail merchants could receive a powerful addition to their assortment of incentives for new downtown businesses--if the Legislature will go along.
EDLREDGE EXPLAINED that the consent of 25 percent of a particular district's merchants was necessary to petition the city to create a district. If 40 percent of the area's merchants were in a counter-petition against the district's formation, the action would be blocked. Eldredge said.
"The idea was that the downtown areas needed another tool to enable merchant associations to upgrade the downtown area." Clark said yesterday. "We thought what we would do is expand the benefit distinct concept, which we use to build sewers, streets and sidewalks.
Improvement bill a tool to upgrade downtown
dissolve the district, it's a dead issue right then,
with no City Commission action."
ELDREDGE SAID that a Senate colleague, Valley Center Democrat Norma Daniels, had expressed worry that, in her Wichita-area constituency, it would be easy to summon the necessary 25 percent support to create an improvement district. However, the 40 percent coalition necessary to block the district's forfeiture could be more difficult to get, Daniels said.
"I think the 25-40 guidelines are more than adequate for Lawrence," Eldredge said. "But Norma, and some of the people from smaller cities, are concerned about it.
Eldredge said she hoped that "the bill will come out of the committee favorably, and get through the Senate by the deadline on Wednesday." After then, Eldredge explained, the Senate can work only on House bills for the remainder of the session.
"This district tool can be used to make downtown development competitive with suburban development," Eldredge said. "Downtown development can then hopefully be offered at a comparable price to suburban development."
BOB RADCLIFFE, a member of the Downtown Lawrence Association, said that he thought it would be good for him.
"It takes into consideration the special needs that a commercial district has," Raddie said. "If a particular commercial group wants to form a special benefit district, they can pay for it."
"Parking lots could be built this way, and promotional funds could be put together to promote the area. Those things shouldn't be a general obligation of the city."
University Daily Kansan, March 9, 1982
Page 7
Rock Chalk a success, draws 5,400
Six months of hard work an-
practice for Rock Chalk '81, The
Last Laugh, ended this weekend in
Pans and celebrations until sunrise.
The three performances Friday and Saturday by eight fraternities and sororites drew a total crowd of 5,400, according to John Jantsch, Bucyrus junior and Rock Chalk business manager.
Beta Theta PI and Kappa Alpha
Theta swept four of the seven
awards, including Best Overall
Production, Best Male Performer,
Best Original Song and Most Efficient Use of Sets and Costumes.
SUSAN PAGE/Kansan
But no act was left empty-handed, because the other three teams each won one trophy.
Other awards went to Delta Upsilon and Kappa Kappa Gamma for Best Production Number; Sigma Chi and PI Beta Phi for Best Original Alpha Kappa Psi and Alpha Gamma Delta for Best Female Performer.
JEROME
SUSAN PAGE/KNAPPER
Leann Folsom, Wichita senior, and Jerome Kirk Dabney, University City, Mo., senior, emcee the Rock Chalk Revise Friday night in Hoech Auditorium. Four fraternity and sorority teams based their comical skits on the 1811 theme, The Last Laugh.
The winning act by the Betas and Thetas cost about $1,500, the groups said. They started work on the script last September.
"It seemed like the audience enjoyed it and that's what made it a success for us," Katie Kennedy, and a Theta chorus member, said.
The 20 In-Between-Act players, enmceed by Lean Follos, Wichita senior and the reigning Miss Kansas, and Jerome Kirk Dabney,
University City, Mo., senior, performed a salute to dance.
Rock Chalk is increasing in popularity, Jantsch said.
thused about Rock Chalk this year," he said. "There was more interest and attendance is picking up.
"KU in general was more en-
"It's still a good, fun evening within a reasonable price."
Nancy Hambleton city commission
PROVEN LEADERSHIP FOR LAWRENCE AND K.U.
Paid For by Hambleton for Commission Committee, N. Cushing, TREAS.
Iranian student accused of spying
By KAREN SCHLUETER Staff Reporter
A member of the Iranian Students Association printed a filer this weekend stating that an Iranian student senator was working as a spy for the United States.
Mahmood Amani, engineering students student, gave a copy of the filter, which was written in Farsi, and a translation to the Kansan yesterday. Translation was verified by a KU professor who did not want to be identified.
The flier, titled "What happened at the Student Senate meeting," claimed to report excerpts from the Cultural University's budget hearings last Thursday.
At the meeting, Amani, who was trying to prove that ISA misused Student Senate funds, said that he had photographed ISA leaflets in the in-room library at Boulevard to prove that ISA was a political rather than a cultural organization.
ACCORDING TO the translation of the flier, ISA interpreted Amani's actions as espionage work.
Shahrok Azedi, ISA member, said that the filer was printed by an ISA who could explain to Iranian students what happened in his case. ISA presented its budget request. He
said the flier was not paid for by Student Senate money.
Azedi did not identify the person who wrote the flier.
In addition to denying that he was a spy, Amani said that there were several other errors in the flier.
The flier identifies Amani as a representative of a Muslim Students Organization. Amani denied any official connection with that group.
According to the flier's translation, Amani asked Azedi why the ISA wrote "Death to the American imperialism, the true enemy of the Iranian masses."
at the bottom of its leaflets when KU officials had banned political activity.
officials had banned political activity. THE SLOGAN ALSO was printed at the bottom of the filer.
Amani denied saying that KU officials had banned political activity.
He said the ISA member who printed the flier might have done so in defiance of Amani. The ISA's name is printed at the bottom of the flier.
Azied said that according to Iranian culture, the fact that Amani took pictures of the slogan to show to Americans, and also that he showed the flier to the Kanan, proved that he was a spy.
Watson remodeling progresses
Watson Library's $6.2 million face-lift is moving along as expected.
"We're a little behind in some areas, and we're a little ahead in others," according to Carol Chittenden, librarian in charge of publicity.
Although an insulator's strike forced a work slowdown from November to early February, phase two of the four-phase project is well under way.
Much to the delight of library users and staff members, phase two has been more quiet than the demolition and remodeling of the basement, ground
PRE-LAW?
Chancery Club is
holding a meeting
floor and part of the third floor that took place during phase one.
Wednesday, March 11, 7:00 P.M.
"We're actually a little ahead of schedule on the front entrance work." Shiftenden said. "We were able to pour the hot water." He added that the temperature was near freezing.
New Green Hall, Rm. 203
Meet with current 1st, 2nd, 3rd year law students discussing the experience of law school at KU and career opportunities.
The library administration offices, which originally were to be completed last Oct.1, are near completion.
Paid for by student senate
SKIA FILMS
Monday, Mar. 9
Belle de Jour
A repressed wife (Catherine Ganese) goes to work in a brothel in order to love her husband and more. Lui Bunsu's erotic comedy-drama novel testimatin to his cristian genius cannot be imagined. Ganges Sodau, Minister for Culture, Ministry of Culture, 7:30. 10 min'i. French, Brunette, 7:30.
(1967)
Tuesday, Mar. 10 Love Me Tonight
(1932)
A brilliant early musical, about a tailor who makes dresses for a princess (Jacqueline MacDonnell) The Rodgers and Hart scores include "n'til I Romantic!" and "a love affair," and directive and dramatic,廖曼民 providing a delightful view of Paris in the Spring. Loye and Charles Kruggle round up the joy of playing.
Unless otherwise noted, all will be furnished at wooded Auditorium in the back of the library on Friday, Saturday, Popula and Sunday nights at $1.150. Midnight tickets are $2.00 per person. No smoking or refresher appointments sas Union, 4th level. Information 884-973-6600. No smoking or refresher appointments sas Union, 4th level. Information 884-973-6600.
MONDAY GLADNESS
Pyramid Pizza
842-3232
12" one-topping pizza with 2 LARGE Cokes
16" one-topping pizza
with 2 LARGE Cokes
$5.40 FREE $6.65 FAST, Delivery til 1:00 a.m. every night
Why be mad-
When you can be glad!
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Save $100 on our Siladium® rings (now only $79.95). And if you're up to it about a college ring, we can make your decision easy. Because we'll get a terrific deal when you trade in your 10K gold high school ring.
You can choose from dozens of styles. We've got something for the most demanding student. Even you.
But do not thank us. Thank your mother.
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DATE: March 9-13
LOCATION: Level 2, Kansas Union
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YOUR MOTHER WARNED US.
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LOCATION: Level 2, Kansas Union
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, March 9, 1981
Fire strikes Bailey Hall
The absence of an alarm system in Bailey Hall forced about 30 people to be evacuated by Lawrence firefighters who, despite a fire was discovered in the building.
Authorities said that the fire started about 11 a.m. in the air conditioning unit between the first and second floors and caused $1,500 to $3,500 of damage, most of which was smoke damage. There were no injuries.
Fire inspectors pointed out last February that an alarm system was needed in Bailey.
A fire system eventually will be installed in Bailey when enough funds are allocated for major renovation, Tom Spencer, director of facilities operations, said.
Fire Chief Jim McSwain said the fire could have been caused by a malfunction in the air conditioning or by unit faulty wiring.
Anderson said crews worked yesterday to clean up the damage that occurred in rooms on the east side of the building, but it will be able to meet in those rooms today.
Most of the smoke was confined to the first floor. People in the building left through the main doors and did not have to use fire escapes.
Lawrence police are investigating a weekend burglary at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St., in the non-remained amount of money was taken.
On the Record
Police said the贼 apparently hid inside the building Friday night until the library closed. They found no signs of activity in the room and the library had been broken open.
The thief pried open a safe in the library and removed its contents, police said. Two money boxes and a bank register were taken from the bookkeeper's office.
Police will not know the exact amount taken until library officials can check their records today.
POLICE ARE ALSO investigating a burglary that occurred Thursday or Friday in the 1100 block of Connecticut Street.
and screens from a house and crawled inside, police said.
They took two televisions valued at $1,000, a stereo system valued at $650, and two KU souvenir serving trays valued at $60.
THEIEWS TOOK STEREOS from cars in two separate incidents over the weekend, police said.
The first burglar occurred sometime between Jan. 28 and Friday at G and R Imports, 2858 Fourwheel Drive. Police said the thief broke into the car using a coat hanger and took a stereo system valued at $715.
The other burglary occurred Friday night in the 1000 block of Massachusetts Street, police said. The thief smashed the driver's window with a rock and took an AM/FM cassette portable radio valued at $88, 42 cassette tapes valued at $294, and a cassette carrying case valued at $25.
The thieves removed storm windows
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
843-2931
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Lawrence, Kansas
Over 17 years in the business.
Snow tires available.
$7.95 A DAY + MILES
Summer Orientation Program 1981 STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
. . leadership abilities
interpersonal communication skills
knowledge of University programs & activities
... the personal interaction skills
... enthusiasm about program
. enthusiasm about program
student in good academic standing and returning to KU for Fall 1981 term.
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSION & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL
APPLICATIONS DUE BY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25
an equal opportunity employer
Schumm For City Commissioner
"The Schumm Family enjoys the quality of life in Lawrence. We have been residents for the past 17 years and both Sandra and I are K.U. graduates. I will continue to uphold the exceptional standard of living our city enjoys."
M. A. SELMAN
Maupintour travel service
AIRLINE TICKETS
travel service
1000 MASS.
KANSAS UNION
843-1211
JACKEN
ARRIVALATION
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DRAFTING
DRAIL INSURANCE
INSPECTED CURBS
SOUTH AFRICAN DINNER
March 11, Wed. St. Luke AME Church
6:00 P.M. 900 New York
Reservations: 841-8733, 843-8926
Ticket advance, African Studies Dept. 2120 Wescoe $2.50
M.
"SOUTHERN AFRICA in CRISIS"
by Bill Sutherland
- Southern Africa Representative of American Friends Service Committee
Sponsored by the Orest Friends Meeting and the KU Committee in South Africa with KU International Club, St. Luke AME Church Jihlava Fellowship, Centenary United Methodist Pectorius Hugh Jones Study, Deputies, Deptrees Network, African Studies Association
Paid for by the International Club
You can meet advertising professionals on the spring media tour of Kansas City.
The tour includes stops at:
- Kansas City Star-Times
- Valentine-Radford advertising agencyv
- Macy's Department Store
TomGleason
The tour is Wednesday, March 11.
We'll be gone from about 12 noon - 6 p.m.
Lawrence City Commission
We're trying to arrange transportation, but car-pooling may be necessary.
See the large poster in the lobby of Flint Hall for more information.
POLITICAL ADV. TOM GLEASON FOR CITY COMMISSION.
LANCE BURR-TREASURER
Room to rent? Use Kansan classifieds.
JUST PASSING THROUGH?
The university community is vital to Lawrence. Rather than dismiss university students as "transients," city government should recognize their needs and encourage
Good city-student relations will produce both valuable citizens and goodwill ambassadors to other communities.
their participation.
A. S. HARRIS
IMPORTS COMPLETE SERVICE CENTER
2858 Four Wheel Drive • Lawrence, Kansas • 843-3322
Located just North of Lawrence Toyota-Mazda in the Auto Plaza
G&R
TUNE-UP for the SPRING BREAK ROAD TRIP Foreign Car Specialists
TOMMY HADID'S PLASTIC MODEL KITS
Complete service for imported cars-professional mechanical work and quality body work. Our certified body shop will Why settle for second best. Call today!
See us for the finest today! Minor or major colloc-
tions. We're here to serve for all impractical cases. We're experts!
Student-clogged roads make van service late
Because students clog the roadways between classes, many disabled students using the Student Assistance Center vans have been consistently late, Bob Turvey, the center's associate director, said Friday.
Turvey said the vans spent from five to 10 minutes waiting at the intersection of Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Road.
"It's aggravating to everybody," Turvey said. "Walking people seem to be the king of the campus."
By AMY S. COLLINS Staff Reporter
ACCORDING TO TURVEL, the vans transport roughly 20 to 25 people daily. The Student Assistance Center operates the two vans to help people who are on crutches or who are permanently disabled get to class.
"The poor person trying to get to class is consistently late and often it's more than one student."
The vans are easily recognizable. One is light blue and the other is beige with brown and orange stripes. Both vans have raised roofs.
Turvey said the van service enabled disabled people to remain enrolled in their classes. Two people have had to work outside of care after being hit by cars on campus.
"When you're driving on campus you take on a whole different perspective."
He said the vans had a tight schedule because of the number of people they transported and the 10-minute period between classes. He said that some people were able to meet the van at a curb, but that often the van driver had to enter a building and assist the disabled person into the van.
TURVEY SAID he hoped people would let the van pass when they saw it stuck among a thong of students.
In addition to curb cuts, planned ramps at Watson Library and the van service, a pneumatic door opener has a hallway. It will have more accessible to the disabled.
The Student Assistance Center is happier with another University attempt to improve access for the handicapped.
MONDAY NIGHT
Pitcher
Night
8 pm 3 am
$2.00
The door opener. located on the North side of Strong Hall, was a gift to the University from the Redding Door Company.
HAPPY HOUR-FRIDAYS
3:50 7:30P
DRINKS $1.00 DRAWS 50¢
815 New Hampshire
he said. "But everybody has to realize that going to get to class as well as they are."
Attention Season Ticket Patrons of the KU Concert & Chamber Music Series
"We wanted our office more accessible." Lorna Zimmer, director of the Student Assistance Center, said.
SSG PRESTONS
OF THE NORTH
Tickets for the Thursday April 2 Concert by Mstislav Rostropovich, Cellist, will go on sale to season ticket patrons on Thursday, March 5. Tickets are available to these patrons for $8 and $7 at the Murphy Hall Box Office.
General public and student tickets will go on sale Thursday, March 12. Tickets are $10 and $8 for the public and $5 and $4 for KU students with ID.
THE DOOR OPENER allows a disabled person to push a knob and the door automatically opens.
ROSTRO
POWICH
Zimmer said the division of student affairs paid for the installation of the door opener. The device costs about $1,000.
For reservations:
call 913/864-3982.
Murphy Hall Box
Office
BUY OR SELL
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Monday-Saturday
9 am-5 pm
731 New Hampshire
TRAILRIDGE APARTMENTS
- Racquetball
- 250 West Sixth 843-7333
Studios, I & 2 Bedroom
apartments, 2-3-4 Bedroom
townhouses.
- Racqueball Hill
* Free Tennis
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* Convenient Location
* On KU Bus Route
Lose 17 to 26 pounds or more in just six weeks
in just six weeks
TOOWAY AT THE DING GATE
DIET CENTER
841-DIET
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COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
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SIMMER STUDIO
time you watch, others you feel.
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9TH AND TOWNS
TELEPHONE 842-842-6000
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LTE PHONE # 2609 8500
ACADEMIC AWARD NOI MINATIONS
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THE COMP
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MAT SAT 8 & SUN 21:5
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TELEPHONE 761-849-4700
HANGAR 18
STARRING
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WHY WAS THEY TALKING?
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MAY 20
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1975 AND DOW
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9:15
MAT SAT & SUN 2:00
CoI
the user c system if 1 cedures.
Wolfe se
begin. In I
every men
password.
outside of t
formation.
Students ID number in their wor
The U KA
ADMINIS for the theft
15 words or Each additi
Carithers class last 5 dollars nr Thanksgiving the passwo
In some to someone abuse. Als someone's is on the ter
to run:
Monday ...
Tuesday ...
Wednesday ...
Thursday ...
Friday ...
FOUND A
Found items c
placed in perse
Operati
Hillel present
TR CE
ENT
Operation
The Israea
rid on Er
Tuesday
7:30 p.m.
Dyche
Aroom 301
$1 donation
For more info
TAKII
Travel
The LOWI
As clos
Free service
84
Southern
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9:00-5:00
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Special—All 61%
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"Say I
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ASTA
TEL
841
HANOVER PLACable immediately 2+ beds rooms are to K.U. and dow 841-1213 or 842-4:
Single rooms to walk of campus 3228.
3 bdrm. townhou and carport. Will 6th. 843-7333
University Dally Kansan, March 9, 1981
Page 9
Computers
From page 1
Wolfe said this is where the real problems begin. In lower-level computer science courses every member of the class has the same ID and password. Therefore, it is possible for someone outside of the class to obtain those pieces of information.
the user can sign on to the Honeywell computer if he has a simple understanding of procedures.
Students sometimes leave their passwords and ID numbers in the trash, on sheets of paper left behind.
In some instances, students give the numbers to someone outside of the class for the purpose of abuse. Also, a student can simply look over a screen to see if someone else's information is on the terminal's video display.
Carrithers said that in his Computer Science 600 class last semester, he discovered hundreds of cases missing from his account after Thanksgiving and was forced to change the password.
ADMINISTRATORS gave a number of reasons for the theft of computer time and money.
Victor Wallace, director of the computer science department, said he thought people were carrying out projects that couldn't be justified on the basis of non-educational abuse such as game programs.
"I guess if I had to come up with one reason, it is mainly an i ego trip," Wolf said. "They were not accepted by fellow students or they just got hooked somehow and are computer bums."
"A hundred dollars can go a long way in computer time," Wallace said, "and while we're not a police state, this is an educational institution and abuse is stealing."
WALLACE SAID there was evidence that legitimate users were taking time from others' accounts and using it to complete projects when the money in their own account ran out.
Wallace called this a cross use of funding and
it was still an abuse of the computer accu-
sure.
He said that if a student came in with a legitimate request for more account money, the department would examine the student's project to determine whether he provide him with additional money if necessary.
WOLFE SAID one precaution was to randomly monitor the activity on various student terminals through a master terminal at the computer center. The center is then able to determine whether a terminal's use is valid and for educational purposes.
Because of the widespread account abuse, Wolfe said the department had taken a number of precautionary steps in the last few months to apprehend violators at their terminals if possible.
Wolfe said one girl ran two or three projects that cost more than $200 each because she did not set up the program correctly and made it unnecessarily complex.
Wolfe said other means of preventing abuse included changing passwords during or between semesters, reducing the large amounts of money being maintained in accounts, continuously modifying the security system and creating individual accounts instead of class accounts.
Someone caught abusing the computer system could be subject to punishment by the University
The punishment that does take place is called counseling and involves a discussion between the offender, the offender's department chairman and Wolfe.
"I'm a great believer in the second chance," he said.
Judiciary. But no student has yet been penalized with exhumation, Wolfe said.
Neither terminal has been recovered.
Officials at the computer center said they were not aware of any domestic stealing, but terminal serial numbers were being registered with police nevertheless.
At times, the problem has gone beyond the stealing of computer time. A mini-computer terminal was $2,700 and a $1,100 standard terminal were stored in Learned Hall last year in separate incidents.
Ronald Russell, electrical technician of computer science, said the department had planned to install a security system that would alarm if an attempt were made to steal a terminal.
Wolfe said that there were 400 terminals located in the various buildings on campus and
that number was growing at the rate of one new terminal a week.
ONE OF THE lesser-known acts of abuse has been the non-educational use of computer games such as Star Trek, Lunar Lander and other simulation games.
These games have become toys that drain computer accounts and leave teachers scratching their heads wondering how account money could disappear so quickly.
"We've pretty well stamped out the problem with games," he said.
Wolfe said abuse of the games now was restricted and games were now off limits to beginning computer science students.
The most unusual and least productive form of abuse is known as "crashing" the computer with a keystroke operation to come to a standstill, Dou Shailer (Park senior and center employee, said).
HE SAID CRASHING could only be accomplished by someone with a thorough background in computers. Some colleges are known to have CRAFT Clubs but there is no evidence at one KU.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one twenty two nine six seven eight nine ten eleven
two $2.50 three $2.50 four $2.50 five $3.00 six $3.00 seven eight nine ten
15 word fewer two $2.50 three $2.50 four $2.50 five $3.00 six $3.00 seven eight nine ten
Each additional word .05 .05 .05
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kasanian business at 844-528
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Hillel presents
SOLAR ENERGY
Operation Thunderbolt
The Israeli version of the
raid on Entebbe
Tuesday, March 10,
7:30 p.m.
Dyche Auditorium
room 308
$1 donation to UJA
For more information call 864-3948
ENTERTAINMENT
TRAVEL CENTER
TRAVEL CENTER
TAKING A TRIP?
Travel is Our Business.
The LOWEST FAREs available!
As close as your phone . . .
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W 23rd St. (by Perkins)
9:00-5:00 M.F. • 9:30-2:00 Sat.
Special- all 6' Bcater 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. $50.00
even evening Mon.-Fri. Thurs. and
Wednesday Non-dinners welcome. Open Mon-
-Fri. Thurs. W/Children. Pammore,
Topeka, Ks B-Cub 205-90-3-4
"Say it with a song"
ASTA SINGING
TELEGRAMS
841-6169
FOR RENT
HANOVER PLACE TOWNHOUSES: Available immediately. New and contemporary.
2 + bedrooms are within walking distance.
3 - kitchen, laundry room, Waste of cell or $11-1212 or $84-4455.
3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. ff
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5, 843-3228. tf
ARIZONA STREET DUPLEXES Available, now perfect for Pick 4 students, 4 bedrooms, range of amenities, waher, disposal, and dry hooker; central air conditioning, carpet & pet carrier; parking, unfurnished, $物价, $30 cars. Call 843-8750 or ftw 6563.
For spring and summer, Nalismah Hall of
Law offers a variety of life and the advantage
of an apartment. It has plenty of it; its bilingual mailed service to clean rooms, entertain guests and much more. If you're looking for fun activities you want, stop in or give us a call: NAILSMAH HALL, 1808 Maldan Hill, 845-8938
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
for roommate, features wood burning fireplace,
roommate, features wood burning fireplace,
weather/dryer, hookups, fully equipped,
fully equipped, 8th princeton place, phone 842-7309,
8th princeton place, phone 842-7309,
VCAri Capi Arms. Unfurnished studio, 1. & 2 bdm. chairs, available. Central air, wall-to-wall chair quiet relaxation 2.35; blocks south wall. Air-conditioned. 842-903-8300, 5:30 or aviation weekends
TIBURON TOWNHOUSES are new, spacious and contemporary and available immediately. Attendance includes bedroom starring at $45 per month. Must be in room at 3rd and 1st floor. 811-239-824 or 842-455-8
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Of street parking and no pets. Phone 841-500. If
2 b to houseware for rent now at Pine Haven
3 b to houseware and rent water close to shopping
mall with waver and dresser close to shopping
mall. We paywater $60 per person dome-
nant. We paydresser $50 per person dome-
nant. Our pet Nc calls 824-218 or
6777. No pet Call 824-218 or 6777.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 26th and Kandol If you’re tired of apartments in the city, this feature 3’ br., 1½ baths, all appliance garages, pool, and lots of privacy. We offer a patio, sauna, Crake Lauk or Jim Bong at 749-1507 for townhouses on our modestly押价 townhouses.
Summer sublease 2 bedroom, $1\frac{1}{2}$ bath at Heatherbrook Apts. Rent + electricity. Call 841-7077 after 9:50.
Five bedroom house close to campus available for summer leave. Carpet, modern appliances, air conditioning and laundry. $425 Kitty, Dallas 841-736-892, 107 Kurtz-curley.
Med Center Bound?. Nice. 2-bedroom
duplexes available for summer and fall.
Carpet, A.C. appliances, and parking. Call:
1-813-381-2878.
2 bedroom, attached garage home, 2621
Moundview. Forced yard $290.00 mo. Available now. 843-0570. 843-6011.
3-10
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute walk to campus, 1821 Tennessee, $270 rent + utilities, 842-4822. 3-25
ROOM FOR MALE STUDENT. Share bath and refrigerator, and 10th and Kentucky, renting now. $85 + small utility. 814-2105. 841-5318. 3-11
2 bedroom apt., close to campus, $210 + utilities. No pets, $42-1929 after 5:00. 3-11 ROOMS APT.
GARAGE FOR RENT. Clean, dry, near 1412
and Kentucky. $30. 841-2105, 841-5218, 3-11
FOR MALL STUDENT. Share kitchen,
bath, 14th and Kentucky, furnished.
walk to campus; t small iumail.
2105, 841-3138
$3 - $11
Female roommate wanted, after graduation to share a 2-Bedroom-2-Bath Furnished Apartment in Johnson County. Rate $130.8749 bills,陪付 C: 6:50 i: 9:00 i: 3-13
3 BR ranch. Fenced yard. Closed porch.
Available March 15. Crestline Dr. Hillcrest
area. $225 + 1 mo. deposit. 842-3946. 3-12
Sublease furnished apt. loft, one bedroom,
available April 1st, excellent view of Law-
rence. Call 841-5255 or 843-7828.
3-12
Sublease this summer. Two bedroom apt:
on 10th Street near campus; Call 841-6782.
3.19
FOR SALE
Sublease 1b. w/study all utilities pd. ex-
cept lights, busuce, convenient location.
Call 841-8552 or 842-4661.
3-13
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sales
Makes books to use. them on-1 Sale
Makes books to use. them on-1 As study
sale. them on-1 As study sale.
warm preparation. The New,
Analyses of
History. The New, Analyses of
History. The Bookmark, and Oread Book-
marks.
For Sale: 1976 Honda CB 550. Completely stocked, low mileage, excellent condition.
3-10
114865
Alternator, starter and generator specimen-
ing equipment. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-506-3005.
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-506-3005.
Alwa 1250 slant style cassette tape deck.
Fine condition. $125, 749-0486. 3-10
TWIR CHRV, Two door post, 3-9
have minor work $850.00, 843-000,
3-9
D.C. Marvel comics back issues for sale
cheap $81.829.
843-000
1975 Cutlass Supreme, V-8, Radials, PS. AC.
88,700 miles, $2,000, Call 841-1386. 3-10
96 Muttang Coupe, recent rebuilt 289
490 Dodge Challenger, new brine
cylinders, new maintenance
near new tires, new starter, upholstery
in new tires; $700. Tail Call at 748-344-10
d-10
Reel to reel tape deck. Pioneer 102DL
$320.00 Card. B42-6577-687. 3-10
187 Cullass Supreme, V-8, Radials, PS, AC
88,700 miles, $2,000, Call 841-1386. 3-10
74 Chevelle, excellent cond, new paint,
tires, engine. Alan Ross 843-1772.
HP 36C Calculator. Programmable, statistical and business functions. 2 months old, barely used. Use $100. Call 843-7978, evenings, please. 3-11
Receiver technics (30 w/ ch), turntable dual
2 speakers, $300 or best offer. 1144 Louisiana
7 (2nd floor).
3-11
1976 VW RABBIT. 48,600 ml, great looking and running + good gas mileage. Must see. Call 841-7762. 3-11
78 Cameraman Lt. 4 speed—39,000 miles, AM-FM radio, radio deluxe interior, like new. Call Kamal after 7:00 pm 841-5233. 3-11
73 Honda M-CCM-780, 1030 Total Mile,
Passport Style, Lug. Rack, Ease, Start,
Turn Signals, New Battery, Super mileage, 864-362,
after 5,914 - 801 - 0703. 3-11
Olds Cutlass 68, Blue AM radio, Air-condition-
ing, Runs good. $549. 842-4372 after 3
3-10
Mini-Korg Electronic Music Synthesizer, excellent condition, must sell, first $200 takes 3-12 841-9270, Curt.
Three $50 discount certificates for United Airlines flights between K.C. and Chicago or Chicago and Houston for sale Expires March 31, 2011; Call 841-3276. 3-10
Opticonica System tuner unit & amp 80 watts, cassette, turntable, with 2 ZBS plugs. Ex. condition, must sell before break. 814-965 Make offer.
35 mm. Canon camera. Tele-соverter, 50 mm, 135 mm *200 m*, and 28 mm wide-angle镜头. All in excellent condition—Best offer. Anytime at 864-2821. 3-11
TWO STYX TICKETS FOR SALE. Lower Level, March 18th show. I'm selling at cost ($11.50 each). Call 749-0406. 3-11
1978 MAZDA GLC SPORT. Like new, low mileage 1 owner, 5 speed, $3500, 842-3378,
864-4245.
Material; filing cabinet; 3-drawer, excellent condition; $50 - Sonic cassette tape recorder with extendable speakers; $40. Call 864-4103 or 841-0699.
For Sale: Matching couch & chair, kitchen-
ware, cross country skis & poles, downhill
ski boots, Women's size 6, Men's size 11,
84-349. 3-13
1971 Chevrolet Malibu, rebuilt engine
at 3:05 p.m. to 4:20 p.m.
2.00 p.m. to 5.00 p.m. $800. Call 49-1236. 3-13
Bass-4001 Bickenbacker Bass Amp Ampeg
S.V.T. Priced to sell, Call Randy 842-3807.
3-12
3 - In- 1978 Allegro moduler stereo $75.
19" Zenith cabinet Color T.V. $150. Car-
749-1699. Call 3-13
FOUND
HELP WANTED
Found-Ladies watch March 2 in O-zone parking lot. Call 843-0030 to identify. 3-9
Found: small amount of money outfitted Flint. Call to identify. Eric 843-9300. 3-9
Cross pencil on sidewalk near Fraser Hall.
Call 749-3941. 3-10
I found a charm in the girl's bathroom at Wescore. Call to identify. 864-5888 or 864-
2864. 3:11
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS. Applications are now being submitted to the student staff. For more information in advertisement in for more information in paper or come by for Admissions and Records. 128 Strong Hail. An equal opportunity player. 3-25
Full or part time help wanted. Combination
full or part time help wanted. Costs:
Danced. Dancing starting $4.00. Nude舞
dancing $10 per hour. Your choice.
Nude dance west of LA or
west of L.A. on Hwy 40. 379-8900.
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES:
We will share your work and experiences with students in our nursing home residence? Our consumer or nursing homes (KIN) need a document of Nursing Homes (KIN) needs and home conditions and your opinion on the location, condition, and opinion will be taken. All names and correspondence will be taken to KIN, or '457-107, or write us at KIN; 6981 St., Si. 24, Lawnridge, KI 60044.
Bus driver for Saturday morning workshops. UKE to March Mid-May 12th to April Mid-April 19th. Bus license required. Contact Both Gatesmen Employees 3-600-824-8700 An Equal Opportunity Employer - 3-600-824-8700
CRUISES CLUB MEDITERRANEAN, SAILING EXPEDITIONS! Needed: Sports in-tenors. Counselors. Europe, Caribbean, Worldwide. Summer. career and $5.99 + $1 handing out GUIDE to CRUISERWILD. GUIDE TO CRUSERWILD. 153 Box 0129. 3-31ento, City 95880.
MAKE $400 A WEEK PLUS 50% OF ALL
DELIVERIES TO THE COMPANY
RECEIVES INVOLVING YOUR NAME
of address, if sr-addr,
form envelope to: Glenn H.
prtse. P.O. Box 2288, Lawrence K 66945.
Need female salesperson capable of working morning hours. Apply at Morris Sports or call 843-0412. 3-10
REGISTERED PHYSICAL THERAPYIST be
required. Flexible home health care
team. Flexible working hours. Must
have own car; mileage paid in addition.
Must have information technology
to practice in Kansas. Internship
opportunity employer. Call Dauglas County
workers Nurs Amm. 843-7358, for appoit-
menting nurses.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT (11) Position open in Children's Research, Requirements, Current Status of Child Research, Compete for job position. Computed data entry on monthly report; Organize monthly database for assigned by Director. Work as a member of application week, Application duesal 16. March-September. University of Kansas 865-3412. AW at WKU
World's Largest Business, needs you! Stay home -naid weekly. Free info. Enclose stained膜 taken. Peggy Jones, 3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, Kansas 60944. 312-875-4411
LOST
Lost—a very sentimental gold sorbent necklace with seven little diamonds at Robinson-girls room on Tuesday, at room call Kim Willis-84 at 563-600. Reward.
Subtanual rewards for leather backpack,
two Spanish books, French book, red note-
book, and Gold Pendant Watch. Call 749-
1147.
Have you found a red-leather address & date book, with gold-aged pages? Please phone 842-1770. There's a reward! 3
HP-34-C Calculator Tues. 24. Reward. 841-
3625. 3-13
MISCELLANEOUS
Consumer Affairs Association
for problems with teasies, busy merchandise,
advertising and other issues
call or ship by
811 Visitation
843-608-9988
NOTICE
**KWIER WINTER PARK-MARY JANE SPRING**
**tickets, skirt rentals, hiking insurance, and**
**ski tickets, skirt rental, lodging insurance, and**
**ski equipment.** **Write KRIE l.e.c. 180**
**Kentucky 180-21rd.** **Write KRIE l.e.c. 180**
**Kentucky 180-21rd.** **Write KRIE l.e.c. 180**
**for Dan Darwin.** ***Three day Easter tiffin**
***pack.***
Giving skiing over Brooke HEAT WAVE SKI
Vests are ideal for Spring skiing and
come in great colors and colors. Tel
864-3891, 842-5855. 3-13
Dr. Robert Mendle will speak on cow dogs at the Jahayh Kennel Club meeting March, 9th 8:30 p.m. downstairs of the Community Building, 11th and Vermont. 5-9
GAY AND LESBIAN PEER Counseling: A friend is ready to listen. Referees through K.U. Information, 842-3506, or Headquarters, 841-2345. If
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
if
NEED EXTRA CASH? Sell your old Gold &
Diamonds. Top brands for class rings,
gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-8727, 841-7476,
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can give at invest students can afford. Swells Studio, 749-611, CLL
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports, Custom made portraits, color, B.W, Swells Studio 749-1611. 3-11
CHALLENGE
The KU school of Engineering challenges the KU Law school to a Tug-of-war on Thursday, March 12th at 2 p.m.
at Broken Arrow Park for the St. Pat's Engineering celebration.
Singing messages for all occasions ASTA
Singing Telegrams 841-6169.
- LINCOLN
Opening soon 'All Babat' Mid-East cuisine.
b side Minnsky's Pizza, 2200 Iowa (Great Gyros!) 3-12
Ounem- minded adventureurer for lengthy
World Bicycle tour to start spring
Write: CJ.C. 509 S. Fern, Wichita, KS
67213
3-11
Looking for someone going to CORNELL UNIVERSITY NEW YORK vicinity Spring Break. Will pay for transport of harmines biological specimen. Call Sarah B. 843-667-644
BE THERE!
Beads in the face? Beavers on the beach?
FT. Lauderdale 4 days. S.B.S,F,N.RB.L. 3-8
Senior portrait special, studio taken with a large selection of scenic background available. Swells Studio. 724-1611. 3.05
Bass Player wanted IMMEDIATELY. 748-
3649. Serious inquiries only. 3-9
3649. Searious Inquiries only.
Green's Tawn and Keg Shoppe KU ID
Green's Tawn- Mon Thur, Pilchers $12.5
7: Fri - 4: Big Draws 8.5 - 3:12
Immediate Opening. The United States Stats
demonstration center is dedicated to the interests of students in
public, private and military KU is a member of this group and actively
supports the student body by positioning for the position of campus director
KBU Student Senate. KBU Student Senate, 805 KSU Blvd., Berkeley, CA 94720, or 814-7465, Deadline March 5, 5 pm.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, March 9, 1981
C
Well-timed peak carries KU to Big 8 tournament crown
By TRACEE HAMILTON
Associate Sports Editor
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—David Magley calls it the mountain and the valley. Ted Owens calls it peaking at the right time. Art House explains It by shouting, "This is it. this is it!"
Whatever It is, the Jayhawks have it, and used It to win the Big Eight's post-season tournament this weekend and earn a bid to the NCAA tournament.
KU beat Missouri in semifinal action Friday night, 75-70, then downed Kansas State Saturday night, 80-68, to capture the conference crown. K-State eliminated Colorado 84-61 Friday
The Jayhawks will face Mississippi in Midwest Regional competition in Wichita Friday night at 7:08 at Henry Levitt Arena. Kansas State and Missouri also received NCAA bids.
KU Coach Owens was visibly pleased after Saturday's triumph.
"WE GAVE A tremendous performance against a fine basketball team," he said. "That makes it gratifying. Everyone made a contribution."
Perhaps the biggest contribution came from 6-10 forward Art Housey and 8-2 guard Darnell Valentine. Housey had 11 rebounds and 20 points, Wildcats, and 45 total points in the tournament.
"I haven't played better in my life," Housey said. "I've always thought that if you continue to work hard, sooner or later, your chance will come."
Housey's chance definitely has come in the Jahayhaws' last several outings, and he was rewarded for his efforts by being selected to the all-tournament team, as was Valentine, who was also designated as the tournament's Most Valuable Player.
"DARNELL HAS worked so hard in his four years in America that Darnell Valentine, a better guard in America than Darnell Valentine,
Valentine's 97 tournament points and out-
standing leadership and durability earned
Owens' praise. Owens made no substitutions in
Valentine's game, something he has not done all season.
"They were all playing so well," Owens said of his starters. "Booty Neal and Victor Mitchell wanted so badly to play. But had it not been for them, they'd be here now. I'm delighted for all of them."
"I never stopped to think about it," 6-8 forward David Magley said. "I was so fired up about the game. The people who didn't get to play, Victor and Booty, have been instrumental to our team all season. If anybody thinks they don't deserve 'o play, that's highway robbery."
HOUSEY SAID the Jayhawks were physically prepared to play 40 minutes.
"It's a job, but it's no problem," he said. "We had a conditioning program at the beginning of the course, and it worked."
The Jayhawks were in good enough shape to outlast a strong Wildcat attack. Once KU got the lead, it never relinquished it, although K-State threatened several times.
K-State maintained a one-two point lead over the Jahawks early in the game, largely because of center Randy Reed's four buckets. However, a layup by Valentine with 8 minutes remaining put KU ahead, 29-28, and the Wildcats never took control again.
Kansas led by as much as 11 before the half ended, but two K-State baskets and two free throws by Rolando Blackman narrowed the margin to 5. KU, though, took the momentum into the locker room when Tony Guy, 6-4 guard, entered the basket and scored at the buzzer.
K-STATE PULLED to within one point several times in the second half, but free throws kept Kansas in front. The Jayhawks were 20 of 26 from the line. K-State had 26 fouls.
"I don't know that we ever had a team with a better performance than tonight," Owens said. "I told them, 'get me at 6 or 8 point lead, then we'll make them go man-to-man.'"
The Jayhawks did just that, spreading their offense and forcing the Wildcats to make a move. They ran out with a big push.
Two Jayhawks on all-tourney team
1981 BIG EIGHT ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM
Darnell Valentine* 6-2 G Kansas
Art Housey 6-10 F Kansas
Tyrone Adams 6-6 F Kansas State
Jo Hunter 6-3 G Colorado
Rolando Blackman 6-4 G Kansas State
*Most Valuable.*
Player
SECOND TEAM
Tony Guy 6-6 G Kansas
Curtis Berry 6-8 F Missouri
Jon Sundevil 6-7 F Missouri
Randy Reed 6-7 F Kansas State
said. "The intention was to get a bucket. Against MU we not a big lead and used it earl."
The Jayhawks had little trouble with the Missouri Tigers Friday, taking an early lead against the conference champions and holding the Tigers off the entire game.
MU's 6-8 forward Curtis Berry poured in 26 points and grabbed 19 rebounds in a losing effort. Teammate Jon Sundvold, 6-2 guard, added 23 points. Teammate Josh Wilson grabbed 11 rebounds, but only scored four points.
"WE PLAYED a Good game," John Crawford, 6-7 forward, said. "We took what we could get. We controlled the boards in the first half, and we played the composite and set up plays in the second half."
Missouri Coach Norm Storm maintained his usual wit, even after the defeat.
"I would like to continue winning the championship," he said, "and then figure out how to win up here afterwards. Maybe in another two or three years. I'll figure it out."
KU also eliminated Missouri last year, 80-71, in the semifinals, and lost 79-88 to K-State in the final.
JAYHAWK NOTES: Coach Ted Owens, who was listed in Inside Sports magazine as one of the five most overrated coaches in the country, said he didn't feel his victory over K-State Coach Jack Hartman, who was listed as one of the five unrouted coaches, mattered to the magazine.
"I don't read the Sports." Owens said,
"smile. "We use it in our bathroom. It has good
KU senior guard Darell Valentine set several records during the 1981 Big Eight post-season tournament, including most free throws made, tournament, 27; most free throws made, career, 64; most free throw attempts, tournament, 37; most free throw attempts, career, 85.
The Jayhawks also set a record for most points scored in the post-season tournament, 251 (96 against Oklahoma State, 75 against Missouri and 136 against Michigan) of 249 was set by K-State and Missouri in 1977.
The Jayhawks also set a mark for the fewest fouls in a tournament. 47.
FRIDAY'S BOX
| | MINT | DATE | FEATURE | FT | REB | A | PF | T10 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Magley | 27 | 11 | 5-8 | 6-1 | 7 | 3 | 4 | 19 |
| Crawford | 27 | 11 | 5-8 | 6-1 | 7 | 3 | 4 | 19 |
| Housey | 29 | 11 | 2-4 | 6-4 | 8 | 2 | 5 | 25 |
| Valentine | 28 | 11 | 2-4 | 6-4 | 8 | 2 | 5 | 26 |
| Guy | 40 | 11 | 5-8 | 6-1 | 13 | 5 | 3 | 19 |
| Mitchell | 11 | 11 | 5-8 | 6-1 | 13 | 5 | 3 | 19 |
| Milne | 11 | 11 | 5-8 | 6-1 | 13 | 5 | 3 | 19 |
| Kirchhoff | 7 | 11 | 0-6 | 1-2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Kushner | 7 | 11 | 0-6 | 1-2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Koenig | 200 | 11 | 21-44 | 34-30 | 35 | 10 | 22 | 17 |
| | MISSION | TIME | TEAMS | TEAMS | TEAMS | TEAMS | TEAMS |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Berry | 34 | 6-14 | 14-21 | REB A | 9 | AP P | TP |
| Praner | 34 | 6-14 | 14-21 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 18 |
| Siphanovskii | 33 | 2-11 | 0-5 | 12 | 2 | 4 | 4 |
| Duskovec | 33 | 2-11 | 0-5 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 4 |
| Sundvold | 38 | 0-19 | 0-5 | 1 | 3 | 4 | 2 |
| McCrazy | 22 | 1.2 | 0-4 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 2 |
| Austin | 2 | 0-1 | 0-4 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
| Jones | 0 | 0-1 | 0-4 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| O'Neal | 6 | 0-1 | 0-4 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
| Foster | 4 | 0-0 | 0-4 | 31 | 31 | 20 | 79 |
| KANAS | 200 | 25-21 | 20-28 | 31 | 34 | 79 | 70 |
| KANAS | 200 | 25-21 | 20-28 | 31 | 34 | 79 | 70 |
KANSAS
MISSOURI
SATURDAY'S BOX KANSAS STATE (2018)
BEN BIGLER/Kansan stel
| MIN | 40 | PG | FT | REB | A | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Adams | 40 | 6-19 | 0-4 | 2 | 2 | 15 | 18 |
| Neally | 40 | 5-19 | 3-4 | 4 | 2 | 13 | 17 |
| Reed | 39 | 5-10 | 3-4 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 13 |
| Jacchman | 32 | 6-11 | 3-4 | 0 | 1 | 14 | 17 |
| Blackwell | 30 | 7-13 | 3-1 | 3 | 1 | 12 | 17 |
| Redd | 5 | 1-1 | 0-4 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Reid | 4 | 1-1 | 0-4 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Gould | 5 | 1-0 | 0-4 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Total | 200 | 56 | 0-4 | 0-5 | 25 | 20 | 18 |
| | MIN | MON | FG | 5-4 | FT | REB | A | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Magley | 40 | 10 | 5-4 | 9-0 | 9 | 2 | 5 | 11 | 10 |
| Crawford | 40 | 10 | 9-16 | 3-4 | 11 | 1 | 5 | 3 | 23 |
| Valentine | 40 | 10 | 6-11 | 11-15 | 11 | 5 | 3 | 23 | 18 |
| Gold | 40 | 10 | 7-11 | 10-14 | 2 | 5 | 3 | 23 | 18 |
| Total | 200 | 100 | 30-14 | 20-24 | 36 | 10 | 12 | 88 | 10 |
| KANSAS STATE | | | | | | 36 | 10 | 12 | 88 |
11
KU's Darnell Valentine and David Magewile swipe the ball from Kansas State forward Tyrone Adams. KU-68 SI victory gave the Jayhawks the tournament championship and a berth in the NCAA Midwest region.
Officials: Dabrow, Leimbach
Technical Fouls: none
Attendance: 17,632 (sellout)
MIDWEST REGIONAL
At Austin
Lamar (8)
Missouri (9)
Louisiana State (1)
Mercer (12)
Arkansas (5)
Louisville (4)
At Wichita
Wichita State (6)
Southern (11)
Iowa (3)
Kansas (7)
Mississippi (10)
Arizona State (2)
At New Orleans
Numbers in parentheses indicate tournament seed. Winners of second-round games will play in New Orleans March 26-22.
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Tuesday, March 10, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 112 USPS 650-640
Senate committee continues to trim budget requests
By KAREN SCHLUETER Staff Reporter
A woman is standing near a water pump in front of a large, modern stadium with multiple tiers. The background features a grassy field and a flat horizon.
The Student Senate Student Services Committee last night trimmed $9,700.70 from budget requests totaling $43,946.70 as budget deliberations continued.
vannas destroyed 15 sidewalk lamps on Campanile hill causing more than $3,000 damage. Nancy Albrecht of Lawrence clears the hill of broken glass. See related story page 7.
The committee, with five members present made final decisions on 11 groups.
Tentative cuts were made in three groups budgets.
THEREE OTHER GROUPS, KU Drug Information Group, Commission on the Status of Women and River City Women's Health Collective, failed to present their requests to the committee last week. Lisa Ashner, committee member, would be rescheduled for Wednesday night.
The Black Student Union's budget suffered the largest cuts, from $7,230.67 to $4,139.72. The committee made reductions in BSU's allocations during printing, film rental and office supplies.
Friends of Headquarters requested $13,088.75
After cuts, its budget was reduced to $10,918.75
The committee voted to reduce KU-Y's budget from $2,242.52 to $1,698.52, cutting money for the KU-Y school district.
THREE GROUPS ESCAPED the budget axe last night. They were Douglass County Rape Victim Support Service, requesting $434.40; the Youth Rescue Fund, $809.10; and the Men's Coalition, requesting $255.70.
Consumer Affairs Association's $11,348.88 request was tentatively approved, but the committee discussed the possibility of allocating only half the request. CAA would then have to apply for the rest of the money in fall supplemental hearings as it did last year.
CAA's Senate funding pays the director's salary. John Lamb, committee member, said that cutting this allocation would severely jeopardize the program.
The committee voted to completely cut the KU Solar Energy International Club's request. Ashner said that the committee decided the group was primarily an academic, rather than a service, group and should not be funded under the Student Services Committee.
Other cuts made were
- $450 for the Non-Traditional Students Organization's $175 request.
- 660 from KU on South Africa’s $28 request.
* 1,600 from Latin American Solidarity’s
$11,400.
THE COMMITTEE TENTATIVELY cut $303 for office rent from the Native American Alliance's $19 request. Ashner said that the group had not used its office space responsibly.
MECHA's request was tentatively cut from $1,355 to $890. Ashner said she would like the committee to investigate the group's use of its office space before making final decisions on its budget. MECHA is a hispanic students' organization.
Five committees will meet this week to formulate final recommendations to present to the Senate. Senate deliberations are scheduled for March 24 and 25.
Public radio threatened by funding cu.
By KARI ELLIOTT
Staff Reporter
The Reagan administration's proposed 25 cut in Corporation of Public Broadcasting funding would eliminate network programming for the White House, an NPR official in Washington said last week.
"Twenty-four percent of public broadcasting goes to national programming." Walda Roseman, national affairs and planning senior vice president, said. "That entire amount is the only source of NPR money. Without that money, NPR would shut down."
President Reagan has proposed cutting public broadcasting funding by $43 million, leaving $129 million in fiscal 1982 and $120 million in fiscal 1983.
In 1975 Congress authorized two-year advanced funding appropriations for the Corporation of Public Broadcasting.
ROSEMAN SAID public radio would have to cut into "soft" items, which are controllable
The proposed cuts would affect funds already appropriated to public broadcasting for fiscal reasons.
"The two areas we can cut are general grants to local stations and programming," she said. "We can't cut the fixed or uncontrollable cost of our station equipment, repayment of the satellite debt or copyrights."
The cuts could not be straight across the system because of the fixed costs, she said.
"That means more out of national programming and station grants."
One-fourth to one-third of the public radio stations might fail if they don't receive grants from NPR, Roseman said.
"Even if one cent was cut from the '82 or '83 funds, the insulation shield, the buffer between the federal government and noncommercial broadcasting would be lost.
"The insulation would be dramatically affected with any rescission."
THE PRESIDENT of the Kansas Public Radio Association, Howard Hill, said the real question
with the proposed funding cut was the repeal of appropriated money.
"Only the Corporation of Public Broadcasting has advanced funding," Hill, who is also general manager of KANU-KPXU at the University of Kansas that insulates CPB from undue political influence
"Without advance-year funding, you might as well put a politician in the control booth."
If there are 25 percent funding cut, KANU-
KFU would lose approximately **27,000**,刀。
"I could maintain most of the staff on money from CFB grants, but probably not the students," he said. "There would be no money to purchase audio equipment. Some records couldn't be purchased, so programming would be affected."
THE CORPORATION of Public Broadcasting is a quasi-principal organization that prepares its budget based on congressional and CPB staff decisions, Hill said.
Two Lawrence residents take a stroll down the alley between New Jersey and New York streets. Warm temperatures are expected for the remainder of the week, with temperatures expected to be in the mid to upper 50s.
The Office of Management and Budget has no
BRANDSLISTS.5
See BROADCAST page 5
1809-1937
Conard said the Regents received the list of the final five candidates for KU chancellor yesterday and planned to interview the candidates within the next 10 days.
Chancellor to be named soon
They may find a new chancellor, John Conard,
kansas Board of Negent executive officer, said Kane.
"The Board is hopeful that they will be able to select the new chancellor in time to announce it at their regular Board meeting on March 20." He said he just a matter of getting the interviews done.
KU students returning from spring break may in more at the University than their midterm finals.
The Regents are studying the candidates' dossiers this week, Conard said, and are planning to spend a half day interviewing each candidate.
chancellor by next week. Conard cautioned that the process may take longer.
"We have some excellent candidates," he said. "I have met all five of these candidates, but the Bengaluru team is ahead."
"But since we don't know it is yet, it depends on the individual's personal time set aside."
Conard said the Regents would probably request the chancellor-elect to be present when
The Regents expect the new chancellor to take office 1, when I del Shankar's term as acting governor.
"Having sat in on some of the search committee meetings, I know that one of the candidates can begin sooner than July 1," he said. "There could be the possibility of the new chancellor coming in and with Dr. Shankel as a sort of orientation period."
Dillingham enters guilty plea
Clarence L. Dillingham, Jr., former assistant instructor of social welfare, pleaded guilty yesterday in Douglas County District Court to three felony charges of selling illegal drugs.
"On Nov. 26 and Dec. 4, I did sell . . . cocaine and . . . marijuana to a person that I later discovered to be an agent of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation." Dilghamed told the court.
Dillingham admitted to making the drug sales.
An undercover agent for the KBI said earlier he brought out pieces of cosine and 14 pound napkins.
He said that the transactions occurred north of Lawrence, at the intersections of U.S. 40 and U.S. 38.
District Judge Ralph King set sentencing for April 3, after a pre-sentencing investigation was conducted to determine what sentencing was appropriate.
Dillingham faces a minimum of one to five years and a maximum of 10 to 20 years on each charge, as well as a fine of $1,000-$10,000 for each charge.
Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone said he made one charge of selling cocaine in exchange for the guilty plea. He said he made no sentencing recommendation to the court.
Dillingham served as the University's acting director of affirmative action in 1978-79. In December 1979, he travelled to Iran with Norman MacDonald and was charged with an unofficial effort to mediate the hostage crisis.
Dillingham and Forer also are plaintiffs in a lawsuit against KU. They alleged that they were labeled by school officials, that their privacy was invaded and that they were denied due process during the University's considerations of disciplinary action that occurred after the trip.
Mineral tax bill to go up against political obstacles
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
Since the mineral severance tax passed the House yesterday, Senate supporters of the bill have begun in earnest to prepare to overcome threatening obstacles in their chamber.
Perhaps the earliest and most threatening obstacle to the bill's Senate passage is the plan to "double-reference" the tax into two Senate committees.
Although these efforts began when the bill was introduced early in the session, they were intensified after the House passed the tax on a 64-61 vote. As amended by the House, the severance law placed a 5 percent with head tax on oil and gas and a 2 percent mine tax on coal, salt and cement.
Another discouragement to the bill's supporters is that both of the committees are supported by political allies of Doyen's. Sen. Paul Hess of the Ways and Means Committee and Sen. Robert Cohen of the Doyen's Committee have been allies of Doyen's all session, according to several senators.
WHAT MAKES this move so potentially damaging is that it could be made by Senate President Ross Doyen before the bill ever reaches the Senate floor.
Doyen, an opponent of the bill, said over the weekend that he would probably assign the tax bill to both the Senate Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee. If that happened, it would ring a virtual death knell for the tax this session.
"We are not really sure what Sen. Burke will do," Senate Minority Leader Jack Steiniger said yesterday. "He is really stuck between voting with his Johnson County delegation and staying within the lines of Doyen's wishes. As for Sen. Burke, we are not looking for too much help from him."
HESS SAID that he did not think the tax would stand a chance in his committee. He said that he would not even hold hearings on the tax unless it was passed out of the Assessment and Taxation
"We really cannot afford to take off the time to work on this because of all the work we have on the appropriation bills," Hess said. "But if it does get past the other committee, then we will work on it and I don't think it has very good chances."
"I am confident that we will get the tax on the floor." Steiner said. "One way or another, we will either use it as an amendment or pull it out of committee through an extraordinary rule."
One way that he said to accomplish this was to tack on the tax as an amendment to a different piece of legislation. Another possibility that Steiner suggested was to call for an ex-
STINEGER SAID that he thought that kind of maneuvering would work because almost 28 out of the 50 senators favored the tax in principle. He said he bill to pass out of the Senate it needs 21 votes.
"There is no way that we can ward off the double reference," Steinger said. "But there is enough strength to get the vote on the floor before the session ends."
Gov. John Carlin said over the weekend that he would help the Senate supporters of the bill attach the tax to another bill. He said he would not do anything and arrested and something had to be done to counter it.
Carlin, however, said double referencing was acceptable to him until it became obvious the choice.
ASIDE FROM the political maneuvering, Steineger said that the Senate would have to look closely at how the bill was amended by the House.
"As it stands now, it does not look like it will go
SEE VERANCE page 5
Weather
Cool
Skies will be clear today with light northwesterly winds and a high of 47, according to the KU Weather Service. Tonight will be cloudy with a low of 29 Tomorrow will be sunny and cooler, with a high in the mid to upper 40s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 10, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Hijackers threaten 103 hostages
DAMASCUS, Syrians—About 150 heavily armed Syrian soldiers took up positions near a Pakistani jetliner yesterday after three hijackers armed with time bombs and hand grenades threatened “decisive action” against 103 hostages on board the plane.
As the world's longest hijacking its ninth day, the three Pakistani gunmen released a woman captive, a stewardess on the Pakistan Infrastructure Agency.
The hijackers demanded the release of 92 political prisoners, an end to official harassment of their political organization and the release of the families of two men, Salam Elah Khan and Nasser Jamal, about whom there was no further information.
Pakistan's President, Zia Ui-Haq, who said he never would release "hardened criminals," gave Syrian authorities-free hand to end the hijacking, including a commander raided on the Boeing 720 parked on a fog-shrouded runway at Damascus Airport. Political sources in Damascus, however, said that no military action was imminent and that talks were continuing.
The plane, nearly out of fuel and with three Americans among its passengers, had landed in Danausac earlier in the day after a week in Germany.
Pakistan's Defense Secretary, General M. Rahim Khan, blasted Soviet-controlled Afghanistan for refueling the Pakistani jet in Kabul Sunday and said it was "a grave mistake."
Three Mile Island cleanup urged
WASHINGTON—The damaged Three Mile Island reactor must be cleaned up swiftly to keep radioactivity from tainting nearby water and to prevent a chain reaction from restarting in the fuel core, a federal report said yesterday.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff, in a final environmental impact statement, said a contamination threat to ground water and to the Susquehanna River would remain as long as hundreds of thousands of gallons of contaminated water were stored in the country's reservoirs and tanks.
It concluded the cleanup "should proceed as expeditiously as is reasonably possible."
The study found the stricken reactor could be cleaned up safely in five to nine years, with work crews running only a slightly increased risk of cancer. The report estimated the fatal cancer risk to people living in the area from one in 600,000 to one in 2 million.
It cited the handling of several past reactor accidents, mostly in Canada and Europe, in concluding, "The basic technologies for decontamination are well established, and available techniques can be modified to suit the conditions at TMI-2."
The commission staff also concluded TMI should not become a permanent radioactive waste disposal site—an option favored by some who fear removal of the highly radioactive fuel core and wastes will pose unacceptable risks to area residents.
WASHINGTON—Black leaders, coal miners and city officials criticized president Reagan's budget cuts to civilization completed in 1986. The plan would衍向 Congress to sign a compromise.
Reagan signed his budget message to Congress and his revised 1982 budget would contain proposed reductions of $4.6 billion for fiscal 1982, an increase from the $4.14 billion in cuts he proposed three weeks ago. He said the latest reductions were not necessarily the last ones.
Reagan's budget widely criticized
Thousands of mine workers, holding a rally near the White House, called on the president to "stop black lung murders, not black lung benefits."
On the Capitol steps, civil rights leader Benjamin Hooks and black Del. Walker Fattroy, a non-voting delegate from Washington, D.C., held a news conference calling for a national campaign to
Reagan's first round of budget proposals cut deeply into social programs, such as food stamps, child nutrition, Medicaid and public service jobs. Programs that benefit states and cities, such as highway programs, urban and regional development projects and education funds, also were cut.
The second round of proposals to be announced today is expected to cut deeper into some of the same programs and take aim at new ones.
Meanwhile, Reagan left today for a 27-hour visit to Canada's capital for "get-acquainted" talks with Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau.
WASHINGTON—The administration said yesterday that it opposed a quota on Japan car imports and was on the verge of proposing a three-to-one quota.
U.S. opposes Japanese car quota
"Legislation to impose a quota will be counterproductive at this time."
Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldridge said a Senate trade subcommittee
Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldridge told a Senate trade subcommittee. The panel's chairman, Republican Sen. John Danforth of Missouri, is sponsoring a bill to limit Japanese imports to 1.6 million cars a year, 300,000 fewer than last year.
Crushed by Japanese imports, which make up about 25 percent of the U.S. market, American automakers lost $4.2 billion last year. According to Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis, only General Motors stands a chance of making a profit this year.
Instead of pushing for quotas, the administration's response will be "jawboning" the Japanese into voluntary restraints, Lewis said.
Baldridge said the administration was close to a decision on a 'short-term' plan for its industry, perhaps in time for Japanese Foreign Minister Masayoshi Ito's visit.
Atlanta schools to open for break
ATLANTA-Authorities approved a plan yesterday to keep 31 schools in low-income black areas open during a scheduled spring break this week to provide supervised recreation for children whose parents cannot be home during the day.
Alonzo Crim, superintendent of Atlanta school, said attendance would not be compulsory and that schools would be staffed by volunteers.
The school board voted unanimously in favor of the proposal, which was asked to keep black children from becoming victims in the string of child killings.
A sign-carrying crowd of about 600 marched yesterday in support of the child welfare law to aid the $1 million investigation of the 21 missing and murdered children.
Although the administration has released nearly $1 million in federal funds for social programs, no money has been allocated to help the city pay for the investigation by its special police task force. At the end of February, the cost of the investigation was estimated at $1 million and was growing by $8,000 a day.
Appropriation bills have been introduced in both houses of Congress to provide the city with up to $1.8 million in aid.
Judy dies; shows some remorse
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind.—Steven T. Judy went "like a man" to his long-sought death in the electric chair yesterday, showing a glint of remorse for the rape-strangulation of a woman and the drowning murders of her three children.
Judy, 24, who blamed abusive parents and an inhumane system for his bloody trail of rape, robbery and murder, knotted his fists as the deadly electricity surged through his body at 12:11 a.m. CST.
Indiana State Prison Warden Jack Duckworth ordered the switch thrown. One minute later, Judy was pronounced dead after 2,300 seconds of electricity in the room.
Judy, who battled for his right to die rather than spend his life in prison, atolically wafted the last 13 steps from his holding cell to the electric chair he
During the final hours of his life, a crack emerged in the veins of the condemned man's personality. He indicated for the first time that he was
Debaters from Redlands University, Redlands, Calif., placed first in the silver anniversary of KU's Heart of America Debate Tournament yesterday.
Parson said he thought the tournament went well, but was glad it was over.
Bill Isaacson and Jeff Wagner defeated Pittsburgh University's Mike Alberty and Steve Marzen in the final round last night.
Redlands beats Pitt in KU debate tourney
The top four teams all received silver trays as awards in recognition of the tournament's 25th anniversary.
"This tournament is virtually the same as nationals," he said. "It's a good way to get ready for the national competition.
Isaacson said that he was glad that the tournament was over, but that he was still trying to do it.
Most of the teams and their coaches agreed with Isaacson. Thomas Kane, the Pittsburgh coach, said that the KU was one of the top two in the country.
"Sixteen of the teams at the national tournament are elected to be there and are selected as the top in the nation; 15 teams debated in KU's tournament."
"We come here because we know that teams from all over the country will be here and that many of the teams will go on to nationals." Kane said.
"All of the good teams are here," he said, "and Professor Donn Parson (the program) always makes sure that the teams face each other while they're here."
Alberty said that he thought of the KU
The Heart of America Tournament began on Saturday morning when the $4 teams participating began the first round of competition. The elimination rounds were completed early yesterday afternoon.
tournament as a "prelude to nationals."
The semifinals late yesterday afternoon ended in a third-piece tie
between the University of Louisville and Wayne State University, Detroit.
"There were no problems, everything went smoothly," Parson said. "But it has been a long three days and I'm tired."
Between 400 and 500 people were involved in the tournament, including judges, timekeepers, debaters and coaches.
Summer Orientation Program 1981 STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
. . . leadership abilities
knowledge of University programs & activities
interpersonal communication skills
interpersonal communication skills
enthusing about program
. . . enthusiasm about program
... student in good academic standing
and returning to KU for Fall 1981 term.
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS
AVAILABLE IN ADMISSION & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL
an equal opportunity employer
MARCH 25.
APPLICATIONS DUE BY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15
You can meet advertising professionals on the spring media tour of Kansas City.
The tour includes stops at:
- Kansas City Star-Times
- Valentine-Radford
- Valentine-Radford advertising agency
- Macy's Department Store
We'll be gone from about 12 noon-6 p.m.
Transportation will be provided.
The tour is Wednesday, March 11.
KUAD members $2.00 Non members $3.00
See the large poster in the lobby
of Flint Hall for more information.
sponsored by the Kansas University Advertising Club
sponsored by the Kansas University Advertising Club
University of Kansas Spring Dance Festival
University Dance Company
Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble
K.U. Folk Dance Performing Group
March 12 and 13, 1981
University Theatre, Murphy Hall
University of Kansas, Lawrence
Tickets on sale, Murphy Hall Box Office
2.50 General Admission
1.00 Students and Senior Citizens
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--live in separate halls Vice-President
Spring Formal Rush March 27,28,29
February 23-March 24
Registration:
Register in the Interfraternity
Council Office or call 864-3559.
Booths will be set up in Oliver,
Templin and JRP on
March 10,7-9 p.m.
There will be a $10 registration fee.
--live in separate halls Vice-President
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AURH ELECTIONS
Or
Must run as a team and President
GEORG PAINTEN abstract Forum R
TODAY
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March 10 and 11, 1981
Hall ID required
University Daily Kansan, March 10, 1981
Page 3
On Campus
TODAY
GEORGE BOGART, VISTING PAINTER, will present a lecture on his abstract paintings at 2 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
GARY TAYLOR, CO-EDITOR OF THE STRATFORD SHAKESPEARE PROJECT, will give a lecture entitled "The Unsungligence of Shakespeare" at 4 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILMS will present "Why Man Creates" and "World Within a World" at 7 p.m. in the basement of Limestone Hall
THE DEATH AND DYING SUPPORT GROUP, sponsored by the ST Lawrence Catholic Center, will meet at 10:30 a.m. on Tuesday at Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
THE TAU SIGMA STUDENT
DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in
Dance Room 242 of Robinson Gymnasium.
THE BIBLICAL SEMINAR ON ROMANS will meet at 7 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
THE STUDENTS' ANTINUCLEAR ALLIANCE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor C of the Kansas Union.
THE SALT BLOCK BIBLE STUDY will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the Kansas Union.
THE CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSE WEEKLY BIBLE STUDY will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 1118 INSTUDIA
THE LAWRENCE CHAPTER OF THE SIERRA CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW
A CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER SESSION at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center will meet at 7:45 a.m. LA MESA ESPONLAO (Spanish Table) will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Room 3059 of Wesco Hall.
DICK JOHSON, PASTOR OF THE LAWRENCE FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, will give a speech on Saudi Arabia for the University Forum at 11:45 a.m. in the Ministry Ministries Center.
AN INTERVIEWING TRAINING SESSION will be sponsored by Personnel Services at 1 p.m. in Room 102 of Carrubh O'Leary Hall.
BILL SUTHERLAND, SOUTH AFRICA REPRESENTATIVE TO THE AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMITTEE will speak on "U.S. Foreign Policy and Africa" at 3 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
A German-made documentary on South African women will also be shown.
EDWARD KOTTICK, CHARMAN OF THE MUSICIUM FACULTY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA, will give a lecture entitled "A Musicianist in Acoustics" to the Acoustics of the Harpsichord at p. t.m. in the Murphy Hall Lounge.
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at p.m. in PARLORS A, B, and C of the KU
LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will present the film "El Salvador; Another Vietnam?" at 7:30 p.m. in Douthart School Hall.
THE SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS/SIGMA DELTA CHI will sponsor a forum on "Cameras in the War" at the Hawkeye Room of the Kansas Union.
TOM LEWIN WILL PRESENT AN AFRICAN ARTS EXHIBIT LECTURE entitled "Asahi Art: The Role of Gold and Money" at 8 p.m. in the Main Gallery of the Museum of Anthropology.
UNIVERSITY SINGERS SPRING CONCERT will be presented at 8 p.m. in Murphy Hall's Swarthout Recital Hall.
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AURH to hold officer elections today
Today is not only election day for local governments in Kansas, but for KU residence hall government as well.
The Association of University Residence Halls is holding elections for president, vice president, secretary and treasurer tomorrow night in each hall's safety.
The team includes Brenda Darrow, Salina sophomore, president; Jeff Davis, Englewood, Colo., sophomore vice president; Dave Gillogly, Ottawa senior, secretary; and Chris Schneider, City, Kau, sophomore, treasurer.
The AURH ballot contains the names of only six candidates, with the offices of secretary and treasurer the only contested ones.
Four of the six candidates are running as a team on the Credit Coalition. Members gave no reason for the coalition name.
The other two candidates are Steve Imber, Stanley freshman, treasurer; and Joe Schooler, Atchison sophomore, secretary.
The coalition members all have had previous AURH experience. Darrow is social programming chairman, Davis J. Ruppert, an AURH Resident, the AURH newspaper,
Gillyog is chairman of the Board of Appraisers and counselor is chairman of Contracts Committee.
Imber said he had not been active in AURH, but his major in business accounting should help him as a treasurer.
Schooler said he was active on student council in high school, and wanted to serve as a link between the administration and the hall residents.
The new officers will begin their terms at the AURH Assembly meeting Thursday night. Shortly after elections, the committee chair positions for the six committee chair positions.
Nancy Hambleton city commission
PROVEN LEADERSHIP FOR LAWRENCE AND K.U.
Paid For by Hambleton for Commission Committee, N. Cushing, TREAS.
Rent it. Call the Kansan.Call 864-4358.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, March 10, 1981
Opinion
One tin Senate . . .
Once upon a time in a mythical kingdom, there was a legislature charged with the duty of running itself. It had the power to take in dollars and to appropriate dollars—real ones, not Monopoly money—and it spent a great deal of time deliberating just who would get how much.
A
But up in the castle on the mountaintop lived the king, who had already determined just how much would be given. And when the legislature's final decision didn't agree with the kings' edict, the legislature found out why the country was called a kingdom.
KU is far from a fairy tale, and KU's Student Senate isn't so mythical. Neither is its constituency—but its power, if last week's events are any indication is.
For, after weeks of deciding how much (if any) next year's student activity fee should be raised, the Senate found it didn't have the final say in the matter.
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel, rubber-stamping a suggestion by David Amber, vice chancellor for academic affairs, decided that the $14.55 activity fee requested by the Senate was just too much—especially with the other increased fees and tuition students will be paying next semester.
That would have been a $3.45 increase over this semester's activity fee, and would represent the first hike in the fee in several years. In cutting the request, the administration forced upon the Senate an artificial ceiling—$14 tops, no more. And the Senate is left with the unpleasant job of deciding who of the deserving gets cut.
The chancellor's power to overrule the Senate in such matters should be a safeguard against totally unreasonable actions—but a $3.45 increase to pay for the Revenue Code-funded student organizations is far, far from unreasonable.
The administration's edict doesn't save students a potful of money—just think of all the fun you'll have with that 55-cent windfall—and worst of all, it undermines student authority over its own affairs. Imagine one of the puppets in the old "Kukla, Fran and Ollie" show getting out of line and Fran whacking it into submission with a two-by-four, and you've got an idea of how the Student Senate was whacked back into its place . . .
"Now they stood beside the treasure On Mt. Oread, dark and red, Turned the stone and looked beneath it; 'Fifty-five cents' was all it said . . ."
Special convocation address must confront real problems
KU students are going to come back from spring break with the opportunity to hear Acting Chancellor Del Shankel reassure the University of Florida about concerns in a University-wide convocation.
Administrators are closed-mouthed about what these concerns are. Perhaps they're trying to whate our interest, or prevent us from leaving the classroom, but we know a lot about the problems at the University of Kansas.
Perhaps the upcoming NCAA tournament makes it unwise to reveal the topic right now. In light of Shankel's statement in the Kansan last Wednesday to KU faculty, staff, and students
JANE NEUFELD
1930
alumni about student athlete academics, we can probably assume that a good part (or at least some) of the convolution will be about the academic progress of KU athletes.
Somehow, people at the University seem less than friedened about the problem. A few administrators and professors huff and puff and reaffirm that a lack of academic progress, the way they do every time anything at the University is criticized. It's a fill-in-the-blank problem—criticize something and will reaffirm their commitment to high standards, pure hearts, motherhood and apple pie.
But it's hard to how anyone could be crushed by the charges the Kansas City Times made against the KU athletes. After weeks of investigation, the paper announced to the world that KU athletes were deliberately taking easy classes.
It was an anticlimax. Where is the scandal we were all expecting, the allegations of bacchanalian orgies in the locker rooms, the hundred-dollar bills slipped to the athletes by shifty-eyed coaches? "Here kid. Buy yourself some and get cranked up for the big game?"
Instead, we got a pallid brew saying that athletes are steered into easy courses by their advisers, that they get other people to do their class work and they throw themselves on the
mercy of their professors and try to get their grades changed when they fail a class.
Certainly, academic incompetence is a matter of some concern, but it's hard to imagine that people didn't know such incompetence existed, not only for athletes but for everyone.
The problem is not just athletics, but any time-consuming extracurricular or academic activity that takes time away from studying, whether it's basketball, debate, theater or band. The more time spent on any particular interest, the less spent on classes.
Every person must determine his own balance or time spent on academics and time spent on other activities.
Few people spend a day debating or rehearsing a play and feel like studying when they get home. It also is probable that few athletes come to town for training and practice it's time to relax. I think I'll read my chemistry."
If a student athlete doesn't get a degree and doesn't make it as a professional athlete, he could add digging ditches. He will probably not realize it but he is realizing you couldn't get a job with that degree.
It is ultimately not the University's or the adviser's job to see that people take their education seriously or make clear-headed choices that will lead them to an upper-middle class good life when they graduate. The individual must decide what he wants to do.
True, advisers can steer students into awful classes, but any person who hasn't figured out that 50 percent of college advisers are reckless dolis is a slow learner. It is still the person's duty to select classes and to ignore foolish people who stand in his way.
The University can provide the classes, but it cannot force people to learn from them. The best it can do is try to see that the classes use a college, not a high-school, level of material, and that the professors do not unjustly favor athletes in their grading.
We can hope that the convocation is not going to be a lot of high-minded rat about KU's wonderful academic program and ceaseless dedication to education. Maybe it will even have something useful to say, like 40 legal ways to get an Kansas University slashes our budget any more.
But if it's about academic slackers and cheats, more people should be cringing at a few stale news.
QUICK, HERMAN!
MAKE LOVE TO ME
ON THE STEPS!
Oh, John! Oh, Rita! Oh, brother!
Ever since Watergate, we've heard story after story about Watergate and the fast-paced world of high-powered conspiracy theorists.
Juice stuff, isn't it? But do we really need you know about all this? Why are they tearing their marriage apart in public? It's not doing them justice. How do we see our perceptions of Washington and politicians.
© 2018 MIMI NAGA
When we last left our couple, they had quarreled on the Phil Donahue Show. Rita was a guest and John called in. In front of a national audience they quarreled about money, John's recurring drinking problem and Rita's posing for Playboy.
Want to follow a good soap opera? Forget "Dallas" or any of the mid-morning shows. There is a real-life soap opera that puts them all to shame.
I'm talking about the saga of John and Rita story. In case you haven't followed the story, you can read it online.
John meets Rita in Washington. He is a selfmade congressman, putting himself through school. She is the wealthy daughter of a cattleman.
They marry, and she goes about the business of being a congressman's wife. She tries intuitively, but she is criticized for being outspoken and not conforming to a more sedate image.
Then Rita discovers $2,000 in one of John's shoes. Some of the serial numbers match the money. John and Rita separate. Rita bars records, in words and pictures, for the April Playboy.
Then ABCAM hits. John fights for his political life, with Rita by his side. He is convicted and works on his appeal. Rita writes an article about the episode, "Diary of a Mad Congresswife," not all of it complimentary to John.
surprising that nothing gets done. Everybody is too busy partying. Or being corrent.
In Watergate, we got Nixon's bugging and a burglary. In Corvengate and the storied influence brought by Hillary.
Those were the big scandals. We heard about the smaller ones, like Wayne Haws and
DAN
TORCHIA
1983
Elizabeth Ray and Wilbur Mills and Fanny Fox.
Now we come to ABCSCAM, and more talk of influence buying. John and Rita, mostly Rita, have provided most of the publicity. The rest of the MDA defendants are wisely avoiding the spotlight.
But Rita plugs away, effectively burying John and herself and chipping away at any credibility politicians still might have with the public.
Are all politicians that way? Are they all boozeers, just fitting from one reception to another, accepting money and women along the way? What do we believe?
Did John and Rita really make love on the Capitol steps when the Congress was in session late one night, as she maintains in the Playboy article? Did a governor really bargain on her when she was in the show? Did a lobbyist really supply John with women and liquor?
Does she really need to tell us these things?
In the Playboy article, Rita defends her profiling off of ABCAM and her husband by saying she is not the first to profit off a scandal.
"I am criticized for speaking out of turn, exploiting myself and cashing in on my husband's misfortune," she wrote. "It seems that his memoir is a woman's indiscretion."
Well, she does have a right to memorize, but she exhausted a long time ago. She had a legitimate story to tell. Being the wife of a college professor at SCAM had to be a painful thing to go through.
Writing her article, "Diary of a Med Congresswoman," which came out last December, was justified at the time. She was candid about her life in Washington, and she provided information about one aspect of political life—the wife's role—that was not offered before.
But now she has gone beyond that. She is unabashedly cashing in, appearing on TV, posing in the nude, and negotiating the book and movie rights to her story.
She really has not added any information to what she has already told. Her TV appearances and her Playboy article are rehashes of what she wrote in December.
She should be criticized now, and not for her gender. Anyone who is involved in a scandal and then tries to profit from it, like Richard Nixon with his TV interviews or Liz Ray with an attempt to be an actress, should be criticized. It's anyone's indiscretion, not just a woman's.
But no doubt she will continue on. The divorce proceeding should be starting soon, and more details will come out about soiling Washington and John.
But there is no way she can avoid soiling herself. After all, she was a participant in Washington, an observer. As the details get juicier and jucier, a lot of people—including Rita—are going to be affected. No one is going to gain.
To the editor:
Letters to the Editor
A hearty congratulation and expression of thanks is in order for the City-County Planning Commission for its overwhelming decision to approve a new master plan, over 60 acres of south Lawrence for commercial
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The saying "money talks" has become somewhat of a revered adage in our society today, yet the principle on which our nation was founded is that the majority of the people have an inherent human right to govern the destiny of their community.
action development. The wisdom demonstrated by such action is all too seldom witnessed in our region, where one medium-sized town after the other has succumbed to the pressure, politicking and pecuniary power of an outside developer who, in bringing to its own personal gain, was on bringing to the market the pavement and a "climate-controlled" monolith, with it the demise of the city's own downtown.
The planning commission has recognized the inductability of that right - hats off to them.
The commission has demonstrated by its vote a degree of commitment to, and concern for, the welfare of the majority of its constituency, which has become and is partly in the erse of the cost-benefit analysis.
Let's just hope the city commission proceeds in as enlightened a manner later this month.
Jeffrey Grogger
Let me see if Ive got this straight: my First Amendment guarantee of free speech can be considered denied if someone refuses to finance espousal of a particular political theory. In other words, if someone refuses money to enable me to publicize my position, I am being denied the right to state my position.
To the editor:
Questionable funding
I can imagine the uproar that would ensue if someone organized a campus chapter of the Moral Majority or the National Rifle Association and was awarded student funding.
Dubious logic, at best! Yet this seems to be the argument being made by certain student committees and organizations up in arms over recent court rulings that have led to the recognition of one-sided political views be reconsidered.
Free speech is there for anyone who chooses to
Bro
statutory money," he good reason inflation, " reasons.
exercise that right. If the belief is strongly held, those holding it will find a means of expression. To assert that I and every other KU student must bankroll those who wish to air their views or be guilty of a denial of constitutional rights is not only a tenuous legal argument, but would seem to indicate that political conviction proceeds from adequacy of resources.
However, year fundin Roseman Congress w
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Pam Johnston of KU-Y contends that "the very idea of setting up guidelines threatens censorship." I cannot help but feel that if a member of her increasingly political organization requested KU-Y (and thus the Student Senate) funding for, say, a pro-nuclear energy committee, that person would find himself in a veritable forest of KU-Y guidelines.
Student Senate funding of political organizations should be an all-or-nothing proposal. And because funds are necessarily limited, the rational and fairest course for the entire student body would seem to be to refuse to fund such groups. To equate such a policy to censorship is to admit that one has nothing to say unless somebody pays.
Colin Gage
Coll Gage
Lawrence graduate student
CINEMA
HV
On October 24, 1960 the movie "Thelonious Monk" premiered in Hollywood. The film featured a new cast and the latest technology.
Why were you interested in this movie?
(US$ 959-$468) Published at the University of Kansas
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during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and
Saturday. Mail $25 to Kansas State University,
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a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are £14
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CINE
Pastmaster: Send chair to the University of Kannan, Flint Hall, The University of Kannan, Lawrenceville, IL
The University Daily KANSAN
Editor
Dear Wife
Date:
Business Manager
General Manager and News Advice - Rick Mume
General Manager and News Advice - Rick Mume
THIS I
University Daily Kansan. March 10. 1981
Page 5
Broadcast
From page 1
statutory right to tell CPB how to spend its money,' he said. "If money can be taken for good reasons like controlling the budget and then later it can be taken for other reasons."
However, Congress rarely rescinds advance-year funding, Hill said.
Roseman said she was optimistic that Congress would not take away public funding.
"When the public learns that 'too much government' means CPB loses its insulation from the government, they will make their feelings known," she said.
DALE N, ANDERSONN, general manager at public television station KITU in Topeka, said
"I'd be highly surprised if Congress rescinds the money," he said. "It's a political game. There may be some reduction, but not 25 percent."
Survey to explore students' opinions, needs
By DAN BOWERS Staff Reporter
A new program of student opinion surveys will improve communication between students and the administration, the Office of Student Affairs said yesterday.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the program would collect information on student attitudes, interests, opinions and needs.
He said the program would be governed by a 12-member Student Opinion Survey Committee, comprised of student, faculty and administration representatives. Clifford Wirth, coordinator of survey research for the Center for Public Affairs, is the committee's chairman.
Warth, who has worked with a similar program at the University of Rhode Island, said the research was the first to show
"The committee is the governing body that decides which surveys are important to the University," he said. "Creating the issue is the sole role of the people who are requesting the service."
University and student organizations and the administration.
The committee will screen topics to select those affecting a large enough segment of the University, Witr said. He said that he didn't think the committee's policy was exclusive, but that it would prevent a myriad of topics affecting few students from being submitted.
"If the issue is pervasive enough to the University community, there is certainly an organization that is already interested in the topic."Wirth said.
Writh added that while the policy would help unit the number of requests made to the com-
munity to be handled, it did not change.
abusing the program by using the surveys for class projects.
The survey committee, through the Office of Student Affairs, will accept question requests for materials.
Wirth said that in Rhode Island, the program had been helpful in the planning of programs by the school's administration. For example, surveys were used to assess campus use of computers and the libraries of the library and interest in intercession courses between the fall and spring semesters.
"Whether they (the administration) use the information from the surveys is up to them," Wirth said. "If they requested it (the survey program) they must be sincer in their plans for
The surveys will be administered randomly in classes, with permission from departments and instructors. He said the surveys would be designed to last a maximum of 10 minutes.
Severance
From page 1
through," Steinerge said. "For one thing, it totally ignores the need for highway repair funding and that was one of the most important factors that led to the oush for the tax."
Another provision that the Senate will be looking at is the exemption of farmer's livestock and machinery and merchant's inventory from other taxes.
"Those exclusions to other taxes would cut about $70 million from the state's revenue," Steiner哥 said. "That leaves only half of the benefit, by the severance tax as newly-revenue found."
STEINEGER SAID that if the Senate did decide to change the House amendments, the bill would then go back to a House and Senate Conference Committee to iron out differences. The bill would return to the House floor for approval or disapproval of the recommended changes.
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WHAT WOULD YOU DO?
ROBERT VAKUMAN 7:00
--c/o KU Student Senate office.
CARL HUBBARD
1 Sciences Know of Evolution."
-A talk by Dr.
A.E. Wilder-Smith
Kansas Union
Ballroom
Thursday,
March 12th
7:00 P.M.
FREE
"The Natural Sciences Know Nothing of Evolution."
A talk by Dr.
A.E. Wilder-Smith
Kansas Union
Ballroom
Thursday,
March 12th
7:00 P.M.
FREE
Dr. Wilder-Smith received his first doctorate in physical organic chemistry in 1941 at the University of Reading, England and has since earned two other doctors. He is the author of coauthor of over 50 scientific publications, and more than 20 books which have been published in English, German, French, Russian, and Rumanian. At present, he is engaged in the production of TV films tracing the origin of the universe and the origin of life and species.
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USSA—Immediate opening
The United States Student Association is a national lobby organization dedicated to the interests of students in American institutions of higher education
K U. is a member of this organization and actively participates in it. Persons interested in applying for the position of Campus Director are encouraged to contact Greg Schnacke
105,B Kansas Union or call 864-3710
DeadlineMarch 13.5 p.m
Spring Sale
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Phone: (913)842-1811 Est. 10
P. O. Box 2, Lawrence, Ks. 66044
Page 6 University Daily Kansan, March 10, 1981
C
'Taco rock' spicy stuff for Nuevo Wavos
By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Writer
Joe "King" Carrasco wears a fire-engine-red cap, the skin pants and overall crown straight out of an empire coat.
On stage, he leaps from speaker columns and amplifiers like a madman, and uses a 60-foot guitar for frequent romps into the audience, jumping to the table and often duckwalking across the tops of bars.
Not surprisingly, Carrasco and his band the Crowns—appearing tomorrow night at the Lawrence Opera House—become one of the hottest acts to hit the music scene. The band finance a trip east from their home in Austin, Texas.
THEIR JUMPY, tireless blend of early rock-n-roll and Tex-Mex music was soon packing dance floors from Long Island to Greenwich Village, leading to a festival's appearance on "Saturday Night Live," and a world tour.
One critic recently dubbed the bend's blend of Mexican party music and classic 68s rock-n-roll "Nuevo Wave." Another described it as something akin to Tex-Mex Ramones.
"There's always been kid-rock in Texas," Carrasco says. "That's what I tapped into—trash."
"It's taco rock," the King says.
Indeed, what can you say about a band that performs songs like "Jalapecon big Ben" and "Coca de Vaca"?
(roughly translated as "Bull manure"), "Beer for Breakfast" and "Nervous Out" and returns for encores of "Wooly Bully" and "La Bomba," a song from a 1930s musical?
AND WHAT CAN you say about a band whose album describes itself as "Taco-rific," complete with two greasy tacos and a bottle of "Carrasco Sauce" pictured on the cover, a band that sings some song lyrics in Spanish, and once played a fourth encore to four people?
"Buy my album and win a night with my sister," a leering Carrasso says in an inset on the album's cover.
Carrasco and the Crowns (Kris Cummings, organ;
Brad Kizer, bass; Mike Navarro, drums) draw their
music from the likes of Buddy Holly, '60s bands like
Sam the Blues, ? and the Mysterians, the Farisa
organ-accented sound of Tex-Mex pioneers such as
Sir Douglas Ountet and even Mexican nolks.
"We're a party band," Carnisco says. "It's not a novelty. We just never saw ourselves as anything more than a National Guard Armry band. I'm just out there to have a good time."
Joe King Carrasco and the Clowns, er Crowns,
could hardly be described as serious musicians.
They're too busy having fun. No underlying messages.
Stupid lyrics. Catch my melodies.
THEIR TRADEMARK is the cheesy sound of Cummings cheeses arean
flight of stairs, burst into the women's rest room and played hopping up and down in a toilet stall.
Carrasco the live antics are fast becoming legend.
Once in New York, he jumped off the stage, ran up a
Last December in Los Angeles, he stretched his guitar cord out the door of the Whisky-a-Go-Go and played a few licks on the Sunset Boulevard. On another date, he again took his act outside, bopping around on the hood of a Cadillac before climbing a tree for one number.
BUT AFTER THE first night, word began to get around.
"They didn't know who we were—we were hocking records off the stage," Carrasco said last week, when he was during the Chicago stop of his U.S. tour. "I think they were catching a country-west band, but we rocked out."
Their next gig was at Manhattan's famed Mudd Club, and soon people were lined up around the corner to see Joe King 'Carrasco and the Crownes. New songs were even singing along with the Spanish lyrics.
Carrasco and the Crowns have only been together since October 1979. A month later, they managed to arrange a gift from New York's Lone Star Cafe based on their signature drink, "Fruit Roll-Roll." They paid just $100 for the performance.
ENGLAND'S STIFF RECORDS them to a multiple album record contract midway through a six-month run.
The Opera House will be selling half price tacos all night.
THE GREAT FUNKY BAND
Joe 'King' Carrasco and the Crowns—(from left). Kris Cummings, Mike Navarro, Carrasco, Brand Kizer—appearing at the Lawrence Opera House tomorrow night.
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PRE-LAW?
Chancery Club is holding a meeting Wednesday, March 11, 7:00 P.M.
New Green Hall, Rm. 203
Meet with current 1st, 2nd, 3rd year law students discussing the experience of law school at KU and career opportunities.
Paid for by student senate
A. S. Mukundan
"U.S. Foreign Policy and Africa" Public lecture by Bill Sutherland
There will also be a film shown entitled "South Africa is Ours"a documentary film on Black South African Women.
Date----11th March
Time----3 pm
Sponsored by the African Students Association with Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, Womens Studies Dept., Oread-Friends meeting Commission on the Status of Women, the Nigerian Students Association and KU Committee on South Africa.
Location—Council Room
Paid for by the I-Club and ASA
screen printing
9-5:30 m-s
screens, squeeges, inks, stencil materials, fabric for printing, textbooks. . . supplies for the student, hobbyist, or professional!
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Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments,
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- Raquetball
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* Convenient Location
* On KU Bus Route
Tuesday is: STEAK NIGHT AT SIRLOIN STOCKADE
6 oz. of tender, jucy sirion cooked the way you like it—served with choice of potato, toast, and all the coffee or tea you can drink. 5 p.m. till closing.
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University Daily Kansan, March 10, 1981
Page 7
Vote set for municipal bill
After weeks of lobbying and debate, the pet proposal of many downtown Lawrence retailers—the State Senate's Municipal Improvements District bill—is finally set for a Senate floor vote this week.
"I'm optimistic that the bill will be acted on before the Wednesday deadline (for Senate consideration of its bills)," the proposal's sponsor, State Sen. Jane Eldridge, R-N.C., said Tuesday. If he isn't acted on, it will have to wait for the next legislative session."
The bill, which left the Senate local Government Committee yesterday had the additional support of the federal government. Borwat Fordson, City Commissioner
Barkley Clark and the Downtown Lawrence Association.
The bill, originally intended to encompass all Kansas municipalities, was amended to make it applaudable only to Lawrence, Edwards
"If this bill works okay for Lawrence, we might want to bring it back and amend it again," she said. "Most of the committee members have been told that, but they had not yet had time to think through all of its implications."
The bill will allow groups of landowners in Lawrence's downtown area, under certain conditions and with City Commission approval, to obtain district districts to finance new construction and other capital improvements.
Vandals destroy lamps
Vandals destroyed 15 sidewalk lamps on Campanile hill Thursday night causing over $3,000 damage. Thomas and Facilities Operation, and yesterday.
Anderson said that the lamps, which cost $280 each, had probably been destroyed by more than one person.
"On Thursday several security people called in sick so the security watch for that area was cancelled," Anderson said. It seems like a group of people was just waiting for the opportunity to sandalize."
Anderson said the most serious vandalism usually took place during final examination weeks.
"Kids take their academic frustrations out on buildings, grounds and anything else they can get their hands on," he said.
He said that, vandalism was a growing problem, but that for a university of its size, KU had a very low rate.
"During the two semesters we get an episode here and there of vandalism, but most of it happens during exams."
"Only a small percentage of students ever take part in any kind of vandalism," Anderson said. "All in it very proud of the kids here. It's very seldom that some screwball decides he wants to destroy something."
Anderson said that the damaged lights would be replaced as soon as possible for campus beauty and commencement ceremonies in May.
"Vandalism hasn't been a major problem at this university and I hope it never becomes one," he said.
On the Record
KU police are investigating the burglary of two cars Saturday night. The cars were parked in the "UL" zone near the Kansas Union.
POLICE SAID the thieves possibly used a spring-loaded nail punch to break a wing vent in one car and take a vehicle into the car was estimated at $250.
THE THIEVES used the nail punch again to break the sunroof of another car and take another purse. Damage to a vehicle was estimated at $400, police said.
THREE THEFTS occurred at Robinson Gymnasium recently, police said.
A THEIF TOOK a gold chain, earrings and cash, totaling $230, from a locker in the women's locker room while the owner was in the sauna.
A GOLD TOPAZ ring, valued at $200,
was taken while its owner was in the
shower.
A THEIF took a pursue, billfold and cash, valued at $140, from the balcony over the old racchet court, police said. Police have no suspects.
FUN & GAMES
PENTE
The University Daily
$1.50 PITCHERS
BUG, BUSCH, NATURAL LIGHT
2-8 PM DAILY
al "THE HAWK"
1002 Mass.
CLASSIFIED RATES
Call 864-4358
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twenty-three fourth five six seven eight nine ten eleven twenty-three fourth five sixth seven eight nine ten eleven twenty-three fourth five sixth seven eight nine ten eleven twenty-three fourth five sixth seven eight nine ten eleven twenty-three fourth five sixth seven eight nine ten eleven twenty-three fourth five sixth seven第八九十九十九十九十九十
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanans will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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 Ranman business office at 894-4358.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Hillel presents
MERCEDES BENZ CITATION
Operation Thunderbolt
The Israeli version of the
raid on Enterbte
Tuesday, March 10,
7:30 p.m.
Dyche Auditorium
room 308
$1 donation to UJA
For more information call 864-39
שד
Hillel Lunch with
Norman Forer
American Jewish Radicalism
Wednesday, March 11
12-1.30
Alcove D, Kansas Union
ENTERTAINMENT
"Say It with a song"
ASTA SINGING
TELEGRAMS
841-6169
TRAVEL CENTER
TRAVEL CENTER
Domestic & International Reservations
• Airline • Escalator Tours
• Hotel/Resort • Skip Packages
• Car Rental • Group Rates
• International Student Specialists
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Free services to students and faculty 841-7117
9. 00 5:00 M-F, 9.30 2:00 Sat
3 Bedroom apt. in N. Lawrence, utilities paid $300.00 per mo. 841-5988. 3-13
FOR RENT
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5, 843-3228. tf
HANOVER PLACE NEWHOUSES: Available immediately. New and contemporary.
2+ bedrooms are within walking distance to the pool. Will resist or sell $104-1212 or $842-4455.
3 bdmr, townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. tf
ARIZONA STREET DUPLEXES Any moment. Perfect for 4 students, 4 bedrooms. 2 bathrooms. instructor, dishwasher, washers, washer and dryer, upsala, central air conditioning, carpet & dress-off-street parking, unfurnished, no stairs. Call 843-7370 or 6563.
For spring and summer, Naimhall Hall of Arts offers an advantage of an apartment. Good food and adventures in the city may serve to clean your room and back up your activities and reach more. If you're looking for a place with room to you, want, stop in or give me a call: Naimhall HALL, 1800 Naimhall Drive, 858-392-6900, 1800 Naimhall Drive, 858-392-6900.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
For roommate, features wood burning fireplace,
roommate designs, fully equipped
winter烘干器, fully equipped
daily at 2500 River Drive or phone 842-
176-3998 for roommate.
Vista Capri Apt. 1, Unfurnished studio, 1,
2 bd/m², apts. available. Central air, wall-
to-wall carpet. quiet location, 2½ bds. south
wall, large space. located 424-7209, after 30-
amly anytime weekdays.
THIRUON TOWNHOUSES are new, spacious and contemporary and available on weekends. We have room for bedding rooms at $40 per month. Must be enrolled at 8th and Earnest, 841-30-102, 842-455-6.
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
3 b townhouse for rent now at Pine Haven
904 S. 5th St. Flushing, NY 11378.
mer w & water dryer, close to shopping
name: We pay water $50 per person de-
sire: We pay gas $20 per person
名
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 203 &
Kasdon. If you’re tired of apartments
in the city, you can rent a feature 1 b, lr; baths, all appliances, at-
charges, for summer use of privacy. We have
garages for summer use of parking.
Craig Lea or Jim Bong at 748-1697 for
prices about our modestly价 townhouses.
Med Center Bound? Nice. 2-bedroom
on-lines available for summer and
carpet. A.C. appliances, and parking.
1-1031) - 381-287.
3-27
2. bedroom, attached garage home, 2821
Mountvale. Fenced yard. $290.00 mo. Avail.
now. 843-0570, 843-6011.
3-10
ROOM FOR MALL STUDENT. Share bath
now. 885 small utility. 841-214-
3607. 885.
GARAGE FOR RENT. Clean, dry near 148,
and Kentucky. $30. 811-205-1038. 3-11
Sublease this summer. Two bedroom age
*10th street new campus*. Allege 811-672-8
ROOM FOR MASTER STUDENT. Share kitchen, bath, 14th and Kentucky, furnished, walk to campus. $95 + small utility. 84-2105, 84-3138
3-11
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute
walk to campus, 1821 Tennessee, $270 rent
+ utilities. 842-4822. 3-25
Sublease furnished apt. loft, one bedroom,
available April 1st, excellent view of Lawrence.
Call 841-5255 or 843-7828. 3-12
2 bedroom apt., close to campus. $210 +
utilities. No pets. 842-1929 after 5:00 +
Female roommate wanted, after graduation to share a 2 Bedroom-2 Bath Furnished Apartment in Johnson County. Rate $150.87417.盆快 Call: afor 690-312-1138. $13
Sublease 1 bd. w/study all utilities pd. except lights, bus route, convenient location.
Call 841-852-83 or 842-4641.
3-13
3 BR ranch. Fenced yard. Closed porch.
Available March 15, Crestline Church. Hillcrest
area. $225 + 1 mo. deposit. 842-3946. 3-
12
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Makes sense to use them! As a Study
材料 makes sense to use them! As a Study
exam preparation! Analyze of
exam preparation! Analyze of
Cater. The Bookmark, and Oread Book
FOR SALE
FRESHIMEN and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house next year! Apply now. 842-6592.
Alternator, starter and generator speculaa
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-909-3800
W. 6th. tt
74 Chevette, excellent cond. new paint,
engine. Alain Ross 843-1772. 3-10
For Sale: 1976 Honda CB 550. Completely stocked, low mileage, excellent condition.
841-2665. 3-10
Reel to reel tread deck. Pioneer 1020L
$329.00, Call Don B42-6577. 3-10
87,500 Cullas Supreme, V.-B. Sidalia, PS. AC,
88,700 miles, $2,000. Call 811-138-126.
A1250 130 art style cassette tape deck.
Fine condition. $125. 749-0486.
**'84 Mustang Coupe, repair rebuilt 289**
**'85 Chevy Monte Carlo, new maintenance free battery, cylinders, new maintenance free battery, near new free battery, unibody油箱, near new free battery, Body Kit $700. Call Troy at 783-440-314
HP 36C Calculator. Programmable, statistical and business functions; 2 months old, barely used. please. $100. Call 843-7978, evenings. please. 3-11
Receiver technics ($30 w/ch), turntable dual
2 speakers, $300 or best offer. 1144 Louisiana
7 (2nd floor).
3-11
1976 VW RABBIT. 48,600 ml, great looking and running + good gas mileage. Must see. Call 841-7762. 3-11
73 Honda M-CMC-MT, 1030 Total Miles,
Passport Style, Lug. Rack, Ease. Start, Turn
Signals, New Battery, Super mileage, 864-
3482, after 9:04 - 840 0700.
78 Camero Lt. 4 speed—39,000 miles, AM-FM radio, deluxe interior, like new. Call Kamal after 7:00 am p81-15223.
Olds Cutlass 68, Blue AM radio, Air-conditioned,
Runs good. $549. 842-4372 after 3
3-10
Mini-Korg Electronic Music Synthesizer, excellent condition, must sell, first $200 takes, 841-9270, Curt. 3-12
Three $20 discount certificates for United
Airlines at Chicago and Montreal for sale. Expire
at the end of the month.
Opticonia Stereo System tuner, & amp 80 speakers, cassette, turntable, with 2 ESS speakers. Ex. condition, must sell before break. 81-985 Make offer.
35 mm, Canon camera, Tele-couverter, 50 mm, 135 mm in front, 20 m and 28 wide angle lenses. All in excellent condition—Best offer. Anytime at 864-2621. 3-11
TWO STYX TICKETS FOR SALE. Lower
Level, March 16th show. I'm selling at cost
($11.50 each). Call 749-0046. 3-11
MZDA GLC SPORT. Like new, low
mileage, 1 owner, 5 speed, $3500, 842-3378,
864-4245.
3-13
Metal file, cabinet, 2-drawer, excellent condition; $50 - Sonic cassette tape recorder with extendable speakers. $40. Call $64-1033 or $84-1041
For Sale: Matching coach & chair, kitchen-
basket, cross country skis & skis, dowell-
ski boots. Women's size 6. Men's size 1.
814-4390 3-13
1971 Chevrolet Malibu, repaired engine, 2
door newly repainted, new back tires. Call
after 2:00 p.m. $800. Call 749-2136. 3-13
Bass-V. Pricer to sell. Call Randy 842-307-507.
Bass-4001 Rickenbacker Bass Amp Ampl@
Bass-W. Price to sell. Call Randy 842-307-507.
3 - in 1- 1978 Allegro modular stereo-$75.
4 - in 1- 1978 cabinet color TV T V$150-
745-1699
745-1699
Ratten Snake Ice, Wall paper, photograph,
Kitchen Mat, Wall Decor, Everything But Ice, 6th & 8th Years - 3-23
Need a camera for Spring break? Pocket
Camera, new like. Newcomer $44-124
like, new like. B$44-124
Ampge V-4 v guitar head. New Transformer &
Tubes. $175.00 or best offer. 749-1214.
Keep trying. 3-23
Movie projector 35 mm. Lenses, amp., ex-12
condition, 842-0540.
Window shades, Battered golf clubs, sleeping bags, tents, lamps, metal detectors. Everything But Ice, 6th & 8thm. 3-23
FOUND
'74 Honda 400 4 cyl. excel. cond. 841-5968.
3-13
calient condition, B24-0540.
1977 Ford LTD II, A/C, AT, PS, PB. Raceway.
Beautiful car in excellent condition, $700.
Beautiful car in excellent condition, $700.
Keep trying - 13
STEREO PRE-CAR INC.
LINENA* model, 4000. Extensive noise reduction and peak amplification circuitry to allow Harry and卡尔-8283 before its sleep.
Window shades, Battered golf clubs, sleep.
Cross penchant on sidewalk near Fraser Hall.
Call 749-3941. 3-10
Found at bus stop across from Bailey. Silver I.D. Bracelet w/names in inside & outside. Call 749-2903 and identify. 3-12
HELP WANTED
Found umbrella Wednesday in front of 2092
Maliuti, Cell. 845-2001 and jordy.maliuti
3/12
I found a charm in the girl's bathroom at Wescoe. Call to identify. 864-5888 or 864-
2844. 3-11
Full or part time help wanted. Combination
Dancing for hire 24 hours. Dancing for hire
Dancing starting 8:40 per hour.
Nude dancing at 75 per hour. Your choice.
Dance on Hwy 40. 379-9900.
rence on Hwy 40. 379-9900.
3-24
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES/
experiences with us, as a public service to
nursing home residents! Our consumer or-
ganizer, Nursing Homes (KIN) need your help.
Nursing Homes (KIN) need your help in
nursing home conditions and your opinion
in all of the residents. All names and correspondence
913-843-3688 or 843-7167, or write us:
913-843-3688 Male. Mae S. J., Lawrence, Kansas
MAKE $500 A WEEK PLUS $50. OF ALL
MAKING GROUND TRANSITIONS INVOLVING YOUR TIME FOR
information, send $125 to $100, self-addressed,
p.o. PRESS 220, Lawrence, KS 66045.
p.o. PRESS 220, Lawrence, KS 66045.
CRUBS CLIENT MEDIZERANEAN, SAIL-
ERS, TRUSTORS, OFFICE PERSONAL,
grantsors, Office Personnel, Counselors,
Medicinal Staff, OPENS, handling for AP-
lication, OPENING, 153 Box 6029, JACKSON
CROSSWISDOM, 153 Box 6029
World's Large Business needs you! Stay home-paid weekly. Free newsletter. Enclose stamped envelope. *Peggy Jones.* 3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, Kansas 60044. 3612-855-8570
RESEARCH ASSISTANT (1) Position open with Children's Research Requirements. Current position of Child Research Requirements. Compete data (at one hour).招聘 children one month program. Requires completion of one month program. Apply online. Application deadline 16. March. Weekly application form available. University of Kansas 646-3412. Hooverville, 3-13
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF
accepted for the Summer Orientation student
advertisement in today's paper or come by
Strong Hall. An equal opportunity ame-
nity.
Spring break jobs-Lasting one week, part part time position continuing through Spring outdoor work. Appl in person at the Garden Center, 15th and 3rd May- 13
Need female salesperson capable of working morning hours. Apply at Morris Sports or call 843-0412. 3-10
PRYCH NI. If you are interested in providing a full-time job, the potential has a job for you. We have 2 immediate positions with 60 hr per wk. Part time 16 krs Full time 48 krs per wk. Part time 16 krs Part time 48 krs Part time 35 krs Mainline 33 krs Mainline 91-934-6838
LOST
Subtantual rewards for leather backpack,
two Spanish Books, French Book, red Note-
book, and Gold Pendant Watch. Call 749-
1147.
HP-34-C Calculator Tues. 24. Reward. 841-
3625.
3-13
NOTICE
SKI WINTER PARK/MARY JANE SPRING
18th-24th. All-day skiing, tickets, ski rental, lodging insurance and
baggage insurance. 18th or 19th-2dth. Write SKI e.c.t. etc. 18th or 19th-2dth. Write SKI e.c.t. etc.
18th or 19th-2dth. Three day Easter Trip Hike. Three day Winter Trip Hike.
Going skiing over Break? HEAT WAVE SKI Vests are ideal for Spring skiing and come in great designs and colors. Tel. elevations 644-3691, 842-5585. 3-13
GAY AND LESHISI PEER Counseling: A friend is ready to listen. Referrals through K.U. Information, 844-3506, or Headquarters, 841-2345. tf
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH/
RIGHT 843-4821.
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports. Custom made portraits, color, B/W. Swells Studio 749-161. 4-1
CHALLENGE
The KU school of Engineering challenges the KU Law school to a tug-of-war on Thursday, March 12th at 2 p.m.
at broken Arrow Park,
for the St. Pat's Engineering
celebration.
BE THERE!
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can give, at prices students can afford. Swells Studio 749-1611.
**NEED EXTRA CASH** Sell your old Gold &
*Diamonds*. Top prices for class rings,
gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6377, 841-
7476.
Want to be a Priest? Sister? Ages 20-50
Contact Faither Nigro, Gonzaga University.
Spokane, 92588.
3-24
SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 27, 28, 29
Register in the Interference Council Office
of Overseas Booths in Washington,
7 p.m. There will be a $10 registration
fee.
Senior portrait special, studio taken with a large selection of scenic background available. Swella Studio. 749-1611. 3-25
Looking for someone going to CONNELL UNIVERSITY (NEW YORK) vicinity Spring Will pay for transport of harmless biological specimen. Call Sarah 845-674-674
Singing messages for all occasions . **ASTA**
Singing Telegraphs. 841-6188. **If**
HEADACH, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? *Chiropractic Care Improve*
for constipation. Johnson 453-8588 for
consultation, accepting Blue Cross & Blue
Star insurance loans.
Green's Fine Wines. Come see our selection.
Green's Liquor, 802 W. 23rd St. 841-2277
3-10
A great Spring fishing combination—sunshine, warm breezes, open water, you, and Anglers Unlimited. 1449 W. 23rd. 5-13
She does or does not. She better打
Design a logo for the KU Sailing Club.
Winning logos will be displayed to Designer Will need $150 or a club membership. Entries must include a phone number. Pricing: 3-25 Call barb At B43-8120.
Green's Tavern and Kg Shop KU ID
Price Cut, Mn. Thur-March, $125, $1 7; Till 2 till 4 Big Draw 56s. 3-12
Green's Fine Wine. Come see our selection.
Immediate Opening. The United States State Univ. is dedicated to the interests of students in need of academic support. KU is a member of this group and actively participates in campus activities for the position of campus director. Please apply for the position of campus director by submitting resume to KU Student Senate, 1005 Barkun Union, KU 802-647-3191 or 814-1408. Deadline March 31.
The Clean, a local band, is looking for a Music Director to work with us set demolished, receive no response (or pay), and you. Our band is experienced in destroying buildings. If you are interested please call 811-765-3242 or if seriously interested please call 811-765-3242.
Floor Laundry-drale -Padre Island IZOD.
Front Floor and Friends to want you.
With Pie. Pick up pizza or dessert OFF.
Clinton Parkway开车 OFF
through March 15. Open daily 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. 3-12
pm.
Open-minded adventurer wanted for lengthy World Bicycle tour to start spring 22. Write: C.J. S.CO. S. Fern, Wichita, KS 67213. 3-11
Complaining a "Best of Lawrence" list Best
business, hotel, waiter, burger,
bar, shop, restaurant, star
starr, shot for Best anything
as long as it matches nominations to 2500 W.
2144 LaWayne.
Does she or doesn't she? She better! 3 days
-S.B.S.B, N.R.B.L. 3-10
Opening soon "All Baba" Mid-East cuisine, biside Minsky's Pizza, 2200 Iowa (Great Gryst) 3-12
Mary—Happy Birthday! You're not getting old, you're better better. Hang in there
-Green Hall—
3-10
FISHING FEVRÈ — a highly contagious disease with no known cure. We have the prophylactics rot what we might think) at Angra Unlimited, 149 W. Dresdert. 3-12
Skipping classes? **Learn to "play the game"**
and still make the grade you want. Send $3 to
BRENNAN RESOURCE DIRECTORY.
Box 555, Wichita, KS 67208.
3-24
STUDY BREAK—Fish Clinton Lake us
Spring. We'll help you bring in the big
angels. Anglers Unlimited, 1449 W. 23rd, 3-13
What's beyond vegetarian? Prasadamantari
FREEL LUNCH in comfortable settings. Mon-
fr. Fr. 12 noon ~ 20 pm, $34. illinois.
If you all can eat it, no string.
tachid!
OUTDOORS WOMEN—sport fishing is an exciting experience. We can help you get started—Anglers Unlimited. 1449 W. 23rd.
3-13
SERVICES OFFERED
Tutoring in Biol. 104, 408; Chem 184, 188; Environ. 632, 913; Econ. 729, 750; Maitl 121, 250, 358; Phyllis 211, 212; Organized dis on important concepts, 64. Available for all courses. C-3-10
644 available.
Do you have a mechanic that is as comfortable in the pits at Watkins Glen as he is working on your Sports Car?
We Do!
wheel
wheel
843-7095
--self service
copies
now at
ENCORE COPY
CORPS
Tutoring Math 000-800. Phxs 100-600. Bus
368, 804, 806. Call 843-9036. tf
Preparing for the *MCAT* and don't know where and how to begin. Call *Former MCAT* (and who has been admitted to medical school of choice) for tutoring and helpful advice.
Drop off services. Drop your laundry on the floor and we will wash, dry, hand and fold your clothes. We only charge $4 a minute at 8 a.m., 8 p.m. or 10 a.m. for mounting services and free rides. Hillcrestment services and free rides. Hillcrestment services and free rides.
3¢
سعودية شركة التمويل
الكامل للاستثمارات في
الشركات الخاصة في
جمهورية مصر العربية
1941-2016
25th and Iowa 842-2001
TYPING
Experienced typed-term team, thesis
music, electric IMM Selective, Proofreading
--illegal corrected. 843-8544, Mrs. Wright
Experienced K.U. typist, IMC Correction,
Selective, quality work. References available.
Sandy, evening and weekends. 788-818
ff
Experienced typist- thesis, dissertations term papers, mica. IBM correcting selectric Barb. after 5 p.m. 842-2210.
IRON FENCE TYPEP SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate. IBM pica/elite. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. tf
1 do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. *
842-2001
For Your Typing Odyssey ENCORE COPY CORPS wa— Holiday Plans 842-209
Dial
25th and 1
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. If
RESUME—RESUME—RESUME—Professional
Resume Preparation and Printing. Entrance
Copy Corps. 25th and 842-2001. tfr
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editine, self-correct Selective.
Call Ellen or Jeannan 841-2172 tf
Experienced typist-looks, thesis, term papers, disartifications, etc. IBM correcting Selective. Terry evenings and weekends. 842-754 or 843-2671. tf
RUSH JOBS our specialty. Reasonable Rates.
IBM 10, 12 pitch. Nathan or Sandy-841-
7668, 843-8611. 3-12
Grad. student's wife will type papers 75/cp.
842-3338 anytime. 5-13
pt. br. 842-3338 anytime.
Experienced typist would like to type thesus,
dissertations, etc. Call 842-3203.
3-30
Closest thing to printing—IBM Executive typing. Fast service. Reasonable Rates. Bill 3-13 0979
ORDER FOR
Fast. efficient typing. Many years experience.
IBM. IBM before 9 p.m. 749-268-3, 1-3
WANTED
GOLD. SILVER. DIAMONDS. Class rings.
Wedding Bands, Silver Colors, Sterling, etc.
We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or
442-2868.
Female roommate to share extra nice furniture 2 dr. 2 bath duplex $115 + ½ util.
Call 841-8390. 3-13
Male roommate wanted for Jayhawker Towers Apt. $108/month includes utilities.
Call Tom or Drew 749-3933. 3-10
Musicians wanted. Drums, guitars, keyboard, vocals. Forming band. Into Stones. Room in basement. Entrance. Apartment or a room needed through Spring Break. Call 864-6588. 3-11
The University Daily
-KANSAN
ORDER FORM
SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T!
If you've got it, Kansas classifieds can sell it! just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to University Daily Kansas. 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 60405. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write Ad Here:
Dates to Run:
RATES:
additional words
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 inch *3.75*
NAME: ___
ADDRESS: ___
PHONE: ___
University Daily Kansan, March 10, 1981
一
'Hawks open baseball season
Last season, weak pitching may have kept Kansas out of the post-season baseball tournament. This season, pitching may get the Jayhawks in.
KU COACH Floyd Temple will see today if the improvement he expects in this season's pitching shows up. KU will take a big step forward against Emporia State at Emporia.
Sophomore Jim Philips will start in the first game and Kevin Clinton, a former quarterback with the KU football team, will open the second.
Phillips led the Jayhawk pitchers last
season with a 5-3 record and said he thought that this season would be better.
"I feel ready to go," he said.
"Everybody is. We are 200 times ahead of where we would be if we hadn't had the warm weather."
The extra outdoor practice has been especially important this season because most of the starters today have switched positions or are new since last spring.
TEMPLE WILL start two junior college transfers on the left side of the
infield, third baseman Russ Blaylock and shortstop Jeff Neuill. Second baseman Roger Riley played third base and layhawks last season. Senior Brian Grier will catch and senior Juan Ramon will catch. Both batted over .350 last season for KU.
In the outfield, Temple will also start a young team, with sophomore Dick Lewallen in center field, where he played last season. Freshman Joe Heiney will start in right field and the left field position is still undecided. Either Tim Heineman or Jim Heeney, both walk-on, will start.
None qualify in track team's last trv
Sometimes winning is not enough.
Athletes from four Big Eight track teams showup in Manhattan Saturday day for one last attempt at qualifying for major championships. All of them failed.
KU freshman Craig Jones won the hurdles and junior Van Schafer won the 88-yard run, but not with times fast enough. The Giants' friend's NCAA championships in Detroit.
THE JAYHAWKS, however, still have 11 athletes qualified for the meet, which starts Friday at Joe Louis Arena.
Schaefer, who finished third in the 1,000 at the Big Eight championships, won the 880 with a time of 1:54.7, beating K-State's Sandy Rotch.
JONES WON the hurdles with a time of 7.6, edging Kelly Brooks of Oklahoma State. The time was a half-second short of the national qualifying time.
K-State's Ray Bradley set an Ahearn Field House record Saturday with a tots of 64-2 1/4 in the shotput, breaking his old mark of 63-9 4/4; set earlier this year. The senior is one of three Wildcats already qualified for the national meet.
"It was a low-key meet, really," KU Assistant Coach Steier Kaiefer said. "Most teams sent kids up just to qualify."
The Jayhawks, who also qualified 11 athletes for last year's national championships, have finished fourth in the NCAA meet the last two years.
Kansas grabs spot in final Top 20 poll
Press International Board of Couchers Top 20 final rankings with first place votes and won-lost ballots
1. DePaul (38) (27-1)
2. Oregon State (6-16) (621)
3. Louisiana State (28-3)
4. Arkansas State (11-14) (607)
5. Kentucky (19-14) (360)
6. Indiana (21-9)
7. Kentucky (21-9)
8. Notre Dame (25-5)
9. Utah (28-4)
10. UCLA (28-4)
11. Iowa (21-4)
12. Iowa (21-4)
13. Wake Forest (24-4)
14. Tennessee (30-7)
15. Bryant University (28-4)
16. Illinois (18-5)
17. Michigan (28-4)
18. By agreement with the National Association for College Couchers. The only team on probation for the 1984-85 season.
B
THE CASTLE TEA ROOM
1307 Mass. phone: 843-1151
LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property
WE BUY USED FURNITURE
EVERYTHING BUT ICE
6th & Vermont
749-1595
John E. Dudley
843 2870
843 8711
Prudentbal
Life Health Adn Care
Lose 17 to 26 pounds
or more
in just six weeks
HOW TO WIN AT THE WOODS GAME
DIET CENTER
841-DIET
"It's a Natural"
935 Iowa
Hillcrest Medical
Center
Classified ads get results
SUA FILMS
SNA Films
Tuesday, Mar. 10
Love Me Tonight
(1932)
A brilliant early autobiography, about a tailor (Maurice Chevallier who falls in love with a princess) (Jeanette "MacDonald"). The Rodgers and Hart score includes "isn't I Remember?" and "I Love." direction Roben Mamoulian provides a witty, delightful view of Paris in the Spring. Myrme Loy and Charlie Roguge round out the cast. (104 min.) BW, 7:30.
Marcel Camus' brilliant retelling of the legend of Orpheus, set in the carnivals of ancient Greece, is a colorful flavor, spontaneous Latin music and superb performances by a cast of unknowns, the winner many international Brazilian frenzies, Tables 32, Color, Brazilian Frenzies, Tables 32.
ROSTROVICH
Wednesday, Mar. 11 Black Orpheus
Unless otherwise noted, all tickets will be shown at Woodstock Auditorium in the evening or on Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday tickets are $150. Midnight tickets are $200. Tickets for all programs are $150 Union, 4th level. Information 864-777-9200. No smoking restrictions on balconies.
Tickets for the Thursday April 2 Concert by Mistislav Rostropovich, Cellist, will go on sale to season ticket patrons on Thursday, May 5. Tickets are available to these patrons for $8 and $7 at the Murphy Hall Box Office.
Attention Season Ticket Patrons of the KU Concert & Chamber Music Series
General public and student tickets will go on sale Thursday, March 12. Tickets are $10 and $8 for the public and $5 and $4 for KU students with ID.
For reservations,
call 913/864-3982.
Murphy Hall Box
Office
Wednesday, March 11, 7:30 p.m. and ??? and ???
Special Added Attraction: 'BRING YOUR OWN PITCHER'
50c Pitchers/10c Draws
When the whistle blows, it's cheap beer until someone tries to leave or go to the 'john'
Back by Popular Demand!!!
The Second Harbour Lites P*** or Drown
Any regular size pitcher—
(60 oz. or less)-
we'll fill it for 50c during P*** or Drown
(make sure your pitcher's marked!!!)
Prime your pump for Spring Break . . .
how long can YOU last???
francis
sporting goods
SPEEDO SUITS SPRING
781 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 60404
843-4191
Speedo Racing Swimwear
Worn by more gold medal winners
and world record holders
other than the other
Block panel shown. $21.95.
plus other Speedo traks,
fashion shoes and water shorts
clothing items, gloves, towels,
towels, goggles, caps,
clothes and shoes.
T-shirts and bags.
Jeggings.
*Speedo is a registered trademark of Speedo Knitting Mills, Pty. Ltd.
"Sporty things for sporty people"
ENGINEERS
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It was no surprise that Nebraska won this weekend's Big Eight men's swimming championship. It was a surprise, however, that Missouri edged out the Kansas Jayhawks for second place.
KU swimmers third in Big 8
NEBRASKA, PICKED in the Big Eight Coaches' pre-met poll as the team, finished with 519 points, well
ahead of Missouri with 432 and Kansas with 418.
GOKONON
841 3600
12 EAST 5TH ST
Senior co-captain Steve Graves set Big Eight records and had NCAA championship qualifying times in the 200-meter individual medley, the 100-meter breaststroke and the 200 breaststroke and was named the meets. Most Outstanding Swimmer.
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Restaurant open to public. Club memberships available.
NEED HELP WITH YOUR TERM PAPER?
The English Department's Writing Lab is presenting a session on how to write term papers.
When: Wednesday, March 11, 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
research & library sources
Where: 4019 Wescoe
organization
bibliographies end notes
For more information, call or come by the Writing Lab, 4056 Wescoe, 864-5575, afternoons
Univ
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 11, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 113 USPS 650-640
A
Linda Jackson (left) and Jo Dalquest, both employees in the Douglas County Clerk's Office, tally the final results of the city commission primary last night.
Newcomer runs away with primary
Bv PAM HOWARD
Staff Reporter
In contrast to last November's chaotic election, the Douglas County Courthouse bore a subdued air last night as quiet candidates and a few well-wishers stood in the City Commission primary and school board elections.
The top six primary finishers, who advance to the April 7 general election, in order were Nancy Shontz, Barkley Clark, Tom Gleason, Nancy Hambleton, Bob Schumann and Mike Amyx. Three commission seats are up for election. Clark and Schummm are incumbents.
Amyx, the sixth finisher, be seven-th place Nesbitt by more than 408 votes, 2.01 to 1.10.
A quiescent crowd, including Amyx, candidates Sherri Diert and Jerry Riding, gathered in the county courthouse lobby, ringing a large white board which rested on two drinking glasses. The jury preset totals, Jo DaLques, 1418 Clare Court, covered the board with black, war pencil numbers.
ACROSS THE ROOM and behind the counter of the County Clerk's Office, a clerk drowned figures to the tune of an adding machine. The machines sang a ringing of phones, bustling and crowded confusion.
After the last precinct total had been recorded, an anxious crowd followed Dalques across the room as she carried the board to the white counter of the Clerk's Office. Peering at the board, Dalques read the precinct figures for each candidate. With more clicking of the adding machine, the numbers were solidified into 13 totals, for the 13 candidates.
The final vote totals were:
- Nancy Shontz, 3,227.
- Tom B. Gleason, 2,634
- Nancy Hambleton, 2,603;
* Nancy Shapiro, 2,236;
* Mike Amyx, 2,011;
* Nick Abetsch, 1,002;
* Sherri迪尔, 1027;
* Pat Slick, 538;
* Jerry Riley, 420;
* David Frye, 390;
* Chester Schiertmund, 377.
A few blocks away from the courthouse in the City Commission meeting at City Hall, other candidates awaited the election results. Barkley clark nervously rubbed his rib and Bob Clark nervously rubbed his papers in front of him. Both had been at City Hall, and the strain of a hard day showed in their faces.
in the audience, Gleason fidgeted in his chair, often balancing on the edge of it, crossing and uncrossing his legs. Shonz nervously towed with her back. Nessitt sat on an orange sofa, looking relaxed.
In the county courthouse, there were no shouts or cheers after the final row of black numbers were recorded on the board. The solemn crowd soaked in the names of the six victors and then walked off the court, asking for knowing. Amyx and Ruling remained, talking to friends and reporters, Dietz left quickly.
RLING, who had been nervous white the votes were counted, looked disheartened.
Amyx looked dazed, as though the realization of his victory had not penetrated him.
"It went as I already well expected," Filing said. "I thank the people who voted for me."
"I really feel good," he said. "The race starts tomorrow. I have some ground to make up, so I can prepare."
Commissioners Clark and Shumm, aware of the room that filled the room, remain relatively quiet.
vote tally circulating around the room on several pieces of paper.
"This is my third campaign," Clark said later, "I've been on the commission since 1973, and I'm sure that everyone has not agreed with every vote and action that I've taken."
"But I think the people of this city also realize and appreciate how much time I've put into this lot."
SHONTZ LEFT THE commission chambers after she saw the results and stood in the lobby numerous welcoming congratulations from numerous wellwishers attributed her watery eyes to a lingered creeper.
"I'm very thrilled to be in the top six," Shontz said. "I just hope that everyone who came out and voted for me today, plus many more, will come out and vote again on April 7."
After five minutes in the lobby, she returned to the meeting, a widie smile creasing her normally pensive face.
Gleason later joined Shontz in the lobby to shake hands and slap backs. He heartily尝
"I was cautiously optimistic about getting out of the primary, and I remain cautiously optimistic about winning the general election," Gleason said.
NESBITT, who had been outside in the lobby when the totals were passed around, calmly and patiently answered.
"Ah, the power of positive advertising," Nesbitt said. "I didn't do much advertising—1 ran one ad in the Journal-World. I refused all campaign contributions.
"Government is like a bowie for me. It like a Tuesday night bowling. I am a terrible bowie, so we play."
Winners of school district No. 472 band elections were Mary F. McGhee, Lorraine Michel, Rodger Pine, J. Howard Rytting, Bob Davis and Jim Dwyer.
Rep.says politics killing tenure bills
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
two tenure bills initiated by State Rep. Joseph J. Hoagland, R-Overland Park, are facing a premature House Ways and Means subcommittee death because of underlying political ties, a member of that subcommittee said yesterday.
State Rep. Loren H. Hohman, one of three members of the subcommittee and the minority leader of the House Ways and Means Committee, said that political factors might make the difference between the bills' success or failure and that at the moment the bills' future looked grim.
The bills were scheduled on the Ways and Means calendar for a vote today by Ways and Means Chairman Mike Hayden. But another member of the subcommittee said that all that would be given today was a subcommittee progress report.
State Rep. Bob Arbautnot, R-Haddam, said that it would be unlikely that the bills would be voted on because the subcommittee had not finished its studies on the bills.
ARBUTHNOT, HOHMAN said, was one of the subcommittee members that was considering killing the bills because of political maneuvering.
The maneuvering involving Arbuthnot has to do with House Speaker Wendell Lady's desire to get the tenure bills out of committee quickly. According to Hohman, Lady wants the bills to succeed so that they would reflect favorably upon Hoagland.
Arbuthton, however, is "farting around" on the bills, Hohman said, because he is part of a House "coalition" that is considered to comprise Lady's opponents.
"The speaker is trying to give Hoagland a cumb with what he does himself." Hohman man that was in the cumberland.
Of the three members of the subcommittee, Robman and Arbautnot said they thought that Stellar Rep. Harold Dyck, R-Hesston, chairman of the committee, was the staunstein supporter of the bills.
"Rep. Dyck is really caught between a rock and a hard place," Hohman said. "On one side he has to go along because while the speaker and the chairman are applying pressure to get the bills out, Arbuthnot and I are blocking him from doing so."
Arbuthnot, however, disagreed with Hohman.
HOHMAN SAID that the fact that Arbuthot was on the side against the bills was unusual, because he thought that Arbuthot in other circumstances would be in favor of the bills.
"Right now, although not all of the information is in, I really don't see where any legislation on this issue is needed." Arbuthnott said. "I am convinced that we are beginning to look like all this is really necessary."
Arbuthnot said that he had taken to tour
Holman and Dyck, but did not want to speculate
on the possibility.
Arbuthnot said that if the evidence, after it was all collected, still showed the bills as superfluous, then he and Hohman would have to talk with Dyck to work out how to send back the bills.
"Just because the two of us are against the bill does not mean that they will be reported on unfavorably." Arbuthnot said. "The reason why this might be so is because the strongest supporter for the bills is the subcommittee's chairman.
"What we will have to do is to sit down with Derek and try to get on their thinking. I hope that they will be able to explain it."
Kansas concert rescheduled
Staff Reporte
By DEBBY FOSTER
Staff Reporters
Kansas will perform in Allen Field House on
Sunday, April 12. The team planned and the
basketball team is in good health.
Tickets for the concert, originally scheduled for last Sunday, will be on sale again at noon today in the SUA office. They will probably be available at area outlets by tomorrow, Duke Devine, SUA special events chairman, said yesterday.
Tickets sold for the cancelled performance will be honored, but if a ticketholder cannot make it to the event, the performance may be canceled.
Ruffles are available at the SUA office from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. during regular business hours.
The concert was cancelled when a band member, whose name was not previously released, became ill. A spokesman for Beaver Productions, concert promoters, said yesterday that the band member was Steve Walsh, keyboard player.
There were few problems getting the concert rescheduled, Devine said.
"The band is really up for the show, and they want it to be perfect," he said.
SUA will not lose money because of the cancellation, Devine said, but Beaver Productions will.
He said the company would bear the cost of building another stage, advertising and work done by Facilities Operations in preparation for the concert.
However, Beaver Productions does not seem upset about the additional costs.
"It's just one of those everyday business problems," Beaver Productions spokesman said. "We need to get a specific loss figure, because of competition from KU, everything has worked out fantastic."
The opening act for the concert will still be the group Loverboy.
According to Beaver Productions, about 200 tickets were returned out of the 8,000 sold. Beaver Productions rescheduled the concert on a Saturday night before the event and bought tickets can attend the postponed concert.
According to John Conrad, KLZR program director, the station received more than 200 calls about the cancellation and received about as many concerning the concert rescheduling.
The station began releasing the information yesterday morning about twice every hour after 10 a.m.
New parking lot at City Hall would be unsafe,prof savs
By AMY S. COLLINS Staff Reporter
The ghost of the Bryan Anderson building has returned to haunt the Lawrence City Commission.
John Morris, KU assistant professor of architecture and urban design, questioned the safety and cost of the parking lot designed for the downtown restaurants streets, where Anderson once had a building.
ACCORDING TO MORIS, the existing lot design puts both the entrance and exit to the lot in the blind corner at Sixth and New Hampshire streets. He said cars would have to make an 180-degree turn directly through inbound and parking lot traffic and the first lane of westbound Sixth Street traffic.
His building was condemned by the commission last year. The commission had it demolished and planned to use the site for additional City Hall parking.
The lot was designed by Peters, Williams, & Kubota for european-type driving. Drivers exit on the left side of the parking lot and enter on the right.
In his presentation, Morris stressed two major problems with the proposed lot design. He charges that the entrance and exit were unsafe and hard to access, and that cost effectiveness of the lot was low.
Morris said that pedestrians crossing from the lot to City Hall would be a hazard. He said that a comprehensive study of the site alternatives and cost had never been done.
Morris said it would be hazardous for drivers to exit left, around the 180-degree corner. Morris said he would be forced to turn into two lanes of traffic, increased risk for cars being hit broadside by 51st street traffic.
IN ITS PRESENT CONDITION, Morris said, the lot should not be developed for about five years. He questioned the city's need for a 28-space parking lot.
George Williams, director of public works,
admitted that the city's draft of the lot was indo-
red.
Sunny day
If you could only swallow your pride and realize you can only get 15 spaces in, there not 20.
He said crowding 28 spaces in the parking lot would make it impossible for cars at the end of a driveway.
Weather
See MEETING page 5
Tonight will be clear with a low of 32.
The wind will be from the west at 5 to
10.
It will be sunny today with a high near 60. Winds will be light and variable from the west.
Tomorrow will be clear with a high in the lower 60s.
Carter bids adieu to commission seat
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
Ed Carter, his sky-blue pinstret suit and knee-high boots, dressed day, stared binary-eyed at the questioner.
"Twenty times? Geez. Well, let's just try to get this thing over with," he said.
It had been especially trying yesterday for the mayor of Lawrence. On the heels of several morning engagements at his job at Southwestern Bell were three almost unbroken hours of fielding complaints, questions and comments from citizens seeking a slice of Lawrence's federal Community Development funds.
FOLLOWING THAT, Carter had barely 20 minutes to down a box dinner in a room adjoining the City Commission chambers before commission's regular 7 p.m. Tuesday meeting.
It was primary election night, and slips of paper bearing the latest returns circled the room as Barkley Clark and Bob Schumm, two of the primary's candidates, alternated between nervous fidgeting and impassive looks that seemed a bit forced.
Carter's seat was also up for re-election. However, as the mayor lifted a torn sheet of yellow legal paper to read the final vote tally, he had to admit that the afflicted amusement rather than nervousness.
"Congratulations, you rascals," he announced to the winners. Laughter rippled through the room as Clark and Schumm, who had been on the list, broke into relieved smiles.
CARTER HIMSELF had no worries. On the 13-member primary election ballot, his name was nowhere to be found. Carter had wanted it that way.
JO SANTER
Ed Carter
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
The commission meeting, already two
"I never had any intention of running again," Carter, whose term expires in April, said. "And I don't regret it one bit, although the time Ive spent on the commission."
hours into its eventual four and one-half hour duration, was in temporary recess. As the primary winners and their supporters talked excitedly around him, Carter stood in the blue-carpeted City Hall tower. Swathed in the
See CARTER page 5
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 11, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
U.S. lifts sanctions against Chile
WASHINGTON—The State Department announced yesterday it would reverse the Carter administration's human rights-oriented "contraventational" approach to deporting asylum seekers.
John Bushnell, acting chief of the State Department's Latin American policy bureau, defended the Reagan administration's controversial decision to rescind the trade and military sanctions imposed on Chile in connection with 787 murder of former Chilean diplomat Orlando Leiteier in Washington.
In the case of Chile, we believe that our interests, including human rights, are best served by a less confrontational approach than is chosen in the United States.
Bushmell told the House Inter-American Affairs Subcommittee that many countries have refused to acknowledge improvements in Chile's human rights climate and have made the country a victim of "blatant double standards."
Official denies U.S. combat role
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-Defense Minister Jose Guillermo Garcia said yesterday that under no circumstances would American troops join in the war with Honduras.
At the same time, President Jose Napoleon Duarte said statements that the United States would become involved in another Vietnam-type war in El Salvador.
"This notion is the work of the extreme left to try and generate among the American people an attitude against the support that the United States could give in behalf of democracy in El Salvador," Duarte told radio station WRHC in Miami.
Garcia said at a news conference that the Salvadoran armed forces would fight the guerrillas "without the help or participation of anyone," including
García said government forces had killed about 2,200 guerrillas this year, while only 147 soldiers have been killed in the fighting.
Price of first-class stamps to rise
WASHINGTON—The Postal Service Board of Governors yesterday raised the cost of a first-class letter to 18 cents effective March 22. However, the board wanted more and took the action under protest because of the urgent need for money.
Board Chairman Robert Hardesty said the board planned to put the new rates into effect under protest and to send the case back to the Postal Rate Board.
The new rates apply to a broad range of mail, including postcards, which now will cost 12 cents.
In a sharply worded statement, the board said the rates approved last month by the independent rate-making commission were an "affront to industry" and that they should be removed.
The board said the commission's decision not only ignored more than $1 billion in revenue needs but also would cause a $400 million budget loss for the company.
Last month, the commission approved rate increases for the Postal Service, shaving $1 billion from the agency's request for $3.75 billion.
Reagan, Trudeau talks go smoothly
OTTWA-President Reagan and Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau reached a basic agreement yesterday in their first round of talks on issues facing the North American neighbors, including increased U.S. aid to El Salvador, a U.S. official said.
"We got along just fine," Reagan told reporters as he headed to meeting on bilateral and, often touchy, relations with the Canadian leader.
The two-day visit to the Canadian capital was the first foreign trip for Reagan as president. It also was the first to Canada by an American president since 1972 and marked the first time Reagan and Trudeau had ever met.
Asked his reaction to the protests, Reagan, who has ordered 4 U.S. military advisers to El Salvador to help the regime fight Communist-inspired rebels, joked, "I thought they were imported to make me feel at home."
While the official government welcome was spiced with flags, bands, court guards, a jet fly-over, red carpets and 21-gun salutes, chanting protesters interrupted the welcoming ceremony on Parliament Hill to voice their opposition to the American military advisers in El Salvador.
"Hey, guys," Trudeau interjected as Reagan doggedly proceeded through his prepared remarks, "when I go to the United States, I'm not met with these signs."
Gunmen fire at U.S. ambassador
BEIRUT, Lebanon—Gunmen fired on U.S. Ambassador John Gunther during oraclecade yesterday, blowing out the tire of a guard car but causing no injuries.
Police said it was not clear if the shooting was the second assassination Dean in six months or if his three-car motorcade was caught inadvertently in the driveway.
The port area where the motorcade was passing at the time of the shooting is frequent. A frequent clashes between Syrian peacekeeping troops and Christian militia are also common.
None of the several bullets fired struck Dean's armor-plated Cadillac, and the American envoy went to the seaside embassy 'unperfurbed' by the included bullets.
Dear usually alternates the route he takes from his mountain home in use, to the modern Mosleh and then to the embassy, located in predominantly Modern West Berat.
His car is always sandwiched between security vehicles provided by the embassy and the Lebanese government.
Dean, who assumed his post in Beirut in October 1978, escaped an assassination attempt Aug. 27, 1980.
At that time, gunmen hiding off the road near the ambassador's residence used a salvo of machine gun fire and a rocket-propelled grenade as a lancehead.
Dean's security guards exchanged fire with the gunmen, who quickly fired the scene. One was injured, and the assailants never were caught.
Police files checked in Atlanta case
The Atlanta Journal, quoting unnamed sources, said investigators were examining officers who had resigned, been forced to quit or were nursing a possible grudge against the police department.
ATLANTA—The special task force investigating the missing and murdered children case has reviewed police personnel files from the past 10 years, and is trying to determine whether any former policeman could be linked to the killings, it was reported yesterday.
One of the hypotheses reportedly being considered by the task force is that the killer may be an authority figure who uses a uniform to quell any fears of potential victims. An earlier profile of the killer also addressed this possibility.
In another development, a contingent of Guardian Angels, the self-funded administration of New York streets and subways, headed for Atlanta to organize a youth basketball tournament.
Lisa Evers, 23, head of the female branch of the 700-member Guardian Angels, said she and 10 male members, six of them black, would hikitek to Alaska.
Evers said the Guardian Angels would mingle with Atlanta youths over true friends, who live near street corners in areas considered most susceptible to future attacks on children.
She said the group, aged 18 to 26, would stay "as long as we can be effective."
Debate director says insider took research
By Staff and Wire Reports
WACO, Texas - Baylor University's debate team, talked out of KU's Heart of America Debate Tournament last week before with 12,000 stolen note cards, recovered the cards yesterday.
The cards, and 1,000 pages of briefs on national defense, were delivered to the parking lot of one debater's office. Because the cards were stolen last Tuesday from Baylor's Castellaway Communication Center the team was forced to miss KU's tour among the top two in the country.
William English, Baylor's debate coach, blames the theft on someone with inside information
"It was obviously somebody involved in it debate," English said. "It was no coincidence, whoever it was had to know where our debater lived and to pick those six cases of out the of 12 or 15 in the room."
The stolen note cards surprised the competition in KU's debate tournament, which ran Saturday through Monday.
"Nothing like this has happened before that I know of in the history of
forensics," Donn Parson, KU's director of forensics, said. "Everyone was surprised, but the incident did not breed paranola.
"KU is not taking any special precautions other than not keeping all of its evidence in the same place. We have always kept it spread out."
Because of the theft, Baylor's debaters canceled their spring breaks to undertake researching the lost material at Texas &M University and the University of Texas.
"We told them to come home after the notes were found," English said. "If anything good has come out of this it's that our friends and colleagues have shown their concern.
"Other colleges offered to help us research, but of course we had to say no because you can't use material you haven't researched yourself." KU was one of the schools wanting to help.
"Of course we offered to loan them evidence, and so did a number of other schools," Zach Grant, a KU debater, said. "But in the true sense it was hard to try to research itself. They just didn't have enough time."
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Place an ad. Tell the world.
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THE CROSSING
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--administration discovered its earlier spending plans would cost more than it estimated, hence larger cuts are needed.
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MONTANA CITY WESTERN HORSE RAILWAY
The new cuts are in addition to those the president announced only three weeks ago on Feb. 18. They bring total spending cuts proposed by Reagan and President Obama from President Carter, with changes for economic estimates, to $48.6 billion.
WASHINGTON—President Reagan proposed $13.8 billion in new budget cuts yesterday, affecting hundreds of programs including food stamps, high school jobs, mass transit, synthetic fields, low income housing and veterans' care.
935 Iowa
Presenting an updated version of its fiscal 1982 budget to Congress, the administration said spending reductions, along with other elements of its economic program, would help revive the economy and cut inflation in half by 1983.
Among proposed new cuts added since Feb. 18 are reduction in coast $450 million.
Overall, Reagan proposes defense spending increases in 1982 of $4.9 billion over what Carter proposed, but with the exception that there would be a net increase of only $4.4 billion.
Tonight:
GO NUTS!!!
Put Some Texas in your Tank!
Tex-Mex
Neuvo-Wave!
JOE "KING" CARRASCO
Red-Hot Dance Music
Taco-Rific! Also:
MORRELLS
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Taco Via
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Cover only $3.00
Also This Week:
March 12: Moffet-Beers Band
13: Luther Allison Blues Band
14: Alchemy
One reason for the new cuts is that the
Like Reagan's previous proposals, most of the new cuts still must be approved by Congress, and special interest groups are sure to fight decreases in their areas. The Liberal Americans for Democratic Action have proposed to move the budget in "Norland" economics that take from the "needy to give to the greedy."
Tonight:
GO NUTS!!!
TexMex
'Neuvo-Wavó'
Put Some Texas in your Tank
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VOL. 13, NO. 4
a spring preview
St. Patrick's Day SPECIALS!! Today thru March 17th. .St. Patty's Day
a spring preview
All Cross Creek
knit shirts $14.99 each
sweater group
values to $18.99 each
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Suits
All remaining
Long Sleeve Sport Shirts
50% off
All remaining
Sportcoats Outercoats
Every item hung with a GREEN TAG gets an 20%
GREEN TAG SPECIALS
Wool Shirts $15.99 each
Pendletons $29.99 each
20% OFF the net price.
(already at great reductions)
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Town Shop
the men's store
downtown
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On the HP3E3
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By KA Staff R
| | REG. | SALE |
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| HP 32E | $55 | $49.95 |
| HP 37E | $75 | $69.95 |
| HP 38C | $150 | $134.95 |
| HP 41C | $250 | $224.95 |
| HP CARD READER | $215 | $194.95 |
| HP PRINTER | $385 | $349.95 |
| HP MEMORY MODULE | $30 | $28.00 |
| HP 67 | $375 | $325.00 |
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University Daily Kansan, March 11, 1981
Page 3
Others upset with dorm food
By KATHY MAAG Staff Reporter
Since the release of three women form their residence hall contracts last month, two more residents have asked for housing and a director, director of housing said yesterday.
The housing office still does not plan to offer room-only housing contracts next year.
The residents are deciding whether they would save money if released from their food contracts, according to Wilson. No action has been taken.
Three Lewis Hall residents were released from their food contracts in February after complaining about the quality of meat served. The women suggested that the housing office allow residents to buy their own food.
Debi Hartman, Derby freshman,
said, "If students don't eat the food,
then they shouldn't have to pay for it."
Wilson said high cost was the biggest disadvantage of an optional food contract.
"We've considered options many
times, but when we put the whole package together, we found a better value with the way it is now." Wilson advised that our rates down and our services up.
AN OPTIONAL FOOD contract system would not be advantageous to the greatest number of students, he said.
Lenoir Edkahl, KU food director, said that built-in costs prohibited a separate food contract.
"It takes just so many people to operate a cafeteria," she said. "It doesn't matter whether you have 100 or 300 students eating.
"You need volume in food service. It's the built-in costs you can't change."
LABOR AND UTILITY costs would be the same no matter how many students ate, Ekdahl said. Possible ticket abuse would complicate the issue.
"I can't see any advantages in optional food services for us in food service," she said.
KU hall residents have mixed feelings about a separate food contract.
"If they had optional food contracts, it would make living in the dorsas not so bad," said Dave Cook, Kansas City, Kan., junior, who lives in McColum Hall. "It would probably cost more, but it would be worth it."
"I've heard kids talk about it and wish they would change it."
STUDENTS SHOULD HAVE a choice, according to Maureen Madigan, Northbrook. III, sophomore, who lives in Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall.
"I'd rather go to a grocery store and buy something I can eat, instead of going down to the cafeteria and not eating," she said. "I end up spending money now because I go out to eat a lot and pay a dorm food contract."
But Stephanie Albright, Denver freshman, said the present contract was adequate.
"It seems silly not to get a food contract, because it's much simpler the way it is," said Albright, who also lives in GSP.
"It would cost so much to eat out and it's fairly cheap to eat in the cafeteria."
Big 8 schools' food contracts similar
KU's room and board policy follows the trend of the other Big Eight schools.
A check yesterday showed only one school with an optional food contract for all hall residents, and two schools with a limited optional food contract.
The other five universities argue vehemently against an optional food plan, citing increased costs, planning a meal ticket, abuse as disadvantages.
Oklahoma State University has several options for its 7,900 hall residents. According to Jean Holland, associate director of university food services, students can contract for a 15-min meal, a 30-min plan or a room only.
SURVEYAND A student committee showed students favored the options, as well. The program is non-profit
"We don't make money off of it." Holland said. "But it's a service to the
students. It's what they want and that's what we're here for."
At Oklahoma State, 7,000 hall residents contracted for room and board and 500 for the room-only plan.
The University of Oklahoma offers a similar optional food plan, but in only one of seven halls.
"Students who don't want a meal ticket can live there," Lynette Thomas, housing office reservationist, said.
OU HALL RESIDENTS with room-only contracts pay $460 a year, while room and board contract residents pay from $1,240 to $1,530, depending on the hall. Students save $780 to $1,070 if they supply their own food.
Iowa State University offers the option of food-only contracts to graduate students, but not to undergraduate students.
"We've not been overly enthused with an optional food plan," Dick McFarlin,
manager of administrative services,
said. "A 'no-food plan' advocates
sanitize and fire safety problems by
providing an educational kitchen to cook
in their rooms.
In addition to KU the University of Colorado, the University of Nebraska, Kansas State University and the University of Missouri offer only combined room and board contracts to their residents.
"It wouldn't be financially feasible for us to offer that (room-only contracts)." Deborah Lyon, Nebraska's supervisor of housing student accounts, said.
The K-State director of housing agreed.
"The purpose of on-campus housing is to provide a total housing package," Thomas J. Frith, housing director, said. "What we would have to charge for room only would not be economically advantageous."
On the Record
Lawrence police are investigating a burglar Monday in the 1000 block of Delaware St. Thieves took a washing machine, valued at $40; a dryer, valued at $20; a stove system, valued at $400 and 10 cases of canned food, valued at $50.
POLICE ALSO ARE investigating a
burgary Friday of a car parked at Gammon's, 160 W. 32rd St. The thief took a stereo system, valued at $330 and a radar detector, valued at $130.
KU POLICE said yesterday that the staff of Gertrude Sellaris Pearson Hall reported the theft of $170 from an office.
KU POLICE ARE ALSO investigating the theft of a ring from the Satellite Union Bookstore. The ring, a 10 caret gold men's class ring, valued at $225, was taken from a display in the bookstore.
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University Daily Kansan, March 11, 1981
Opinion
Fire alarms essential
Over a year ago, the University was warned by fire officials.
Last Saturday, it was warned again.
Those warnings were the flashing red lights of fire trucks parked along Jayhawk Boulevard.
When will Bailey Hall get a fire alarm system?
Saturday's minor fire on the first floor of the building once again proved the necessity of a fire alarm system in every building on campus. The 30 or so people occupying Bailey at the time had to be individually told to evacuate.
Fire inspectors in February 1980 urged the University to install such a system. Last fall, state fire officials came to KU to investigate potential firetrapts inside Bailey. In spite of all the warnings, nothing's been done.
Back when Bailey was built at the turn of the century, fires were the most feared of all disasters. Eighty-one years after Bailey's construction, that fear of fire seems to have disappeared, as if disastrous fires couldn't happen at a modern university.
But are fires any less deadly today than they were in 1900?
The installation of Bailey's fire alarm system is awaiting the allocation of funds for remodeling. Those funds are but shadows in the tenuous future, yet lives are at stake in Bailey today.
Bailey needs fire alarms, and it needs them now. The University's had enough warning. Without an alarm system, the next time trucks are sent to Bailey, the University might find itself issuing obituaries instead of excuses.
Letters to the Editor
Protest of homosexual dance sparks praise, condemnation
To the editor:
After being painted in a recent editorial as "hypocritical" and "dangerous," I thought it appropriate to explain my actions in protesting the homosexual valentine dance at the Kansas Union. Not that I particularly care what an excited undergraduate editorialists thinks of me personally, but I'm writing so people can understand our true motives for doing what we did.
There were so many inconsistencies and errors in that editorial, it's difficult to know where to start. For instance, the writer's definition of sodomy has nothing to do with the Kansas legal definition, which specifically includes all types of homosexual intercourse, and includes nothing between married, consenting adults. It's strictly a matter of gender.
Also, the writer said the sodomy statute wasn't enforceable. Apparently she doesn't know about the state prison at Lansing, because a number of convicts are there for this very violation.
Another error the writer made in her thinking was accepting the homosexual argument that we're only unhappy because society condemns us. We shouldn't be unwritten censure of homosexuality, those in it would still be unhappy. It isn't simply a matter of external pressure, but inward pressures from one's own conscience. Those I've talked with have been one of the gay movement make this point very clearly.
One of the most glaring inconsistencies in the editorial was how greatly the writer and the cartoonist condemned those whose actions they did not have at the same time said that condemination is bad.
I don't want anyone to think that we have some sort of phobia or even dislike toward homosexuals. The only reason we did what we did was to help awaken those at the dance to the folly of their actions. Many homosexuals would be moved in a minute if they knew they could not be prosecuting it. All we did was to try to point people on the only place they can get real help — Christ.
So it's quite possible that people who know about and yet have still rejected Christ from being their savior and lord are setting themselves up for a far worse destiny than the Sodomites. By this standard, an editorialist or cartoonist, for instance, can actually be worse off than a homosexual who doesn't know much about Christ.
Doug Lamborn
Lawrence residen
Sodomy defined
"Let him who has no sin cast the first stone." This Bible verse is the great edifice many raise in the name of tolerance, tolerance to deprived and reprobate practices. And like a building one hears Jesus' conclusion to the passage "Go and sin no more." (John 8:11)
Jane Neufeld's article, "Anti-gay protesters are hypocritical," said the protesters' banner, "Does KU sanction sodomy?" was unfounded. Webster defines sodomy as "any sexual intercourse considered abnormal, as between two male persons." The dance of Feb. 21 had prompted Webster for the participants; in other words, homosexuals set up for the occasion. It follows that if you sanction the birds to build their nest, you're sanctioning them to lie together, too.
To the editor:
Jesus Christ himself hated such practices as he did all ill. And he himself died to liberate us from sin. To ignore what Jesus said about sin is not to be liberated, but enslaved. The worst type of slavery is for one to be enslaved to himself and to his passions.
As I look at myself and the world around me, I realize that what I and my world needs to hear is
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affirmed by the editors, the letter should include the writer's home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Chuck Vanasse Overland Park senior
seldum what is wanted to be heard. The truth hurts. Some might exclaim, "You're narrow-minded!" Well it's not original with me; Jesus himself said, "Enter by the narrow gate for the gate is wide, and the way is broad that leads to destruction, and many are those who enter by it. There are others, and the way is narrow that leads to life, and few are those who find it." (Matthew 7:13-14).
Leave them in peace
To the editor:
In recent days we have seen an abundance of anti-homosexual sentiment forming around the country. Although this is to be expected in this country, it does not this does not mean that it should go unchallenged.
The Topeka Capital-Journal recently ran a story about certain fundamentalist groups spending $3 million on a media attack designed to build such sentiment. Supposedly public pressure could be used to their advantage to harass a group of people who had not made the move, and they used their belts. Dean Wycoff, a member of the group, the Moral Majority, compared homosexuality to murder and sanctioned capital punishment as a possible way of fighting homosexuality.
As a Christian, I am appalled at the lack of Christian qualities these groups have. Where did the right to a free agency go? What happened to mercy, understanding and love, which are so intrinsic to our belief in God? Are not the qualities Christians should try to emulate already waging some cruel vendetta upon some already suppressed segment of society?
Granted, as responsible people and parents, we have the right to protect society from harm or unhealthy situations. However, some rational basis for the anticipated danger should prevail. Because we have no proof that homosexuals are innately child molesters, recruiters or any number of other frightening things, where does the danger lie, except in the fact that one might have been abused by someone found in the homosexual community are problems of rejection, repression and persecution, having little to do with homosexuality itself. Are these groups assuming it is Christian to add salt to these wounds? For the sake of humanity, aren't people allowed to live in peace?
Chris Budd Lawrence senior
I would like to address the protesters who were outside the Union in response to the gay dance. I walked up to the Union to mail some letters and came in contact with what I consider irresponsible behavior on the part of the protesters.
Irresponsible protest
If Kinsey's estimates are correct, 10 percent or more of the world's population is a rather large number. You won't be able to don't think your irresponsible actions will even make a dent in KU's gay population; after all, your idiotic publication of the event intrigued me to go in and I might even go to the next one, it was too much.
Indeed, there was not any sodomy going on and to say that KU sanctions sodomy is to say that KU sanctioned the political violence of the late '60s and early '70s. Surely someone in that so-called Christian group had to realize the ridiculousness of that message.
To the editor:
Secondly, sodomy, in this case, I think, refers to oral sex. Do you people have any idea how long that law has been on the books in this state, or how many states had similar laws and have since repealed them? Wake up and live. This is the 80s.
Other student groups engage in activities at the Union. To disallow one group's activities is blatant discrimination and goes against all I have learned as a Mennonite and an American.
As an optimist, I think this can be the dawning of the age of love and acceptance, providing the so-called Moral Majority does not stick us (members of this liberal college) back into the 17th century. Thank you for fueling the fire and bringing the age closer for us all. As a result, we have to take care of ourselves, one one's race, creed, sex, religion, color, age, origin or ancestry, which is not at all.
Lawrence senior
Timothy Goering
LOBBIES
Executed convict knew his fate
Steven T. Judy finally got his wav.
But Steven T. Judy was executed Monday morning in the Indiana state prison's electric chair, only the fourth person to receive the death penalty in over 15 years.
In his 24 years, the only thing he ever got
he all wanted his death. And he almost
didn't.
The Steven Judy story seems at first not to be extraordinary. It's about an angry young man, orphaned, tossed from home to home, in with the wrong bunch of kids, bumming and panking arrow, strung out, into crime and in and out of schools and juvenile "jails" for the past 10 years.
Sounds like a lot of kids that anyone could have known, the types in junior high who were always a bit frightening, who teachers always spoke rather carefully to because these kids were not so brave that the verge of a surprise explosion. They were wild and rowdy and daring, and so much fun.
He was convicted last year in the 1979 rape-strangulation of a 21-year-old Indianapolis woman and the drowning of her three young children. Crime was nothing new to Judy, nor was it going to get caught; but this time, Judy was going to make sure that the punishment was new.
But Steven Judy wasn't fun at all. His angry young man story is real and vivid and more interesting than most of his books.
He demanded throughout his trial that he be sentenced to death, warning the judge and jury that should he be freed someday from prison, and that he would be sentenced. Jury insisted that only death could stop him.
He also knew what his crimes meant to
What makes the Judy story so extraordinary is that he knew. He knew! Judy knew what he was and that he did not have the power to control what he was. He knew, as he said in a news conference a few days before his death, that he was "a very dangerous person." And he said society knew it, too, but "nothing was ever done about it."
society, although they meant nothing much to him at all. He was an uncontrollable killer and rapist, feared by the public, and he knew it. I didn't really matter to him, though; of his last crime, Judy said flatly, "It's just something that happened."
Inhuman? No, quite the contrary. Steven Judy was so human because he faced what he
AMY
HOLLOWELL
was and didn't pretend for a minute that he was something else. He didn't lie, to himself or to others.
Steven Judy was very human, more human probably than most people. He knew what his "human" was all about, he knew that this person was able to limit and that even he had no control over it.
But, ironically, in the name of humanity, some people tried to stop his execution, claiming that it was "cruel and inhuman" to kill him. The young man must instead be rehabilitated.
Because their actions were against his will, because Judy made several impassioned pleas to them to let him die, the ACL finally respected his wishes and abandoned the legal burden. If he really wanted to die, they said, then it was not the ACL's position to intervene.
Despite Judy's initial complaints, the American Civil Liberties Union and a number of religious organizations said they were acting in his behalf to prevent the execution.
Judy's foster parents, Robert and Mary Carr, didn't believe that he really wanted to die, however. They insisted that there was a "loving and kind" person "deep" inside the
vicious "murderer" Steven Judy. His mother said that he was just a "very frightened" young man, who had never received the love he so desperately wanted.
Perhaps love was one of the things he had desperately wanted all his life and never received, but Steven Judy wasn't scared. Not for a amateur. He was nothing but courageous.
For Judy had nothing to fear. He knew exactly what he was and what had to be done about it. He didn't run from it, he didn't hide up in bed before his ugly life and said, "Errough."
Fear for him would have been in not knowing. Therefore life would have been frightful; he was terrifying to others and himself, because he was out of their control and his own. He would never have known what he could do to next, as he testified during his trial when he was 13, at age 13, he committed "12 to 15" raps because he couldn't control himself.
Although he blamed society for never doing anything about his "dangerous person," Judy realized in the end that the final responsibility fell upon him. He was the "dangerous person," and the consequences of his actions were his to do, as he said before his death, "if you did, or, as she said before his death, "what waits for me," but he knew what had to be done about it. He made the choice.
To some, Judy was therefore a coward, electing to die rather than to face his monstrous being everyday. But it seems that Judy would have been a coward to live; in life he was bound to death truly free; in life he would be lying, running from what he thought had to be—his death.
The angry young man had faced himself, had looked his wretchedness in the face. He knew what he was, that he was a rapist and a killer and a menace, a "very dangerous person" that had to be stopped even if it meant his death. Like death, none of it really mattered to him. But unlike most of us, the fact is, Steven Judy knew.
Reagan's boyhood towns remain unchanged
By DAVID PICHASKE
PEORIA, Ill.—Tampcio, Dixon, Galesburg, Monmouth, Eureka—poking around Ronald Reagan's Illinois, one perceives immediately how close to his roots the president is.
New York Times Special Features
The early weeks of the administration have brought hustle and promotion aplenty, but forget the bumper stickers and the chinzy T-shirts. These towns are as solid as silver dollars, were around long before Reagan, and will be around long after he's left Washington. Much longer than Sacramento or Pacific Palisades, they are living embodiments of his vision of America.
In Dixon, from a second-story window of the Nachusa House, Casey Tolly points across the square to the Van Epsmansion: "I lived there as a girl. My first date was Moon Reagan, Dutch's brother. He called me just the other day. Dutch came back here with Louella Parsons. A big reception over in the Community Center. He staved in this hotel."
The Nachua House (1853) is the oldest continuously operating hotel in Illinois, and one of the 10 oldest in America. It may soon be on the state historical register—as are the Van Epss and the Judge Library at McLane's an architect, taken above about a historic district around the courthouse square.
did Abraham Lincoln—in this very room.
Also Jefferson Davis, Ulysses S. Grant, William Jemmings Eryan, Margaret Fuller, Boss Tweed
would be for Canada on the underground railroad.
The Loveland Community Center, almost as impressive as Nachusa House, is proof that in Dixon, at least, private individuals can be found with the help of a local business for "a community building." furnished in a
suitable manner for pleasure and instruction" (the words are from George C. Loveland's will). The city government stays out, says its mayor as for booze—not allowed. Closed on Sundays.
Eureka, where Reagan attended college,
seemed almost oblivious to his inauguration.
"Ronald Reagan Visitor Center" visible, only the
Ecta Cetera ("treasures around the world and your neighbor's attic"), where volunteers
help with staff Organization and area churches sell thristore items and handicrafts imported directly from underdeveloped countries.
In Eureka, there is still the good life that Ronald Reagan knew: no smog, no crime, no litter. Folks leave cars unlocked, front doors open. It is a dry town, and next to the magazine rack in Rexall Drugs is a stand of religious books.
Like Tampico, Eureka has not changed appreciably since 1932, when Reagan graduated from Eureka College. The businesses in the square, the old homes with their arching trees and broad lawns and the college itself are mostly 1930s vintage, and are well maintained.
The town is not as straight as it seems, however. Rexall stocks Playboy-and who immediately outpace the counter. Immediately outside the culinary two tavers, the Outpost and the Chanticleer.
Saturday at noon, the Outpost is filled with farmers ordering pitchers of beer and large lunches. Rib-eye steak, fries, and salad are $3.99; chicken, fries, lettuce and tomato. $2.69. Their hats, bearing names, fill a table: Amoco, Kent, Supersweet Feeds, the Farm Shop. Two young boys in cowboy hats warty circle a pool table. In a dark corner a young couple in their 20s, both wearing wedding bands, lean toward each other, lost in conversation. She is stunningly attractive, and as he passes to the bar for two more gin-tonicics, someone mutters.
Life unfolds easily in the towns of Ronald Reagan's childhood. What you want, what you need—it there, out front or under the counter, outside city limits. And if the kid from small-town Illinois has become president of the United States, he will be Eureka, then what, really, is so wrong with that?
(David Pichakse, associate professor of English at Bradley University, is writing a book, "Ronald Reagan's Illinois," with Jerry Klein, a Peoria journalism.)
(US$ 895-460)充付 at the University of Kansas early August through May and Monday and Thursday for a stay in campus, except on Sundays, Sunday and beddays, Second-class beddays, Second-class room, or 6045. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $15 if any in Douglas County and $15 for six months or $15 if any in Jennings County are if a fee is paid, measured with the student activity.
Co
smoke Carter commi
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Pastmaster: seed changes at the University of Kansas, Kansas City, Flint Hall, the University of Kansas
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University Daily Kansan, March 11. 1981
Page 5
Carter
From page 1
smoke of the cigarette he held in his right hand. Carter spoke in soft tones characteristic of his
"When I ran, I considered being on the city Commission as a civic duty," Carter said. "I felt like, with the operational problems the city was facing, that it could serve as a businessman could be very productive."
"I think we've been extremely successful in the operational area. We've got the trash department straightened out, and we've really tightened out the contract and labor problems that we're facing." We've got an employee relations ordinance and our negotiation process is much smoother.
"When you get down to it, that's what city government's all about—police and fire, trash service, water service, things like that. If you don't have those, you've got serious problems."
CARTER SAID that he thought the issues before the city now were primarily political and social, but not economic.
"We've been able to split the politics and the operations pretty effectively," he said. "Consequently, the last two years of my term have been marked by a new emotional and political issues, such as the mail."
Carter said that despite the time he had
undergone changes in the department, a commissioner
end mayor, had bad records.
"The job requires a lot of patience, a lot of understanding, and it gets hard sometimes," he said. "But, it's nice to know that you've gotten a lot accomplished."
"There are a lot of things that most citizens would never recognize that have happened over a period of time that has made the city government a lot more effectively. I feel good about that."
of role for myself at all. I think the new commission will be finer. They're not going to need my help.
WHEN HE LEAVES the Commission, Carter said, he plans to devote more time to the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the United Fund, two groups he has been active in for years.
"As far as being directly active in the City Commission," he said, "I don't envision that sort
Carter said that, as mayor, he'd had the opportunity to meet people and do things he probably wouldn't have been able to do otherwise, "but I don't think I'll miss that."
1
Meeting
From page 1
Morris said that he wanted to help the city and offer it his best.
If a parking lot is really what you want then what you want is the best parking for your day.
HE PROVIDED STATISTICS for the commissioners that showed their projections for the rupture risk.
Morris said all 12 spaces were occupied nine hours a day, six days a week, at 10 cents an hour, the idle would earn $7,863 a year. With the other hours dedicated to work, it would take almost 32 years to pay for itself.
During the disagreement, Anderson sat calmly in the back of the room, smiling. He never added
"We are trying to make this intimation something we never intended to do." Commissioner Marci Piccoli
Mayor Ed Carter denounced Francisco's statement and said the commissioners would not change their minds on the parking lot plans. He also asked them to take bids for the lot until the plan was fixed.
BUFORD WATSON, city manager, asked Morris to help in the design of the lot and Morris accrued the fee.
He suggested that the city consider another lot for parking use and designate the Anderson lot.
"I will help if the city will respond," Morris said.
With the exception of Francisco, the commission did not welcome the suggestion.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the City Commission voted unanimously to accept the Community Development Grant Advisory Board's recommendations for community development fund use after cutting about $24,000 from the proposed $908,000 fund.
A new $15,000 community development fund program was instituted this year for projects including curb cuts and added accessibility to public buildings and parks by the disabled.
The commission voted to defer funds for Hobbs Park light installation on multi-purpose courts, to asphalt Hobbs Park walkways and to expand the East Lawrence Center Parking lot.
Commissoner Don Bimbs said the cuts were made for the express purpose of the North Atlantic.
THE $24,000 CUT was earmarked for the improvement of North Second Street
The commission plans to raise $10,000 from other budget cuts for the improvements.
Classified Senate to define its legal purpose and identity
By KATHRYN KASE Staff Reporter
The KU Classified Senate, hoping for official University recognition, decided night to draw the floor.
Such a definition would allay KU administration fears that the Senate is a pre-union group, according to Suzanne Cupp, Senate president.
And it may aid the administration in recognizing the Senate.
"The legality of the Classified Senate is just floating out there," Lewin said. "And because of that, the administration does not know legally whom you represent and whom you speak for."
CURRENTLY, the administration cannot recognize the Senate because the group's legal purpose and identity is unknown. David Lewin, director of personnel), said..
While the administration may want to recognize the Senate, Lewin said, the legal question would be resolved.
"Hopefully, such a statement will make us more palatable to the administration," she said.
To resolve the legal question, Cupp said she would consult Vickie Thomas, University counsel.
SENATE PETITIONED the Senate executive committee last month for admission to University governance bodies, but was denied, in the case of the administration had not recognized Senate.
George Worth, SenEx president, also
questioned whether classified employees should sit on academic committees. Worth did encourage classified staff to request non-voting membership on University committees.
"And that's what we've been doing all along," Lewis Armstrong, associate librarian said.
In addition to continuing requests for non-voting committee membership, Joseph T. Collin, vertebrate zoologist, suggested that the Kenns strengthen its relations with the Kansas Legislature.
"I think we will probably have a better chance of becoming part of the University governance system by strengthening our ties with the legislature," Collins said.
SUCH STRENGTHENING would also alter the legislature from cutting the 5 percent cost of living increase requested for classified employees, he said.
"I got a copy of the 'hit' list from Sen. Jane Eldredge (R-Lawrence) and we're right at the top," Collins said. "But Jane Tulsen in her letter said she's grateful that we could save the 5 percent increase."
Collins, who lobbies for Senate, said his intent was to save the increase, not ask for more money.
"Some people call me and say why don't I ask for 15 percent," he said. "Right now, our philosophy is that we're trying to save what we have now. If we can do that, we're winners."
Collin's said he and other senators would contact local legislators today about the in-
Summertime
Barton County Community College
Earn college credits by attending Summer School at
Early enrollment begins *April 28*
Classes start June 2
Check with your academic adviser
FOR A COPY OF THE SUMMER SCHEDULE, WRITE:
Summer Schedule
Admissions Office
Barton County Community College
Great Bend, Kansas 67530
PRE-LAW?
Wednesday, March 11, 7:00 P.M.
holding a meeting
Chancery Club is
New Green Hall, Rm. 203
Meet with current 1st,2nd,3rd year law students discussing the experience of law school at KU and career opportunities.
Paid for by student senate
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, March 11, 1981
On Campus
TODAY
CONTEMPLATIVE PRAVER SESSION will
be a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian
Ministries Church
LA MESA ESPANOLA (Spanish Table) will
have from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 1950 Wes-
man Center.
THE UNIVERSITY FORUM will meet at 11:45 a.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries
KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH AFRICA/LAWRENCE FRIENDSHIP will sponsor a film and lecture at 3 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. Bill Sutherland will speak on "U.S. Foreign Policy and Africa."
PERSONNEL SERVICES TRAINING
PENSION on 18th of May from 1-
much to 5pm at Orchard Place in Hyde
SIMULATIONS GROUP ON WAR GAMES
will meet at 6:30 p.m. on the drill deck of the
Museum of Science, Washington, D.C.
KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parkers B and C of the Union.
THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINAR ON PRESENTATION
in the Episcopal Christian Ministries Center
WRITING LAB SESSION on "How to Write a Term Paper" will be from 7-9:30 pm. in 4019
SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS will present a forum on "Cameras in the Courtroom" at 8 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will sponsor a rally, another Vietnam. Another Vietnamese rally, in Doubrefont, on Sunday.
AFRICAN ARTS EXHIBIT LECTURE will present Tom Lewin on "Ashanti Art": The Role of Gold and Money" at 8 p.m. in the Main Gallery of the Museum of Anthropology.
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER with present "Graphics III" at 7:30 p.m. in the Bldg. Room 1480.
THE UNIVERSITY SINGERS SPRING
CHEESE COFFEE in the Swarthout
Rockefeller Hall in Murray Hall.
'London Calling' offers a view of the obscure
By MARK PITTMAN Staff Writer
It's supposed to be the latest stuff-
An array of technology-spawned creations from the likes of the Dead Kennedys, Throbbing Gristle and the Theatre of Hate that pours from the KJHK studios from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. on Sunday nights. It's the progressive sound of "London Calling."
"London Calling" thrives on obscurity, culling private collections for records from labels like Factory, Rough Trade, Industrial and 4'AD.
Sunday's show hosts host Marc Burch, New York Senior, hauinds in armories of his albums, while thousands of the station's own LPs look on. He takes over the mike from the departing DJ and gives the station ID at the station on, on the, the KJK Jukebox becomes rebellious.
It isn't pop and it isn't punk. According to Burch, it's a brand new synthesis of all the wrapped, put up in a new box that replaces, vacuum tubes with silicon chips. The invention is based on recent "wave" of music is replaced with a technical mastery of the latest in technology.
STRAINS OF old Stax sax mix with the beady viens of high-tech syn while visions of death, destruction and mutual nuclear annihilation dance in the vocals.
"Not everything's great," says Burch, slapping a 45 over a Chubby Checker record he uses for a turntable pad. "But there's a lot of good stuff.
s贿睫helia", Burch says, referring to the San Francisco acid rock scene in the late '80s.
The most "progressive" of the American and European bands, according to Burch, operate under the almost-Dadaistic assumption that all sound is music.
MARK MCDONALD/Kansan staff
"A lot of people call it the return of
That philosophy can lead to a lot of strange things being put on vinyl. For example, Throbbing Gristle recorded a series of death metal albums, and used them as the basis for one of its songs.
Marc Burich, New York senior, plays one of the many new 45's featured on "London Calling," heard on KJHK radio station from 10 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Sunday nights.
BEING THE FIRST KID on the radio block with the latest stuff leaves Burch and his show open to as much criticism as the guy brought a Rhamnus album to a party in 76.
Fellow KJIK disc jockey and "Ethnic Cowboy," Rick Frydman, says of "London Calling." There are limits to avant-grade. It calls too, too, too, like a stereo needle penetrating a Brillo驴.
THOMAS MAYER
However Frydman said he was a regular listener of the show.
There is an audience, as witnessed by the flashing light on the KJHK phone. Burch finishes his edition of the weather, shuts off its display and runs the phone on run at 33 and $\frac{1}{3}$ is running at 45. It's a fast start and Burch switches it back before answering the phone.
JNKH yeah yeah
thanat Burch instructed the onair
a mirac and the presence of a journalist.
He still manages to slip in a enthusiastic
"you gotta request?"
BURCH'S FISH is in a cauldron of accent, but most often resembles the British work on the island, like a pencil on paper.
father was in the military and Burch grew up on such disparate spots as Germany and the Philippines. His taste in music is just as diverse, as long as it satisfies his thirst for the latest stuff: reggae, Motown, and television scores.
"It's real stagnant in America right now," Burch says, writing his latest plays in the program log. "That's why most of the records I play are imports."
At $9.50 an album and $2.75 a single, Burch says he is having trouble affording his habit for records that are "uncommercial." But he says record promotion people are sending more albums to the KJHK studios that suit his taste and keeps him in business.
Business? Well, Burch is dealing with only the latest stuff, dispensing it with the itchiness.
"I'm just trying to turn people on," he said.
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LITWINS
Pick one
What's your interest? Old movies? New movies? Foreign films? Midnight movies? Whatever it is, SUA films wants you to help pick the films for the biggest and best film program in Kansas.
Interviews for positions on the SUA film committee are March 31st. Get your application at the SUA office, fourth level, Kansas Union, or call 864-3477. No experience necessary—just be interested and ready to go.
MIDNITE FLICK
FRI & SAT AT 12 MIDNITE
The Kids Are Alright
starrung THE WHO PG OVERHEAD
A NEW WORLD PICTURES RELEASE
Varsity
Downtown 843-1065
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
Art in Living Animation.
AMERICAN POP
COMMONWEALTH PICTURES RELEASE
EVE 7 30 9 30 SAT & SUN MAT 2 00
VARSITY DOWNTOWN
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Some films you watch, others you feel.
DONALD BUTHERLAND
MARY TWAIN MOORE
Peppy Palmer
EVE 7:15 & 8:30
HILLCREST 1
THE ICON AND LOVE
FILM AWARD
2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
RICHARD DREYLUSS
THE COMPETITION
PG MAY 14 AT SUN 21:5.
HILLCREST 2
THE AUDIENCE NOW
HILL CREST 2
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RAGING BETTLE
HILCREST 3
ROBERT DE NIRO
Nominated 'BEST ACTOR'
JACK LEMMON
ROBBY BENSON
TRIBUTE
EVE. 7:30 & 9:00
MAT SAT & SUN 2:15
CINEMA 1
HANGAR 18
STERING
GARDEN MCGAVIN
MAT SAT & SUN 2:15
Who won't they believe?
ROBERT VAUMAN
MAT SAT & SUN 2:00
CINEMA 2
Windwalker
MAT SAT & SUN 1:15
CINEMA 1 LIFT AND LOOK
HANGAR 18
STARRING
DAREN MCGAVIN 6'10"
BEN TYLER 7'4"
WHY WANT TO BE LIKELY?
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CINEMA 2 LIFT AND LOOK
Windwalker
MAT SAT & SUN 2:00
Over the
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Wednesday, Mar. 11 Black Orpheus
SUA FILMS
Marcus Camel's brilliant retelling of the legend of Orpheus, set in the carnivals and slums of Rio de Janeiro. With beautiful choreography and superb performances by a cast of unknowns, the winner of many international Latin films, Colo Brazilian/French subtitles; 7:30.
Thursday, Mar. 12 The River
Jean Renoir's typical, sumptuous version of Rousseau's portrait, about English growth in upwarding times, color photography by his brother Claude. With Patricia Waters, Nora Swainbunt.
Unless otherwise noted, all will be shown at Woodford Auditorium in the evening or on Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Friday. Tickets are $150. Midnight tickets are $200. The Saturday show is at Union 4th, level Information 864-864 no smoking or refreshments allowed.
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University Daily Kansan, March 11, 1981
Page 7
Wingert familiar with Regents issues
By DAN BOWERS Staff Reporter
OTTWA-A-Although he's only been a member of the state Board of Regents for two weeks, George Wingert is no stranger to the delicate issues that the Regents deal with routinely.
Serving an eight-year stint in the Kansas House as a Democrat from Ottawa, Wingert was chairman of the House Ways and Means committee. He oversaw many bills and appropriations, dealing to the hearts of the Reedschools.
Thus, as Regents Chairman Bernard Franklin noted at the last Regents meeting, Wingert was not as reluctant to speak up as other rookie Regents have been at their first meetings.
WINGERT SAID he developed greater pride in the Regents schools since he had played a part in the decisions affecting them.
"The legislators have always looked favorably toward higher education," he said. "And the students I work with today students have justified that faith."
Some people might question the state's commitment to higher education in view of the $3 million worth of budget cuts proposed for KU, but Winget defended the recommendations.
"They're about in line with what is needed," he said.
WINGERT SAID his experience with the state budgeting process had
JAMES E. BROWN
George Wingert
taught him that the cuts wouldn't be quite as harsh as they initially might appear to be.
"The proposed cuts probably won't go through as they are," he said. "They'll look for a common middle ground with the Regents."
Wingert said that as the Regents schools faced declining enrollment, higher costs and budget cuts, they must increase their expenses more carefully.
As utility costs become more prohibitive, he said, more university activities should be made in energy-efficient buildings.
look at the costs of operating the older buildings on the campuses," he said.
"We may have to take a long, hard
ONE PRIORITY to keep in mind, he said, was minimizing the student's share of the educational burden.
"We must be able to keep the cost of education within the reach of all the young people in Kansas," he said.
Wingert was appointed to the Regents by Gov. John Carlin, and was confirmed by the Kansas Senate on Feb. 19.
Wingert said he had not sought reelection for his House seat after 1978 because he didn't want his family to be "shortchanged."
"If I had stayed in the Legislature, I was going to miss my kids growing up," he said.
WINGERT'S INTERESTS in Ottawa are enough to occupy his time. His wheat-and cattle-farming operation spreads over more than 1500 acres in Franklin and Coffey counties.
His independent oil company, which he bought in 1964, serves over 40 service stations in eastern Kansas and serves a consumer and convenience stores.
Wingert was graduated from Kansas State University in 1963 with degrees in agriculture and journalism.
Politics came natural to Wingert, who had one uncle who served in the state Senate from 1949-1953 and was a delegate to the state Democratic chairman.
By ROB STROUD Staff Reporter
Parking Services' budget scrutinized
The million-dollar budget of KU Parking Services is under investigation by a Student Senate subcommittee, which yesterday sent a letter to the Parking Services requesting an explanation of its budget.
David Kersley, a student senator who is working with the subcommittee, indicated that Parking Services still might be reluctant to cooperate.
The subcommittee, which operates under the Student Rights Committee, received an outline of the budget from the Kansas Department of Agriculture after the Parking Services turned down requests to公园 its budget.
Anticipating that possibility, Kersley said the letter "indicated that we wouldn't hesitate to call on the attorney general for assistance."
The subcommittee is seeking to in-
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USSA—Immediate opening
The United States Student Association is a national lobby organization dedicated to the interests of students in American institutions of higher education.
K.U. is a member of this organization and actively participates in it. Persons interested in applying for the position of Campus Director are encouraged to contact Greg Schnacke
c/o KU Student Senate office.
105 B Kansas Union or call 864-3710
or 841-1469
Deadline—March 13, 5 p.m.
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- install new spark plugs
· replace points and cond. (if appl.)
· set engine to recommended manufacturer's specifications
· adjust carburetor
· inspect operation of choke
· install new fuel filter
· check all underhood fluid levels
---
"Even the Parking and Traffic Board has admitted that that is more than they need," Kersley said.
The letter requests that Parking Services explain irregularities that appeared on the Department of Administration report, such as the posting of income for some months and the posting of a negative gross income for one month.
Kersley said that a confidential source urged the subcommittee to pay careful attention to the negative income posting, indicating that questionable handling of the budget might be involved.
Kersley would not identify the source, but said that he was intimately familiar with the internal operations of the University.
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Kersley said that Daryl Daniels of the Department of Administration told him that "someone in KU Parking Services is playing games with the budget."
Eventually, the subcommittee could recommend that the cost of parking permits and tickets be reduced, and eliminate the structure of Parking Services be changed.
"The structure mandates excessive violations,"he said.
Those expenses could then be assumed by the state, instead of through parking fines and permits.
At least $400,000 a year could be reduced from Parking Services expenses if it would merge with the KU Police Department, Kersley said.
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Safety Hints from your gas company.
© 1965
If you detect an odor you think may be natural gas-
(1) Open windows and doors to dilute the air to safe level.
(2) Call for aid or advice from the gas company or fire department.
(3) If the odor appears to be very strong, leave the house or building immediately. Go to a telephone and notify the gas company do not turn on any electrical appliances including light switches.
(4) When the problem is solved, have a qualified person from the gas company, plumbing or climate control firms relight appliances.
(5) In the event a leak is detected anywhere outside of a building notify the gas company immediately and describe the location and approximate level of the odor-a quick check of the area will be made to determine the problem and corrective action needed.
If you have any questions please contact our office.
CALL 843-7842
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733 MASSACHUSETTS
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, March 11, 1981
Tollefson named dean of School of Business
It's business as usual now that John Tollefson has been named dean of the School of Business.
Jerry Hutchinson, acting vice chancellor for academic affairs, announced Tolleyson as his choice to lead the University's year-long search for a dean.
"He'll be a good one," said Hutchinson.
Tolleison was chosen because he was known to be an experienced scholar, Hutchson said. Tolleison, who has been associate dean of the University of Chicago and assistant professor in 1987 and was promoted to full professor in 1974.
Tolleson said the school would face problems of recruiting faculty members, but would make retention of faculty members a high priority.
"We are in a period of extremely rapid growth of the school, and we must build on our exceptional and talented faculty." he said.
A gradual transition will take place this month as Tollesfon assumes the duties from Jack Gaummit, acting dean.
John Tollefson
Gaurnnitz, who became acting
PETER SCHUMANN
dean last July, said, "I am pleased to have him for my dean and I'm looking forward to a good period of progress under John."
Gaumnitz said he would return to teaching next fall.
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DAM RUN
For more information call, Recreation Services 864-3546
ENTRY DEADLINE: Monday, March 23
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208 Robinson
PLAY BEGINS: Saturday, March 28 10:00 a.m. Clinton Dam
∞
"The Natural Sciences Know
By KAREN SCHLUETER and CRAIG PARKHURST Staff Reporters
"The Natural Sciences Know Nothing of Evolution."
The Student Senate Cultural Committee, with little debate, voted last night during budget deliberations to approve Iranian Student Association's request.
SILVER JEWELLE
A
The committee decided it could not consider the $775 request until the review of the service and Auditing Committee completed its investigation of possible fund missuses.
"I don't want to commit funds to them until we know what's going on," Ron Heape, committee co-chairman, said.
Finance and Auditing will begin the investigation at its meeting Thursday night.
Panel delavs vote on ISA budget request
A talk by Dr. A.E. Wilder--Smith Kansas Union Ballroom Thursday, March 12th 7:00 P.M. FREE
IN A RELATED ACTION, five student senators who attended the Cultural Committee's meeting last Thursday signed a statement denouncing a flier printed by the Iranian Student Association.
The flier claimed to be a transcript of an exchange between Mahmood Amani, engineering senator, and Shahrok Azeedi, ISA member. It implied that Amani did espionage work for the United States.
Dr. Wilder-Smith received his first doctorate in physical
The statement signed at last night's meeting said the ISA flier was inaccurate. It also expressed the signers' concerns that "the 'accusations made toward Amiad."
Four Senate committee chairmen and a student senator signed the statement.
Dr. Wilder-Smith received his first doctorate in physical organic chemistry in 1941 at the University of Reading, England and has since earned two other doctors. He is the author of coauthor of over 50 scientific publications, and more than 20 books which have been published in English, German, French, Russian, and Rumanian. At present, he is engaged in the production of TV films tracing the origin of the universe and the origin of life and species.
The Cultural Committee also made preliminary cuts in budget requests from 11 groups.
SPONSORED BY NEW PERSPECTIVES
After making the cuts, Heape and Krupa Billa, committee co-chairman, plan to appeal to the Senate to allocate funds to groups funded under the committee.
HEAPE SAID the committee was facing a frustrating task because its requests totaled more than $19,000 and there was only $6,600 to allocate.
"What we should try to do is to scrutinize these budgets and take them into account."
- Reducing the KU Folk Dance Club's requests from $800 to $400.
- Reducing the Hellenic Society's request from $500 to $232.
- The following preliminary cuts were made:
- Reducing the Arab Student Organizations' request from $560 to $300.
- Reducing University Dance Company's request from $2,018 to $751.44.
- Reducing Tau Signa Dance Ensemble's request from $1,901.9 to $323.5.
- Reducing the Brazil-Portugal Club's request from $813 to $78.
- Reducing the Latin American Club's request from $1,275 to $190.
- Reducing the Thai Association's request from $700 to $360.
The committee tentatively decided to recommend that the Hilltop Twirlers Square Dancing Club and the KU Club不要 receive Senate funding.
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
Neither group received funding in the past.
HEFAID SAID the decision not to fund the square dance club, which provides instruction for beginners, could be made in part through a provided narrow scope of services.
The committee decided the Formosan Club, made up of students from Taiwan, represented a duplication of the group by the Chinese Student Association.
- Passed a budget of $671 for the Architecture and Urban Design Council.
- Approved a $225 budget for the Biochemistry Club.
SCoRMEBE had originally asked for more than $7,000 in funds.
According to Peter Jouras, co-chairman for the academic affairs committee, one reason the original request was denied was that SCO-REME had more than $183,560.04 in total assets as of last June.
THE MOTION PASSED, after another motion to cut SCoRMEBE's funding was defeated.
SCORMEBE's next step, he said, was to draw up a new budget to present to the Senate during its final deliberations. He said his group would keep pushing for more money within the existing rules.
"I don't see how we can fund an organization that has this much money."
In another meeting, the Student Academic Affairs Committee passed a motion to give $500 to the Student Academic Affairs Committee and Education of Minority Engineers.
Heape told the committee that it should add a rider to the Chinese Student Association's recommendation for the share funds with the Fornison Club.
Leroy Armstrong, president of SCORMEBE, said that without extra funding, his organization would eventually fail.
"The other three dance groups we fund are more public, in terms of performances," Heape said.
- Approved a budget of $65.06 for Alpha Rho Gamma, a jewelry and metalmithing organization for students.
ARMSTRONG SAID that unless the University of Kansas supports his group with money, other outside interns would stop supporting the group.
The committee also:
The assets that SCoRMEBE has, Armstrong said, can only fund support
- Approved a $170 budget for the
The committee responds differently to every group, Armstrong said.
ARMSTRONG SAID that some of the committee members were against SCorMEBE, and that other minority groups got the same treatment.
"You can look at some of their regulations and tell them they're aimed at you. They're also the ones they can't see."
WE BUY USED FURNITURE
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- Approved a budget of $398 for the French Club.
Armstrong said that the recruiting rule and financial considerations were not the only reasons his group's request was cut.
The committee decided the symposium constituted recruiting a vowel teacher.
services and financial aid for members of his group.
Arnarmand said the group needed
supplies, utilities and its
annual symposium.
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- Approved a budget of $310 for the Women in Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania.
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- Passed a $700 budget for the Kansas Engineer Magazine.
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University Daily Kansan, March 11, 1981
Page 9
STATE
Hogan readies for NCAA meet
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
Deon Hogan's frustration began six years ago, on a high school football field in Detroit.
By PAUL D. BOWKER
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
Hogan, a tailback for Kettering High School, chipped a bone in his knee cap during a game, left the lineup and got it back by days as a football player were over.
THE INJURES have continued for Hogan, a now sprinter on the KU men's track team. Since arriving at KU in 1978, Hogan, a junior, has had 11 hainstiming injuries, seven in his first season. He has suffered two of them this year.
Hogan's injuries, however, have not kept him on the sidelines constantly. Between trips to the doctor, Hogan has established himself as the top spinner in the Big Eight and one of the best in the nation.
Hogan was the fourth fastest quarterliner in the nation last year, finishing in a tie for fourth place in the 440-yard run at the national indoor championships with a time of 49.1. He won fourplace in the 400-meter at the national outdoor championships with a time of 45.71.
Although Hogan is still fond of football, he has excelled in track. As a high school student at Kettering, an inner-Detroit public school, Hogan set up a prep recruit in the 30 and won the Michigan state titles in four other events.
"That's when I knew it was time to quit," Hogan said. "I really enjoyed football. But my knees are pretty weak."
WHEN HE SUFFERED the chipped kneecap as a football player, Hogan knew it was time to leave the riderni.
Although he pulled a hamstring muscle seven times during his first year at KU. Hogan was ready when the championships rolled around. He won the 106- and 200-diameter dashes, anchored the Jahayhaks' 440-yard relay team, was a member of the 1600-meter relay team, and meet's outstanding performer.
Hogan's biggest obstacle has been running on a board track.
"I really don’t get hurt unless I run on the boards," Hogan said. "I can’t run on the boards. I haven’t yet mastered it. It kind of twists my upper body."
If running on a banked board track is Hogan's weakness, he makes up for it on a flat track.
Two weeks ago, running on Nebraska's lead, synthetic track at the Big Eight Championships, Hogan set a world record for a 220-yard track in the 40 with a time of 47.30. He was named the outstanding performer of the meet.
The NCAA championships, however, are held on a four-lane banked track in Joe Louis Avenue in Detroit. The meet starts Friday.
recurred three weeks ago at the Los Angeles Times Invitational.
Although he tied for fourth in the 440 on the same track at the national championships last year, Hogan pulled out of the mile relay with a leg cramp and the Jayhawks did not place in the event.
Despite the danger of the same thing happening this year, Hogan is looking forward to the meet.
"We should finish pretty strong," Hogan said. "At least fourth, like last year, or better."
Last year, six of the Big Eight teams
placed among the top 20 teams at the NCAA indoor championships. The Jayhawks led the conference with a fourth-place finish.
AFTER LESTER MICKENS graduated last year, many conference teams probably felt a reason to join the team of the fastest spriners in the ration.
Mickens reset his own conference record in the 40 at last year's BigEight indoor championships and was a member of the Jayhawks' miley relay that won first place in the conference indoor and outdoor championships.
The University Daily
The loss of Mickens from a spinner-train team like KU, however, was not as devastating as it might have been to another team.
Hogan, senior Mike Ricks and junior Mark Rau all qualified for the national championships. Rau qualified in three events.
"The anchor leg is a lot of pressure," Hogan said. "It's make or break your腿. Mike will have the pressure this year."
Ricks has taken Mickens' place as anchor on the mite relay team, although Hagan ran in the anchor position several times last year.
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Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be on person or by calling the Business office at 843-9900.
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9:00 5:00 M-F 9:30 2:00 SAT
FOR RENT
3 Bedroom apt. in N. Lawrence, utilities paid. $300.00 per mo. 814-5968. 3-13
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5. 843-3228
tf
3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. tr
ARIZONA STREET DUPLEXES Available
now-perfect. For pick up, 4 bedrooms,
2 bathrooms. Wheelchair-accessible.
waver, washer, waver and dry hooker-
ups, central air conditioning, carpet &
draft-out parking, unfurnished, no
building + utilities. Call 843-9730 or
6563.
For spring and summer, Naimish Hall of Arts offers a variety of advantages of an apartment. Good food and plenty of it. Weekly maid service to clean the rooms, wash dishes, do activities and much more. If you're looking for something new, you want stop in or give us call: Naimish MALL HALL 1800 Naimish Avenue, 843-756-2764. 1800 Naimish Avenue, 843-756-2764.
Med Center Bound? Nice. 2-bedroom duplexes available for summer and fall. Carpet. A.C. appliances, and parking. Call: 1-913); 381-2876.
3-27
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
For rosette homes, feature wood burning fireplace and water dryer/fireplace. fully equipped water dryer/bathroom daily at 2908 Princeton Bldk. or phone 822-436-1500 at 2908 Princeton Bldk. or phone 822-436-1500
Newly-renamed rooms and apartments in the building are now available for parking and no pets. Phone 841-5000 or if you need 3 bikeways for rent now at Pine Hawen Bike Shop in Waterbury & water warden close to shopping mall names we pay water $50 per person desired. We also offer a $200 per married, not married, no pet. Call 841-9248 or 218-7642.
Victoria Capir Avail. Unfurnished studio, 1 &
3 bdrm. avail. Central air, wall-to-
wall quaint location, 25 blocks south
of Friar's House, 842-893-7000, 5:30
am/weekend times.
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute walk to campus, 1821 Tennessee, $270 rent + utilities, 842-4822, 3-25
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 1028 &
1030, you'll like to spend afternoons at
domns, you'll like to spend afternoons at
feature 3 bk., 1½ hrs., all appliances, at-
tained garage, wood, and lots of privacy.
We have a new apartment on Craig Leale or Jim Bong at 149-760 for pre-
townhouses about our modular private
townhouses.
2 bedroom apt. close to campus. $210 -
utilities. No pets. 842-1929 after 5:00 - 3:13
ROOM FOR MASTE STUDENT. Share kitchen-bath. 14th and Kentucky, furnished. walk to campus. $95 + small utility. 84-2105, 84-3318. 3-11
ROOM FOR MALE STUDENT. Share bath
and refrigerator, 14th and Kentucky, renting
now. $55 + small utility. 841-2105.
841-5318. 3-11
GARAGE FOR RENT Clean, dry near 14th and Kentucky. 841- 82105, 841- 82106, 3-11 Sublease this summer. Two bedroom apt: on 10th street near campus. Call 841- 8742
3 BR ranch. Fenced yard, Closed porch.
Available March 15, Crestline Dr. Hillesterr
area. $235 + 1 mo. deposit. 842-3946, 3-12
Sublease furnished apt. loft. one bedroom,
available April 1st, excellent view of Law-
rence. Call 841-5255 or 843-7828. 3-12
Female roommate wanted, after graduation to share a 2 Bedroom-2 Bath Furnished Apartment in Johnson County. Rent $180.9747;付费 Call: 630-895-1477.
mills
Sublease 1 bd. w/ study all utilities pd. except lights, bus route, convenient location.
Call 841-8552 or 842-4661.
3-13
FRESHINEN and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house next year! Apply now. 842-6592. tt
Available now 1 br. Bt at Jayhawk West Apt.
803. One room, one bath, outdoor pool, no deposit required, $250. Two rooms, two baths, large room for rent close to campus. Exc. time of 4-6pm or 8-12pm 7 a.m. for $495 or 8-12pm 7 p.m.
Sublease furnished Meadowbrook studio apt.
available April 1st or May 1st! Call 749-
1810. 3-13
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Makes sense to use them 1). As study
makes sense to use them 2). As study
exam preparation 3). Analyses of
exam preparation 4). Analysis of
Cater. The Bookmark, and Gread Book.
Summer mulease: 2 bedroom apt, with carport. Rent & electricity. At Malls Olde English Village. Call 841-8219. 3-13
Alternator, starter and generator specialist,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BEILL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9060, 3890
W. 6th. 1f
FOR SALE
78 Camero LL. 4 speed—39,000 miles, AM-FM radio. radio interior, like new. Call Kalam after 7:00 a.m. 841-523-11. 3-11
Receiver technics ($30 w/ch), turntable dual
2 speakers. $300 or best offer. 144 Loulaua
x7? 2nd floor). 3-11
13 Honda M-CMC-MT, 1090 Total Miles.
Passport Style. Lug. Rack. Ease. Start. Turn Signals. New Battery. Super mileage. 864-3110. $3.00 - 841-0703. 3-11
35 mm Canon camera. Tele-coverter, 35 mm, 135 mm *200 m*, and 38 mm wide-angle lenses. All in excellent condition—Best offer. Amenity at 864-2821. 3-11
1976 VW RABBIT. 48,600 mi, great looking and running + good gas mileage. Must see. Call 841-7762. 3-11
1978 MAZDA GLC SPORT. Like new, low mileage, 1 owner, 5 speed, $3500, 842-3378,
3-13
Opticaon System timer tuner & amp. 8watts, cassette, turntable, with 2 ISR speakers. Ex. condition, must sell before break. 3-11 941-985 Make offer.
Mini-Korg Electronic Music Synthesizer, excellent condition, must sell, first $200 takes 3-12 841-9270, Curt.
HP 36C Calculator, Programmable, statistical and business functions. 2 months old, barely used. $100. Call #437-7987, evening.
please. 3-11
Two STYX TICKETS FOR SALE. Lower Level, March 16th show. I'm selling at cost ( $115 each). Call 749-0946. 3-11
For Sale: Matching catcher & chair, kitchen-
crowave, cross country skis & skis, downtown
ski boots. Women's size 6. Men's size 11.
841-4390 3-13
Metal filing cabinet, 2-drawer, excellent condition; $50 - Sonic cassette tape recorder with extendable speakers. $40. Call $64-4103 or $84-0689.
3 - in- 1. 1978 Allegro moduler stereo—$75.
19" Zenith cabinet Color T.V. $150. Call
3-13
179 Cheville Malone, repaired engine, 2
197 Cheville Malone, repaired engine,
after 1.20 p.m. 899; Call 749-236-138.
Bass-4091 Ricklencker Bass Amp Armp
S.V.F. Tried to sell. Call Bass 842-367-867.
S.V.T. Priced to sell. Call Randy 842-3807
3-12
Ratlie Snake eggs, Wall paper, photographic mirrors, chest of drawers, crook pots.
Everything But Ice, 0th & Vermont. 3-23
Everything But Ice, 6th & Vermont. 3-28
Need a camera for Spring break? Pocket Minolta, with built-in flash & telephone, like new -Cheap! BM-842-6447. 3-12
Ampge V4-4 guitar head, New Transformer &
Tubes. $175.00 + offer. 749-1214.
Keep trying. 3-23
Movie projector 35 mm Lenses, amp., excellent condition, 842-0340. 3-12
1977 Ford LTD II, A/C, AT, PS, PB, Radium, Cruise control, only 65,000 miles Beautiful car in excellent condition $2700. 842-6212 after 5:00 Keevin teen. 3.13
Window shades. Battered golf clubs, sleep-
bag bags, tents, lamps, metal detectors.
Everything But Ice, lee & Vermont. 3-23
H44 Honda 400 cm², eyelid cex.聘. convemnt 1-23
H60 Honda 500 cm², eyelid cex.聘. convemnt 1-23
Hand woven oriental rug, 7 by 42 inch
wall hanging. Rare chance. Contact Haroon
749-2724.
3-23
Dishwasher & Stove (gas) for sale. Good Condition. $75 each. Call after 5:90 p.m.
842-1292
Ski Boots-Women's Size 61* Dolomite
Boots, 2 yrs old, used only one season.
$75.00 Call after 5:00 p.m. 941-7149 3-13
Looking for burglar? Of course you are sure to find a new set of clothes that $25 low. Now you get free soap from your clothes for only 75c per load 24 hours or $100 for just two. We take clothes to Hillebrand, Laundry and home for real? It sure is this bargain for real! Eighty-97% now. Keep telling, we are going to pay.
Conn Acoustic Guitar & Case Brand nu-take best offer. Also E. flat Alto Sax; Take best offer so call now. 842-2853. 3-13
The team's good job! $900 Gulliver
warm suit - 12/30/20
$150 Wampa suit - 12/30/20
w amplifier $200 Matt's teacher boosts it 12
months
Look for a woman to buy a SAU trip
to Palm Beach island to break Spring Break.
I'll send you a coupon.
1975 WV 412 Wagon. Auto, Radials. Body and
engine得军大, 86.000 miles $1375.191
WV Squareback. Auto, Body clean. engine requires work $700.48-3/14-
74 Toyota, Corolla 4 cylinder. Sta Wagon
Atr/AC Nice condition. Call 841-4859. 3-11
70 EI Caintoo 5,20 B1 New: engine, trans.
60 EI Caintoo 8,30 B2 New: motor,惠斯达
M300. must sell 130 K900. must sell 140 FM
FM cassette. Excellent condition, $750 or
$700 at 114 Louisiana. Staircase,
ST (2nd floor).
FOUND
HELP WANTED
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES
You will share your work
experience with us. Please
nurse home residents! Our consumer or
caregiver training program
Nursing Home (KINH) needs your help.
Nursing home conditions and
your opinion in these matters.
All names and correspondence
to the residents. Call us at:
913-828-3028 or 821-7107, or write us:
813-828-3028, St. Ma. # 54, Lawrence, KS
66044
Found umbrella Wednesday in front of 3092 Malott. Call 842-5010 and identify. 3-12
I found a charm in the girl's bathroom at Wescoe. Call to identify. 864-5888 or 864-2844. 3-11
Found at bus stop across from Bailey. Server 1D. Bracket w/names on inside & outside. Call 749-2903 and identity. 3-12
Full or part time help wanted. Combination dancers & waiters. Excellent iPad, Cosmos, and Laptop access. $70 per hour. Node dancing $70 per hour. Your choice. Rise on Hwy 40. 379-9800. $-24 rene on Hwy 40. 379-9800.
World's Largest Business needs you! Stay home -paid weekly. Free details. Enclose stamped envelope. Peggy Jones. 3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, K6004. 3614-4.
MAKE 5000 A WEEK PLUS 50% OF ALL
DELIVERIES INVOLVING YOUR TIME FOR
Information, send $1.00 & self-addressed,
CRIVES INVOLVING YOUR TIME for
P.O. Box 2008, Lawrence, KS 60053
P.O. Box 2008, Lawrence, KS 60053
CRUISERS CLUB MEDIZERANEAN, SAL-
structures. Office Personnel, Counselors
and Administrators handling for APPLICATION
OF OPENING. 153 Box 60129, Sacramento,
CA 94651.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT (1) Position open position with Child Development Requirements. Current level of Child Research Experience. Compiled data entry, office duties, graphical analysis. Req's Master's degree or equivalent, assists by Director of program staff. Application deadline 16 March. Course offered online. University of Kansas Kannene 3411. AAE. XO-12
Part time help was needed at Hillebrand Laundry-mat 925 lbs. Where you can wash and dry your clothes for only 75e per load. Please apply in person. **3-13**
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF
accepted for the Summer Orientation program and accepted for the Summer Orientation program in today's paper or come by during Fall Hall. An equal opportunity emerger will be available.
Suring break Jobs--Lasting one week, possible part time position continuing through Summer. work in. In person at the Garden Center, 15th & New York. 3-12
PSCHY INF. If you are interested in interpersonal training, have a job for you. We have 2 immediate slots: **Midweek** (for wk) and **per wk**. For interviews apply call the clinic at ks. 913-843-3600 *Midweek*, Mar 3, 2015. Ks. 913-843-3600
LOST
HP-34-C Calculator Tues. 24. Reward. 841-
3625 3-13
NOTICE
SKI WINTER PARK/MARY JANE SPRING
dates. include skis, ski rentals, lodging insurance and
tickets, ski rental, booking insurance and
dates for 18th-3rd, 19th-4th or 18th-3rd White Skis ect. 107
BUSk out for Darryl. Three day Easter trip
is available for $250.
Going skiing over Break? HEAT WAVE SKI Vests are ideal for Spring sking and come in great designs and colors. Tel. eveningss 864-391, 842-558. 3-13
GAY AND LESBIAN PEER Counseling: A friend is easy to listen. Referrals through K.U. Information: 844-3506, or Headquarters: 841-2945.
J. HODD BOOKSELLER. The finest school book hardware and is price paperbacks hardcover and in excellent condition, organized and in excellent condition. We maintain a full server network for 814-644-7814 or 814-644-7802.
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
tt
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passport. Custom made portraits, color. B/W. Swells Studio 749-1611. 4-1
NEEED EXTRA CASH? Sell your old Gold & Diamonds. CAPT求票 for class rings, gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6777, 841-7tf
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can give, at prices students can afford. Swells Studio, 749-1811. 4-1
Want to be a Priest? Sister? Ages 20-50?
Contact Father Nigro, Gonzaga University,
Spokane, 99228.
3-24
SPRING FORMAL, RUSH MARCH 27, 28, 29
Register in the INTERFORMATION Council OF
REGISTER in the INTERFORMATION Council OF
Oliver, Templin, and JBP on March 10.
p. Thence will be a $10 register fee.
HEADACH, BACKACHE, CHISEFT NECK,
LEG PAIN? Quality Chiropractic Care &
its support. 484-5388 for consultation,
accepting Blue Cross & Litton,
Star insurance plana.
Senior portrait specal. studio taken, with a large selection of scenic background available. Swells Studio. 749-1611. 3-25
Looking for someone to go to CORNELL UNIVERSITY (NEW YORK) vicinity Spring Break. Will pay for transport of harmless biological specimen. Call Sarah K. 843-6674.
A great Spring fishing combination-sunshine, warm breezes, open water, you, and Anglers Unlimited. 1449 W. 23rd. 3-13
Green's Tavern and Keg Shoppe KU ID
Price Cut, Mon-Thurs, Pitchers 12.5 $
till 7; Fri 2 till 4 Big Draws 50.
3-12
Immediate Opening. The United States State University is dedicated to the interests of students in its program. A KU student is a member of this group and actively applies his knowledge to playing for the position of campus director for the School of Engineering at KU Student Senate, 1038 Ramsay Ave., KU Student Office, 941-1460. Deadline March 15.
Design a logo for the KU Sailing Club.
The sailing logo will be used for news letterheads.
Create a website with a logo valued at $15.00 or a club membership. Entries due by December 31st.
For more information call Barb at 843-3100.
Fort Lauderdale-Pedro Island! IZOE, MARIE and friends want to go to Fort Lauderdale. 4120 Clinton Parkway; 15% OFF ALL MERCER
Singing messages for all occasions. ASTA
Singing Telegrams. 841-6169. If
Complaint a "Best of Lawrence" list. Best
attendance at bar, athletics, hotel, restaurant,
bar, athletics, hotel, restaurant,
as long as it applies to Lawrence K.U.
nominations to $200 in 214. Lawrence K.U.
$214. Lawrence K.U.
Opening soon "All Baba" Mid-East cuisine,
beside Minsky's Pizza, 2200 Iowa (Great
Gyrost)
3-12
Owen-minded adventure wanted for lengthy World Bicycle tour to start spring 2012. CJ.C. 509 S. Fern, Wichita, KS 67213.
K11-31
Skipping classes? learn to "play the game"
**WHERE** BRENNAN RESOURCE DIRECTORY
or BRENNAN RESOURCE DIRECTORY
FISHING FEVER—a highly contagious disease with no known cure. We have the fish fevers in North America at Anglers Unlimited, 1449 W. 32rd St.
What's behind vegetarian? Prasadamantarian PRASADAMANTARIAN FISH! Friday, Jan. 15, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 934 illumina. You can all eat it, no string attached!
Do you like Pizza? Try Pyramid Pizza—Wee
Pile It On "til 1:00 a.m. 842-3222. 3-11
STUDY BREAK-FISH—Paul Clinton Lake this week. Amy Fischler, Annette Angers Unlimited, 1499 W. 32nd St. 3:45. OUTDOORS WOMEN—sport fishing is an exciting experience. Annette Angers, 1499 W. 32nd St. 2:40.
Lt. Flaudeler or Bust? The more Bust the Better! 2 days. S.B.S.F.N.RBL. 3-11
Slik—just wanted to let you know I'm missing someone who has changed in time and my since she disappeared or not. Don't worry, I'm not gonna jump you, we got that much neat. Let gets out of your face once over a piece of Paul Harnish's body at the Hall of Fame. Paul Harnish I will bring you? Please wilt affection—the Captain.
MATT: I'd like to see you before you leave for LOUISIANA. Meet me at the place where we first met, Thursday 1:30. Lynn. 3-12
Karen—The frog can wait. Donny and Marie are expecting us. Go Hawaiian! Aloba—Slick. 3-11
It's time again for **P*****x** or Drown at The
Lake. It's 7:30 p.m. and I don't know when.
When the whistle sounds, some friends
someone leaves the bar or goes to the "john"
lane. Prime your pump for spring break!
Lites. Prime your pump for spring break!
KEV the REV and POODELHEAD thank Methan莲Chai Chi, for participating last Friday. The thinner, laxing boot surm fogged and dizzy from midnight to dawn we wrapped with Nancy, Mo, and Meg. Here's to Laush, at HoloRoom Sports Complex. Sure the Madness party and we'll need a paramedic; The wallers rate the Lambda a bit lower. Yelp CM
MY CAMERA IS MISSION! Anyone know what the event at the party at #143 on Thursday would be like at the film back. 5-12 INTERNATIONAL PEN FRENDS. Recared in international movies in the world, 61,000 people in 143 countries, German, and Spanish. For all age groups, you can find a wide selection of free details write: International Pen Fonds. F.O. Box 899, Shore Mission, KS 66208. 5-12
For Sale: nice 75 Suzuki 185 Street bike.
In ex. cond., 30,000 ml. Call Mike 749-
0851. 3-13
Help—I need to buy one more ticket to the game Friday night in Wichita! Call Kris at 3-13 864-2216.
Hilmerst Laundramat 9251 is illly so swerd. Business from 6 a.m. till 9 a.m. they give their clients an online courtyard service. Don't you be allly too and pass up this贴! Please call 843-708-fun to the truth person to call a free tree to do the clothets free soap and fabric softener. How many clothes free soap and fabric softener. How many
CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS: April 14-15
Petitions offered in Student Senate Office.
Filing deadlines: 5:00 p.m. Friday, March
27
27
Happy 21th B.V. Rah! in Peoria.
Cind-Today is the Day !!! Let's PARTY all the way, From NY to PA. Good times every day!-Sheet. 3-11
We are looking for another mature, non-
married woman who is willing to pref. engraved or married to live with us in an apartment during the next school year. You will be available as soon as possible, but during Spring Break.
See May study, see May review. Watch her show how the chemistry is worked said "MCAT's are complex," its true! But Marilio, that's nothing new! Good luck on him! You need the Chemistry, and the Bio, too. Go knock them dead, you're due! Oh. Fearless, you'll have to learn Cha-cha-Cha. P-3.1 love you!
(Muffin) You're a very special lady. I Love
You so much! May our dream never end.
Happy Anniversary. Pooh. 3-15
Crossing Coupons are good for everybody.
Watch for them. 3-11
Tutoring Math 000-800, Phux 100-600, Eus 388, 804, 806. Call 843-9036. If
Tutoring Math 000-800, Phux 100-600, Eus 388, 804, 806. Call 843-9036. If
SERVICES OFFERED
Do you have a
Sports Car Mechanic that has been Factory trained? At the Factory?
--self service
copies
now at
ENCORE COPY
CORPS
20th and over. $40.00
wheel We Do!
to sports car racing and repair
wheel 843-7095
2th and love
Drop off services. Drop your laundry off and we will wash, dry, drip and fold your clothes and we will wash, dry, drip and fold your clothes on R p.m. through Sai. Ask about our morning service and give us Hillary's phone number.
3¢
Vibrant Life Care
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Experienced, typid-term papers, books,
music, electric IM Sealect. Proofreading,
spelling corrected. 843-954. Mrs. Wright.
tfr
TYPING
Experienced typet-thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mise.良M correcting selective.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Past, reliable, accurate, IMB plan, 842-525-3921, evenings at 11:00 and weeks.
I do damned good typing. Peggy 642-467-69
Experienced K.U. typist ICM Correcting
Selective, Quantity work. References are
available. Sandy, evening and weekends 748-
9813. tf
842-2001
For Your Opting Object
COPYED COPYS
envelope - Holiday Box 812-2000
Dial
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra
141-4800. 18
Experienced typist-books, tesis, thema
papers, dissertations, etc, IBM correcting
Selective. Terry evenings and weekends.
812-454 or 813-267. **tf**
RESUME—RESUME—RESUME—Professional Resume Preparation and Printing. Encore Copy Corps. 52th and Iowa. 842-201.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editte, self-correct Selectlec.
Call Ellen or Jeannan 841-2172. tf
RUSH JOBS our specialty. Reasonable Rates.
IBM 10, 12 pitch. Nathan or Sandy= 641-
7668, 845-5611. Nathan
Closest thing to printing-IBM Executive
tying, Fast service. Reasonable Rates. Bill
842-8772. 3-13
Grad. student's wife will type papers. 75/c/
p. 842-333 anytime. 1-13
Excellent typet would like to type thesis, dissertation, etc. Call 842-3263. 3-50
Fast, efficient typing. Many year experience. IBM. Ann before 9 p.m. 749-264-3. 1-3
WANTED
GOLD. SILVER - DIAMONDS. Clam rings.
Wedding Bands, Silver Colons, Sterling, etc.
We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or
542-268.
Female roommate to share extra nice fur-
berths 2 b bath duplex $115 + 1*3
Call 641-8390
Mustaniwa wanted. Drumm, kochaugi, booked,
Bruno, Kimmel, and David. Kimmel, Kimmel,
Kinn, Jams, Kinn, call. Stg 41-410 = 118.
An apartment or a room needed through
Spring Break. Call 644-6888. 2-11
Summer suburban needed for female soho,
from May through August. Would prefer a
mail at Mall's Ode English Village Call
844-6134, ask for Lisa.
5-13
We need your spare clothes hangers at Hilricet Laundretail $25 Iowa. Please call 815-9740 from 6 a.m. till 10 p.m.
3-13
We are looking for another mature non-
mature female (exempted or married) to live with us in an apartment during the next school year (exempted or married) to call 681-4137 as soon as possible but not during Spring Break. | 2-25
Household insurance number | 3-12
Cell phone # 681-4134 | 2-12
Quiet, studious male roommate to share
very nice apartment. Close to campus, own
room $87.50 mo. plus 1% utilities $42-$884.
e.1.19
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, March 11. 1981
Baseball team wins two; at home today
By ARNE GREEN Sports Writer
As winter baseball practice wound down last week, Kansas Coach Floyd Temple said that improved pitching would be the key to the team's success. But yesterday it was hitting that carried the Jayhawks to a 9-4 and 17-5 sweep in their season opener at Emporia State.
Third baseman Russ Blaylock and pitcher Kevin Clinton provided the power in the first game, hitting back-to-back homers in the sixth and seventh innings back from a 4-3 deficit to put the game out of the Hornets' reach.
THE JAYHAWKS grabbed an early 2- lead with single runs in the first two innings by capitalizing on a pair of wild balls in the next inning on an error of their own.
After the Hornet's 'Andy Hoffman」fled off the third with a single, Clinton threw the ball on a sacrifice bunt and Hoffman scored. Clinton then gave up two more unearned runs on a two-run homer by Brad Hill.
Kansas evened the game at 3-3 in the fourth inning on a triple by Blaylock and a sacrifice fly by right fielder Joe Heeney, only to fall behind on an Emporia State home run in the bottom of the inning.
The fourth-inning blast was the only earned run given up by Clinton, who won the game, scattering four hits and striking out five.
CLINTON ALSO collected four RBI
on two home runs, while Blaylock went 4-for-4 and scored four runs.
The second game was never in doubt as the Jayhawks jumped on the Hornets for 12 runs in the first two innings.
Senior first baseman Brian Gray肝 KU with a 3-for-4 performance, collecting two doubles and five RBI. The doubles gave Gray 40 for his career and the RBI boosted his total to 102, both tones on the KU all-time list.
Center fielder Dick Lewalen had two hits in the game, knocking in four runs and Heene added three RBI in a pair of singles.
SOPHOMORE JIM Phillips picked up the victory in the nightcap, working six innings, up up three runs on five hits.
Temple said he was pleased with the team's performance the first time out.
"I was particularly impressed with our righthanded hitting against lefthanders," he said.
Gray also said he like what he saw.
Gray also said he like what we saw.
"As far as first games go, this is the best we've looked since I've been here." he said.
"We never would have done this well if we hadn't been outside all winter."
THE JAYHAWKS hope the weather holds up for their home opener today, a 1 p.m. doubleheader against William Jewell at Quinney Field.
the same young team he started at Emporia State.
Temple will have a pair of left-handers take the mount for the Jayhawks for their first game of the season before home fans. Freshman Ryan Dobbins and Randy McMishtn the second. Temple is expected to start basically
Before the season Temple expected to play his team into shape in these early games, but a warm winter changed that.
"When we started to prepare for winter practice I had some valid concerns about getting ready to play this spring," he said. "We had two
"Pitching kept us out the last two years. I hope pitching will get us into the tournament this year. That's the name of the game. Pitching."
Floyd Temple
position changes happen since last fall. Second base and shortstop need a lot of time to work together. The second baseman (Roger Riley) is in a new position in the third baseman (Hylock) and the shortstop (Nejucci) just since this last.
"THE GREAT WEATHER has enabled us to accomplish some things we thought would be a problem."
However, Temple said he thought Riley would do a good job at second once he made the adjustment.
"We used him some there his freshman year before moving him to third and then to the outfield last year," he said. "I think Roger has adapted well. He's an intelligent player and he's an overachiver as ever at effort."
Senior Roger Riley, who played third base and outfield the last two years, was forced to step in at second that year. The coach was declared academically ineligible.
RILEY, A career 348 hitter, said,
"It's a little different turning the double play, but I'm getting really comfortable with it now."
The left side of the infield is being filled by junior college transfers Blaylock at third and Nezuil at short.
Blaylock, who transferred at semester, was impressed in spring drills and won the startling job.
"Russ has stepped in and done a good job," Temple said. "There is always a transition from junior college and he had done well."
The rest of the infield is set with seniors Brian Gray at first and Juan Ramon at catcher coming off solid years.
NEUZIL PLAYED two years at Barton County and last fall won the shortstop job.
"He's a fine competitor and an aggressive baserunner," Temple said. "I think he will develop into a fine player." The team also be able to swim the bat for its too, too.
Gray hit .323 last year, second on the team to Matt Gundelfinger, who passed up his senior year to turn pro. Ramon chipped in with a .357 average while alternating between designated hitter and catcher.
Dick Lewallen returns. he led KU freshmen in hitting last year with a 36 average and is the strong defensive goaltender, another good fielder, will start in light.
The left field starter is still uncertain, Temple said, but walk-ons Tim Heinemann and Jim Heeney have the inside track.
"I PLAN to give those youngsters the opportunity to play for us," he said. "Kevin Clinton can also play left field."
The Jayhawks will play several games and a tournament in Texas during spring break before beginning the Big Eight schedule. Temple and the teams are confident that the team will be one of the top teams in the conference.
"I do think that with proper development as we gain more experience we will have a good chance of success," he said. "I feel good about this ball club."
In the outfield, only center fielder
"I think we will be really competitive in the Big Eight," he said. "Some of the young players from last year are really big, and some we are sitting in really good shape."
Ramon said the team has more depth this year.
Clinton agreed.
"LAST YEAR we didn't have pitching, but had good hitting," he said. "This year we're an all-around good team. From one to nine we have solid wins."
Temple summed it up best.
"Pitching kept us up the last two years," he said. "I hope pitching will get us into this year. That's the name of the game, Pitching."
KC rips Boston in Florida, 8-3
by United Press International
FORT MYERS, Fla.—The Kansas City Royals got their season off to a good start yesterday.
The Red Sox tied the game on home runs by Jim Rice in the fourth inning and Dwight Evans in the top of the fifth. The Royals had scored their five runs off Steve Crawford, the second of three Boston pitchers.
The defending American league champions broke a 3-1 tie with one run in the fifth inning and four more in the sixth for an 8-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox in the exhibition opener for both teams.
Amos Otis singled in Willie Alkens, who had led off with a double, to score the single run in the fifth. The four-run sixth inning was a result of three ground ball singles, errors, a walk and a sacrifice fly.
The Royals scored once in the second on an Otis double and a bunt single by Frank White and twice in the third when Boston starter Mike Torres walked Hal McAke, Akens Otts in succession and Clint Hurd in third. Mitch Kujawski scored John Wathan's ground ball scored Akens for the Royals' other run.
Royals' Manager Jim Frey played most of the regulars from last season's World Series team. Missing was All-Star third baseman George Brett, who had surgery to remove hemorrhoids on Feb. 28. Brett is not expected to return to the team until late March.
Men's tennis team beats Baker in outdoor meet
Yesterday afternoon Kansas's men's tennis team did something it hadn't done this season. It played outdoors and won the second time this season.
The Jahways defeated Baker, 81, but few were pleased with KU's play. Coach Randy McGrath said the team won by 20 runs, and doors after playing indoors all season.
Weyne Straw, a senior and KU's No. 1 player, said that the difference in the ball's speed—it travels faster indoors—and the wind caused him to play his worst match of the season. The wind was the biggest problem, he said.
"It's a big equalizer until you get used to it," he said. "Today was a frustrating day."
Sewall described Baker, an NAIA
school, as a much weaker team than the Jayhawks. He said that the KU team members had some problems preparing to play the meet.
KU's struggle in its first outdoor meet was unexpected. After KU's indoor meet last week at Nebraska the team were confident about playing outdoors.
"WE'LL DO better outdoors," Sewall said then.
The Jayhawks next outdoor meet will be a tournament in Baton Rouge, La. next week. The team will also play in the state championship the trip south during spring break.
AURH ELECTIONS
KU had finished third in the Nebraska meet behind Ol'Reberts and Nebraska. Kansas State was fourth.
Offices open:
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Executive Secretary
Treasurer
Vote in your hall at dinner March 10 and 11,1981 Hall ID required
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It happens March 23rd. The most unusual nightclub in Lawrence opens its doors. Chevy's Bar and Grill. Chevy's has been designed with one thing in mind ... FUN. Electronic games, superb food and drink, free hot buttered popcorn and an atmosphere that gets down to where the rubber meets the road. If you're a bit bored with the current night scene, come and get re-aligned at CHEVY'S. No restrictions, no rules. . . just the green light to a great time. Because of the 10 day waiting period for private clubs, we suggest you mail in the application form below in order to get off the starting line when we do. Chevy's Bar and Grill. Our motor's running. . . we invite you to come along for the joy ride of your life.
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KANSAN
Thursday, March 12, 1981 Vol. 91, No.114 USPS 650-640
Legislators pass 100 bills beat deadline
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
Final votes on bills average five or six day in the Kansas House of Representatives—usually,
Yesterday the House had to hurry its way through nearly 100 bills in an effort to beat the clock. The rushing, quick debating and chamber-corner political compromising came as a result of yesterday's deadline for bills in their houses of origin.
Among the bills approved in the mass voting yesterday were Lawrence State Rep. Jessie Eranson's child passenger safety seat bill; a bill outlawing the sale, distribution, advertisement of firearms; and a bill allowing a Hayton man, convicted of second-degree burglary, to become a policeman.
ALL THREE of the bills, like many other bills yesterday, were packaged together in bundles of up to eight bills for quick debate, amending and roll-call votes.
Because the House was conducting emergency voting on nearly all of the bills, each bill had to have a two-thirds majority to pass. Although such emergency voting is unusual during normal session days, it is standard procedure on days just before a deadline.
DAVE KRAUS/Skona Stellar
"I don't think that anyone really argued with the emergency drug," State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said on the House floor. "I didn't usually used, in but these cases it needed."
State Rep. John Sobach, D-Lawrence, said that the number of bills that had flowed through the House was a record for this session. Solbach said that the flow of bills had kept the house so busy that no committee meetings had been scheduled for the past three days.
"We have to get these bills out or they will simply die on the House calendar," Solbach said. "To give an idea of how long we have been working in session, we started Monday at 9 a.m. and did not get out until 6 p.m. Tuesday we attended at 9 a.m. and were not finished by 7:30 p.m."
"Sach long hours have made me get my days all mixed up," Charlton said. "The sessions are very difficult."
Solbach said most of the bills that ran through yesterday were local bills. The example he gave was the bill allowing the Hugoton man to join the local police force.
CHARLTON AND BRANSON agreed with Solbach that the long sessions were tiring.
Solbach said he had decided to defend the bill because he admired the courage of the Hugoton man and the Hugoton representative who sponsored the bill.
The bill followed the guidelines recommended by Gov. John Carlin at the beginning of the 1960s and continued into the 1980s.
The biggest locally sponsored bill to get through, however, was Branson's child passenger safety seat bill. Brannon said she had been told by the House Public Health and Welfare Committee.
"That bill got a lot of debate," Solbach said. "I think that a lot of it was from people that worried that this bill would allow all convicts to join law enforcement agencies."
Under that bill, any sale of drug paraphernalia by an adult to a minor at least three years younger is a felony. It would also be illegal to deliver, manufacture or possess drug paraphernalia. Advertisements of paraphernalia also are outlawed in the bill.
SHE SAID after it got out of committee that she expected an equally difficult time getting the bill through the House floor. The bill, however, passed 80-41.
Weather
One bill that passed through the House in a package of eight bills was the drug paraphern
Z
PEASANT
Today the flood of bills was expected to subside somewhat and the next focus of the chambers will be on bills coming over from the other side of the Statehouse.
It will be mostly clear today with a high near 54. Winds will be shifting from the south to the southwest at 5 to 15 mph
There will be diminishing cloud cover
tighten to the surface and variable winds
and low air masses.
Tomorrow will be clear with a high near 50.
BROOMS
University Theatre shop worker cuts wood in front of the only storage area in the shop, which is backstage at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Any other number or supplies needed by the shop must be stacked on the floor until ready for use.
Murphy Hall inadequate, dean says
By CINDY CAMPBELL Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts,
contends that high-quality facilities are an importance
to the school.
Those facilities are lacking for students majoring in music or the dramatic arts, Moeser said.
"We're terribly cramped. Projected enrolment declines won't help much either because Murphy Hall is built for a university of about 10,000 to 15,000 people.
It's an enormously possible situation. It's also terribly unsafe because of fire standards."
HE ALSO EXPRESSSED a concern that students and faculty members might be suffering damage because of large number of cases practicing in the one rehearsal room in Murphy.
"I'm our large ensemble rehearsal hall, 102 Murphy, we have to打 in a marching band of 250 people, nine jazz bands, three concert bands and an organophony orchestra in a room designed for 85 people.
"I're really a mess when the 250-member marching band gets in there. The directors all say, 'We don't have to'."
Moeser outlined two areas that needed immediate attention: rehearsal space and Hoch
"One of the biggest problems we need to solve is that of rehearsal and storage space," he said. "The choral library is housed in the same room as the Murphy fountain pumps, which leak frequently and destroy thousands of dollars worth of sheet music every time they leak.
"I'T A TERRIBLE environment to store
students often have to read scores
caught by online cheating."
Murphy Hall was designed in the early '50s to be a music school, Meoser said. But because of problems getting funding from the legislature at that time, it was considered politically smart to move the drama department into the building also.
See MURPHY page 5
Alarm system recommended for Bailey Hall
By TIM SHARP Staff Reporter
Lawrence firefighters had to go from room to room in Bailey Hall Saturday afternoon to evacuate about 30 people.
There were no injuries in the fire that caused 85,000 in smoke damage, but neither were there any casualties.
Bailey Hall is not the only University building that does not have an alarm system. In fact, several buildings aren't even required to have one.
Kansas State Fire Marshall Ed Redmond said yesterday that buildings built before the adoption of the present fire code did not have to have a permit. The new fire safety standards during fire inspections.
The Kansas Legislature adopted the state fire code in 1970. Under the code, the state fire marshal may require "the installation and maintenance of equipment intended for fire fighting" and "in all buildings in which persons, work, live or congregate from time to time."
Bailley Hall was built in 1900, so a fire alarm is not required in it. Redmond said Bailley was last inspected in June. At that time, the fire inspector recommended that a fire alarm be installed in
"It it takes time to get them put in, but it should have one by now," he said. "We'll be checking on it to see that it's put in."
An electrician for Facilities Operations said lots of older buildings. "didn't have fire alarms.
"There are long range plans to upgrade the older buildings," said the electrician, Bud Overfield. "Marvin and Lindley are being updated now, and Strong and Bailey will be later."
All buildings built since 1970, and those that have been remodeled recently, have fire alarms, said Tom Anderson, director of Facilities Operations.
“As buildings are refurbished, they'll be brought up to date,” he said.
The problem with remodeling the buildings is a lack of funds, Anderson said. The Kansas Legislature must allocate the money for any construction on a state-owned building.
"The economic situation makes money tight for building purposes," he said. "We keep the buildings well-maintained so the chances of fire are low." That's all we can do until we get the money."
Genetic engineering industry offers practical applications
By ANNIKANILSSON Staff Reporter
Editor's Note: This is the first of two articles healing with process and ethical questions of education in an era of technology.
The less-than-dead-decade technology involves taking DNA, which carries a cell's genetic information, from one organism and inserting it into another.
Genetic engineering, which has in rapid succession turned out human insulin, interferon and growth hormones, seems limited only by imagination.
In 1972, Stanford biochemist Paul Berg successfully spliced genes for the first time. To produce a string of genetic information from two different viruses, he carefully cut genes from
Genetic Engineering
one virus using enzymes as biochemical "scissors."
BERG, WHO WILL SPEAK at 1 p.m. tomorrow in Woodruff Auditorium on "Disssection and Reconstruction of Genes and Chromosomes," shared the 1980 Nobel Prize in chemistry for these first gene-splicing experiments.
Berg had planned to insert the recombinant viral DNA into an Escherichia coli, a bacterium common to human intestines and a popular host for new hereditary information. That part of the experiment was never completed because of fears of health hazards.
The genes in the cut-out piece of DNA were then linked to a carrier DNA from another virus.
Berg and other scientists called a six-month moratorium on the brand-new technology to evaluate its risks. Scientists as well as lay people in information science could do with this new genetic information.
THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE of Health has since enacted safety guidelines for gene-splicing research, and the initial fears about dangerous bacteria getting loose have calmed.
According to Robert Weaver, associate professor of biochemistry, the safeguards are aimed at keeping the bugs containing the recombinant DNA in the laboratory. He said the physical containment included working under negative pressure so that all air came in through windows and doors and went out through special filters designed to catch any potential escapees.
"But more important than the physical containment is the biological containment," Weaver said. "You must use weakened strains of bacteria that could not exist outside the laboratory."
WITH SAFETY GUIDELINES intact, DNA is well on its way to becoming big business. The discovery of the cell's own gene splicers, called recombinant DNA, has made mass production of recombinant DNA products.
According to Weaver, the chances that escapees would be disease-causing are extremely remote even if the bacteria could survive outside the laboratory.
"The risks of the typical recombinant DNA experiment are negligible," he said.
The researchers who applied the discovery of gene splitters to recombinant DNA, Herbert Boyer and Stanley Cohen, tried to patent the process.
They were turned down by the U.S. Patent Office, which argued that new life forms could not be patented. However, a Supreme Court decision last June overturned that position.
Boyer has since help launch Genetach in, which was the first gene splicing company in the United States.
So far, the gene splicing industry has turned out several clinically important proteins and enzymes that can be used in drug development.
IF, FOR EXAMPLE, genes for converting atmospheric nitrogen into biologically usable forms could be spilled into the DNA of wheat and other crops, farmers could reduce fertilizer use.
Genetic engineering also has the potential for curing blood diseases, such as sickle cell anemia and hemophilia.
See GENETICS page 5
KU convocation scheduled
The University-wind convocation, at which Acting Chancellor Del Shankel will address major issues facing the University of Kansas, has been scheduled for Thursday, March 26.
The convocation will be at 4 p.m. in the Kansas Union's Woodruff Auditorium. The convocation's agenda has not yet been determined, Jim Scally, administrative assistant, said yesterday, adding that the agenda might be released by tomorrow.
Although Woodruff Auditorium seats only 500 people, Scaally said the whole University was invited to the convoitation. Shankel choiced a guest speaker, seats the number of people expected to attend.
When Shankel announced the convocation last week, he declined to say what issues would be addressed. He did say that the meeting had been suggested by the KU Chapter of the American Association of University Professors.
Green ribbons a memorial to murdered Atlanta children
Staff Reporter
By EDDIE WILLIAMS
Once again, a ribbon has become a symbol during an American crisis.
Recently, yellow ribbons were tied around trees to honor the U.S. hostages held in Iran. But today, it's green ribbons that are being worn in remembrance of 21 Atlanta black children murdered or missing in a string of killings that started in July 1979.
Strewn along Jayhawk Boulevard are bright green ribbons tied to trees in protest of the
A green ribbon worn in an inverted V has become a symbol of protest against the killings.
THE IDEA STARTED in Atlanta but has now spread throughout the country.
Elenora Adams, spokesman for a concerned group of Lawrence citizens, said, "When the killer or killers are caught, we will turn the V up and remove them from the ribs and wear the ribs until the murders are solved."
The community coalition has scheduled a half-mile silent march for 3 p.m. Sunday from City Hall to the Judicial Building at 11th and New Hampshire streets.
"Our actions will make it clear that we won't tolerate violence against children anywhere, be they in our own communities."
The coalition is asking supporters to tie green ribbons to their trees or attach green bows to their canopies.
Adams, president of the Lawrence chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said the Lawrence group had been in touch with similar groups in Atlanta.
save the youth, whom the coalition says are "the nation's greatest treasure."
In other local action concerning the Atlanta killings, the Black Pantherellic Council, the governing body of black Greek organizations, has organized a petition drive requesting government assistance to defray the cost of the investigation of the killings. The petitions will be sent to President Reagan.
AT THE MARCH, Adams said, ribbons and badges will be distributed, many of which were made by senior citizens of the Edgewood Homes Meal Site and Babcock Homes.
The Reagan Administration has released nearly $1 million in federal funds for social programs, but no money has been allocated to study the investigation by its special police task force.
At the end of February, the cost of the investigation was estimated at $1 million and was paid.
Bills have been introduced in both houses of Congress to provide the city with up to $1.8
THE DEMONSTRATIONS of support for the children are made to combat a national feeling of helplessness, Derek Rovaris, Topeka junior and member of Phi Beta Sigma, said.
"The feeling in Atlanta is that there is a general lack of concern about civil rights in the country," Rovaris said. "We want to show that the University of Kansas—black as well as white—cares about the situation. We're trying to get everybody involved."
Rovaris said that not enough action was being taken by Atlanta police.
"I think the police and the media in general let it get out of hand," Rovaris said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 12, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Fee credits may aid some students
WASHINGTON—The Reagan administration's tuition tax credit plan can be expected to help families in children in private schools and colleges, but not necessarily those with children in public colleges, Terrel Bell, secretary of education, said today.
Bell spoke to the House Subcommittee on Postsecondary Education.
When questioned by a reporter, Bell said there was agreement within the administration that parents of students in private elementary, secondary and higher schools would be permitted.
He said the major uncertainty involved whether parents of public college students would be eligible for such tax credits and how large a break would be needed.
As Congress got down to work on the education and other issues, House Democrats challenged the "mirrors and magic" economic forecasts on which they had been relying.
Bell earlier testified before the subcommittee about administration plans to limit college loans, saying that without restraint the cost of the program will soar out of sight. The administration wants to make it harder for students to get federally guaranteed loans and grants.
"We are not going to put out a budget based on mirrors and magic," warned Rep. James Jones, D-OKA, House Budget Committee chairman.
JERUSALEM–Israel's Parliament, in a session boycotted by many government and opposition members, yesterday defeated a bill to annex the island.
"We are not going to put out a budget based on assumptions that six months or a year from now will be held up to ridicule," he said.
Israeli parliament drops Golan bill
The measure was voted down 45-14 with five abstentions in the 120-member house. Fifty-six legislators, including Foreign Minister Yilzhak Shamir and opposition Party leader Shimon Peres, boycotted the debate.
But Agriculture Minister Ariel Sharon defied the government decision to oppose the bill and voted for it. The proposed legislation was sponsored by Geula Cohen's right-wing Tehiya Party, the same party that last August pushed a pass through a law solidifying the annexation of East Jerusalem.
The negative vote on the preliminary reading effectively killed the Golan bill.
El Salvador rejects mediation offer
SAN SALVADOR, EI Salvador—EI Salvador's ruling junta has rejected as "totally unacceptable" an offer by the Organization of American States to negotiate a peaceful solution to the fighting between Marxist-led guerrillas and government forces.
Leftist guerrillas yesterday bombed and shot at an army troop convoy truck, and at least three civilians were found to death near the capital, in Tchelyabinsk.
The U.S.-backed military-Christian democratic junta Tuesday released copies of a diplomatic note delivered to the OAS rejecting the organization's offer to intercede in the crisis to seek a peaceful solution.
The note said intervention was unwanted and unacceptable.
Meanwhile, El Salvador's top leaders vowed that American military advisers would never be sent into combat in the war-torn country and dismissed as leftist propaganda the fear that the United States was being drawn into another Vietnam.
In Ottawa, Secretary of State Alexander Haig said that the United States would not increase aid to El Salvador beyond the "modest" shipments of food and medicine.
Ban on Angolan aid reconsidered
WASHINGTON—President Reagan is expected to ask Congress next week to lift a ban on aid to rebel forces in Angola, congressional sources said yesterday.
The decision will underscore the new administration's determination to resist Cuban and Soviet-backed involvement in Africa, the Middle East and Asia.
The present government of Angola took power in early 1976 after Cuban support, with Soviet aid, helped it defeat the Unit forces of Josua Savimbi, whose forces had been fighting with the Red Army.
Cuban troops remain in the country, but Savimbi's insurgency continues. State Department sources said Reagan and Secretary of State Alexander Haig had made no firm decision to seek repeal of the five-year-old ban on airsoft or direct aid to the Angolan insurgents.
ATLANTA—Police are working under the theory that as many as 10 different killers may be involved in Atlanta's string of 20 unsolved child murders, it was reported last night.
But congressional sources said Reagan was likely to ask that Congress repeal the ban, imposed in 1976.
Multiple killers suspected in Atlanta
"It is surprising that they haven't solved even one" of the killings, Slaton said.
He said the cause of death was a key factor in separating the killings. The last seven victims all were strangled or suffaced. Although some of the people who died were also were blighted, stabbed or shot, and some bodies were too deceased to determine the cause of death, but all were discovered in the same area.
Atlanta city officials called on concerned Americans to appeal to Congress for money to aid the police investigation of Atlanta's child slaying crisis but wooded citizens not to start carrying guns.
Public Safety Commissioner Lee P. Brown said people should not arm themselves in a city where 20 black children have been slain since July 1979. Another boy, 10-year-old Darron Glass, is still missing.
Mayor Maynard Jackson called on Americans to pressure their congressmen to back a bill already introduced to provide funding for the institute.
In other developments, 11 members of the Guardian Angels, a youth group from New York City, arrived after a 19-hour train ride to help teach children how to protect themselves on the street. But Brown indicated they would get a chilly reception from Atlanta authorities.
Pakistan negotiating for hostages
DAMASCUS, Syria—Pakistan released two prisoners yesterday and sent them with a top negotiator to Damascus to try to save the lives of 102 hostages held by three terrorists aboard a hijacked jetliner for the past 10 days.
The terrorists, who already have killed one hostage and threatened repeatedly to kill the rest, said they would give Pakistan until 11 a.m. EST today to release 90 other prisoners. They said this was the last of several deadlines, including one that had passed earlier in the day.
Pakistan has indicated it would be willing to release 46 of the prisoners on the hijackers' list.
The two prisoners flown to Damascus were the father and brother of one of the terrorists, whose hostages include three Americans among the 93 passengers and nine crew members on the Pakistan International Airlines plane.
Fakistani officials in Islamabad said that the negotiators brought an offer to the investigators, and that the two prisoners, as described as suspect murderers, had been released.
Dean of College named
A professor of political science at Northwestern University will become dean of KU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences effective July 1.
intellectually and financially," he said, "and I think the opportunity offered at Kansas is bolstered by the nature of the state's commitment to higher education in the state of Kansas economy in this time of generally troubled economics."
Jerry Hutchinson, acting vice chancellor for academic affairs, announced yesterday that Robert L. Timmons, the new top administrator of the College.
"Dr. Lineberry is a distinguished scholar with an international reputation in the field of political science," Hutchinson said. "In addition, he brings a sense of freshness and vigor to KU which I will be stimulating to all who will work with him."
Lineberry expressed enthusiasm similar to Hutchinson's concerning his appeal.
Lineberry will replace acting dean Robert Hoffman. Hoffman has served as acting dean since last July when Robert Cobb, previous dean of the College was named executive vice chancellor for the Lawrence campus.
The University is in strong shape
Lineberry, 38, has been a member or the Northwestern faculty since 1974. Before that he was associate professor of political science at the University of Texas at Austin. A native of Oklahoma City, Lineberry earned his doctorate in 1969 from the University of Northern Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Admissions director selected
The KU Office of Admissions and Records faces the same problems that admissions offices across the nation face, the new director of admissions said yesterday when she assumed her duties.
"We're facing a more competitive market with more institutions recruiting fewer students," Linda Thompson, the new director, said.
"Our recruitment has always emphasized academic programs, campus
Appointed director yesterday, Thompson said her office would continue its regular recruitment practices despite the more competitive market.
Until yesterday, Thompson was assistant director for admissions. She has assumed her new position at a time when the office is somewhat short and the workload is heavy, she said. Two assistant director positions are vacant.
Thompson's new duties include supervising all communication between KU and Kansas high schools and community colleges. Additionally, she will coordinate on-campus visits and field trips to places like Thompson will also oversee admissions counseling for minorities, foreign students and other groups.
Ladies' and Gents' Night
Every Thursday night—
everyone receives a free
drink coupon from 9 - 11
NO COVER!
GAMMONS
SNOWWOG
即
Summer Orientation Program 1981 STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
. . leadership abilities
. . knowledge of University programs & activities
. . interpersonal communication skills
. . enthusiasm about program
. . student in good academic standing
and returning to KU for Fall 1981 term.
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS
AVAILABLE IN ADMISSION & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL
APPLICATIONS DUE BY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25.
an equal opportunity employer
IN FOOTBALL,
WE WENT HEAD TO HEAD.
BUT WHEN IT COMES TO LITE BEER,
WE SEE EYE TO EYE.
Fred "The Hammer" Williamson and Billy Kilmer
1981 Milo? Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
LITE BEER FROM MILLER. EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS.
Co
During night, the squeezed $18,886.50 the $12.77
The r reallocate other final deli
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University Daily Kansan, March 12, 1981 Page 3
Committee slashes funding requests
During final budget deliberations last night, the Academic Affairs Committee squeezed its requests, which totalled 13,729,344 requests below the $12,779,344 to have贮备.
The remaining money may be reallocated to groups funded under other committees during the Senate's final deliberations.
Academic Affairs made final decisions on five groups last night and then approved the entire budget recommendation.
The committee decided to reject the Kansas Defender Project's request for $2,067.98 because the service provided by the program was limited to an exclusive membership of only the conference students who work with the program.
THE PROGRAM received $150 during supplemental hearings last fall.
Senate funded groups must be open for participation or services to all students, according to the funding philosophy.
Gib Kurschner, committee co-chairman, told the committee that a rider had been attached to the group's recommendation in 1978, stipulating that it no longer should receive Senate funding.
The committee cut the School of Education Organization's request from $25.50 to $115 and attached to the recommendation a rider stating that the group should not receive Senate funding after this year.
THE CHANCERY CLUB, a group for pre-law students, was granted its entire $229 request.
The committee cut the Engineering Student Council's request from $2,099.70 to $1,860.
A rider ending Senate funding after this year accompanied the decision to cut the Kansas Engineer magazine's license fee, and all students have access to the magazine.
The Student Services Committee, which had $27,403.42 to allocate, reduced its requests to $27,374 63.
The amount of money requested from various groups totaled about $43,000. Seventeen groups requested money from the committee this year.
The groups and their final recommendations were:
- Latin American solidarity, $595
- Native American Alliance. $216
BIG BLUE
Property Management, Inc.
RENTALS IN THE LAWRENCE AREA
842-3175
2340 Alabama St.
- Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service, $1,134.40
Maggie's Panty
7:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
Thursday's 11:00 P.M.
1000 Massachusetts
841-5404
- Volunteer Clearinghouse, $809.19
(Big Brothers and Sisters program)
* Man's Coalition, $55.79
- Consumer Affairs Association,
$5,374.44
VOLUME 11, NO. 20
- Commission on the Status of Women, $2,459.65
- MECHA. $890
- Committee on South Africa, $160
- Committee on South Africa, $160
* Friends of Headquarters, $54.37
* River City Women's Health
- River City Women's Health Collective, $758.60
- Non-Traditional Student Association. $725
- Black Student Union, $4,139.72
* KU Weather, $87.84
Two groups were not allocated funds. One of them failed to present information in person, and the other wasn't funded because the committee wasn't sure what committee the group should be funded under.
These groups will be able to request money from the full Senate, but it would probably not effect the allocations last night, the committee said.
FRIENDS OF HEADQUARTERS and the Consumer Affairs Association
The Cultural Committee voted on its final recommendations for the Senate, paring $20,000 of student organization requests down to $7,253.19.
received about half of what they originally had requested. These groups will be able to apply for more money at the fall supplemental hearings.
The committee exceeded the budget set for it by the Senate by $601.
Ron Heaple, committee co-chairman, said he hoped the Senate would fund the extra spending by trimming the recommendations of other committees or by using some unallocated funds to finance Culture Committee groups.
The final committee recommendations are:
- Arab Student Organization -$250
* Tau Sigma Dna Education Ensemble -$891.90
* Chinese Student Association -$42
* Indian Student Association -$180
* India Club -$400
- Polish Students Organization—$150
* Nigerian Students Association—$185
* African Student Association—$300
* Thai Association—$340
- KU International Club—$2,700.85
Reporter working on this story were Karen Schueter, Rob Strond and David Lombardo.
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Opinion
Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 12, 1981
And it's on to Wichita
By winning the Big Eight post-season basketball tournament last weekend, the Kansas Jayhawks proved they were the best team in the Big Eight. But they have yet to prove they're the best team in the state.
This weekend, as the NCAA tournament's field of 48 teams is whitted to 16, KU will play one—or hopefully two—games in Wichita's Henry Levitt Arena. Beware, hometown favorite Wichita State also will be a participant at the Wichita subregional.
Arizona State and Iowa, the teams' second-round opponents, may prevent such a matchup, there still is a possibility that the two Kansas schools may play.
The Shockers have long wanted to play KU, but the folks on Mount Oread have steadfastly refused. If both teams win their next two games, the Jayhawks will have no choice but to play Wichita State. Although
Wichita State won the Missouri Valley Conference regular-season title and has a formidable front line. A KU-Wichita State matchup would be good for the state, despite a reluctance on the part of many KU students and alumni.
New Orleans. It seems a faraway place for KU to prove it's the best team in the state. But don't be shocked if it works out that way.
Fortunately for the Jayhawks, a KU-Wichita State game—at least this year—would not be played in Wichita. Instead the game would be played in New Orleans, site of the 1981 NCAA Midwest Regional.
Black, white living standards becoming even more unequal
大
By ROBERT S. ENGLAND New York Times Special Features
NEW YORK—The gap between the living standards of white and black people in the United States is wider today than it was when the civil movement gained momentum in the early 1960s.
The ushering in of a new age of legal equality between the two races has been followed by a decade, 170 to 1980, of losses in the struggle for economic equality.
This development is particularly disappointing in light of the large spending programs for social welfare and equal opportunity that began with the work of Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society program.
The bridge of understanding between the races that was built in the 1960s seems to be in disrepair, too. Gone are the days of hope that followed the enactment of stronger voting-right laws, the court initiatives to end separate-but equal education and the dawn of federal policies aimed at giving blacks a better chance to catch up to whites.
Although many have attributed the declining fortunes of blacks to the severe national economic problems of the last decade, the small economic gains that whites have made in the same period suggest that our national, state and local policies are failing to address the problem of inequality adequately.
It has become clear to just about everyone that some of the basic precepts of liberalism seem to have been off-target, in spite of liberals' good intentions.
A psychological barrier to blacks' progress is a misconception in 1960s civil rights liberalism that first appeared among whites and later was accepted by some blacks. The whites argued that blacks were not responsible for their plight in the white-collar job market, and that their inability to rise out of poverty and find a better life. Society was to be blamed; they said; some even called our society sick.
While the power of this indictment helped shatter the conservative rationale that those who actually try can overcome poverty, it has had some unintended side effects.
It slighted the fact that many blacks have indeed risen out of poverty since colonial times—those who bought their way out of slavery by labor; those who fled to freedom; those free blacks who made their way in the world after the Emancipation Proclamation. The liberals' argument is that in it that viewed black people as helpless—a view that in itself is a form of racism.
The new message from liberals in the 1960s
affected segments of the black population differently. Those who had been held back by legal and non-legal racial barriers took heart and struggled harder to overcome them.
An important visible minority of blacks has become very successful since then. A very large second group has risen into the middle class. Yet, at least half, and possibly more, of America's blacks are economically worse off than they were.
These blacks, the "hard core" as they are now called, reacted differently to the whites' message that society is to blame for the plight of the black man and woman. Since, in fact, society forces blacks to work harder than whites to "make it," some, accepting the stereotype of inner-city hopelessness, found it too easy to blame "Whitey" and excuse themselves.
And since the degree of work required to "make it" is, of course, considerable, the hard knocks and the lifetime efforts that are taken have taken their toll of ambitions and energies.
Further, the unrealistic expectation, propagated by liberals, that blacks trapped in a cycle of poverty can extricate themselves from it quickly by the infusion of federal money is wrong. Spending that is not accompanied by a stronger commitment by white employers and white neighbors to judge black people as individuals on their own merit will not work.
Morover, if only a few whites drop their prejudices, the effect is not sufficient. Rather, what is needed to break the psychological barrier that holds our nation back is a general improvement in racial attitudes across the whole population.
Further improvement in racial relations is possible. It must be preceded, among whites and blacks, by a clearer understanding of the task at hand.
Society must re-emphasize the role of individual effort in altering one's fortunes. As the conservatives note, self-help has been the traditional mode of success. It must, however, be accompanied by blacks' patience with their slow progress, for results do not appear overnight.
Black people have taken the initiative with efforts such as those of the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, head of Operation PUSH, which are aimed at instilling a sense of purpose in individuals whose vision is limited and trapped by the ghetto world they experience.
And, too, whites who have given up their own hopes that blacks can improve their lot and live equally with other Americans must re-examine the reality of their situation that impatience carries racial condescension.
Robert S. England writes frequently on public- policy issues.
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Why am I the one feeling the labor pains?
POLAND
FREEDOM
LOTTERY
© 1981 CHICAGO TIBUNE
By ABRAHAM BRUMBERG New York Times Special Features
New attitude could ease Poland woes
WASHINGTON-Since September, the news from Poland has followed a consistent pattern: Mounting confrontations between workers and the party, peasants and the party, students and the party, followed by last-minute negotiation and compromises.
Similarly, the reaction in Washington has been consistent: As the clouds gather, doom-laden predictions of a Soviet invasion fill the air; when the predictions fall to come true, officals and newspaper columnists offer not yet "get" gone but in time for sure.
An attitude that in effect invests the idea of Soviet military intervention with legitimacy is profoundly reprehensible. And the complacent assumption—usually referred to as the "worst-case scenario"—that an invasion untreatable is "not only morally repugnant, but destroys our perception of the complex processes that have been unfolding in Poland.
To begin with, we should recognize that Poland is different, that its upheaval is historically unique, and that the Soviet leaders know this. What we are seeing is not at first glance as good as 1956, aimed at overthrowing the regime and extracting the country from the Soviet orbit.
We are not seeing a revolt of a party confident, as the Czech reformists in 1968, that "socialism with a human face" is devoutly to be wished, and therefore commuted, in Czechoslovakia and in the Soviet Union. Rather, we are seeing a movement of more than 35 million determined workers, intellectuals, peasants, professionals, students, and even civilian employees of the armed forces.
The movement enjoys the support of the Roman Catholic Church and of influential lay Catholic groups. In the movement's ranks are nearly a million party members. Its goal is not merely to obtain economic betterment but, essentially, fashion a new order by existing the existence of a multiplicity of autonomous social groups with the rule of a single political party.
How is the new relationship between the society and the political authorities to be forged? Only by continuous dialogue and negotiated settlements, and only, as Warsaw radio put it candidly the other day, if the nation would announce new policies and then expecting the nation "obediently to listen and pretend that it had been convinced."
A movement of this nature is not likely to succumb to intimidations or to submit peacefully to a foreign invader—which is, of course, we may be sure, Moscow also is aware of.
In recent months, voices in the highest party echelons have urged an end to the "old habits," pleading for a genuine "partnership" as the only way to avert confrontations that might indeed temp Moskow to seek to establish "order" by force of arms.
Yet many observers in Washington, obsessed with the "worst-case scenario," have paid little attention to them. Fortunately, Solidarity has stood its ground and the voices of realism have prevailed—at least for the time being.
The new prime minister, Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, has asked for a three-month moratorium on strikes to allow the government to work with the social dialogue within a defused atmosphere.
The new deputy prime minister, Mieczyslaw Rakowski, who in his previous presidency has called for a nuclear deal.
urged the authorities to treat their "partners" with "respect," reiterated his plea in the Sjep (Parliament). He also urged speedy enactment of the new bill liberalizing censorship whose "intolerable" delay had caused bitter resentment in the country.
Other speakers fully supported the workers' and peasants' demands, and criticized the government's recent strident attacks on the "anti-socialist elements," especially the Social Self-Defense Committee, known as Kor.
In response, the unions have indicated readiness to accept the moratorium—as long as the government keeps its share of the bargain.
And in a remarkable interview in a Warsaw daily, Solidarity's press spokesman—himself a Kor member—praised Gen. Jurzelski's speech, pointedly stressing that only a "strong government" capable of taking even "unpopular measures" while fully "respecting Solidarity as a partner" could end Poland's political and economic chaos.
Of course, no one can predict the outcome of these complex processes. Negotiations may again break down, spawning new and even more dangerous crises. And any assumption that they will occur under no circumstances intervene is as absurd as the confident assertion that it will.
But the West can help—not by issuing somber warnings that the workers and others "cool it" lest they be overrun by foreign tanks, but by helping them and their allies—above all, by providing desperately needed economic aid—to bring an increasing measure of democracy, prosperity and stability to their troubled land.
Abraham Brumberg, former editor of the journal, Problems of Communism, is a visiting fellow at the John Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.
Tourney tickets scarce for Kansas fans
It's time for a quiz. You're probably fed up with exams about this time of year, but this one was not.
Q: Which of the following is most difficult?
A. Passing a camel through the eye of a needle.
B. Making an "A" on your English midterm.
C. Getting a ticket to KU's sub-regional basketball game at Wichita State University this Friday
If you were one of the more than 250 people who waited outside the athletic ticket office at Allen Field House on Monday, you probably chose answer C.
“What Luck,” most Jayhawk fans probably had thought when the NCAA announced that KU would play its preliminary rounds at Wichita. But the game will see them see the game and cheer our dear Jayhawks on.”
So you and a buddy were numbers 101 and 102, or something like that. Bummer. You feel like you deserved those tickets. After all, you've invested a lot in the 'Hawks—$15 for a season ticket. Wednesday and Saturday nights for the past five months. The price of maybe 100 beers, dwned in celebration after winning games and in consolation after losses.
"What a disappointment," many fans ended up thinking when KU ticket officials had counted off the 100 students who would be allowed to purchase seats.
Before you start getting really mad and blaming everybody from Darnell Valentine to your mother for this calamity, you'd better understand how the tickets are distributed. A basic primer in the allocation of precision labels, namely sub-regional basketball tickets.
Now you're going to be rooting from your couch or the stool of a local bar, and it just won't work.
The tickets must be sold for an average minimum price of $9.
all needed them this year, so they were divided up equally, and each school got 125.
It all starts with the NCAA. It's their tournament, so they get to decide who gets how many tickets. NCAA guidelines stipulate that each participating school gets 20 for each student in the pool of 500 tickets that the schools can divvy up according to need. Well, WSU, KU, Mississippi and Southern
What the schools do with their 375 previous tickets is up to them. Here, students in general
JUDY
WOODBURN
ALEXANDRA
got 100, slightly less than one third of the total attendance. According to sports information director Larson, this reflects the fact that he one-third of the regular season ticket holders are students.
Thirty-five tickets go to the pep band, because we couldn't have a basketball game without the sweet refrain of "I'm a Jayhawk" in the background. The rest go to Williams Fund contributors, alumni, officers of the players, coaches and other assorted athletic biewigs.
Now here's the tricky part. It's like a grade school math problem. Henry Levitt Arena at WSU holds 10,600. After you take out 375 for each class, 9,100 tickets remain. Who gets those?
Again, the NCAA stipulates that the host institution—in our case, it was WSU—gets to determine how these are distributed. Margie Dersi, a student at NC State, said last November, the WSU season ticket holders
and boosters had the first option. After Dec. 2,
tickets were fair game for anybody.
As Deral puts it, she doesn't care who gets the tickets, as long as somebody buys them. You just need to buy a ticket.
"The people who get really irate," she said, "are the ones who wait, the ones who want to be nice when people show up."
It doesn't seem fair. Fans are disappointed. KU Coach Ted Owens probably is disappointed. Knockout best of us, he thought having the game in Wellesley was better than not giving our fans an extra opportunity to be there."
In other words, he who hesitates doesn't get a ticket.
Well, you could get angry at the NCAA and say they should make more tickets available to participating schools. But what if the KU game were, say, in Austin? There's a chance that KU would win, which would be on the campus and the University of Texas, which has a bigger arena, would be left holding the bag. er. tickets.
So what do you do if you don't get a ticket? You plunk yourself down on the couch with a beer and watch a lousy black-and-white TV with no horizontal hold. You feel sorry for yoursef.
But you also feel hopeful. If the 'Hawks win Friday, you just may have a shot at one of the tickets for Sunday. (The ticket office here hasn't decided how they' be distributed yet, though.)
What's more, if they win Sunday, they get to play in the Louisiana Superdome, which could hold more than 30,000. And according to the headline, KU would give a whole 759 tickets for that one. AKA.
Mu
"It was other do faculty o" We've o
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affirmed, a note that the letter should include the writer's home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
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University Daily Kansan, March 12, 1981
Page 5
Murphy
From page 1
"It wasn't re-designed to accommodate the other department, though, so now we have faculty offices in closets and stairwells" he said. "We've used every inch of space."
Another problem with Murphy, according to Moeser, is that it doesn't have an elevator. His feet and percussion instruments have to be moved in front of him down Murphy's five flights of steps almost daily.
The lack of space and facilities is causing other problems, too. Moeser said.
"We have people graduating in directing who have never directed a show in their lives," he said. "They're getting only classroom instruction and not the practical experience they need."
Ann Shock, Overland Park senior in theatre, agreed that space limitations were affecting her
"The rooms that are available in the evenings are used for the main shows because they can't rehearse on the main stage." Shock said. "Most of them have to be being built. Students who want to rehearse
have to go to Robinson or the Satellite Union and find facilities on their own.
"It really frustrating because in directing, you use props, furniture and various other large pieces of equipment that you can't drag with you to rehearse.
'I won't have a chance to direct anything on my own before I graduate just because of space
MOESER SAID that KU needed small proenium theatre that seated about 400 to 100
"The University Theatre seats 1,200 and is too large for an ideal university theatre facility," he said. "The Inge Theatre is a converted storage room so it's not much help either."
Another major area of concern, Moeser said, is the need for a first-rate cone ball.
"We use Hoch now, but it's an acoustical nightmare and a distinct embarrassment to the University," he said. The place used to be a basketball arena. It's also aesthetically terrible because it hasn't had an interior physical uplift since the 20s.
"Hoch has limited lighting capabilities and no
backstage facilities. It's also inaccessible for parking.
"When the Paul Taylor Dance Company performed last week, we had to rent a floor and a stage."
Performers in the Rock Chalk Revue, which is held each March, are forced to dress and warm-up in Strong Hall and run across the street to be because of the lack of dressing facilities.
A PLAN FOR a new performing arts center is now under consideration, according to Meeser, who has been the artistic director of the opera.
A choice of a major addition to Marphy Hall and a new building on West Campus is being considered. Moser estimated the final cost at $20 to $40 million.
"We hope to be able to use private money for most of the costs," he said.
Remodeling Hoch Auditorium would be a waste, according to Moeser
"It would cost about the same as building a whole new structure, and we would still have just a fixed-up old building that's inaccessible," he said.
"It short, we're not able to supply the quality education we should because of the lack of facilities, and we're not able to supply the quality education we should because of the lack that we would like to. Something has got to give."
ACCORDING TO Executive Vice Chancellor Robert Cobolt, plans for a new performing arts center are in the earliest stages, however, if not non-existent.
"It is a generally perceived need that the University needs a new performing arts center." Cobb said, "but it's clearly in the very preliminary stages because the capital building fund is planned out years ahead of time and the proposal hasn't been introduced at all.
"There is no doubt that the demand and need is there, but it takes years to collect the amount of money required."
Genetics
From page 1
The treatment would include gene transplants in bone marrow cells, replacing defective genes with normal ones. Bone marrow produces red blood cells.
Gene splicing may also give scientists a looking glass into the information stored in the DNA over evolutionary time. In coming years they may, for example, reveal the details of how
green plants can capture sunlight in photosynthesis.
Recombinant DNA techniques also have become a powerful tool in basic research. Three KU researchers, Weaver and assistant of microbiology Robert Su and William Haldeman, are present using the techniques to answer questions in molecular biology.
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TONIGHT:
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The Moffet-Beers Bond
MOFFET-BEERS BAND
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Tomorrow Night:
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Return of the great electric blues!
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Tonight:
Lawrence Favorites
The Moffet-Beers Band
MOFFET-BEERS BAND
Dance All Night! Students & Members $2.00
Tomorrow Night:
Spend the evening with Luther Adams and his group
Return of the great electric blues!
Also: ALCHEMY Saturday!
Cheap Pitchers & Drinks 8-9 all 3 nights!
Every Sunday.
Lynch & McBee-FREE in cellar!
March 18: Cowboy X
20, 21: Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown
Where the stars are
7th & Meas
842-6930
Lawrence Opera House
Tonight:
Lawrence Favorites
The Moffet-Beers Band
Tonight:
Lawrence Favorites
The Moffet-Beers Band
MOFFET-BEERS BAND
Dance All Night! Students & Members $2.00
Tomorrow Night:
Spend the evening with
Luttrell Aison
and his group
Return of the great electric blues!
Also: ALCHEMY Saturday!
Cheap Pitchers & Drinks 8-9 all 3 nights!
Every Sunday.
Lynch & McBee-FREE in cellar!
March 18: Cowboy X
20, 21: Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown
Where the stars are
7th & Meas
842-6930
Lawrence Opera House
Spend the evening with Luther Adams and his group
Return of the great electric blues!
Spend the evening with
Luther Alison
and his group
Return of the great
electric blues!
Also: ALCHEMY Saturday!
Cheap Pitchers & Drinks 8-9 all 3 nights!
Every Sunday:
Lynch & McBee-FREE in color!
March 18: Cowboy X
20, 21: Clarence 'Gatermouth' Brown
Where the stars are
7th & Mass
842 6930
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Opera House
Board of Class Officers Elections
For Next Year's So. * Jr. * Sr. Class Officers
- Petitions now available in Student Senate Office 105B, Kansas Union
- Filing Deadline: 5:00 pm Friday, March 27
- Elections April 14-15
- Questions? Call 864-4556 or 841-0487
THE CROSSING Coupon Special!!
1/2 Sub Sandwich of your choice
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GRAND OPENING HARRIS MENSWEAR
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Shirts . Pants . Suits
Hats . Ties
Sportcoats
Entire stock not included.
Alterations available at cost.
811 Massachusetts • Lawrence Ks • 749-1800
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, March 12, 1981
Hollywood offers viewers respectable movie choices
By MIKE GEBERT
Contributing Reviewer
A theater is 24 hours a day, 363 days a year. A day has 24 hours, 363 days out of the year, a few hours of the day.
That's why midnight movies were invented, and that's why Hollywood does its best to provide a steady stream of movies throughout the year to lure you away from your TV set. A box-office hit, "American Gigol," indeed, last year's "American Gigol" became a hilly because it came out at an off-break time of the year. Paramount figured they could dump this apparent bomb in February and nobody would notice. But starved moviegoers pounced on it as the only new movie in town, and made it
So while the next few months won't bring any blockbusters, the screen should be brightly lit with a stream of respectable movie choices. And you never know . . . one of these could be the next "Star Wars." (But more on that in a moment.) What to look for in the next couple of months.
MELVIN AND HOWARD. Universal originally released the latest film by critically acclaimed director Jonathan Demme last year; advertised as a yuk-yuk yokel comedy instead of the sharp descendant of Preston Sturge's comedies that it is, died. With the help of a few Oscar nominations, it has been resurrected and may yet hit Lawrence. It's the story of Melvin Dummar, the gas-station attendant who picked up a driver who turned out to be Howard Higges in a fight. Though that film is based on it, it's really about the American dream, with a fresh, funny-serial slant. Paul LeMat is Melvin, and Oscar-nominee Mary Steenburgen is his wife.
MOVIES
THEIF. James Cana stars as John Bardolino, one of the world's most successful and accomplished thieves. This is the first feature film directed by Michael Mann, director of the TV movie "The Jericho Mile" with Peter Strasburg. Hollywood is expecting it to be a new "French
Connection," from a different point of view of course.
THE DOGS OF WAR. Frederick ("The Day of the Jackal") Forsyth's espiionage thriller, about a mercenary hired by a multinational consortium to overthrow a government in a potentially lucrative country, stars Christopher Walken (Nick from "The Deer Hunter") in his first leading role. Directed by John Irvin, it promises to be a thoughtful, exciting and hopefully more than one-dimensional thriller, something we haven't had in quite a while.
SPHINX. Yes, it's quite probably dreadful,
starring TV's reigning petticots-and-sleaze queen, Lesley-Anne Down, overactor Frank Langelia and, in nice color photography, those pyramids. We can hope that the adaptation of "Asteroid Mk.15" has some fun, at least, though mummy-curses stories are a bad ol' fashioned by now. Franklin Schaffner ("Planet of the Ames") directed.
Flynn, there are fourteen-year-olds and there are fourteen-year-olds, especially in Hollywood). His first Oscar nomination since "Chinatown" stars natassia Jasksi as the heroine of Thomas Hardy's "Tess of the D'Urbervilles." Reviewers note that she overly caudal, as would seem prudent for Polarski's adaptation, but given the source material and Polarski's reputation, it should be interesting.
TESS, Roman Polanski's first film since his troubles with the law (as the judge said to Errol
RAGTIME. Milos "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." Forman took over this adaptation of E.L. Doctorov's 1975 bestseller after producer Dino DeLaures命指 Robert Alman and numerous writers, concentrating on a fiction novel set in the early 1900s, on an embittered black in the early 1900s, on a life shooting of Stanford White, and drawing in characters like Emma Goldman, Scott Joplin and Houdini, the Czech-born Forman should make it an interesting look at America. James was lured from retirement to play a police officer as Stanford White leads a cast newcomers.
FOR YOUR EYES ONLY. The latest James Bond thriller will be due in early summer. The fifth Bond film for Roger Moore and the thirteenth in the series, should be a bit more refined than its glitzy predecessor, "Moonraker". There should be more reliance on character, less on special effects, and the beautiful woman at Bond's side will be played by Carole Bouquet, whom many know from Bunuel's "That Obscure Man". The movie also presents plenty of fast-paced expensive action to mesmerize the viewer as Bond goes to battle with yet another power-mad criminal genius.
EXCALIBUR. And if you still haven't had enough adventure, stand by for a Tolkien-esque boom in sword-and-sorcery stories, including: "Conan the Barbarian," with Arnold Schwarzenegger, a version of Tristan and Isolde from "Allen" director Ridley Scott, a planned sequel to *The Lord of the Rings* experimental director Harsun-Lursen Syberian fame, and "Excalibur," perhaps the most promising of all. Directed by John Boorman, who did "Deliverance" and "Zardoz," a mad-
10
denying brilliant and stupid film which might qualify as the most pretentious science fiction
This version of the legend of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table could be the definitive screen version of that tale (not that there's much competition). A fine cast of moderately well-known British actors, including Nicol Williamson as Merlin and splendid location
photography aid what some suspect could be the next "Star Wars."
STAR WARS. Speaking of which ... it's all very quiet now, but it seems likely that sometime in April George Lucas *space-western epic* will be re-released. Last time it was re-released, it was followed by ten top-grossing films of the year, so get ready to stand in for the how many times is it now?
TODAY
THE UNIVERSITY OPEN FORUM with
kira and executive vice chancellor, will be
at 2:30 p.m. on Thursday.
On Campus
AN ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE will feature Ray Thompson, University of Arizona, on "Museum Employment and Cultural Resources" at 1 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
AN ART LECTURE by Larry Schwarm photographer, will feature "Snapshots: Homegrown Masterpieces" at 2:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Spencer Museum of Art.
LA MESA ESPANOLA (Spanish Table) will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 3059 Wescoe. All native speakers and students of Spanish descent are welcome.
THE UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 108 Blake Hall.
THE KU GERMAN CLUB will show a series of short films about current events in Germany at the ILLINOIS FILM EXPO.
A LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SPIRITUAL
WELLNESS will meet a 4pm. in the
Ecumenical Church of St. Mary.
NEW PERSPECTIVES will present a talk by A.E.W. Wildsmith-on "The Natural Sciences Know Nothing of Evolution" at 7 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Union.
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER will present an "Introduction to SPSS" at 17:00 p.m. in
the auditorium of the Academic Computer Center.
TOMORROW
A FINE ARTS HORRIB RECTAL will be at 8 pm. in the Swarthorst Recital Hall in Murphy HWY.
A SOCILOGY DEPARTMENT INFORMAL LECTURE will be presented by Judith Stacey on her current research on the Chinese family at 10:30 a.m. in 768 Fraser Hall.
KENNETH A. SPENCER MEMORIAL LECTURE will present Paul Berg, 180 winner of the Nobel Prize in chemistry, on "Dissection and Reconstruction of Genes and Chromosomes" at 1 p.m. in woodruff Auditorium in the Union.
AN AEROSPACE ENGINEERING COLLOQUIUM will present Tom McMurry on Who Said It Wouldn't Fly? (A Test Plot's View of Robot Research "Reward vehicle") at 3:00 p.m. in 314 West George.
A SOCILOGY COLLOQUIUM will present Judith Stacey on "Patriarchy and Socialist Revolution in China" at 3:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union.
THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
A STUDENT CELLO RECITAL by David Mason p.m. in the Swarthwout Recital Hall in Murphy.
Lose 17 to 26 pounds
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and going to KUMC next year?
LET'S GET ACQUAINTED!
The Kids Are Alight
WARNING
THE WHD
PC
A NEW WORLD PICTURES RELEASE
Funded by Student Senate
Monday, March 23, at 7:00 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
Jr. & Sr. Nursing Students will be there!
PLAY BEGINS; Saturday, March 28 10:00 a.m. Clinton Dam
For more information call, Recreation Services 864-3546
MIBV12
ENTRY DEADLINE: Monday, March 23
5:00 p.m.
208 Robinson
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Some films you watch, others you feel.
DONALD SUTHERLAND MARY TYER MOORE
Ordinary People
EVE 7/15 & 8/30
HILLCREST 1
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STEREO BUYERS
Mail Order Programs—
Advantages and disadvantages of all mail order programs:
ADVANTAGES
STATEMENT-
1. The cheapest method by buying a man-made manufactured stereo equipment.
2. A choice of stereo equipment that stores will not stock.
you endure it must be守护. Kimi can't help save the pain manufacturer we can, and will gladly, say you all the costs of insurance charges and will light the伤 and damaged freight claim battles. From the safety of our team, we are sure other mark orders establishment do not render this service.
1. Advance payment in full required.
2. Mail order and waiting time is approximately three to six weeks.
3. Charge for benefits charges for longer than six weeks.
4. Defective units must be repaired to service centers at the customer's expense.
from 5-8 p.m. March 17
**NOTE—** One must order items not "faulty damage" or torn areas, there are faults and breakouts all covered by all manufacturer warranty.
DISADVANTAGES—
If you choose to mail order, Kief can help ease the pain.
Staying in town for Spring Break???
Celebrate St. Patrick's Day
at the
HARBOUR LITES
A "REAL" Irish Bar in Lawrence
$1.00 Pitchers of Green Beer
from 5-8 p.m.
MAIL ORDER TERMS—
1. Payment in full with order.
1. Advance payment in full is required.
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
HOUSE OF USHE
BANGLADESH INFINITI TREET & AFRICAN MUSEUM
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- *command delivery time is in its week.* We assume no responsibility for unavoidable delays, freight strikes, manufacturer delays, etc.
- *4. All units are subjected to manufacturer's warranty terms. Mail order unit equipment is the customer's responsibility to transport his unit to a service area.
1 812 1811 Ext. 10
Warehouse Sound CO. at KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
--c/o KU Student Senate office
The Natural Sciences Know Nothing of Evolution."
SIR MICHAEL DAVIS
A talk by Dr.
A.E. Wilder-Smith
7:00 P.M.
FREE
Kansas Union Ballroom Thursday, March 12th 7:00 P.M.
Dr. Wilder-Smith received his first doctorate in physical organic chemistry in 1941 at the University of Reading, England and has since earned two other doctorates. He is the author of coauthor of over 50 scientific publications, and more than 20 books which have been published in English, German, French, Russian, and Rumanian. At present, he is engaged in the production of TV films tracing the origin of the universe and the origin of life and species.
SPONSORED BY NEW PERSPECTIVES
GOKONON
841 3600
12 EAST 9TH ST
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UPSIDE DOWN
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USSA—Immediate opening
The United States Student Association is a national lobby organization dedicated to the interests of students in American institutions of higher education.
K.U. is a member of this
KU is a member of this organization and actively participates in it. Persons interested in applying for the position of Campus Director are encouraged to contact Greg Schnacke
105 B Kansas Union or call 864-3710 or 841-1469
or 841-1469.
Deadline—March 13,5 p.m.
SUA FILMS
Thursday, Mar.12 The River
Jean Renoir's lyrical, sumptuous version
his children's novel about English
children grown up in France.
color photography by his Brother Claude,
Saint Germain. N° 706. Swinburne
(97 min.) Color: L-30.
Friday, Mar. 13
The Seduction of Joe Tynan
(1979)
Alan Alda wrote and stars in this fine film about an up-and-coming scientist, basically a decent fellow, falling prey to the terror of the white-collar portrait of Washingtonian ways, with Mylin Steele, Barbara Harris and Melvin Douglas, directed by Jerry Schatzbinder. "The Cat in the Snow" Locked Home ("10:59 pm") Color: 3:30, 7:00; 9:30.
Unless otherwise noted all film will be shown at various Auditorium in the Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday Fridays. Saturday, Popular and Sunday Fridays. Tickets available at $200. Tickets available at $165. See union. 4th level. Information 864-3950. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
Var
a p
at N
By BOB MC Staff Repor
The U KA
Ove
15 words o Each addi
to run
Monday ...
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday...
FOUND Found items placed in peri-
Employ
EN
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Domes
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pain, work. Painting,
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nurses. Textured
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1-(913)-381-2
Maib roomm apt, kitchen a. pool, r. excel 1/3 ph at 841-5470.
University Daily Kansan, March 12, 1981
Page 7
Vandalism a problem at Marvin
By BOB MOEN Staff Reporter
Plagued by theft and vandalism, the School of Architecture and Urban Design is considering a policy that could end the school's 24-hour open practice when the Marvin Hall renovation is completed next fall.
"We have a lot of vandalism and theft that occurs in the midnight hours," Dennis Domer, acting dean of the school, said yesterday.
In January, Domer appointed an advisory committee of five faculty members and one student to look into the problem. The committee's report, written by Dorer, will suggest two options that the school can take next fall, Domer said.
ONE OPTION the committee will suggest is to close Marvin Hall completely at 11 p.m. The second option is to lock the doors to Marvin at 11 p.m, but allow students already inside the building to stay as long as they want.
He said the second option was a reasonable compromise that satisfied the students' needs and security measures at the same time.
"The problem is how do you have a 24-hour studio and not have theft and vandalism." Dmer said.
said students would not accept the first proposal to completely close the building at 11 p.m.
"We were told there was no way they were going to leave the new building open," he said.
W. Max Lucas, who will succeed Domer as dean March 15, said he and Dormer would make a decision in April.
Domer said the security guards would be dismissed when the students move back into Marvin.
guards in Robinson Center to monitor the students and the studio, Tom Wilkerson, director of the center, said.
"We have a quarter of a million dollars of new equipment in the building so we must have limited access to the building." he said.
"We consider the policy to be important to students and the school," he said.
Holding up his pen set worth $75,
Crandall said he had about $200 worth of
equipment.
The theft problem has troubled the school for a long time, Dorn said. But it is worse now that the school is split up among Robinson Center, Blake Annex, Lindley Annex, the Art and Design Building and Carruth O'Leary Hall.
"I wouldn't even attempt to leave my parallel bar out," he said.
ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL
But even with the guards, theft still takes place in the makeshift studio in Robinson.
BILL CRANDALL, Leawood senior; said four pen sets, a camera and two projects had been stolen since last semester.
THE SCHOOL EMPLOYS security
843-2931
2340 Alabama
Lawrence, Kansas
Over 17 years in the business
Snow tires available.
One theft victim, Nan Josephson,
Kansas City, Mo. senior, said her $3.30
pen set was stolen when she left to go to
the restroom.
RENT A CAR FOR $7.95 A DAY + MILES
SHE SAID that she approved of the guards but that it would be better if the students knew each other, thus, being able to spot a stranger more easily.
"I just went out for a minute—it was a Saturday afternoon—and it was gone when I came back," she said.
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The University Daily
■ AIRLINE HUCKETS
■ RESTAURATIONS
■ HOTEL RESERVATIONS
■ CAREERS PANSLS
■ INVESTMENT CONSULTANCE
■ ESCORETAL HUCKETS
900 MASS
KANSAS UNION
843-1211
AIRPLANE
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
M
PRINCETON PLACE PAZTE APARTMENTS.
1245 N. 9th St., Suite 300. Frontotyminate, features wood lighting directing to windows and fireplaces. Hiking trails, wader/winter trails, hiking trails. Daily equipped. daily at 2:00 PM. Photos by phone or email at 2958 Princeton St., phone or email at 612-784-1920.
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
Mali roommate to rent in furnished
kitchen, kitchen, wacker, p. water, cable fv.
a. pool, r. central air, all illumination paid
b. toilet, $11, $12/month at 841-540-7
3 - 13
The Kanansa will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FLYING M RANCH
For spring and summer. Nalismith Hall of Science offers a variety of advantages of an apartment. Good food and plenty of it! Cooky maid services to clean activities and much more. If you're looking for
Med Center Bound? Nice. 2-bedroom duplexes available for summer and fall, carpet. A.C. appliances, and parking. Call (1-931)-381-2878.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Cape City Apis. Unfurished station; 1,
2 berms; apts. available Central air, wall-
to wall location; location 21; blocks south
of Frazier Hall Call 842-693-8000 after
anytime weekends.
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 Ranjan Business office at 864-458.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
$110,00 per month includes: feed & exercise
Horse trainer in residence
3 Bedroom apt. in N. Lawrence, utilities paid. $00.00 per mo. 814-5966. 3-13
Employment Opportunities
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5. 443-3228. tf
ENTERTAINMENT
Free services to students and faculty 841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED COURTSIDE WORKer, just own a job. Work at YOUNG LAB on your own plain. Work: Housework, nursing, carpentry, painting, general maintenance. Salary: $1600 per year. You are provided: your own completely furnished house; to August 12 or later (your client). Later preferred by employee. Apply in writing to the company at 1000 Sunset Drive, Lawrence, KS 60044.
$10.00 OFF
Arenas-Quarter Mile Track
3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students 2500 W.
6th. 841-7333. **if**
FOR RENT
Clean modern facilities
TRAVEL CENTER
Indoor-Outdoor Arenas-Quarter Mile Track
AURIZONE STREET BUILDERS Available now. Perfect for 4 students, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, a kitchen, laundry, washer, dishwasher, and dryer hook-ups, central air conditioning, carpet & drip-off street parking, un furnished, zero roof + utilities. Call 844-7305 or ff663.
TRAVEL CENTER
Domestic & International
Reservations
Airline Escorted Tours
Hotel/Resort Ski Packages
Car Rental Group Rates
International Student Specialists
(913) 749-4013
with coupon
first month with coupon
3 - In- 1 1978 Allegro modular stereo-$75.
19" Zenth cabinet Color T.V. $150. Call
749-1699. 3-13
3 kb warehouse for rent now at Pine Haven
mount n. weather & drier, close to shopping
center. We have 200 payable. 300 per item.
1 payable. 60 per item.
No pets. Call 843-210 or 0777.
1977 LPD TLD II, A/C, A/7, PS, PB. Radials, Cruise control, only 55,000 miles. Beautiful car in excellent condition; $2700, 842-6212 after 30. Keep trying. 3-13
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near university and downtown St. Louis street 1500 Sublasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute walk to campus 1381, Tennessee; $70 rent
VW 432 W12 Wagon. Auto, Radial, Body and engine great, 86,000 miles $1375, 1979 VW Squareback. Auto, Body clean, engine requires work $700, 84-175.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 328 and Kasold. If you tired of apartments in the city, consider a feature 3 br. 1/2 baths, all appliances, attached garage pool, and lots of privacy. We offer free Wi-Fi. Craig Lea or Jim Bong at 749-1607 for apartment rentals on our modestly privately townhouses.
2 bedroom apt. close to campus. $210 + utilities. No pets. 842-192-900, 5:00 - 3:10
Sublease this summer. Two bedroom apt.
on 10th Street near campus; Call 841-253-9791
Sublease furnished apt. lft., one bedroom,
2 bathrooms, and a kitchen. Call 841-5255 or 843-7828.
3-12
3 BR ranch Fenced yard Closed porch
Habitable. $235 - 1 mo. deposit. 842-9046, 842-9061.
Must sell 1689 Nova with 1978 Engine AM/ FM cassette. Excellent condition, $750 or best offer. Come see at 1144 Louisiana Apt. 2T (2nd floor). 3-13
Female roommate wanted, after graduation to share a 2 Bedroom - 2 Bath Buried Patent in Johnson County. Rent $190.
Apartment in Johnston County. Call 690-190- (1) 8477.
8477
Sublease 1 bd. w/study all utilities pd. ex-
cept lights, bus route, convenient location.
Call 841-8522 or 842-4611.
3-13
FRESHMEN and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house next year! Apply now. 842-6592. tf
Bass - 401] Rickenbeck Bass Amp Amps
S.V.T. Price to sell. Call Racky 842-753-6940
Available now. 1 Br at Jayhawk West Apt.
carrier refrigerator, A/c, INC/outdoor and poolool, no deposit required, $25/
month, water paid. Call Kit N64-4434- 3-24
Large room for rent close to campus. Excellent kitchen facilities. Call 841-9536 anytime or 842-5152 after 7 p.m. 3-24
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale!
Make sense to use them . . . As study
makes sense to use them . . . As study
exam recitation, Analogy,
Analogy of available books.
The Bookmark, and Oread Book
Summer sublease: 2 bedroom apt. with carport. Rent & electricity. At Malls Old English Village. College 841-8219. 3-13
Sublease furnished Meadowbrook studio apt.
available April 1st or May 1st! Call 749-
1810. 3-13
SPACIOS TWO-STORY DUPLICES 1X20
all appliances, air conditioned, one car garage,
or possible option to buy $2,000. Less
15% contract. Buy by mail or possible
12% contract. Buy by phone.
N-910-845-9186, 845-9186, 3-26
Mini-Korg Electronic Music Synthesizer,
cellent condition, must sell, first $200 takes
841-9270, Curt. 3-12
1978 MAZDA GLC SPORT. Like new, low mileage, 1 owner, 5 speed, $3500, 842-3378, 868-4245.
1971 Chevelle Malibu, repaired engine, 2 door newly mounted, new back tires. Call after 2.00 p.m. $800. Call 749-2136. 3-12
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-908-3900, 3900
W. 6th. tf
For Sale: Matching couch & chair, kitchen-cafe, cross country skis & skis, downhill ski boots. Women's size 6. Men's size 1-13. 811-434-290
Ampeg V-4 guitar head. New Transformer
& Tubes. $175.00 or best offer. 749-1214.
Keep trying. 3-23
Movie projector 35 mm. Lenses, amp., excellent condition 842-0540. 3-12
Window shades, Battered golf clubs, sleeping bags, tents, lamps, metal detectors. Everything But Ice, 6th & Vermont. 3-23
Hand woven oriental rug, 7 by $4\frac{1}{2}$' Also a wall hanging. Rare chance. Contact Haroon 749-2724. 3-23
74 Honda 400 4 cyl. excel. cond 841-5968
Dishwasher & Stove (gas) for sale. Good Condition. $75 each. Call after 5:00 p.m.
842-129-313
3-13
Ski Boots—Women's Size 6½; Dolomite Boots, 2.9龄 old, used only one season.
$75.00. Call after 5:00 pm. m41-7149 3-13
Looking for bargains? Of course you are buying a dress shirt. Your clothes are $25 low. Now you get free soap from your clothes for only 750 per hour 24 hours, or for only 150 per hour 24 hours to Hillcrest Laundry and home care. You can lift 18 ppm. Is this bargain for you? Yes, it is. Call calling us now. Keep waiting, we are ready to help.
90 Ramber, runs darn good. $600; Guitar,
saxophone, drums, keyboard, setter player and equifier 100; turntable w/amplifier 500; Men's吏脚 boots size 12
Wheelchair 400; Women's UTA looking for a women club for UTA ticket to Padre Island over Spring Break. If interested call 804-6366. Keep trying. 3-12
Conn Acoustic Guitar & Case. Brand new,
take best offer. Also E fat Alto Sax. Take
best offer so call now. 824-2533. 3-13
Need a camera for Spring break? Pocket Minolta, with built-in flash & telephoto lens, like new—Cheap! 842-6447. 3-12
70 El Caimino 350, 2-5B New: engine, transm. others. Must see to接待 me: 4935-389-12-12
Rattle Snake rats, Wall paper, photographic Everything but Ilex. 6th & Vermont. 5-23
Datum Pickup Lion, 5-speed, air Sunroof. 99 VW Bug. Call 749-728-3-25
81 Yamaha 400 special 1300 mi with luggage rack, seat back, helmet, nylon cover.
Jim 864-1216
3-13
Lost—my only Christmas present. I used to work in a call center and I kept the Sequit quartz watch somewhere in or near my desk. Genuine reward for the reason: face. Generous reward for the reason: face. Sentimental gift. Please return face. Sentimental gift.
Lost one blue down parka in Murphy Hall on March 1. 749-0110. 3-25
FOUND
HP-34-C Calculator Tues. 24. Reward. 841-
3625.
Found umbrella Wednesday in front of 9029 Malcolm. Call 842-5010 and identify 3-12 Found at bus stop across from Bailley St. Found at corner between Call 769-293 and identify 3-12
HELP WANTED
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES
experiences with us, as a public service to nursing home residents! Our consumer or
caregiver must be available for Nursing Homes (KINH) needs your help and input on nursing home conditions and
and input on nursing home conditions and correspondence to the residents. All names and correspondence
913-843-2088 or 843-7107, or write us:
913-843-2088 or 843-7107, or write us:
Maestr. St. #5, Lawrence, KC 412-697-7107
CRUISERS CLUB MEDIZERIANAAN, SAIL
STRUCTURES, Office Personnel), Counselors,
staffs, Office Personnel), Counselors,
handling for APPLICATION
& OPENING Hours 60 | Box 6129,
CAVERN, CA 95408
CAVERN, CA 95408
Full or part time help wanted. Combination
Full or part-time assistant jobs. Tips.
Dancing. Dancing at home. Dancing.
Nude dancing $7.00 per hour. Your choice.
Nude dancing west of Lansing or
west of Reno. Hwy 40, 379-998.
World's Largest Business needs your Stay home-paid weekly. Free details. Enclose stamped envelopes. Peggy Jones, 3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, K6044. 6044-3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, K6044. 6044-3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, K6044. 6044-3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, K6044. 6044-3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, K6044. 6044-3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, K6044. 6044-3229 Glacier Dr. Lawrence, K6044.
Part time help wanted at Hillett Laundry-mat
925 ILS. Where you can wash and dry your clothes for only 75c per load. Please apply in person. 3-13
Spring break jobs-Lasting one week, possible part time position continuing through Spring outdoor work. In person at the Garden Center, 15th & New York. 3-13
RESEARCH ASSISTANT (1) Position open. Req. BS in Education, Child of Child Research, Requirement Current enrolment (at least one hour) Duterte City Coordination child care one per month, and other kindergarten child care one per month. Application deadline 18 March. Apply online application, www.research.kanap.edu. Weekly application deadline 18 March. University of Kangashta 644-3125. AAE BOE, 20-13
*PYCHM RNW*. If you are interested in interim training for job you for. We have i immediate training for job you for. We have i immediate training for job you for. For interviews only per wk. For interviews only this月 at the office. Ks 913-642-3580. Mailey, a 29, Keith. Ks 913-642-3580.
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF accepted for the Summer Orientation student advertisement in today's paper or come by Strong Hall. An equal opportunity employment.
LOST
"Misting," he bake severely needed back-lost at Dilions, Women's Silver Winner, black seat, like new. If seen or found, please call 842-6800. 3-13
MISCELLANEOUS
Consumer Affairs Association for problems with tissues, leaky merchandise, auto repairs and order carrier call or ship by 819 Vermont Ave.
NOTICE
SKI WINTER PARK/MARY JANE SPRING
campus tickets, adr. tickets, lodging invi-
cedences and transfers, ski tours or 18h or 18h-23rd. Write SKI e.t. etc. 48h or 18h-23rd. Write SKI e.t. etc. 48h or 18h-23rd. Write SKI e.t. etc. 48h or 18h-23rd. Write SKI e.t. etc. 48h or 18h-23rd. Write SKI e.t. etc. 48h or 18h-23rd. Write SKI e.t. etc. 48h or 18h-23rd.
BASK 836 mk for Darryl. Three day Easter trip
at the ski resort.
Giving skiing over Break? HEAT WAVE SKI
Vests are ideal for Spring skiing and come
in great designs and colors. Tel evens
864-3091, 842-5585
3-13
GAY AND LEBISHIAN PEER Counseling. A FRIENDShip to be readen. Referees through K.U. Information, 844-3506, or Headquarters, 841-2345.
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports. Custom made portraits, color, B/W. Swells Studio 749-1611. 4-1
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can give, at prices students can afford. Swells Studio, 749-1811.
NEED EXTRA CASH? Soil your old Gold &
Diamonds. TOP prices for class rings,
gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6377, 841-
7478
Want to be a Priest? Sister? Ages 20-50?
Contact Fathar Miro, Gonzaga University,
Spokane, 90258.
3-24
**SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 27, 28**
**2016**
Register in the Interfairy Exchange
Register in the Interfairy Exchange or Call: 663-355 Dooahs will be set up at 9 a.m. There is no phone number. 7-9 am. There will be a $16 registration fee.
HEADACH, BACKACH, CHEAPY NEEK,
LEG PANT! QUALITY Chiropractic Care &
its benefits. Dr. Mark Johnson 843-838-126
for chiropractic Blue Cross & Bleach
Stair insurance plan.
Senior portrait special, studio taken with a large selection of scenic background available. Swells Studio. 749-1611. 3-25
Green's Tavern and Keg Shoppe KU ID
Picee Cut, Mon-Thura, Pitchers $1.25, 5 lull
T: Fr 2 till 4 Big Draws 50r, 3-12
A great Spring fishing combination-sunshine, warm breezes, open water, you, and Anglers Unlimited. 1449 W. 23rd. 3-13
Help—I need to buy one more ticket to the game Friday night in Wichita! Call Kris at 864-2216.
Immediate Opening. The United States State University dedicated to the interest of students in American institutions of higher learning participate in 11. Personnel interested in application should contact (tug Schnabel) co-ordination@usc.edu or 850-274-3690. Deadline May 31 at 8:41 a.m. or 850-274-3690.
Design a logo for the KU Sailing Club.
Create a t-shirt, tie, dress. etc. Designer will receive $15.00 or a club membership. Entries must be in English and submitted to Call bar Bark #843-3120. 3-25
Front Laudeferland–Padre Island IZOD, NIKE, BOAINT and friends to go with you. Pick up at Alvarem Rucaruel Club, Montreal. Enjoy a new day of CHANDISE! Done now in March
For Sale: nice 75 Suzuki 185 Street bike. In exc. cond., 30,000 ml. Call Mike 749-10831.
Opening soon "All Baba" Mld-East cuisine,
buside Minsky's Pizza, 2200 Iowa (Great
Gyros!)
3-12
Skipping classes? Learn to "play the game" and still make the grade you want. Send $3 to BRENNAN RESOURCE DIRECTORY box B55, Wichita, KS 67208. 3-24
FISHING FEVER—a highly contagious disease with no known cure. We have the prophylaxis for what may might think at Anglers Unlimited, 149. W23. 3-12
'What's behind vegetarian? Prasadamartani!
FREE LUNCH in comfortable setting, Mon.
12:00 noon- 2:00 p.m., 958 illinois,
Apt. D. You can eat at, no. 3-
lached!
Angers Unlimited, 14Km W. 2Frd. 3-13
OUTDOORS WOMEN - sport fishing is an exciting experience. We can help you get started. Angers Unlimited, 14Km W. 2Frd. 3-13
STUDY BREAK—Fish Clinton Lake this Spring. We'll help you bring in the big ones. Anglers Unlimited, 1449 W. Dzir, 3-13
MY CAMERA IS MISSING! Anyone know
when the party will be held?
I seen the party in Trailtale #414 on
Friday, please contact Mum at 131-3901.
2-12 pm via phone or film back.
For Sale: $150.
MATT' I like to see you before you leave for LOUISANA. Meet me at the where we first met. Thursday 1:30 Lynn, 3:12
INTERNATIONAL PEN FREELIBER, Regarded Organizations in the world, $1,000 each. 142 countries. Correspondent in English, French, German, and Spanish. For all age groups. Send resume to International for free details write: International PEN FREELIBER, P.O. Box 8296, New York, Mission, KS 66388. 3-12
Hillcrest Laundromat 925 Iowa is all yoyer business. houseware, free rides, free advice, and laundry services you can purchase this deal. Please call 843-769-180 for 6 a.m. till 10 p.m. P.S. Each day they give two loads of laundry free. This offer includes fabric and softener fabrics they can do it 12.
CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS: April 14-15
Petitions available in Student Senate Office
filings deadline: 5:00 p.m. Friday, March
27
3-27
We are looking for another mature, non-smoker. Please include your employment (if engaged or married) to live with us and provide a 3-month stay in the year. Aip is yet unchecked. For more info, visit www.riversideinternational.com as possible, but not during Spring Break.
(Muffin) You're a very special lady. I Love
You so much! May our dream never end.
Happy Anniversary. Pooh. 3-13
I have a hot date for Jayhawk's NCAA game, but need one more ticket. Call 843-2716 if you can help me find a ticket. 3-13
Happy B-Day to you. Happy B-Day to you.
Happy B-Day to you. Happy B-Day to you.
Happy B-day to a nice day! Leaf 'lady'.
Fit, we leave for it. It is go for it. So!
Nit; we get it. 1 day. 1 S.F.S.N.R.BL.
I'll
Taking your Spring Break in Lawrence?
Visit the historical Crossing Bar. Beer and Good Times for all.
3-12
Looking for fun? Come hear The Moffet Beers Band Thursday March 26th at the Entertainment. Sponsored by AOP). 3-13
Tambo and Jawna L.O. 81: Be prepared.
Don't forget Dr. Schols and baked goods.
3,12
JUR, YOU BETTER. YOU BETTER. YOU
BET! 3-12
SERVICES OFFERED
Tutoring Math 000-800, Phix 100-600, Bus
368, 804, 806. Call 843-903, ttf
Do you have a Sports Car Mechanic that has been maintaining a professional CAN-AM road racing car?
wheel We Do!
wheel We Do!
to sports car racing and repair
wheel 843-7095
2nd and Iowa
---
Drop off services. Drop your laundry on the ground and wash, dry and work, and we will wash, dry, hand and face laundry for only $400 through a fund of money brought in
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476.
Experienced twoterm paper, thesis,
mise, electric "IBM Selectric. Proofreading,
spelling corrected. MSS-854. Mrs. Wright
Experienced typet-thesis, dissertations term papers, mise. IBM correcting selective. Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tt
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra,
841-4980. N
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate. IBM plca/elite. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. tt
Experienced K.U. typist, IB Correcting
Selective, Quality work. References available.
Sandy, evening and weekends. 768-
9818.
tt
842-2001
Experienced typist-books, theses, term papers, dispertations, etc. IBM correcting Selective. Terry evenings and weekends. 842-4754 or 843-2671. tf
Dial
25th and
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
granches, editine, self-correct Selective.
Call Ellen or Jeannann 841-2172. tt
For Your Typing Odyssey
ENCORE COPY CORPS
wa—Holiday Plaza 842-200
RUSH JOBS our speciality. Reasonable Rates.
IBM 10, 12 pitch. Nathan or Sandy-841-
7668, 843-8611.
RESUME—RESUME—RESUME—Professional
Resume Preparation and Printing. Encore
Copy Corp. SZs. Ith and Jwm. 842-201. tf
Exercised typist would like to type thesis, dissertations, etc. Call 842-3203. 3-30
Closest thing to printing—IBM Executive typing. Fast service. Reasonable Rates. Bill 842-8772. 3-13
Grad. studn'tn's wife will type papers. 75/c/
page. 842-3338. 3-13
Fast, easy typing. Many years experience.
IBM. Ann before 9 p.m. 749-264-3, 1-3
WANTED
GOLD- Silver, DIAMONDS. Class rings.
Wedding Bands, Silver Collar, Stering, etc.
We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or
542-2698.
Female to male to share extra nite time.
Call 841-8396 - 5-12
Call 841-8396 - 5-13
Musician to drummer, Drums by Janet,
Hand band- into Sugusu,
Who, Kinks, Jart, etc. Call 841-8396 -
5-12
Summer summer needed for female soul,
Singer, English Language Village -
841-6158 or English Village - 5-12
841-6158
We need your spare clothes hangers at Hilcourt Laundromat 925 Iowa. Please call 843-9749 from 6 a.m. till 10 p.m. 3-13
We are looking for another mature, non-immigrant applicant who is engaged or married to live with us. An immigrant who is engaged or married to live with us. Aphis at yet unchained. For more info. visit www.aglead.org as possible but during Spring Break. 3-225
Housing need for over the break. Will pay good rent. Call 864-2941. 3-13
Quit. studious male roommate to house a girl. Call 864-2941. 875-880. $8.50 plus 1' utilities 864-2844.
Wanted—T79 KU-Mississippi game tickets.
Call—749-106S between 1 and 10. 3-12
$108 per month. Own room. Utilities pd.
Male roommate needed. Call Tom or Drew
749-3933. 3-27
The University Daily
ORDER FORM KANSAN ORDER FORM
SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T!
If you've got it, Kansas classifieds can sell it! Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to: University Daily Kansas. 111 Flint Hall. Lawrence. Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
Write Ad Here:
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
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RATES:
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92.25 92.50 92.75 93.00 B
.02 .03 .04 .05
-4+
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 inch - $3.75
NAME: ___
ADDRESS: ___
PHONE: ___
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, March 12, 1988
15
ROB POOLF/Kansen staf
KU outfielder Tim Heineman dives back to first base on a pickoff attempt in the first game of yesterday's doubleheader against William Jewell. Heineman was safe and KU won the game, but KU lost the second game, 8-7.
Baseball team splits two
By ARNE GREEN Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team had hoped to take a perfect record south for its spring trip next week, but the Jayhawks suffered their first loss yesterday when they dropped the No. 12 ranked team to William Jallieu, 8-7 in eight innings.
Kansas, 3-1, won the opener, 4-2 behind the Dennis hit pitching of freshman lefthander Dennis Coplen.
KU Coach Floyd Temple said that he was not very happy with the team's performance but that he wasn't worried.
"IWASN'T really too pleased, but we got a good pitching job from Copen in the first game," he said.
You hate to lose, but losses now aren't the end of the world, especially if we profit from this loss today."
The Jayhawks almost avoided the loss when down-7 in the bottom of the sevent, they exploded for five runs while batting through the order.
Right fielder Joe Heeney led off the inning with a walk and took second when the Cardinal second baseman Steve Thebone booted designated hitter Juan Ramirez's ground ball. Heeney then put on a single by KU catcher, John Wagner, and shortstop, Neil Jeffreus brought Ramirez and Wagner home with a triple.
Third baseman Rust Blaylock added a sacrifice fly and Cardinal pitcher Pat Owens walked in a run to send the game into extra intries, but William Jewell wrapped it up an innering later on a two-hitter with fielder DICK Lewallen and a double.
"YOU HAVE to give the kids credit for coming back and getting it tied." Temple said. "It's too bad we couldn't hold them the next inning."
Kansas used five pitchers in the second game, with junior lefthand Randy McIntosh working the first five innings, yielding three rulers on 18 bits.
"Randy had more fly balls hit off him today than all of last year, but he only gave up three runs." Temple said. "He's had a little problem with a hamstring injury, so I didn't want him to pitch too long."
GOOD STUDENT—GOOD DRIVER
DRIVER TRAINING DISCourses
John E. Dudley
842 7870
Prudential
[Visit us at] www.prudental.com
WE BUY USED FURNITURE
EVERYTHING BUT ICE
6th & Vermont
749-1595
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
phone: 843-1151
Your Luncheon Alterna THE CROSSING
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
Monday-Saturday
New Hemingway
731 New Hampshire Monday-Saturday
9 am-5 pm
TRAILRIDGE APARTMENTS
2500 West Sixth 843-7333
Studios, 1 & 2 Bedroom
Apartments, 2-3-4 Bedroom
Townhouses.
- Racquetball
* Free Tennis
* Dance and Singing
* Convenient Location
* On KU Bus Route
two-thirds of an inning in relief, gave up five hits and took the loss.
However, Temple said he was not yet concerned about the pitching.
"We have very young pitchers, and you can't coach experience," he said. "You have to learn to set up the hitters when there are runners on second and third. That's why McIntosh only gave up three runs."
"IF THIS were the conference season, I'd be worried, but the only way to improve is to play."
The Jayhawks had no pitching problems in the first game, when Coplent went the distance, allowing only one earned run.
For a while, anyway, Coplen has earned a spot in the starting rotation.
"With his outting today, he's pretty much sure to start for us." Temple said. "He was around the plate pretty much and was fairly consistent with his pitching. That was our problem in the second game—no consistency."
Kansas led the entire first game, scoring two unearned runs in the third inning when cardinal shortstop Dave Hokins misplayed two ground balls.
The Jayhawks added single tallies in the fifth and sixth innings, and William Jewell scored its runs in the sixth and seventh.
CENTER FIELDER Dick Lewall led the Kansas attack, going three-for-three with a double, one run and two stolen bases. Nezuil reached base three times—with a double, a walk and after a hit by a pitch. He scored two runs
FORT MYERS, Fla., (UP)—The KANSAS City Royals posted their first loss of the exhilation season yesterday, at Atlanta Braves 3-2, in the 14th inning.
The next game for the Jayhawks will be Friday when they open their Texas spring trip with a doubleheader against Dallas. They then will play six games against Texas Tech and Pan American at the Jody R雇柔 Classic in Edinburg, Texas, before finishing with a doubleheader at Texas A&M.
Atlanta hands KC 3-2 losss
In the nightcap, Blaylock had a sacrifice fly and two hits, including his third home run in four games.
Atlanta's Ed Miller singled home Craig Landis for the winning run with two outs in the 14th. Miller's ground single up the middle off losing pitcher Bill Laskey ended the $3' half hour contest. Craig McMurty, a rookie non-roster pitcher from Temple, Texas, picked up the victory in relief.
KU's next home game will be a March 25 doubleheader with Baker.
The Royals left runners stranded on
The Royals scored both of their runs in the second inning. Kelly Heath singled home Ken Phipps with the first run and struck out Mike Bell, Terrell grounded into a double play.
The Royals won their exhibition season opener Monday, 8-3, over the Boston Red Sox.
John H. Hill II, D.C.
Chiropractic Physician
Certified Acupuncturist
841-9555 944 Kentucky
Patronize Kansan advertisers.
REMEMBER!
Ron Griffin Service Manager
We'll Service Your Car For Less!
National Institute for
MACHINE
SERVICE
EXCELLENCE
Jerry Sinovic
Service Adviser
All Japanese Imports Coupons must be presented at time of write-up.
PRE SPRING BREAK SPECIAL 10% DISCOUNT
TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA
on Maintenance-Related Items
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191
Includes:
-Oil changes
-Brake inspections
-Wheel bearings repacked
-Plus many more
Additional work needed also receives 10% discount on parts and labor.
(NOTE: 10% discount does not include Tune-Up Special)
(Note that the museum does not include tape-up specimens.)
TUNE-UP SPECIAL
TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA
We'll:
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191
- install new spark plugs
- replace points and cond. (if appl.
- set engine to recommended manufacturer's specifications
- adjust carburetor
- inspect operation of choke
- install new fuel filter
- check all underhood fluid levels
---
WHO HAS THE BEST SPEAKER PRICES?
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This system offers the dramatic difference of Sound-Span at an attractive price in the quality conscious market. The 10 inch low frequency unit increases the low frequency responses of this system, and the midrange and treble TPR radiators are voiced for correct tonal balance. The TPR 400 is a moderately sized system, measuring 38¼ * x 13 * x 13 * deep, compatible with any com layout or decor. The cabinet is finished on all four sides with furniture grade walnut veneer, with the TPR grill assembly finished in black see-thru cloth. The maximum power input is rated at 100 watts continuous undistorted music, at 6-8 ohms impedance.
A value packed speaker, affordably priced. Featuring a heavy duty 8 inch low frequency unit with an oversized voice coil and custom matched mild and high frequency driver. The cabinet, 32½ * x 14½ * x 11½ * deep, is finished on all four sides and includes a black see-thru TPR grill. The TPR 200 is an excellent buy for high quality systems where space considerations are important. The maximum power input is rated at 175 watts continuous undistorted music, at 6-8 ohms impedance.
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BORGEN'S LIQUORS
Hillcrest Shopping Center
917 Iowa
The finest selection of wines, liquors and beers in Lawrence.
.
Beers
American & Imported
.
Mexico
Germany
Ireland
England
Australia
Denmark
Holland
American & Imported
Whiskeys
American & Imported
from:
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.
Vodkas
American & Imported
from:
Finland
Russia
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.
Rum
American & Imported
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Wines
American & Imported
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842-3990
Se
on
on
By KAREN Staff Repo
Mahmood senator, permitee.
The Stue Committee levelled ag for investi
The first not hold options. Ama signatures had not rec There are a
The secovestigate i Student Or form. On t as a ser culturalan
Amani, I that ISA i and shoul University
AFTER committee the Senate allegation.
"No, it's whether I Organizate something ticular office
The third funds dispe Club. for ar
Amani, I that the L vertisemere revolution.
"They a said. "They have cheat say they re
"They hit they repress that come f
The four money allo instances of hearings.
Amani we group was students an
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By the spor
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The men
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THE JAY worst reco
Op
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, March 13, 1981
Vol. 91, No. 115 USPS 650-640
Senate hears allegations on Iranian student group on last day of hearings
Staff Reporter
By KAREN SCHLUETER Staff Reporter
The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee last night outlined four allegations levelled against the Tranian Student Association for investigation.
Mahmood Amiani, engineering student senator, presented the allegations to the com
The first allegation made was that the ISA did not hold open and well-publicized officer elections. Amii told the committee that he had signatures from at least 70 Iranian students who had not received notice of the group's elections. There are about 250 Iranians at KU1.
The second allegation the committee will investigate is that ISA lied to the University on its Student Organization Registration/Recognition form. On the form, the organization is described as a service, academic discipline, social, cultural and sports organization.
Amani, Mashhad, Iran, sophomore, contends that ISA is primarily a political organization, and should represent itself as such to the University.
AFTER THE MEETING. Loren Busby, committee chairman, said that he did not think the Senate had the power to investigate this allegation.
"No, it's not up to the Senate to investigate whether IA sled to the Office of Student Organizations and Activities," he said. "That's something that should come down to that paraphrase."
The third allegation involves the use of Senate funds disbursed to ISA through the International Association of Tax Collectors.
Amani, International Club vice president, said that the ISA used the money to run an advertisement for a film about the Chilean revolution.
"They are not an honest organization," he said. "They have never acted in good faith. They have cheated the University and the people they save they represent."
"They have lied to us as franfans by saying they represent our culture. They represent views that we don't agree with."
The fourth allegation involves the misuse of money allocated to ISA for postage. No specific instances of abuse were presented during the hearings.
Arami wanted to add an allegation that the group was not the true representative of Iranian nuclear powers.
Iranian Students Association, but Busby ruled him out of order.
"Any group can have any name it wants,"
"these students don't have to represent all"
"Iranian students."
DAVID VAN PARYS, treasurer, told the committee that it must find strong evidence to show the need for a new law.
"You've got to differentiate between someone who misuses funds accidently intentionally," he said.
Bubby asked Shahrok Azedi, ISA spokesman, whether she wanted to address the allegations on his behalf.
Azied declined to discuss the allegations, but repeatedly asked Busby two questions concerning last week's Cultural Committee meeting when the allegations surfaced.
Aziedi used Busby whether Amani said during the meeting that he took pictures of SA leaflets in the information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard. He also asked whether Amani told the committee that the ISA printed a slogan urging death to imperialism on its leaflets.
Bursay said he recalled Arami saying that he took the pictures, but later qualified his answer with a remark about the story.
He said that Amiam discussed the slogan but later said that he did not recall the exact words.
According to an Iranian who did not wish to be identified, the slogan "death to American imperialism, the true enemy of the Iranian nation" is a sensitive subject for Iranian students.
IRIANIAN STUDENTS supporting and opposing Amani's allegations were upset over the exact words Amani used when discussing this slogan.
"I'm sure that's because they write those things not for American audiences," the Iranian said. "If this is published in English, it shows Iranian feelings toward Americans."
"They target those slogans for the Iranian population, and they don't want them to be translated to Americans because they don't want to be a minority that is resented by Americans."
The slogan appeared on an ISA flier, written in Farsi, directed against Amani last weekend. Amani was accused of spying for the United States.
Busy scheduled a meeting for the first week in April. He said that the accusers could then present evidence to support the allegations and ISA could defend itself against the allegations.
See BUDGET page 5
Many of KU's sports teams vie for rankings in tourneys
With the excitement of the KU men's basketball team going to the NCAA post-season tournament, the activities of the other KU sports teams may have gone unnoticed.
By the sports staff
Standing in silence, Paula Brighs, Raystown, Mo. freshman, prays for the black children murdered in Atlanta. About 100 people attended a prayer last night at Pottery Lake Pavilion. A silent vigil was held Tuesday morning at Pottery Lake Pavilion.
The basketball team faces Mississippi tonight at Wichita's Henry Little Vena. Areta is 7:08.
See related story page 2
The women's team meets South Dakota at 1 p.m. today.
THE JAYHAWKS' opponent, Ole Miss, has the worst record in the NCAA tournament—16-13.
The men's track team is in Detroit this weekend for the NCAA indoor championships, and the women's team is competing at its home venue. The AIAw championships in Pocatello, Idaho.
"They are the hottest team in the Southeastern Conference," Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That includes Kentucky and Louisiana State. Of the coaches that I've talked to most have said they had to play Mississippi or LSU (fourth nationally) they would rather play LAU."
But the Rebels won 10 of their last 15 games, including three in the SEC post-season journey.
THE MARTIN JEWELS SCHOOL OF PHOTOGRAPHY
But the Jayhawks will be playing under a shadow—a shadow in the shape of a sun devil. Should KU knock off Mississippi, the Jayhawks would face Arizona State Sunday night. The Sun Devils are ranked fifth nationally and beat them No.1. Oregon State by 20 points last week.
But back to the Rebels. Despite Mississippi's end-of-season surge, tradition makes the Jayhawks the favorites. KU has been in the NCAA tournament 12 times. The Rebels' barge
See NATIONALS page 8
Prayer vigil held in remembrance of 20 murdered Atlanta children
By EDDIE WIL Staff Reporter
A crowd of 100 stood silent beneath dark and cloudy skies last night in remembrance of the 21 missing and murdered Atlanta black children.
KU students and faculty meet at Potter's
university building sponsored by the
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity.
During the ceremony, 21 candies were lit
nourished with flowers. The congregation
nourished a one-minute silent prayer followe
The program was conducted by Jules Rovaris, Topea senior, who asked that the wearing of green ribbons in an inverted "V" continue for two reasons.
"The first as a symbol of mourning for the lives already lost. Rovaris said she wished to remember others with other names."
concerned people nationwide to show that we cannot tolerate this action.
"It is indeed tragic that 20 black children lost their lives to make more stark the reality that a black life still does not hold much value in our justice system."
The group also is collecting donations to send to Atlanta to help pay for the cost of the investigation. Containers for the money are located in various residence halls, Rovaris
The green ribbons can be obtained in the
public offices of the City and
Communications office in the Kansas Union.
Rovaris said that the Kansas Senate passed a resolution yesterday to make Sunday a day of prayer.
The measure was sponsored by State Sen. Billy McCrav, D-Wichita.
A community sponsored half-mile silent march from City Hall to the Douglas County Law Enforcement Center is also scheduled for Sunday. The march will begin at 3 p.m.
Senate aids suspended tenure bills
By GENE GEORGE
Staff Reporter
Committee members yesterday seemed willing to consider it.
TOPEKA-State Rep. Joe Hoagland has enlisted the help of the Senate Way and Means Committee to release his legislation on faculty tenure from a bottleneck in the House.
Hoagland, R-Overland Park, sent a letter to committee member Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, asking Gaines to introduce a carbon copy of his tenure bills in the Senate committee.
Gaines' announcement that he would introduce the requested legislation early next week caught on television.
John Conard, executive director of the Regents, said that the board planned to discuss the tenure legislation being studied by a subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee at its monthly meeting March 19 and 20
"It was my understanding that the House Witch Committee was willing delay action, Conan said."
He said the House members whom the Regents talked to did not see any particular urgency to take action.
Conard said the board had not talked to enough senators to find out whether the upper house suggested a proposal.
"We've devoted our time to working in the House since that's where the bills were introduced."
Hoagland introduced the tenure legislation because he thought the Regents institutions did not have enough control over the activity of tenured faculty members.
The bill was sent to the Ways and Means Committee, because House Speaker Wendell Lady, who supported the bill, thought it would have an easy chance of passing.
The bill is now tied up in the Ways and Means subcommittee, may die there. Subcommittee member Loren Hohman, D-Topeka, has said that fellow subcommittee member Bob Arbuthnot, R-Haddam, was part of an anti-Lady Tennessean campaign to enforce legislation to discredit the House speaker.
Gaines said he would not discuss the bill at length until debate started next week.
"It tells the Board of Regents that they've got to draw up a code of prescribed conduct (for faculty members) that's within the restraints of the First Amendment," he said.
In other action, Ways and Means Committee Chairman Paul Hess told the committee that he would introduce a bill lowering the residency requirement for out-of-state students at Regents
Hess, R-Wichita, said that Wichita State University's requirement from 12 months to six months was $35 million.
Yesterday, the committee finished up its work on all the appropriations bills for the 1982 budget.
The committee voted to restore slightly more than $173,000 in KU's civil service pay plan for the remainder of this year. That measure now goes to the full Senate.
Hess commended the committee for finishing up one day ahead of its self-imposed deadline.
He said the House and Senate committees combined, cut more than $28.2 million from Gov. John Carlin's proposed 1982 budget of $2.78 billion.
The Senate will start debates on next year's budget next week, with the Regents system-wide vote to take place later.
State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, said she still would try to amend the Regents appropriations bill to restore the cuts made by the committee.
Opinions still differ on genetic engineering safety
BENNIE WELCH
Paul Berg
By ANNIKA NILSSON Staff Reporter
During the first years of genetic engineering research in the early 70s, both scientists and lay people raised questions about what hazards genetically manipulated organisms could pose.
Editor's Note: This is the second of two articles dealing with the process and ethical questions of gender equality.
“There is no reason to have elaborate guidelines,” he said. “I think we are maintaining them at present levels mostly because of political reasons.”
National Institute of Health guidelines, which require safe guards to confine organisms used in gene research to the laboratory, have been continually eased since they were first enacted. Engineering involves transplanting genetic information from one organism into another.
In an interview last night, Paul Berg, 1980 Nobel laureate in chemistry, said the safety of hydrogen fuel is crucial.
Berg said scientists continued to follow the guidelines out of obligation to the nublic.
However, in the 1980 November/December issue of Columbia Journalism Review, science writer Rae Goodl criticized the press and politicians for dropping the safety subject and
listening only to pro-genetic engineering sources.
"The nuclear industry may have its Three Mile Islands and the chemical industry its Love Canals," she wrote, "but the genetic industry is somehow different, foulproof."
ACCORDING TO RICHARD COLE, KU professor of philosophy and Robert Shelton, associate professor of religious studies, the most significant ethical question raised by genetic engineering involves its application in biological warfare.
"Because this kind of research is inexpensive and can be pursued by private individuals, private firms and small nations, this problem does not have the burden of nucleus weapons does not have," Cole said.
According to Robert Weaver, associate professor of biochemistry, the cost of equipping a laboratory with such equipment is $40,000.
Cole said that there probably could not be any credible international control of genetic materials.
"You can have national regulations," he said, but that does mean anything because the top government agency has been involved.
Shelton said the major questions with genetic engineering were who would decide what to do with the new knowledge and technology, and what motives these decisions would be made.
Commercial application of genetic
engineering has raised questions whether university students them, with the quickly developing gene index.
WITHIN THE LAST YEAR, several companies have applied genetic-engineering technology to produce clinically important human insulin and the antiviral agent interferon.
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said he thought it was possible for faculty members to combine commercial development of genetic engineering and basic research.
Harvard faculty members considered starting their own genetic engineering company but decided against it because of potential conflicts among faculty members and possible effects on basic research that was not immediately profitable.
However, Shankel said the relationship had potential for problems.
See GENETICS page 5
Berg said that a relationship between universities and industry was nothing new but
"It needs a lot of careful definition to make sure the scientific integrity of the researcher is maintained."
According to Shankel, University guidelines governing consulting jobs should apply. Those guidelines dictate that faculty members' first responsibility be his own research and work with students.
Weather
FANTASTIC
It will be partly to mostly sunny today with slightly cooler temperatures, according to the KU Weather Service. It will be $8. Winds will be light and variable.
Tonight, it will be mostly clear with a low of 30.
Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with the high in the low to mid 60s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 13, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
The thieves promised to release their hostages as soon as the details of the exchange and been settled. But hours later, they issued a new set of demands.
Pakistani negotiators had no immediate comment on the new demands. They appeared to play down fears that the new conditions would unravel the agreement reached hours earlier, and only moments before the hijackers said they would kill the three Americans who were among their hostages.
DAMASCUS, Syria - Minutes before the threatened execution of three American, Pakistan gave in to the demands of three Pakistani terrorists yesterday and agreed to free 55 political prisoners in exchange for 102 hostages held aboard a hijacked jet for 11 days.
Hijackers renege once demands met
In Washington, President Reagan denounced terrorists as the most cowardly of the human species but said he understood the Pakistani government's difficult decision to meet the demands of the airplane hijackers.
LOS ANGELES—The city school board met in executive session last night to decide how to shut down a mandatory busing program involving 80,000 students.
At the same time, busing advocates pledged to fight to keep the program, despite a State Supreme Court ruling that appeared to end mandatory busing.
In a conversation with the airport control tower, the leader of the hijackers also demanded that the freed prisoners and their families be flown to Libya, which Pakistan has accused of helping plan what has become the longest hijacking on record.
"The fight has just begun." Fred Orkand, a spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union, told reporters.
Joseph Duff, a National Association for the Advancement of Colored People lawyer, added, "If the court system fails and the political system fails, there really is no other alternative but to take the streets."
End to LA busing stirs opposition
The State Supreme Court late Wednesday upheld the constitutionality of Proposition 1, the anti-bush amendment approved by the state voters two weeks earlier.
Proposition 1, approved by voters by a 2-3 margin in 1979, was designed to bring state law into conformity with U.S. Supreme Court rulings that busing could be required only when it is shown that a school district had taken deliberate action to segregate its schools.
Oil glut will not mean lower prices
WASHINGTON—The nation's stock of gasoline, which normally starts falling this time of year, rose another 3 million barrels last week to a level 4.1 million barrels on Monday.
Despite the glut of oil, Americans can expect gasoline prices only to level off, not to drop, according to Secretary of Energy James Edwards.
However, Texaco is offering a 4 cent-a-gallon discount on gasoline and Shell Oil Co. has decided to lower wholesale gasoline prices by 2 cents a gallon.
Despite such decreases, the price of gasoline has hit $2 a gallon in at least one place in California. Ken Wurbrick is charging possibly the highest price for gasoline in America.
But the higher prices and decreased consumption have not freed the United States from dependence on foreign oil. Government auditors reported yesterday that should foreign oil supplies be suddenly interrupted, the United States would be unable to "cope."
Billion-dollar drug ring broken up
WASHINGTON—The government, in its single largest enforcement action against drug trafficking, announced yesterday that it has broken up a billion-dollar drug operation responsible for 30 to 40 percent of all marijuana entering the United States.
The Drug Enforcement Administration announced the arrest of 122 people nationwide and indictments against 33 more, and about $21 million in seizures of 1.2 million pounds of marjuana; $31 dollars of cocaine, three hundred thousand tablets, 30 ships, two aircraft, six vehicles and about $1 million in cash.
The operation, code-named Operation Grouper, involved undercover agents who infiltrated clandestine meetings of 14 smuggling rings.
DEA administrator Peter Bensinger the investigation the government's single largest enforcement action called drug trafficking.
He said it would have a major impact on drug trafficking nationwide and would do damage to the distribution of marijuana.
In Miami, Vernon Meyer, DEA southeastern director, said the keys to the success of what he called one of the agency's most successful deep undercover inquiries, were four "deep undercover" agents who infiltrated the smugglers at marijuana "off-loaders."
The agents won enough respect from the gang leaders to be admitted to the chancelyiste lecture team, a part of which they managed to record on video tapes of the event.
Federal Reserve spurs lower rates
NEW YORK - Giant Bank yesterday cut its prime lending rate to $17.2\%$ percent, the lowest level in five months and an action that was taken after the Federal Reserve apparently "set the stage" for lower interest rates.
Chemical, the sixth largest bank in the country, said the 17½ percent rate, the lowest since November 1980, went into effect today.
"This is the first time since Nov. 13, 1980, that the funds have traded below 15 percent on the first day of a banking week," William E. Sullivan Jr., senior vice president at Bank of New York, said.
Several major banks, including Bank of New York, Morgan Guaranty, Irving Trust and Marine Midland earlier lowered their broker loan rate to $16.2\%$ percent from 17 percent in response to an easing by the Federal Reserve on the federal funds rate that banks charge each other for loans.
The broker loan rate is the interest banks charge brokersages for loans with stock as collateral. Moves in this key rate, which usually is pegged $ \frac{1}{2} $ to one point below the prime, historically foreshadow similar cuts in the rate for credit-worthy business loans.
Reagan visits Dole after surgery
WASHINGTON - President Reagan visited Sen. Robert Dole yesterday at Walter Reed Army Hospital, where the Kansas Republican is recuperating from kidney surgery. The president took Dole a copy of the book "Wealth and Power in George Gilder."
Leaving the hospital, the president told reporters that Dole was arranging for release from the hospital, and did seem to be real up and about and doing well.
Dole's aides said he was expected to be released within two or three days and was planning to resume his Senate duties, at least part time, Monday.
White House Press Secretary Jim Brady said Reagan discussed the timetable of his economic recovery package with Dole and told the senator, "We need to get you back and don't get to liking this too much. We're ready to go to work."
Correction
It was reported Wednesday that Peters, Williams and Kubota designed the planned parking lot at Sixth and New Hampshire streets. The plan was designed solely by Lawrence city staff engineers.
Student leaders tell lawmakers prof pay raise cuts 'irrational'
From Staff and Wire Reports
TOPEKA-Student leaders from the seven state schools, saying they can prove that low salaries will drive away professors, yesterday attacked lawmakers for "irrational" cutting of faculty pay raises.
But students who do not own tickets for tonight's Kansas-Mississippi game will not have a chance to buy tickets to Sunday's game against Arizona State.
"All of us have been approached by faculty who have almost pleaded with us to represent their concern," Randy Tosh, chairman of the Student Advisory Committee to the Board of Regents, said.
KU's ticket manager, Nancy Welsch, said yesterday that tickets for the Arizona State game would go on sale immediately after tonight's game at Arizona Stadium. The south end of Henry Park are around the state of the first and second-round games.
2nd round tickets scarce
Coleman said the lean budget, which will be debated by the full Senate next week, gave little incentive to teachers to stay in higher education.
Students holding tickets to tonight's first-round NCAA game can purchase tickets for Sunday's second-round game after tonight's game.
Carlin recommended to the Legislature an 8 percent increase, and the Senate Ways and Means Committee trimmed that to 7 percent.
Only students with a ticket stub from tonight's game, a valid KU ID card and one other piece of identification will be sold tickets. Welsh said 100 tickets would be available for KU students, the number available for tonight's game.
"They're doing it for political games," he said.
“It’s kind of tough over there.” Coleman said, referring to the attitude of lawmakers. “It’s nice to cut the budget, but why?
In addition, the committee voted a 15 percent average increase in tuition. The cuts, combined with the withdrawal of state money that was ex-posed to make up by the tuition increase, amounted to a million reduction in the Rents budget.
Bert Coleman, KU student body president, said that the cuts made by both Gov. John Carlin and the Senate Ways and Means Committee in the Regents 1982 budget request could drive away young professors.
"When you start out (as a professor)," he said, "you get about $15,000. You can go to high school and teach for that much."
presidents, met with several legislators, including House Speaker Wendell Lady R-Overland Park.
Lady said he agreed with some budget cuts, but added that the faculty cuts were giving him some trouble.
He said he opposed the deep cuts lawmakers had proposed in an attempt to avoid acting on Carlin's proposed severance tax on mineral production.
An increase of 119 voters in this year's Association of University Residence Halls' election proved resident awareness of the organization is increasing, AURH officers said last night.
A total of 779 hall residents cast their ballots for the four executive offices. Winners are Brenda Darrow, Salina sophomore, president; Jeff Davis, Englewood, co. sophomore, vice president; Carly Fiorina, Kan. senior, secretary; and Chris Schneider, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, treasurer.
Residents more aware of AURH
Darrow and Davis ran unopposed. Last year, 660 residents voted in the AURH election, according to election co-chairmen Jody Arendale, Olahe freshman, and Amy Handelman, Overland Park sophomore.
"There was more publicity at competition this year, and that increased the turnout." Arendale said. "Now how much how much AURH influences the halls."
Darrow and Davis ran unopposed.
The new officers begin their terms at 7:30 tonight at the AURH Assembly meeting in the Kansas Union Walnut grove.
Summer Orientation Program 1981 STUDENT CHAIR POSITIONS
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University Daily Kansan, March 13, 1981
Page 3
Shankel gets faculty support
By DAN BOWERS Staff Reporter
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel has received a vote of confidence from members of the Faculty Council.
"Be it resolved that the Faculty Council go on record as expressing its confidence in Acting Chancellor Del Shankel," the statement read.
At yesterday's meeting, the council unanimously approved a one sentence statement voicing support of Shankel. The action was taken by the council in recent criticisms of the University administration by the Legislature and press.
The statement will be sent to Shankel in the form of a letter.
The statement was proposed by James Ralston, professor of fine arts who said he was frustrated at the constant barrage pointed toward the University over relatively minor items. He also stated he was referring to an article in *University Kansas City Times* that capsulated some of the problems KU had faced recently.
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Among KU's "increasing burdens," that the article cited were:
- Two bills in the State Legislature that would shift final tenure approval faculty discipline away from the Regents schools administrations to the Regents.
- Legislative concerns that unsanitary conditions existed at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
- Recent allegations by State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, that former State Sen. Arnold Berman and former Chancellor Archie D. Dykes were attempting to diminish KU's reputation.
The article also quoted state representatives as saying that Shankel had not been effective because he was in a temporary position of acting chancellor.
"Everybody knows he's just an acting chancellor," the article quoted Rep. Loren Hohman, D-Topela. "He just plain doesn't have the clout."
In other action, the Faculty Council approved a resolution urging sufficient funding for KU's libraries.
"Inasmuch as adequate library collections are essential for quality instruction and research, it is imperative that sufficient funds be provided to prevent any further deterioration of the library book and journal acquisitions program," the resolution said.
George Worth, chairman of the Faculty executive committee, said that upon approval from the administration, evolution would be sent to the governor's office and Senate Ways and Means Committees and local legislators.
25
Get up for NCAA action!
Join Tom Hendrick and Steve Sutherland at court for all the NCAA action beginning this Friday in Wichita as the high-flying Kansas Jayhawks battle the University of Mississippi in the first round of the Midwest Subregional.
You can follow the Jyahwks 'fortunes all the way to Philadelphia on KANI 92 FM, the flagship station of the KU Sports Network.
Friday, March 13 University of Kansas vs. University of Mississippi
7:00 p.m. on
92
kanu.fm
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The University of Kahsas Kenneth A Spencer Memorial Lecture Series presents
1980 Nobel Prize winner for his work on recombinant DNA
Paul Berg
“Dissection and Reconstruction of Genes and Chromosomes”
Woodruff Auditorium/Kansas Union
1 p.m. Friday, March 13, 1981
Page 4
University Daily Kansan, March 13, 1981
Opinion
KU's own Twilight Zone masquerading as library
Every town in America, it seems, has its own farmhouse. I used to visit Oklahoma City occasionally, and down there they had this place called the Crazy House, which was a wild and confusing building. It was, in short, a real adventure just to go through.
Here at the University of Kansas, we have our own Crazy House. We call it Watson.
You know Watson—the building that looks like Notre Dame from the front and Alcatraz from the back. (Lately, it's looked like a strip mine out front.) Well, this lighthouse of art is becoming a metamorphosis of sorts laterly. Removation, they call it. Architectural menopause.
Before it's all over, there will be several graduating classes of seniors that will leave the Hill scarcely remembering what a normal library is like. They'll remember Watson
Maybe you've noticed how the front entrance to the library has been fenced like over a fence.
DON
MUNDAY
Editorial Editor
I
putting in new stairs and doors. And after several months, they finally did something with that Evel Knievel ramp for the handicapped.
Since the Berlin Wall has been erected around the usual entrance, if you want to get into Wattson—and just for the sake of sheer speculation, we'll assume that you do-you-cover your shoes and use them to be used behind the buses. Once inside, you're faced with two alternatives as to how to proceed: You can ascend some spooky old stairs to the desired floor or you can hang a left into periodicals and take in the experience. You can command the latter. That's where the fun begins.
There is a proliferation of signs down there to lead you around. "Not a Public Entrance." "Elevator This Way." "Elevator Not This Way." "Do Not Pass Go, Do Not Collect $200." You get the idea, but don't pay any of the signs. Just follow the labyrinth of steps from concrete and steel, past the pillars supporting the great weight of the library on top of them.
The place is a dead ringer for the Battle of Britain, and every time I see a small group of people almostly wandering around the place, I worry that all of the survivors in "The Poseidon Adventure."
Above the mess of the basement is the main hallway—or what used to be the main hallway. No one goes there without an adventurous spirit and a generous life insurance policy. They won't let you in there anyway, so your best bet for finding life as we know it is to take one of the elevators from the basement to the second floor. Finding the basement in itself is not unlike taking a cruise through muda Triangle. Not everyone who looks for them is heard from again . . . in this dimension, anyway.
Part of renovation, you probably know, is moving things around so they're hard to find. Why is this $k^2$ Elementary, my dear Watson. If every place stayed the same, the challenge is to move all the stacks in the plains why, for a time, you could look out to where the center stacks used to be and see a life-size model of the Vehicle Assembly Building at Cape Canavaler. Supposedly, the book "How stacks are now crammed with wings" and wings. But those white wings were pretty check-fold to begin with.
The Periodicals Room, as I've mentioned before, is now in the basement. It used to be on the first floor, and now it enjoys about one-eighth of that space down in the bowels of Watson. The Reserve Room, Microforms and Copy Services, all of which used to happily reside in the basement, have now worked their way up to the second floor. And I understand why documents from the first level Documents from its classy basement niche, it was lost for several months until someone accidentally stumbled upon it clear over in the Spencer Research Library.
Two departments have—so far—been spared this jugging; Reference and Circulation. They're still where they always want to be, when he awaits your way to them without getting lost.
To keep you from getting lost, they've laid down these lines of red, yellow and orange tape running from the entrance to the various departments. I'd advise not following them, but if you must, you should want to leave a trail of bread crumbs behind you—just in case. There used to be a blue line next to the door where you would use our sheer curiosity. It led me to an exit-staircase one of those Gothic windows on the second story. The leap was tempting, but, unlike many others, I opted to go out the less direct but also less injurious route.
Anybody not made deaf by the library last fall will notice that it's somewhat quieter there now. "Study in Sensurround," they should have called it. Far be it from me to criticize, but with brick walls coming down, jackhammers, normal hammers, sawing, loudspeakers, and noisy noise. I concluded that Watson is everything you've ever wanted in a library, and more!
Gaze up at the mysterious third floor—I haven't had the guts to venture up there—and we'll have concluded our little tour of the library. As you leave, say "HI" to your friendly Gestapo agent, who'll gladly check your backpack to make sure you haven't smuggled out a set of 1921 Britannicas or a builder or something.
On one occasion, as I was leaving the building, I passed to inquire of the book-watcher. "When will all this lunacy end?" I got the same answer Michelangelo gave in "The Agony and the Ecstasy"—"When it's finished."
That comment notwithstanding, the lunacy is still scheduled to end sometime in 1982. But let me warn you now: Just when you think it's safe to go back in the library, you've got a double whammy coming right at you. Rumor has it they're planning to build a twin of Watson later this decade, one to house all the branch libraries.
And why not? Not even the Titanic had a sister ship. In fact, she had two.
The University Daily KANSAN
(USPS 685-40) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday (USPS 685-41) Published except Sunday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 60455. Subscription includes $15 for each year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, passed through the student activity. Postmaster: Send change of address to the University Daily Kansas Flint, Hall, The University of Kansas
Business Manager Terri Fry
It's time to economize!
No more silver bullets!
America is the land where car is king. No other country has such a collection of freeways and drive-in convenience. There are drive-in restaurants, drive-in laundries, drive-in telephones and now,
Pot Shots
Peter
Loneville
Editor David Lewis
for the first time, drive-in funeral parlors.
Where? California, of course.
This is one area in which Kansas can unashamedly remain behind the times, thank you. But one of these days, there will be a multiple-person pileup on this very campus unless the buildings and grounds boys repaint all the stirred crossings.
Every time I try to cross the campus roads—in the right places—I almost am bowled over by a maniac driver who can't see where the pedestrian crossing used to be. My record for near-misses is outside the Kansas Union; there you take your life in your hands trying to cross the road. I'm sure there is a sinister plot by professors to see how many F's (fatalities) they can give out, but, according to the rules of the road, we foot-togglers have right of way at a crossing. Not on this campus—there are no crossings.
Some people will leave the sidewalk and walk across the grass as a short cut.
Other people, presumably rock-ribbed believers in the sanctity of sidewalks, will plant trees and shrubs across the shortcuts so that
Jane Merbelt
everyone will stay on the concrete and the curse will run smoothly along its appointed route.
Somewhere, people are marking cans and packages "Open this end." They are designing little packages of ketchup and mustard that say "Cut or tear along the line" and squirt their contents all over you when you are reduced to ripping them with your teeth. They are making child-proof caps that endlessly turn around in a circle and click instead of opening.
It's just a theory, but I think the world is shaped by it. People and people and people to circumcertain the obstacles.
I refuse to be intimidated. I will smash the child-proof bottles against the wall, open the package at the wrong end, use an ice pick on the ketchup package and walk around the trees on the footpath. For every petty obstacle, there are a thousand small acts of defiance.
Think of television and think of "Nova" and "MASHI," "Masterpiece Theatre" and "Sixty culture," cultured akkenh has resulted from the taming of VIF. The inventive Renaissance that would have turned Leonardo's
BENJAMIN BONDY
Kevin Mills
Kevin Mills
da Vinci's cheeks red with passionate envy
Think of television's young but brilliant legacy: man's crown triumph on the moon, the straightforward reportage of the Vietnam war, the Olympic celebration of America's young hockey team. All for the price of a few hundred bucks. This Renaissance is not reserved for the weakly or intellectual elite; nosirree Bob, TV is everyman's land.
Thus we have J.R. of Sav-on and "You bet you boots" Colonial Billy, Slim Whitman's greatest hits and Popel's pocket fisherman. No nobile craftsmans or creative genius these, nor do they possess the masteries pure and simple, as much a part of the human condition as Shakespeare's "Hamlet."
Television has become the human mirror in which to call it. Call it h哄 call it sh哄 but as the Bard said,
. . ” Have a rosey day.
TV journalism flaunts superficiality
Exactly one week ago, Walter Cronkite spent exactly no time behind his cluttered desk in the CSN newsroom.
And without Cronek, America's favorite
aichman, many television viewers seem to
hate him.
That's the way it is. And that is probably the way it should be.
Cronkite, the CBS anchorman for nearly 20 years, was an experienced, conscientious newsman, and he looked like the third grandfather we never had.
MR. PRESIDENT, THE CHINESE ARE ENGAGED IN A SCIENTIFIC PROJECT I THINK WE OUGHT TO CONSIDER:
THEY TRIED TO CROSS A HUMAN WITH A CHIMP IN ORDER TO CREATE A HIGHER ANIMAL INTELLIGENCE--
ONE ABLE TO SPEAK AND PERFORM SIMPLE TASKS!
THEY COULD BE USED AS COW HERDERS, MINE WORKERS!
However, at times, that trust seemed to resemble blind faith, and that probably was bad
He inspired trust, and that was good.
However, at times, that trust seemed t
B blind faith in the CBS Ewing News, or m other source of information, is dangerous, but it is a valid belief.
VANESSA HERRON
known to forget that their duty is to inform the public, not to rope it into their own third of the
For example, a few years ago, ABC decided to jazz up its nightly news with a high-tech newsroom and a passle of scrappy young entertainers to amplify the day's events in 50 words or less.
ABC also offers "20/20," a news magazine that sources Gerald Rivera, the scrappiest young reporter.
Who could forget the sight of Riviera chasing a pusher down the mean streets of Los Angeles, with ABC's "hidden" microphones and cameras in tow?
NBC, which usually projects a more dignified image, also had a fling with hidden cameras this week. A network news team covered an FBI investigation of the connections between organized crime and organized labor in New York.
Apparently, the reporters were on the right track because those labor bonuses obviously were cut. The managers were the ones who
The men were overweight, they were rumped suits, and in answer to NBC's questions about their Mafia contacts, the men made memorable statements like this:
"I am only acquainted with doze gentlemen," the boss said in thick. Brooklynes. "I am a republican."
NBC certainly bagged some live ones this week. The fact that many of the subjects of the network's week-long coverage had not been formally charged is a technicality.
Trail by television is much more efficient than
it. And it makes it so much easier to meet deadlines.
The television news medium has many advantages. It can disseminate information
that it can make hard-hitting visual
statements.
However, television's 30-minute broadcasts (after commercials) often give an abbreviation.
B
Television reporters also find it awkward to attribute statements. Consequently, many newscasts are scattered with unattributed editorials.
For instance, there seems to be an unwritten law that after every presidential speech, television news reporters should be granted time to present their personal views of the event. So within 30 seconds, the season's Washington correspondent assembles a truncated summary of the speech that usually is colored by his own brand of skepticism.
Roa said budg mula
O
Presto! Instant analysis.
No reporter, in any medium, can be expected to remain objective at all times, but he should be able to accurately describe events.
Law conne
Lawr
Ave.
The American people probably are more intelligent than we think they are.
To a great extent, the major networks decide what will and will not be an issue for the millions of people who are online.
However, most people may not be aware of the media's power to set the national agenda.
The run of static
He fell to
The and three
For example, when Jimmy Carter lusts in his heart, that's news. The problem is that it's also entertainment. And in the monthly ratings race, it's sometimes hard to tell the two apart.
Television newsmen, and all newsmen, should be watchers closely when they report the停播 of the television.
Luckily, it is relatively easy to watch out for reporters like the ABC hot dog squad.
But the trusted, family doctor-type newsman, like Cronkite and John Chancellor, the NBC anchorman, are not obviously opinionated. In their own way, they are more threatening
Anyone who has the power to broadcast his view of the world to millions of people should be challenged every now and then. There should be no unimpeachable sources—especially in the news business. And that includes Walter Cronkite, America's favorite patriarch.
It seems to spell trouble when millions of men go down and the way it is, "every morning—and they believe."
One man's father figure is another man's Big Brother.
University Daily Kansan, March 13, 1981
Page 5
Budget
"It's the accusers' burden of proof," Busy said.
From page 1
Busy told the committee members it was their responsibility to investigate the facts. "It's a huge problem," she said.
The committee passed a recommendation to the Cultural Committee, asking that it continue the normal funding process regarding ISA's budget request. Wednesday night, the Cultural Committee voted to table ISA's request until the completion of the investigation.
Ron Heape, Cultural Committee co-chairman, said his committee could meet before Senate budget deliberations March 24 and 25, to formulate a recommendation on ISA's budget.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, Busy told the committee that he met with Acting Chancellor Del Shankel and Senate officers to discuss the activity fee increase.
He said they explained the Senate's justifications for the $14.58 activity fee. Shankel agreed to postpone his recommendation to the Board of Regents until next month.
The committee voted to decrease its recommendation from $14.55 to $14.50, following advice from Keith Nitcher, University director of the Graduate School, who will be set at an even dollar or half-dollar amount.
The committee cut 3 cents from the unallocated portions of fees, and 2 cents from Unallocated Fees.
The summer activity fee, which was recommended at $4.83, will be presented to the Regents at $5, making an even amount and providing the remainder of the Senate's allocation.
Seventeen cents in the summer activity fee is equivalent to 2 cents in the fall and spring fee begins. The Small number of summer beaches. The Senior will have to approve the $14.50 recommendation.
that biology had just entered the commercial field.
Genetics
From page 1
A common concern with genetic engineering is the perspective it opens in human cloning.
A clone has to grow from a single cell and would result in an identical but younger twin of the parent.
"The moral issues are not profoundly different from those that bear on the relationship of an individual with others."
Yale researchers recently showed that genetic material inserted with recombinant DNA into newly fertilized egg cells of mice, could show up on the DNA of the newborn mice.
Shelton also said human cloning did not raise new moral questions.
"We don't get excited about who can have babies," he said. "We don't think it is appropriate that only certain people are authorized to reproduce their own kind."
On the Record
Lawrence police are looking for three men in connection with a reported assault on a Lawrence man Wednesday near 1800 Haskell Ave.
The victim told police that his motorcycle had run out of gas and he was pushing it to a gas station.
He said he was struck from behind with a club, fell to the ground and was then assaulted.
The victim said he pulled a knife from his belt and stabbed one of the attackers in the leg. The three men then fled the scene.
SEVEN LAWRENCE JUVENILES admitted
their involvement in a burglary and theft ring during delinquency hearings Wednesday in the juvenile division of Douglas County District Court, a court services officer said yesterday.
The youths, all in high school, face punishment ranging from probation to placement in a youth rehabilitation center. Disposition of their cases depends on when the hearings continue on April 10 Kent No. 9826.
The juveniles admitted various degrees of involvement in 18 burglaries and thefts between August and December of last year, Noble said. The group mainly tools, stereos, and car parts—were stolen
LAWRENCE POLICE are investigating the theft Wednesday of almost $500 of property from a locked car in the 1900 block of Heatherwood Drive. The thieves took a stereo equalizer, valued at $220, 17 cassette tapes, valued at $85, stereo volume knobs, valued at $10, a suede coat, valued at $120, and a pair of leather boots, valued at $65.
Lawrence police said they had recovered and returned most of the stolen property.
A KU STUDENT lost $792 Wednesday, KU police said. The student was walking to his car in front of Ellsworth Hall and his wallet apparently fell from his pocket.
NCAA gate receipts to aid KUAC budget
By REBECCA CHANEY
Staff Reporter
If KU basketball games in the NCAA tournament are as profitable as athletic officials are projecting, the income sub-jects for KU will be the status of the athletic department budget.
According to Louis Spry, NCAA controller, schools should receive about $80,000 plus expenses—air coach for 50 people and $$a a week. Teams compete in second-round game of the tournament.
In first-round play today, KU will take on the University of Mississippi at 7:08 p.m. in Wichita. If the Jayhawks win, they will play Arizona State University Sunday.
Teams advancing to regionals should receive $225,000 plus expenses, according to Spry, and teams reaching the finals should get $380,000 plus expenses.
"That's what we're projecting for this year," Soysa said.
However, KU's assistant athletic business manager, Art Lingle, said that income from Big Eight teams participating in the tournament is about $20 million, rather than directly to the teams' schools.
Each team playing a game will receive two-ninths of the income from that game. The other seven conference teams will receive one-ninth of the income.
With three Big Eight teams playing in the tournament, every Big Eight school should
receive at least $30,000 from the NCAA even if none of the teams advance.
"If you're in a conference, that money goes to the conference," Lingle said. "If you're like Notre Dame and don't belong to a conference, the money goes right to the school."
Lingle qualified his statements, saying that he thought the NCAA projections of income per student were "not useful."
"I thought those figures were a little high for a paper-off estimate," he said. "Last year, it was $270 million."
Yet Lingle said he still was confident that the unexpected revenue from the tournament would improve the financial situation of the athletic department.
"The deficient举动 at the end of January was about $500,000." he said. "But that's kind of meaningless because we were still getting football budget and basketball ticket sales.
"We're still finishing up the March report. Depending on the amount of contributions (to the Williams Educational Fund for athletic scholarships), we should be under $100,000 in the red after the basketball tournament receipts."
However, Lingle said he was not so confident that tournament receipts would put the department budget in the black by June 30, the end of the fiscal year.
“It’s going to be awlful close,” he said. “I would probably guess that we would not make it into the black. We’ll probably end up the year a little in the red.”
الله آیا سعید بن عبد الله نبوي
برادرنا علیه السلام نبوي ورضوان بن برادرنا
شرفا كاشران
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دیدگاه نگهبانان آیا اصلاحات خود به جای پاسخ دادن به بقایای دیگر مهم نیست؟ بیان کنید.
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NATIONAL CHAMPION
Joe Tynan knows them all.
The University of Kansas Concert Series presents The Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra Andre Previn, Conductor
Monday, March 23, 1981
Hoch Auditorium
8 pm
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved
Public S7, S8
KU Students with ID S2, S1
Program
Mozart
Tchaikovsky
Brahms
Concerto for Flute and Harp
Romeo and Juliet
Symphony no. 2
'One of the really great orchestras in the land New York Daily News
Page 6 University Dally Kansan, March 13, 1961
On Campus
TODAY
THE SOCIOLOGY DEPARTMENT INFORMAL LECTURE will feature Judith Stacey, University of California-Davis, on her research on the Chinese student at 10:30 a.m. in 700 Fraser.
THE KENNETH A. SPENCER MEMORIAL LECTURE will feature Paul Berg, 1800 winner of the Nobel Prize in chemistry, in "Dissertation and Reconstruction of Genes and Chromosomes" at 1 p.m. in the Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union
THE AEROSPACE ENGINEERING COLLOQUIUM will host Tom McMurtry on Who Said It? (7:47 a.m.) (A Test Plot's View of 3:40 p.m. a Slew-Wing Research Vehicle)" at 3:30 p.m. in 314 Wescoe.
THE SOCILOGY COLLOQUIUM will host Judith Stacey on "Patriarchy and Socialist Revolution in China" at 3:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union.
THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
A STUDENT CELLO RECITAL by David Shumway will be at $ p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
African art created for a purpose
Most people think art is something that sits on tables and hangs on walls.
In African cultures, the arts are integral to everybody's life, according to Reinhold Janzen, KU anthropology museum research associate.
That is why Janzen刻了 the African art exhibit in Spooner Hall "Patterns for Living."
cost of the objects, which come from 27 art styles, cultural cultures, weren't created as art, Janzen said.
They were created out of need to fulfill a distinct purpose.
More than 100 pieces from public and private Karsas collections will be on display
Janzen said "Patterns for Living" was to be held in Exhibition of African art to be held in London.
"The exhibit was only a fraction of what we could have done," Janzen said. "There are very many people in Kansas, former missionaries and Peace Corps volunteers who want to see art privately. We couldn't use it all because one artist just can't hold everything."
The display includes fabrics, miniature cast bronze sculptures, sculptured figures, carved stools, brass bracelets, pottery and beadwork.
In this exhibit we tried not to empower masks too much because that's what most people think of when they think of African zenoiden. We said: "We have a well-rounded exhibit."
Throughout the exhibit's run, a short color filmstrip, "Tribute to Africa," by Eliot Elisono, a world-famous photographer, will be featured.
In addition to the filmstrip, four special lectures will be given in the museum's Main Gallery; "Icons of the Kongo Atlantic World," March 27; "African Vision and World View," April 1; "The Survival of Art: An Ivory Coast Terracotta Tradition," April 8; and "African Art Patronage and Production Today," April 15.
"There is always a dilemma when you show non-Western art, "Janzen said.
A woman is sewing a fabric on a table covered with various tools and materials. The background includes a studio setting with large windows allowing natural light to illuminate the workspace.
REINHILD Janzen, research associate for the school of anthropology, prepares African jewelry for an exhibit that opened March 1 in Spooner Hall. The show, which will run through April 26, features a variety of African art forms.
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Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Center
"SO ABASOL STOLE THE HEARTS OF THE MEN OF ISRAEL!" 2nd Sam. 15:8. But the hearts of the men of Israel belonged to their great King David, the man Sacred Scriptures calls "A man after God's heart."
Abasalom was the third son of The Great King David. He was a soldier and took men in the whole nation, maybe of men and women.
---
The hero's son, winner of all the beauty prizes, idol of the eyes — especially that "head of hair," got himself horses and chariots, and fifty men to run before him — imagine that sight and its effect on the "bestsides and teen stuff" — he was early in the morning to "struit his stuff!" He did not see him in about in foil and foolishness. No, indeed! With these fifteen ahead of his charlot he charged down to the city gate to make war on "poverty, injustice, and uphold civil rights!"
Mt My how he did love the people, justice, and "what have you?" When folks came up to the Capital City to see The
The Great King's Son, "idol of the eyes," stole the hearts of the men of Israel, deceived them, caused them to believe alie, and be damned with civil war! How did he manage to accomplish this stupendous task, and turn the nation against their deliverer and national hero? The 15th chapter of 2nd Samuel tells the story:
The New Deal, The Fair Deal, The New Frontier, the New Deal, The New Deal, the New Frontier, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal,
the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal, the New Deal,
the Lord Jesus Christ, God's Word and Preach!
King, he introduced himself — without needing any, being a royal Prince, and inquired about their controversy: "See my masters are good and right; but there is no man with a royal Prince, and his Absalom said moreover. Oh that I were judge in it,
Even Judas iscarrot, showed concern about the poor—the waste of money on ointment for Christ that might hurt children. What effect does our concern for the poor have on our own pocketbook and bank account? God is not deceived!
BOKONON
841 3600
12 EAST 8TH ST
P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
Gammons' Weekend Birthday Bash!
a year on
have a
us!"
To thank you for your patron-
age, we're giving you a free
drink when you come
help us celebrate our
1st birth-
day this
Saturday!
23rd & Ousdahl
GAMMON'S
SNOWMAT
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 handkerchief fewer $2.25 $2.50 $2.65 $3.00 $3.25 $3.45 $3.65 $3.85 $4.05
15 additional handkerchiefs
one time
12.25
02
ERROBS
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 9 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 9 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 9 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 9 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 9 p.m.
The Karsan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the id.
'OUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can placed in person or by calling the Kansan business office at 843-638.
KANSAN BUSINESS 0FFICE
121 Flint Hall 864-4358
Employment Opportunities
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED COUPLE. Sorry, to children. Must own a computer and a tablet. Pleaseplain. Work. Housework, carpentry, painting, general maintenance. Salary: $350 per hour. Required. Provided, your own completely furnished room. Time: June 1 to August 12 of each month. Preferred by employer. Apply in writing. Job offered on Sunday, 1000 Sunset Drive, Lawrence, KS 60044.
ENTERTAINMENT
TRAVEL CENTER
TAKING A TRIP?
Travel is Our Business.
The LOWEST FARES available!
As close as your phone . . .
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W 23rd St. (by Penney)
9:00 5:00 M.F. 9:30 2:00 Sat.
FOR RENT
Med Center Round? Nice, 2-bedroom
bedrooms available for summer and fall.
Carpet. A.C. appliances, and parking. C3-
1:911-381-2878
3 Bedroom apt. in N. Lawrence, utilities
paid. $300.00 per mo. 814-5968.
3-13
3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplaces and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. tf
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5. 843-3228. tf
**MURIZA STREET DUPLEXES Available.** Perfect for 4 students, 4 bedrooms, dishwasher, range reactor, doctor's chair, central air conditioning, carpet & drips on street parking, un furnished, or 863. Utilize 8-873-590 or 863.
For spring and summer, Naimish Hall offest offers the best of dormitory life and the benefits of it. Weekly maid service to clean rooms, keep the facilities of it. Weekly maid service to clean rooms, keep the facilities of it. You'll enjoy activities and much more. If you looking back on your vacation, you want stop in or give us a call: NAI-HALL, HALL, 1630 Naimshih Drive, 654-792-8100.
Via Capri Apr. 10. Unfurnished studio, 1 & 2 bdm. avail. central air, wall-to-wall. Apartment, 2B blocks south of Fraser Hall. Call 465-2930 at 5:30 a.m. anytime weekends.
PRINCESSION FLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
for rostratemates. wood burned fireplaces,
fireplace inserts, hookups, fully equipped
number of rooms in building, or phone 852-701-3600 for additional housing, or phone 852-701-3600
Male: roommate to rent furnished apt. stit. kitchen, wacher, p. dryer, cable tv, a. poet, r. central alt., all furnishings x. pool, y. carpet, yi. $18/mcall. Call Kevil 8:41 - 54:04
b2 townhouse for rent at Pine Haven
mnt w. weather & dryer, close to shopping
center. We pay water $20 per person de-
sire. No pets. Call 695-821-3947
or 6777.
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5000. if
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute,
walk to campus, 1821 Tennessee, $270 rent
+ utilities. $42-4822. 3-25
SOUTHEAST PARKWAY TOWNHOUSE 26th and Kasold. If you are tired of apartments in the neighborhood, consider a feature 3 br., 1½ baths, all appliances, attached garage, pool, and lots of privacy. We offer a wide variety of accommodations. Craig Levi or Jim Bong at 745-1081 for more information on our most stylish rooms.
utilitys. no pets, 842-1929 after $5. 3-13 Female roommate wanted, after graduation
Apartment in a bedroom-2. Bath Furnished
Apartment in a bedroom-3. Bath Furnished
Utilitys. call. Call after $6. (1) 631-
$575 utilitys. call. Call after $6. (1) 631-
$575 utilitys. call.
Sublease 1. bwd - when all utilities pd. excl.
lights, but not motue convenient location.
Call 841-8524 or 842-4611.
3-13
FRESHENM and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house next year! Apply now. 842-6592.
Sublise furnished Meadowbrook studio apt.
available April 1st or May 1st! Call 749-
1810.
Large room for rent close to campus. Excellent kitchen facilities. Call 841-9536 any-time or 842-5152 after 7 p.m.
Surnear ableate; 2 bedroom apt, with carport. Rent & electricity. At Malls Old English Village. Call 841-8219. 3-13
SPACIACUS TWO-STORY DUPLICATE 1X20
all appliances, air conditioned, one car garage,
or possibly a separate option. You can
possible option to buy $295.00 Less
taxes. 12% contract. B-410 - 815, 010
12% contract. B-410 - 815, 010
Available now. 1 br. at Jayhawk West Ap-trap, carpet, fireproof, stove, A/C, indoor and outdoor pool, no deposit required, $205/month, water paid. Carrier #842-3444-61.
FOR SALE
Nexterian Civilization Notes. On sale on Sale!
Makes it easier to use them! As a study
material, makes it more accessible.
cram summary. New analysis of
the book. New work. Oral Unier.
The Bookmark, and Oral Book-
For Sale, match couch & chair, kitchen-
match, cross country skiff & chair, downhill
ski boot, Women's size 6, Men's size 12,
141-849
Alternator, starter and generator specialties.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3800
ww
4b
3 - In- 1. 1978 Allegro moduler stereo~$75.
19" Zenth cabinet Color T.V. $150. Call-
749-1699.
1971 Chawelle Malibu, repaired engine. 2 door newly repainted. 2 back tires. Call after 2:00 p.m. $500. Call 149-236-1. 3-13
Must sell 1689 Nova with 1979 Engleham AM/AL
best offer best sale best offer best sale best offer best offer best sale
1977 Ford 42D LTD II, A/C, A/T, PS, Pn. manuals, Cruise control only, 50,000 miles. Beautiful car in excellent condition, $2700. 842-6212 after 5:00. Keep trying. 3-13
Ampeg V-4 guitar head. New Transformer
& Tubes. $175.00 or best offer. 749-1214.
Keep trying
1973 VW 412 Wagon. Auto, Radials. Body and engine great, 86,000 miles $1375.1971 VW Squareback. Auto. Body clean, engine work for $30.425. 3-24
Window bags, Buttered golf clubs, sleeping
bags, tents, lamps, metal detectors.
Everything But ice, bce & Vermont. 5-23
H44 Honda 400 lb c.4 exel. cord, engel. 6-28
Hand woven oriental rug, 7 by $4\frac{1}{2}$'. Also a wall hanging. Rare chance. Contact Haroon 749-2724. 3-23
Dishwasher & Stove (gas) for sale. Good Condition. $75 each. Call after 5:00 p.m.
3-14
1699
Ski Boots - Women's Size 12; Dolceme
Boots, 2 yrs old, used only one season.
$75.00. Call after 5:00 p.m. 841-7194 3-13
Looking for bargains? Of course you need $25 a week! Now you get free gift from
Conn Acoustic Guitar & Case Brand new,
take bask offer. E also F flat Alto Sax, Take
bask offer so call now. 842-2853 3-13
60 Rammer, runs darn good; $600: Guitar,
Yamaha 12-string $100: car speakers:
tune w/ amplifier and equalizer tuner;
twice w/ amplifier $800:
$2 Inquire at $402.485 ask for Riech. 3-13
Rattle Snake eggs, Wall paper, photographic mirrors, chest of drawers, crook pots. *everything But Ice 16 & Vermont* 3-23
1980 Datsun Pickup Longbed, 5-speed, Alr,
Sunroof, 1969 VW Bug. Call 749-2728, 3-25
Ryerson.
Sunfroth 1990 WV Bug. Inc.
91 Yamaha 400 special 130 mi with luggage rack, rear seat, helmet, nylon cover
Jim 864-1216
3-13
FOUND
Man's watch found in Snow Hall. Call 864-
4301 and identify.
Set of keys, GM auto, & Honda motorcycle keys among others. 841-2021, after 5:00, 3-24
Found a calculator at Watson Library last
Thursday. Call 864-6117 to identify. 3-24
HELP WANTED
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES
you will share your work with
experiences in nursing and
nursing home residents! Our consumer
organization, Kansans for Improvement of
Healthcare, provides education and input on nursing home conditions and
involvement of the residents. All names and correspond
information is confidential. Please call us
918-824-3850 or visit www.kansans.org.
KANANS 2871) Mass. St. #. 4, Lawrence, Kan.
Get Results!
Full or part time help needed. Combination
full-time or part-time help. Clothes:
Dancing. Dancing start $40.00
Nude dancing $10 per hour. Your choice.
Dance lessons at 890-378-9900.
Rent on Hwy 40. 379-9900. • $24
A listing in the classifieds packs a powerful sales punch!
CRUISER CLIENT MIDDYEREANAN, SAIL
STRUCTURES Office Personnel, Counselors
structures Office Personnel, Counselors
APPLICATION OPEN 10AM handling for AP-
PLICATION OPEN 10AM
CA 8560 10am Box 6029 CA 8560
CA 8560
Part time help was needed at Hilerst Laudrainat 925 Iowa. Where you can wash and dry your clothes for only 75¢ per load. Please apply in person. 3-13
RESEARCH ASSISTANT (1) Position open, with appointment based on Child of Research Requirement. Current position requires one hour of computer data entry and three hours of graph analysis using Dr. Winn's or program dictionaries assigned by Dr. Winn. Application deadline March 16, 2014. Weekly work will include application development, weekly application deascaline March 16-20, 2014. The university of Kansas 6441-3443 AE OE 3-12
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF
accredited for the Summer Orientation student
advertisement in today's paper or come by
Hall. An equal opportunity hire. Strong
Hall. An equal opportunity hire.
Survive break jobs. -Lasting one week, partial part time position continuing through Survise outdoor work. -In person at the Garden Center, 15th & New York. 3-13
PSYCH INV. If you are interested in contacting a PHSYCH intern is a job for you. We have 2 immediate opening full time 40 hrs per wk. Part Time 15 hrs per wk. Full time 60 hrs per wk. Call (877) 350-2959 LMH 350-2959 Malone, LA LMH 350-2959 Malone, LA
Travel from Oklahoma to Montana with a wheat harvesting crew. Call collect on weekdays, 913-751-4945; on weekends 913-
429-4299
LOST
HP-34-C Calculator Tues. 24. Reward. 841-
3625 3-13
Last-may only Christmas I used. J is a very shy girl. She's preoccupied with the Quintz Quartz watch somewhere in or behind her bed. The Hall Genesee reward for the return of her birthday gift is a round face, "sentinelial gift" Please. I will miss you.
Lost one blue down parka in Murphy Hall on March 1. 749-0110. 3-25
"Missing" bike desperately needed buck- luck at Dillons, Woman's Woolen Silver winner, black scat, like new. If seen or found, please call 842-6980. 3-13
MISCELLANEOUS
PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARES. Proof positive, laminated in hard plastic. For details and application send us the following information: Productions, De K. Bag $22, Box 326, Arizona $221.
NOTICE
SKI WINFER PARK-MARY JANE SPHINE
ski rentals, ski tickets, rental lodging insurance and
skis. ticket sales, ski equipment and ski
kentucky ski resorts. SKI ect. 6:10-
6:30. SKI ect. 7:45-8:40.
SKI for Darryn. Three day Easter
kentucky ski resorts.
GAY AND LEBISHAN PEER Counseling:
A friend is ready to listen. Referrals through K.U. Information, 845-3506, or Headquarters, 841-2345.
tf
Going skiing over Break! HEAT WAVE SKI
Vests are ideal for Spring skiing and come
in great designs and colors. Tel. evening.
864-3691, 842-5558. 3-13
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
FAC
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports. Custom made portraits, color, B/W. Swells Studio 749-1611. 4-1
ATTENTION ARTISTS
Smoky Hill Juried Art Exhibition
Smoky Hill
$1,500 CASH AWARDS
Entry Dates: April 3-4.5
For Entry Forms, Write:
Hays Arts Council
Box 896
Hays, KS 67601
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can give, at prices students can afford. Swells Studio, 749-1611. 4-1
NEED EXTRA CHAIR? Sell your old Gold &
Diamonds. Cup prices for class rings,
gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6377, 841-
7478.
HHEADACH, BACKACHE, CHISEPT NECK,
LEG PAIN? GAINLY STIFFIC Care & its
support. Johnson Johnson 643-928-100
con servication, accepting Blue Cross &
Louisiana $1 insurance purchase
Want to be a Priest? Sister? Ages 20-50?
Contact Father Nigro, Gonzaga University,
Snokane, 99258.
A great Spring fishing combination—sun-
warm, warm breezes, open water, you, and
Anglers Unlimited. 1449 W. 23rd. 8-13
SPRING FORMAL RUSH MARCH 27, 28, 29
Register in the Interference Facility
Register in the Interference Facility
In Oliver, Temmlin, and JBP on March 15
p. There will be a $15 register fee
$15
Immediate Opening The United States State University is dedicated to the interests of students in the field of computer science. KU is a member of this group and actively applies for the position of campus directing officer
Design a logo for the KU Sailing Club. Logo design could be used for newsletter, magazine cover or annual fundraiser or $10 or a club membership. Entries due by 9:30 am. Call sales call Barb at 843-3120. For 3-25
Skipping classes? Learn to "play the game and still make the grades" want. Send $3 to BRENNAN RESOURCE DIRECTORY Box 855, Wichita, KS 67208.
3-24
Compiling is a "best of Lawrence" list. Best
compiled by "Lawrence." adhitto, altitude, waitress, restaurant.
Best anything as long as it applies to 2000 W. E.
nominations to 2000 W. E. 614. Lawrence.
314. Lawrence.
What's beyond vegetarian? Pravadamarian!
What's in comfortable settings, Mon
Fri. 12, 10 noon to 4, 50 pm, 834 illions,
D. App. All you can eat, no stairs,
lachéd
STUDY BREAK-FISH Clinton Lake this
week at the $15,000 Unlimited. 1498 W 3d-213
OUTDOORS WOMEN-nort fishing is an o
nmental activity. 1498 W 3d-213
angled-Anglers Unlimited. 1498 W 3d-
213
For Sale: nice '75 Suzuki 185 Street bike
in exc. cond., 30,000 mi. Call Mike 749.
0851.
Help—1 need to buy one more ticket to the gams! Friday night in Wichita! Call Kris at 864-2216. 3-13
Hillcrest Launament 528 is alloy isly business. From 6 a.m. till 9 a.m. they give courtney service. Don't be yelled at and
CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS. April 14-15
Petitions offered in Student Senate Office.
Filing d2dailies. 5:00 p.m. Friday, March
3-7
We are looking for another mature, non-
married individual who is willing to engrave or marry to live with us in a permanent during the next school year. Age: 21-30 years as possible, but not during Spring Break.
(Muffin) You're a very special lady. I Love You so much! May our dream never end. 3-13 Happy Anniversary. Pooh.
Looking for fun? Come hear The Moffet
Bears Band Thursday March 26th at the
Entertainer. Sponsored by AOPI. 3-13
I have a hot date for Jaylawack's NCAA game, but need one more ticket. Call 843-2716 if you can help me find a ticket. 3-13
A Silk Slick—just who do you think you are, calling yourself slick? There's only one option: impulses, and upsets. But too many to many of them, silk's slick to somnib灵-simple and cute, like Butler, Biff. Tooth-biting and affe mind—The Real Silk's caption. P-S- sorry-sick. J-3-13 not February.
Fort Lauderdale--Scooter, Biff, Skip, Flip.
Nix, RB. Lew, Lear, Man.
3-13
Delicious Sub Sandwiches in a variety of flavors, all for your consumption. Watch for our valuable coupons. 3-13
TWO RIDERS WANTED: To Hutchinson
laving Sunday. For Information call 842-
2271.
PAST—I miss you already. Have fun in Colorado. I'll be thinking about you. With love always A C.
3-13
DEB E. Hope you have a "Special" 23rd.
MAGGIE H.
SERVICES OFFERED
Tutoring Math 00-800. Phax 100-600. Bus
388, 804. Math 841-830-936. tf
tutoring math 00-800. Phax 100-600. Bus
388, 804. Math 841-830-936. tf
Welcome home, Brad! We missed you.
Rutua, Leno, Abdul, Chung-dung Poo.
Gigl, Collette, Rusty.
The Beatium of Rusty Rattus Rodove will take place Sunday at the First Renditional Church. Proven parent—Rusty Rattus and Clemence Rattus—R.G. 3-18 Collisse Museum.
Karen—The frog can't be that important. There is no one else there and we need someone to start the locks. This may be your only chance to go to the back in one night. Be there. She's Slick.
We Do!
wheel
Do you have a Sports Car Mechanic that has been named Kansas Mechanic of the Year?
air racing and repair
843-7095
26th and Iowa
Drop off services. Drop your laundry off and we will wash, dry and fold your clothes and we will wash, dry and fold your clothes at 8 p.m. Mon, through Sat. Ask about our providing services and free rides. Ask about our providing services.
I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476.
TYPING.
Experienced typed-term papers, thesis,
music. electric M.Sc Selective. Proofreading,
spilling corrected. 843-8544. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, misc. JBM correcting selective.
Barb, after 5 p.m. p.84-2210. **tf**
Experienced K.U. typist. HI Correcting
Seletric, Quality work. References available.
Sandy, evening and weekends. 748-
0018 ff
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate, IBM plca elite. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends.
842-2001
For Your Timing Order
ENCORE COPY COPIES
-Holidays Fee 842.90
Experienced typist-books, thesis, term papers, disordertions, etc. ICB捏懂 Selectric Terry evenings and weekends. 842-4754 or 843-2671. **tf**
Dial
12th and
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. If
RESUME - RESUME - RESUME - Professional Resume Preparation and Printing Entrance Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa. 842-201. *cc*
Reports, dissatistics, resumes, legal forms,
granches, editine, self-correct Selectric.
Call Ellen or Jeannann 81-2172. tf
Closest thing to printing-IBM Executive typing. Fast service. Reasonable Rates. Bill 842-8772. 3-13
Grad. student's wife will type papers. 75/c.
pg. 842-3338. 3-13
Expertised typist would like to type thesis,
dissertations, etc. Call 842-3203. 3-30
Fast, efficient typing. Many years experiences IBM. Ann before 9 p.m. 7464-391-734
RUSH JOBS our specialty. Reasonable Rates.
JBM 10, 12 pitch. Nathan or Sandy-841-
7668, 843-8611.
3-23
WANTED
GOLD- Silver-DIAMONDS. Clas ring-
Silver Bands, Silver Colins, Sterling, etc.
We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or
542-2868
Female roommate to share extra nice furnished 2 kdr. 2 bath duplex $115 + 1/2 t3-11 Call 841-8390.
Musicians wanted. Drums, keyboards, guitarist, vocals. Forming band. Into Stones, Who, Kinks, jim, etc. Call 841-0180. 3-13
Summer subleagues needed for female sophs,
from May through August. Would prefer a place
at Mall's Olds English Village, Call
844-615-458, for Liae.
We need your spare clothes hangers at Hilcester Laundramat 925 Iowa. Please call 843-7949 from 6 a.m. till 10 p.m. 3-18
We are looking for another nature, non-traumatic couple with a stable relationship (i.e. living together in an apartment during the next school year) and who will be as soon as possible but not during Spring Break.
Housing needed for over the break. Will pay good rent. Call 864-2941. 3-13
Quit, studious male roommate to share
very nice apartment. Close to campus, own
room. $87.50 mo. plus ½ utilities. #328-384.
3-13
$108 per month. Own room. Utilities pd.
Mah roommate needed. Call Tom or Drew
749-3333. 3-27
Desperate for two tickets to Clapton in K.C.
341-687 anytime. 3-13
---
University Daily Kansan, March 13, 1981
Page 8
Nationals
From page 1
never appeared in the NCAA and only once have they been in a post-season tournament, last season in the National Invitational Tournament. They were beaten by Minnesota, the eventual runner-up.
DESPITE THE REBELs' lack of history on the basketball court, Ole Miss Coach Bob Wetlich is enthusiastic about meeting Kansas.
"We are very excited about playing Kansas University in the NCAA tournament," he said. "This will be our first trip while they are a team of great that annually wins their conference and has made several trips to the NCAA."
Walthich also said the Jayhawks would be playing in front of a favorable crowd in Witchita. But because of an NCAA minimum alttoutage of 785 yards, the Jayhawks won't be as favorable as it might have been, which disappoints Owens.
"VERY DISAPPOINTED," he said. "I felt initially that Wichita would be a good place to go but as it turned out, anywhere we had have been better."
The crowd won't help as much as expected but KU's height should be an advantage. The Rebels start 6-foot-8 Roger Steg at center and the only player that tail is seventh-man Tim Thomas, also 6-4.
KU will start three men taller than Stieg and will also outsize the Rebels at guard. Tony Guy, 6-foot-6, and Darnell
Valentine, 6-foot-2, will cover 6-foot Cecil Dowell and 6-foot-1 Sean Tuohy.
THE FRONTLINE is a strong point for the Rebels despite their lack of size. The main reason is 6-foot-5 senior forward Eldin Turner, who averages 20.5 points a game and 8.1 rebounds. Turner was first team ALL-SEC, quite a feat considering the players on nationally ranked Kentucky, LSU and Tennessee, all of the Southeast Conference.
The KU-Mississippi game will be followed by Wichita State Southern at 9:38. The Jayhawks' game will be followed by VCU, VCH, channel 41 and KNK, Channel 727.
BY THE TIME the first basket is made in Wichita, the women's team will have one game of AIAW tournament play under its belt. The Jayhawks, fourth-ranked nationally, face the Coyotes of South Dakota in the first round of the AIAW Region VI Tournament at Minneapolis, Minn.
Kansas, with a 2-4 record and 8-0 in Region VI play, is the tournament's No.1 seed. South Dakota, 16-9, is seeded eight.
The Coyotes started the season on a high note, winning nine of their first 10 games, but lately have been in a bump. They were overpowered last Friday, 104-52, by Kansas State, a team that Jayhawks beat three times this season.
“It’s certainly nothing that I planned,” KU Coach Marian Washington said. “We weren’t notified until just before the season that they had moved back a week. By the time the told me I could’t find anyone willing to play us.”
HOWEVER, WASHINGTON added
hurt, she did not think the layoff would
hurry.
KU may appreciate a weaker
week layoff or a 3% week
layoff since their last game.
"The kids have worked really hard in the last few weeks and they're rested and ready to play again," she said. "I'm not worried that they'll have trouble getting up for South Dakota. I'm sure this is South Dakota's most important game and they'll be up for us."
if the Jayhawks beat South Dakota, they will play the winner of the Drake—Kansas State game tomorrow at 1:30 in the semifinals.
In other first-round action, Wichita and Nebraska will battle Mission. And Nebraska will battle Mission.
The finals Sunday could feature a Kansas-Minnesota match-up, which would give the 15th-ranked Gophers a home-court advantage.
The men's track team, which successfully defended its Big Eight title in 1975, lost to
(1979)
Alan Aida wrote and stars in this fine film about an up-and-coming senator, basically a decent fellow, falling prey to the temptation of being president of a portrait of Washingtonian ways, with Mary Streel, Barbara Barbara and Melvin Douglas, directed by Jerry Schatzbaugh (Scarecrow), Plus. Felsin the Cat "In-Sunlight" (10/8) min./color. 3:30, 7:00, 9:30.
SUA FILMS
Friday, Mar. 13
The Seduction of Joe Tynan
Unless otherwise noted, all will be furnished by Knox Union Weekend Hospital are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50; Midnight films are $2.00; Saturday films are $3.00; Susan Union 4th level, Information 884-699 no smoking or refreshes allowed.
SPRING BREAK
The Jayhawks finished third at the Big Eight championships.
MIDNITE FLICK
FRI & SAT AT 12 MIDNITE
The Kids Are Alright
starting
THE WHD
PC
A NEW WORLD PICTURES RELEASE
Varsity
Downtown 643-1085
KU Coach Carla Coffey said the Jayhawks, ranked sixth in a conference coaches poll before the Big Eight season, are among the top 10 teams of finishing among the top 10 teams.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
"We went that meet ranked as an underdog," Coffey said. "I hope they ranked us low again so we can surprise them again."
VARSITY
AUTHORIZED SERVICE
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Olivia People
EVE 7.15 & 8.30
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DONNY MAYER
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AMERICAN POP
EVE 7.30 & 8.20 MAT SAT & SUN 2.00 R
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DONNY MAYER
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MARY TYLER MOONE
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EVE 7.15 & 9.30
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EVE 7.40 & 9.30 MAT SAT
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20 SECONDS & SUN
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EVE 7.25 & 9.35 MAT SAT & SUN 2.15 PG
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THE DOGS OF WAR
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looking to improve on last year's fourth-place finish at the NCAA championships in Detroit.
Tonight:
Spend the evening
with
Luther Alicca
and his group
Return of the great
electric blues!
I
defending national champion in the 600 and Sanya Owolabi in the juniors.
JAYHAWK NOTES: In NCAA regional action last night, one Big Eight team already has been eliminated. The Missouri Tigers, playing in the Austin, Texas, subregional of the Midwest regional, last to Lamar 71-47.
"We'd like to get in the top two." Timmons said. "We're going to have to be very, very hot to do it. But that's what we're striving for."
The Kansas State Wildcats deserve San Francisco in a thriller in Los Angeles. 62-10. The Wildcats will face Oregon State tomorrow.
The meet starts this afternoon at Joe Louis Arena and concludes tomorrow afternoon.
"Willanoan will once again teach a strong team, as will Tennessee out of the Southeastern Conference and Illinois on the one at Ten. And I think Southern Methodist is a team that is going to be coming on strong."
The defending champion is the University of Texas-El Paso, which has won the meet five of the last seven years.
Tonight:
Spend the evening with
Lulani Alison and his group
Return of the great electric blues!
Tommorrow Night:
ALCHEMY
Area Rock Favorites
Only $2.00 Students & Members
Next Weekend:
March 20-21:
The infamous
CLARENCE
"GATEMOUTH"
BROWN
Playing his brand of jazz, country & blues
All Night! Each Night! Only $3.00 Cover!
Every Sunday:
Lynch & McBee
In car
Where the stars are
7th & Mass
842-6930
lawrence
Opera House
KU COACH BOR TIMMONS doesn't see much hope in overcoming UTEP, which has about 30 foreign athletes on its team.
THE WOMEN'S TRACK team is competing in the AIAW indoor championships in Pocatello, Idaho. The team which lasts two days starts today.
FIELD OF DREAMS
FOUR KU athletes, Gwen Poss, Connie
Mckernan, Tudie Holmes and Lori
Gutierrez will compete for the net.
Tonight:
Spend the evening with Luther Adams and his group
Return of the great electric blues!
Tommorrow Night:
ALCHEMY
Area Rock Favorites
Only $2.00 Students & Members
Next Weekend:
March 20-21:
The infamous CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN
Playing his brand of jazz, country & blues
All Night! Each Night! Only $3.00 Cover!
Every Sunday:
Lynch & McBee
in cellar—FREE!
March 18: COWBOY X
Country and Country Rock!
Where the stars are
7th & Mass
842 6930
KU vs Ole Miss
NCAA Tournament
Experience the game tonight at 7:00 pm on our GIANT TV SCREEN!
We will be showing all NCAA games broadcast.
GAMMONS SNOWMAS
23rd
&
Ousdahl
Next Weekend:
March 20-21:
The infamous
CLARENCE
"GATEMOUTH"
BROWN
Playing his brand of jazz, country & blues
All Night! Each Night! Only $3.00 Cover!
The Jayhawks have qualified in 11 events, including three athletes in the 440-yard run. Mike Ricks is the
"They've won almost all the championships in cross country, indoors and outdoors." "Titmus said. They've had a real team year... they've got a real touch team."
Where the stars are
7th & Mass
842 6930
lawrence
Opera house
KU vs Ole Miss
KU vs Ole Miss
NCAA Tournament
Experience the game
tonight at 7:00 pm on our
GIANT TV SCREEN!
We will be showing
all NCAA games broadcast.
GAMMONS
SNOWMENS
23rd
&
Ousdahl
GAMMONS
SNOWMEN
23rd
&
Ousdahl
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Univ
Lawr
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Monday, March 23, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 116 USPS 650-640
Board of Regents announces new KU chancellor
Board of Budig family excited about move to KU
ALEXANDRA AND HENRY
Gretchen and Gene Budig
By KATHRYN KASE Staff Reporter
Last Friday's Kansas City Times, featuring a smiling Gene Budig on Page 1, was propped in a Kansas Turnipt toll collector's window on the east end of Interstate 70.
"Look, Gene it it's you," Gretchen Budig, wife of KU's new chancellor, said.
"Excuse me," Budig said as he turned from his interviewer to gaze with obvious delight at the woman's expression.
The Kansas Board of Regents designated him KU's 18th chancellor Friday. But Budig has not yet tired of the attention of a news media so curious that they called his mother in Nebraska to confirm rumors about his impending appointment as chancellor.
"Is the reporter here who talked to my mother," Budig asked at the press conference after the Regents announcement. "I have wanted her telephone number and I wanted to call her."
BUDIG'S MOTHER broke the news about his
brother's official announcement, but he can
bake about it.
Yet, Budig can be equally about his reasons for accepting the job, which begins off with a challenge.
"This is an opportunity to assist a truly outstanding University," he said. "It also gives me
an opportunity to return to the Midwest. I was
been away from Nebraska for four years, we have been away
Of those nine years, Budg spent four beginning in 1973 as president of Illinois State University. During the past four years he has been West Virginia University's president.
PERHAPS THIS PART of the country holds special appeal to him for more than the reason
that he was born here. He also earned three degrees at the University of Nebraska.
"I worked my way through school because I had to on the Larkin School and Journal," he said. "I was very proud of myself."
Surprisingly, his undergraduate degree was in English. His master's degree was in journalism from the University of Oxford.
Yet, his work experience has not been solely as CHANAGNEY ORP page 5.
By KATHRYN KASE Staff Reporter
Chancellor Budig discusses the University and its future
I am confident that we will be successful in gaining adequate funding for the institution in the coming years.
Editor's note: In its interview with Gene Budig, president of West Virginia University and the newly appointed KU chancellor, the Kanans asked questions on several issues that Budig was unable to address because of unfamiliarity with the specifiers.
These included: the controversy surrounding Norman Forer, KU professor of social welfare; the KU banner policy; allegations of academic milieu at the universities and the KU Out of South Africa movement.
Answer. It is important that the chancellor of the University make a concerted effort to travel the state and explain the academic program of the institution. It is important that the chancellor not only explain the needs of the institution, but also the role of the university in the state. University can be more responsive to the state.
This morning I had the opportunity to talk to a number of legislative leaders. I sensed they had a genuine interest in the institution. I believe they are proud of the University of Kansas.
Q. Do you see yourself as a good legislative leader?
A. For the past 15 years I have had extensive
involvement in the legislative process. West Virginia University has met with great success in the past four years in the legislature. Illinois State University had a strong record of achievement in the legislative halls. I am entering my ninth year as a university president and I believe I have enjoyed a significant success in the states of West Virginia and Illinois.
It is important that the legislators realize that the University of Kansas represents the state's principal asset. They must realize that the programs and the people of the University impact on their constitencies and impact on them in a favorable way.
Q. Some have accused the Legislature of looking toward an election year, which is next year, and using KU to further their own political futures. How can the University prevent itself from being used as a political pawn by the Legislature?
The University is critically important for the people in the stage.
Q. This year KU's faculty salary request of 10 percent has been tentatively cut to 7 percent. You think such a salary cut will cause professors to leave KU for other institutions or private businesses, and how do you propose to prevent that?
A In the years ahead it is of critical im-
pose. See **INTERUF** page 7.
Commission votes as one: no mall
By DALE WETZEL
Staff Reporter
Almost two years of consultant studies, public hearings, committee meetings and general discussions of Lawrence's "corfield mail" came down to one vote last Tuesday.
The vote was unanimous—against.
In a 5-0 decision, the City Commission rejected the request of Cleveland developer Jacobs, Vissoni and Jacobs to rezone a 61-acre south-Lawrence tract for construction of an enclosed
In doing so, the commission also turned down JVJ lawyer Richard Zinn's proposal that the commission call a city-wide referendum on the issue, and Zinn's affidavit requesting the commissioners to disqualify themselves from hearing the case because of an anti-JVJ bias.
TURNOUT FOR the meeting, which was publicized by several Lawrence groups, was less than the 150-plus throng that jammed the commission's City Hall chambers during the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission's advisory hearing Feb. 23.
In his argument, City Planning Director Garner Stoll reiterated the city's position that the proposed mall was inconsistent with Plan 95, the city's land-use plan, and would put development pressure on the land south of the site.
Dean Palos, planning staff member, said that the decision to Plan 95 as being flawed was ignorance.
"VJ1 is incorrect in asserting that the lack of retail leakage out of Lawrence to Kansas City and Topeka is the sole basis for Plan 55's recommendations of additional Lawrence commercial development," Palos said. "There were also a number of other factors considered."
PALOS ALSO SAID that the city's methods for estimating future commercial land use, which JVJ criticized as inadequate, was one widely accepted as respected by the country's urban planners.
Zinn's presentation, in contrast to his hourlong speech to the Planning Commission almost a year ago, is still not
"We have carefully created a written record, and we'll stand on that," Zinn said. "There's no sense in repeating it all. We intend to leave our time open for the public to express its views."
THE LAWRENCE LAWYER then heard 20 speakers voice opposition to the mail from the company.
Mariyn Bittenbender, 939 Iowa, said, "In spite of all the goodies that you want to give us, as far as we are concerned, the ultimate price we have to pay is too high.
"JVJ could put in a mail from K-Mart to Baldwin and there still would be leakage. For a lot of families, it is a ritual to go to Kansas City and see the Christmas lights."
Another mall opponent answered JVJ claims that 23rd and low street are the city's real problem.
Linda Bailey, 906 W. 29th, said, "If that mall goes in, I will voycott it for the rest of my life."
hub of anything, it's the hub of some tawdy development."
DESPITE THE BREVITY of Zinn's presentation, it contained what he termed later two substantive proposals—that a referendum on the mall question be held, and that the commissioners disqualify themselves from ruling on the case.
The commission was cool to the first idea, which Commissioner Barkley Clark termed "the most brilliant one."
"No major retailer is going to talk to us seriously while the corffield mall possibility is still open," Clark said. "It's like a sword of Damocles hanging over the city's head."
But Zinn retorted, "I think the sword is about drop rather abruptly in an about and a hour at a glance."
"What we're suggesting is, once the sword drops, that the matter be considered, and the cost figures analyzed. When these cost figures are compared, should the matter be submitted to a referendum."
Zinn's affidavit of bias, filed on behalf of JVJ and the property's owners, Richard Armstrong and Jo Ann Gresham, met with stronger opposition from the commission.
THE AFFIDAVIT REQUESTED that the commissioners disguially themselves from hearing the case because of prejudice demonstrabt against the mail by previous public statements.
Clark condemned Zinn's effort.
UCLA College of Arts & Sciences
He said the idea that "selected officials should
See MALL page 5
EL SALVADOR
¡Fue la vida que le han salvado!
Members of KU Latin American Solidarity group organize outside Watson library yesterday as they begin their hunger strike and vigni that commemorate the death of leftist religious leader Archbishop Oscar Romero's assassination. The assassination, which took place in El Rodeo, happened on Tuesday.
Weather
1
It will be clear today with a high in the mid 30s and light winds, according to the National Weather Service in the low tonight will reach the mid 30s.
Tomorrow will be warmer, with a high in the 60s and clear skies.
Doctor shot at KUMC; murderer still at large
From Staff and Wire Reports
Police are still searching for a lone gunman who killed a doctor and a woman bystander in the emergency room of the University of Kansas Medical Center Friday night.
The victims were identified as Marc Beek, 25, a resident working in the emergency room, and Ruth Tybolt, 94, who was resting in a wheelchair when doctors treated her mother. Both victims, residents of Kansas City, Kan., were killed instantly by the shots.
The gunman walked into the emergency room at 10:08 p.m., fired at the two victims, and then traded shots with two Kansas City, Kan., police officers who were in the emergency room at the time. They were waiting for an intoxicated man who had been injured earlier in the night.
THE OFFICERS did not see the gunman until he had fired the first shot. Their return fire missed the suspect and they did not pursue him. Lt. Howard Mitchell of the KU Police Department saw the suspect fleeing but lost him in the darkness.
Police spokesman Sgt. Stan Harrington said
Saturday the Kansas City police officers did not chase the suspect, because they were more concerned the injured.
Police originally thought the suspect might still be in the hospital and conducted two room-to-room searches of the entire Med Center but did not find the summan.
Police said they had no motives or clues in the case. However, yesterday they said the gunnman might have been a drug user, mental patient or harboring a grudge against the hospital.
"The main reason they did not pursue the suspect was that they were afraid he might return through another entrance," Harrington said.
WITNESS DEScribed the suspect as six feet tall, with medium-or shoulder-length dark hair, a mustache and several days growth of beard.
Charles Hartman, emergency room director and a vice chancellor at the Med Center, said he was an avid golfer.
"We have no reason to associate them with any recent or present patient." Hartman said.
See SHOOTING page 5
Latin American solidarity begins hunger strike, protest
By EDDIE WILLIAMS III Staff Reporter
Members of the KU Latin American Solidarity group sat heavily bundled in front of Watson Library yesterday as they began a two-and-a-half day hunger strike and vistil.
The protest is part of a national hunger strike sponsored by the Committee in Solidarity wired to the EI Salamis office.
The KU strike will continue until 7:30 p.m.
*Dry Tender*, Hutchison senior
and applauds.
About 19 students will live in tents at night, when temperatures in the low 30s are expected, show
The vigil's end tomorrow will commemorate the first anniversary of leftist religious leader Archbishop Oscar Romero's assassination in El Salvador.
Treasurer said the protest was intended to raise America's awareness of the problems of the situation.
The group's activities began last night by reading a statement of purpose. Members then read protest poetry written by Latin American poets.
"We're concerned about the U.S. support of the Salvadoran government." Treaster said. "Most
of the land in the country is owned by 14 families and all the wealth is in that small group. People's basic needs are not being met; many are suffering from malnutrition.
"LAS wants as many people as possible to understand what is going on, especially the American taxpayers who support a government that doesn't see to the needs of its people."
Jorge Valverde, Costa Rica graduate student and one of the strikers, said it was very important that America knew what was really on in El Salvador.
"Especially because the U.S. media doesn't show the truth," Valverde said. "People are suffering in the country. If I were not involved here, I would be involved at home."
Activities continue on noon today when LAS will lead a "rumbun" or sing-along with various activities.
At 7 p.m., the group will present a slide show titled "El Salvador Will Overcome." A dandleight dedication for Archbishop Romero will follow the program.
At noon tomorrow, there will be a reading of
black poetry and drama. Chilean folk singers
will perform.
The protesters will then march to St. John's Catholic Church, 1229 Vermont, and attend a service to commemorate Romero's assassination.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 23, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
UMW returns to bargaining table
United Mine Workers President Sam Church, whose 180,000-member union is preparing for a national coal strike this week, called UMW negotiators back to Washington yesterday in hopes of resuming bargaining with the industry.
Church said he had spoken with representatives of the Bituminous Coal Operations Association and expressed optimism "we can get a meeting".
UMW officials said even if a new agreement was negotiated before the Friday deadline, the complicated process of ratification by the rank and file
Church would make no prediction on whether the industry would soften its hardline attitude against compromise, and said talks would be stalemated.
The union has called a nationwide strike Friday, an action that would halt 44 percent of the nation's coal production. After the breakdown in contract talks last week, more than 12,000 miners participated in wildcat walkouts that shut down coal facilities in seven states.
Uresolved issues include an industry demand that the pension plan be changed from an industry program to company-by-company coverage and a change in the way funds are managed.
The investigation board has given top priority to its review of all test procedures that change the environment on the launch pad or in the rocket after a test.
Accident probe may delay shuttle
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — An investigation into the accident that killed a space shuttle worker and critically injured another may delay preparations for the early April launch of the space shuttle Columbia, a Space Agency official said yesterday.
Five technicians were overcome last Thursday when they entered a shuttle engine compartment in which all the oxygen had been displaced by nitrogen. John Bjornstad, 50, died and Forrest Cole, also 50, was in critical condition yesterday.
If the board does not complete its review of those test procedures in time, Harris said; the test will be delayed. That could delay the mandarin orbital spin experiment.
Hugh Harris, chief of public information at the Kennedy Space Center, said the investigation board must review all relevant procedures before a fueling test scheduled for tomorrow could be conducted. The test is to check repaired insulation on the shuttle's outside fuel tank.
Klan wants U.S. inquiry into brawl)
A procedural error of some sort caused the accident, Space Agency officials said. The nitrogen, used to reduce the threat of fire during hazardous operations, should have been replaced by air before the men entered the compartment.
MERIDEN, Conn—Ku Klux Klan leader William Wikinson called yesterday for a Jury investigation of a bloody confrontation at a church in New York and viewed Klan members.
Wilkinson, head of the Louisiana-based Invisible Empire of the Knights of the KKK, said he personally would ask Richard Blumenthal, U.S. Attorney for Connecticut, to initiate a probe of Saturday's violence that left 21 people injured, most of them police officers.
Club-wielding police officers wearing riot gear, helmets and gas masks waded into the melee to rescue KKK members.
About 200 protesters hurted bottles, beards and bricks at two dozen white-robed Klansmen who had assembled in this central Connecticut city Saturday to support a white police officer who shot a black shoplifting suspect when the man allegedly tried to run him down with a car.
Twenty-one people, including 16 Meriden police officers, were injured in the fractures. Twenty people were treated and released for minor injuries.
Police said early yesterday that they "were amazed" by the anti-Klan movement and called them a desperate dash from city hall to the safety of cars and police cruisers.
Ford delivers message to Chinese
PEKING—Former President Gerald Ford arrived in Peking yesterday with a secret message from Presidential appointee Amy Wilson; was intended to convey the nature of Sino-American relations.
"It is my belief that the friendship between our two countries is solid, constructive and beneficial, not only to each of our two nations but also to the world as a whole," Ford said at a banquet in his honor after talks with officials.
Ford said earlier in Hong Kong that the message was specifically for Vice Premier Deng Xiapo, who engineered his country's opening of diplomatic ties with Washington two years ago. Ford was expected to meet with Deng as early as today.
The Ford visit comes at a sensitive moment in Sino-American relations because of Reagan's campaign pledge to upgrade relations with Taiwan and because of the possible sale of F-15 jet fighters to Taiwan. China would be able to force the accord that re-established relations between Peking and Washington.
Ford arrived in Peking two days after Reagan and his top aides received China's ambassador to the United States, Chai Zemin, and Ji Chao Zhu, deputy director of the Foreign Ministry's American and Oceanic Department. It was the highest level contact between the two governments so far.
The timing of the Washington meeting and Ford's visit to China suggested to some analysts that Reagan might be going on the course of a longer trip, but he could just be brief.
Panel to hold budget cuts hearings
WASHINGTON—The top Democrat on the House Education and Labor Committee said yesterday that the panel would hold six days of hearings to discuss the budget.
The hearings appear to be an escalation of growing Democratic criticism of the Reagan budget. Until the last few days, Democrats have muted their criticism of the bill.
"This cannot be done legally by Budget Committee action, but that is the method sought by the administration," the statement said.
"The administration's proposals go beyond any rational, equitable reduction of spending into actual dummanagement of programs," the committee chairman said.
The Senate Budget Committee completed its review of Reagan's budget proposal in a frantic three-day session last week. It approved $6.4 billion in cuts for fiscal 1982, slashing the programs it reviewed by $2.3 billion more than Reagan proposed.
That package of cuts is expected to reach the Senate floor Thursday or Friday.
The House Budget Committee, which said it preferred to hold complete hearings on the proposals, plans to begin its review of the proposed reductions.
Green Berets go to San Sl Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador: Twelve Army Green Berets, the final group of U.S. military advisers, arrived yesterday in San Salvador, bringing to 56 the number of U.S. military advisers in El Salvador, U.S. embassy officials said.
Col. Eldon Cummings, the U.S. military group commander, presented the 12 Green Bees to foreign journalists at a 10-minute "photo opportunity" in the capital. Photographers were allowed to take pictures of the soldiers' backs. Reporters were forbidden to ask them questions.
After the presentation, Cummings delivered a short briefing to the men, taking them they are permitted to carry pistols and to use them only in self-defense.
The Green Berets will stay at a local hotel, a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy said.
Solidarity members remain on strike alert
WARSAW, Poland - The ruling Politburo yesterday accused Solidarity of pushing Poland into "anarchy," and the union called an emergency meeting of its national leadership to consider calling a strike.
The two moves came after government negotiators met for seven hours but then suspended until Wednesday crucial talks to defuse renewed tensions sparked by a police attack on union members.
Solidarity leader Lech Walesa described the negotiations with a government team headed by Deputy Premier Mieczysław Rakowski as "one of the loudest the union's national coordination commission would meet today.
"The commission has the authority to make a decision on whether or not to
LATE YESTERDAY the Solidarity leadership issued a communique asking local branches not to stage unauthorized strikes today, and Walesa spent the evening telephoning local leaders to back in the request.
But Walessa told the leaders that their branches should remain on strike alert.
of the Society's regular roll of staff after an announcement issued a statement saying, "In the conduct of the Solidarity independent self-governed union, the upper hand was taken by the tendency to develop activities of a political character, to the development of a constitutional representative and executive organs in their functions.
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"This creates a state of anarchy," the statement said.
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Echoing the Politburo's charges, Radio Moscow, in a special broadcast to explain the Soviet position on Poland, said Solidarity's leadership would like to establish itself as an opposition political party.
WALESA SAID there was a possibility Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski would go to Bydgoszcz, the three people were seriously injured, when police attempted to remove unionists and some local councilmen
The Politburo said the events in Bydgoszcz and Solidarity's angry reaction "put the country in the face of serious danger."
It said Solidarity members violated the law in occupying public buildings in Bydgoszcz and warned, "State officials cannot and will not tolerate these facts."
Disident Jacek Kuron, a key Solidarity adviser, called the Poliburo statement "a communique in引发 an open war."
the Solidarity meeting a matter "of life or death," Marian Jurczyk, a Solidarity delegation member, said, "The intensity tense. We don't want bloodshed."
In an interview with Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci published by the London Sunday Times, Walesa said he planned to go to the United States later this year to seek political and economic support for Poland
who refused to leave the local government building
Walesa also said he was "deadly tired" and expected his role in Polish problem to decline gradually because of poor health, which includes a heart problem.
Distinguished author will teach at KU
Calling the decisions to be made at
Victor Papanek, internationally known author, lecturer and teacher of design, will teach at the University of Kansas next fall.
Papanek, who is now professor and chairman of design at the Kansas City Art Institute, was recently named the new J.L. Constant Distinguished Professor of Design by the School of Architecture and Urban Desig
"I live in Kansas City and I consider it a very great honor to be appointed
Distinguished Professor," Papanex sa'd yesterday. "Lawrence is a good city and KU is a fine university."
And he has taught in Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Great Britain, Brazil, Australia and Canada.
Papanek, who has lived in Kansas City the last five years, said he would continue to travel as a teacher and a design consultant.
Before coming to Kansas City, Papanek was dean of the School of Design at the California Institute of Arts and design department at Purdue University.
Papanek has written four design books in the last 10 years. His first book, "Design for the Real World," has been translated into 23 languages, making it the most widely read book on design in the world.
As a lecturer, Papenek has travelled to Africa, Asia, Europe, South America and across North America.
GOOD STUDENT—GOOD DRIVER
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--honorary society that stresses:
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Spring Formal Rush March 27,28,29
February 23-March 24
Registration:
Register in the Interfraternity
March 10,7-9 p.m.
Council Office or call 864-3559.
Templin and JRP on
Booths will be set up in Oliver,
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--honorary society that stresses:
Applications now being taken for
SOPHOMORES
OWL SOCIETY
JUNIOR HONORARY SOCIETY
OWL SOCIETY is an
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Pick Up Applications at 216 Strong Hall
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University Daily Kansan, March 23, 1981
B102
Absence of legislators delays action on KU budget
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
State legislators, like university students, coasted through last week.
Senators were to have debated and possibly taken final action on the Board of Regents budget bill, but he did the bill to this week's calendar.
Senate Majority Leader Robert Talkington, R-Iola, said action had to be delayed because several senate members were absent last week.
Talkington and other legislative leaders left Topela Wednesday for a meeting with President Reagan in Washington.
Senators could consider the Regents' budget bill at this afternoon's session. The bills cut out about 50 percent of the wide outside from the Regens' 1982 budget.
At the end of last week, Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, announced that the Legislature might have to meet in a special fall session to make adjustments in the entire state budget, depending on how Congress cut federal aid to
Doyen said he was concerned about the welfare fund and other social services. He says Congress had about 32 percent of Kansas' budget.
The severance taxes considered the key issue to state financing of the 1982 budget, would be nullified if the
Senate moved to exempt royalty owners, Attorney General Bob Stephan ruled Friday.
Stephan said all minerals to be taxed under Gov. John Carlin's proposal were legally considered to be royalties to the owners.
Rep. Keith Farrar, R-Hugoton, an opponent of the tax, pointed out to fellow House members that the House had mistakenly included royalty owners in the version of the tax it passed.
Farrar asked Stephan for an opinion on what might happen if the tax bill was amended to exempt the royalty owners.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said he was not concerned with Stephan's ruling.
"The important thing is we have passed a vehicle dealing with the severance tax," he said. "One benefit of having it also referred in the Senate is that any changes need to be made could be made."
The Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee will start hearings on the severance tax bill today, and the Senate Ways and Means Committee will start hearings later.
This week, the House Local Government Committee will start work on Sen. Jane Eldredge's, R-Lawrence, downtown improvement
The improvement bill, which would allow Lawrence to set up an improvement district, may undergo
changes in the House, according to Ren. Jessie Branson. D-Lawrence.
The Bill would allow downtown businessmen to form a taxing district. The money would be used to support the businesses and attract new ones.
Branson said some Lawrence businessmen were concerned with the version that the Senate passed.
She said the businessmen wanted the improvement district limited to the central business district, and to make it smaller than four square blocks.
The businessmen also wanted to make sure the bill conformed to the city's comprehensive growth plan.
In other action taken last week:
"The House passed the Kaw River bill sponsored by Eldredge. The bill, which is expected to be signed by the governor this week, sets up a hiking trail from Bureham Park near 2nd and SI. St., to the Kansas Turnpike.
*The House Energy and Natural Resources Committee started hearings on a Senate bill designed to exempt rural electric cooperatives from state energy agencies from Kansas Corporation Commission regulation.
The bill, which would allow a group of cooperatives to buy part of the Wolf Creek nuclear plant without conditions passed by the KCC, was supported by the Senate. However, the House gave it a cool reception. Hearings continue this week.
On the Record
THE NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION Safety Board has completed its investigation without determining the cause of the Feb. 13 light plane crash that killed a KU student.
Douglas Wayne Potter, 20. Lawrence junior, died when his Cissena 172 struck power lines near the Kansas Power and Light plant north of Lawrence and crashed into the Kansas River. The cause of death was listed as drowning.
"All we know is that he flew into the wires," said investigator Bob Johnson. "We don't know why.
"We didn't find anything wrong with
the equipment, and we know weather was not a factor in the crash. It just appears that he flew into the wires."
Johnson said the reason probably never would be determined.
The investigation report will go to the Federal Aviation Administration in Washington, D.C.
LAWRENCE FIRE OFFICIALS and KU police have determined that arson was the cause of a small fire Thursday in Watson Library.
The fire was discovered in a storage room in the building's basement. The fire was confined to two bookshelves and destroyed about $50 in various
paperback books, Lawrence Fire Department Ll. Larry Stemmerman said.
"We suspect it was set by matches," he said.
Stemmerman said an investigation was continuing.
A FORMER KU STUDENT is sung for damages in excess of $20,000 resulting from a fight that took place while he was a student at the University of Kansas, according to District Court records.
Jon R. Murphy, Overland Park, said injuries he suffered in the unprowoked fight forced him to leave school.
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Tuition costs will likely rise again
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-KU students can apparently look forward to a second year of higher tuition costs, and regular future increases, as a result of action taken at the Kansas Board of Regents monthly meeting last Friday.
Staff Reporter
Glee Smith, chairman of the Regents Budget and Finance Committee, had his tentative proposal of a $40 tuition increase in addition to other unanimously in principle by the Board.
The proposed $40 boost, which will not become final until the Regents April meeting in Emporia, will increase resident fees 15 percent to $20, up from the current fee of $28. Out-of-state students will pay the amount of $20, up from this year's fee of $820.
"Here, we wanted to get a figure on the table, so that we could finalize action in April. We take two months to decide matters like this."
costs being naid bv KU students.
"The $4 figure isn't set in cement," Smith said. "We'll have a special session of the Budget and Finance committee at Emporia on April 16, to review our progress and tuition level we should reach. The figure could go up, or it could go down."
SMITH SAID THAT tat训 increases could be fairly regular over the next few years, in an effort to increase to 25 percent the percentage of educational
"We're down to the point where student fees provide roughly 18 percent of actual costs, with the figure being less for smaller Gerschols schools," she said. "Usually, we don't want to correct this all in one go. It will be a gradual process."
Smith said the 25 percent tuition-cost ratio was informally reached in 1963 between the Regents and the Senate Ways and Means Committee. He emphasized that the figure did not include capital improvements, research expenditures and other costs but not foresee a downward re-evaluation of the 25 percent benchmark
"We raised the fees last year, but didn't raise them enough, as we felt constrained by the president's wage guidelines," Smith said. "Being in the public sector, we were especially keen of exceeding the guidelines.
"We usually raise fees only every third year, but we've found this to be inadequate."
SMITH SAID THAT A Senate Ways and Means committee recommendation that fees be raised was a "small factor" in the Board's decision, but emphasized that "there was no arm-wristing involved.
"We were raising of raising the fees anyway," Smith said. "The Senate just advises us, and they didn't and haven't tried to force any on us."
If the Regents were to increase KU
fees to agree with Smith's 25 percent figure, it would mean a $70 increase in tuition, rather than the $40 that Smith has proposed.
FOR EXAMPLE, KU's projected 1982 tuition-cost percentage is 19.3 percent without the $4 increase; with it, the rate climbs to about 22 percent. The three smallest Regents institutions—Fort Hays State, Pittsburgh and Virginia State—pay about 13 percent of their educational costs with tuition funds.
Smith said he thought it "likely" that the proportional system would be maintained, but pointed to Regents data indicating Kansas school costs are below the average costs of surrounding states' public institutions.
In other KU-related Regents business, the University proposed that next year's student health fee be boosted to $1 from $46. A financial impact statement submitted to the Board pointed out that the fee had not been written on. Whereas salaries, medical and operating expenses had
In another economy measure, the University proposed shortening two required field geology courses from four-five day workweeks to three six-day workweeks. According to a report by the National Research Council, shortened course period would reduce some expenses, but course fees would be kept at $50 to offset rising expenses.
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Page 4
Opinion
University Daily Kansan, March 23, 1981
Chancellor Budig
It'll take some time to sink in, but soon that title will be as familiar as Chancellor Dykes or Acting Chancellor Shankel.
Chancellor Budig.
Gene A. Budig, the 14th chancellor of the University of Kansas, doesn't take over the reins of KU's administration until Aug. 1, but the process of familiarization between the man and the University has already begun.
His arrival should help end the situation of Acting University, where many top administrative spots are either vacant, temporarily filled or otherwise in the process of transition. Inevitably, the decision-making process is hampered by a transitional administration—although Shankel has been far from just a caretaker chancellor. Still, for the stabilization process to be complete, the University needs a permanent leader, and Budig's selection should initiate that stabilization from the top on down.
Budig has pledged to travel all over Kansas to strengthen the bond between the people of the state and their biggest university. That's good; the people should be interested in it and it in them. His resolution is a good start for a new chancellor, yet his biggest problems as chancellor will come right here on Mount Oread.
Budig will head a University still feeling the reverberations of the allegations of athletic program abuse, as well as KU's
potential problems with Title IX. The best thing Budig could do, if the allegations are still afloat, would be to immediately find out if the allegations are true, and if they are, to admit the problem openly and correct the situation. Such action would restore confidence in both KU's administration as well as its athletic programs.
In addition to his other duties as chancellor, he'll have to convince a skeptical legislature of KU's financial needs. Budig already has taken a step in the right direction by visiting legislators in Topeka, and he was only officially selected as chancellor last Friday.
Budig also will have to make some decisions regarding increased student representation in all levels of University affairs; the wise chancellor does not forget that the University's purpose is to serve the students. And Budig will be confronted with a companion problem, that of declining academic standards in some KU schools and the prospects of declining enrollments in others.
In short, Budig faces a University beset by problems—but problems that can be solved, if he is willing to act, and if the university is willing to cooperate. From this day on, students, faculty and administrators should welcome him as fully as possible in his new position, so that the period of transition come Aug. 1 will be minimal and the period of problem-solving may begin at once.
Deilherrighttree
Daily nightmare
Achoo! The answer is blowin' in the wind
The University Daily KANSAN
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Lawrence, KS. 6045
Ahh, spring. It's a lovely time a year, isn't it?
The cold is gone, the trees are blooming, and the gentle breezes keep things from becoming too warm.
Editor David Lewis
Life is just one long session on Wesco Beach, right? Wrong. With spring comes that dreaded menace, hay fever. What joy there is in the warmth and sunshine is lost in a chorus of sniffles and runny noses. There's sneezes in them breezes.
Business Manager
Terril Fry
Rick Musser
Chuck Chewings
DAVID LEWIS
General Manager and News Adviser
KANSAN Adviser
Era of autos must draw to a close
"The American dream is to drive coast to coast without encountering a traffic light." A-Q-7.
We've come a long way since Henry Ford's dream of a motor car for the great multitude. Everyone and his sister asks Mom or Dad for the keys to the car. High school hot rods thunder with bravado through small town neon nights. Custom auto shows pack them in form Keokuk to Kansas City. Richard Petty is king of the South.
Automotive assembly lines churn them out at rates ranging from 48 to 60 cars per hour, in effect providing a car for every garage and more. This is the great American auto age, when the economy is ruled by Ford, GM and foreign cousins like Toyota and Datsun. And don't forget their merchant brothers, Exxon, McKinsey, JPMorgan and America's favorite toy and the economy would be wrecked, or so say those with the money for adequate public forum.
Costly toys they are, with options running the gamut from sun to moon roofs, from stick shifts to digital dashboards. And when the toy breaks down, look out—a auto repairman have become a shop owner. They buy an air conditioner shop here, a tire store there, astronomical prices everywhere. More toys mean more playgrounds, and the asphalt never stops pouring. "Sorry, ma'am, your 100-year-old house has to go. Highway's comin' through!" It is perhaps the ultimate gesture of luxury, yet nature when a tourist can unabashedly drive through the heart of a dying Redwood tree.
There are about 3,600,000 square miles of land in the continental United States. We have constructed well a over mile of highway for every square mile of land. When completed, the highway would be as long as the Great Wall of China. The Board of Public Roads is not ashamed to relate the
gruesome details: "Total excavations will move enough material to bury Connecticut knee-deep in dirt. New right-of-way needed amounts to 1½% air acres." Every acre covered with asphalt is one less acre available for a school, a hospital, a farm or a park. To serve the motorist, homes are razed, wheatfields leveled and waterways diverted.
Given a choice of buildings to destroy in clearing the way for inter-city highways, highway engineers invariably select low-income housing areas. Why? Well, the land is
KEVIN MILLS
MARY HAYES
Even those citizens secure from the fear of displacement have to contend with the physical assault of automobiles. Motor vehicles are believed to be the greatest single source of air pollution in urban areas, and auto accidents account for nearly 50 percent of air pollution. In urban areas, the figures are more staggering. Vehicles are responsible for at least 90 per cent of the carbon monoxide emissions in urban areas, and hydrocarbons. (Carbon monoxide is poisonous and restricts oxygen flow in the blood;
cheaper. The city is glad to be rid of deceptive eyesores. And the evicted citizens rarely can afford the legal fees to fight back. Have we become so callous that we can place money and asphalt over the lives of destitute people? The transportation shelf in Watson library is teeming with reports on the economic impact of building highways; books on the human impact of displacement are nowhere to be found.
hydrocarbons irritate the eyes and damage vegetation). Recent emission standards have only begun to curb the tide of air pollution, and the standards will succeed is yet unknown.
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DETROIT
Surveys in a number of countries indicate that people consider traffic noise the most annoying kind of unwanted sound. Studies confirm that traffic noise predicates over time and increases the likelihood unlikely to cause acute physical damage, it does interfere with sleep, impede concentration and distract from conversations. Traffic noise may speed up the process of age-induced deafness, as evidenced by studies conducted in urban dwellers to their country counterparts.
Certainly the most appalling consequence of our autobiophic society is the daily crash and gash of cars and their passengers. Over the past five years, auto accidents have accounted for 50,000 deaths annually. This may not seem a great sum compared to the 250 million plus population of the United States, or the monetary mega-figures involved in maintaining the national budget. But it is time to consider the highway fatalities as abstractions or victimization of young alternatives. It is the automobile system efficient enough to compensate for the yearly dead and wounded on our nation's roads? Is there a better way?
Quite a few scientists and engineers think so. A myriad of mass transit proposals ranging from pneumatic tubes to air-cushioned trains have cropped up in recent years. Some of the best-known Japanese bullet train, which can attain speeds up to 160 miles per hour. The Japanese already are working on a modified version that would travel 300 miles per hour with less noise and pressure. Despite these advances, the United States still lacks a concept of cars and buses, pollutants and all.
A mass transit system would decrease the probability of accidents by eliminating the numerous individualistic driving quirks and flaws that contribute to automobile accidents. Not a lot could go wrong on a train or tram gliding smoothly along on a one-way track, all under the watchful eyes of a well-trained pilot an omnidirectional computer. Such a system would be well-suited for the well; well, rather than doing out $8,000 for a new car, and countless more cash for insurance, gas and maintenance, a person could pay for mass transit directly by means of income tax.
Resolution of the American transportation problem can take two forms: One, the status quo will maintain indefinitely, until the oil runs out; or two, the American public will convince the Fed to increase the mass transit, despite protestations from the Ford-GM-Exxon bloc. The second option seems unlikely, given the American preoccupation with four-wheeled freedom. But surely a reduction in individualistic freedom would be less likely than a reduction in life accrued from a public transit system. People need no longer die just to get from here to there.
My life is like one larger Allerst commercial. I've been feeling it coming on for a couple of weeks now. At first I couldn't decide if it was a bug or a symptom of the symptoms of bav year coming on early.
It seemed too early, but now it's official. With
DAN
TORCHIA
ALPHANIKH BAKKER
the passing of the vernal equinox, spring is off- officially here. Things are only going to get worse
The culprit of all this misery is pollen. It travels through the air and somehow manages to find its way into your nose. Your body fights off the foreign particles by releasing histamine.
To but fight off the large amount of pollen that is in the air, and subsequently in your nose, too much gets released. That's when the problems set in. All of the histamine causes the symptoms of hay fever, which include sneezing, rumy nose, and the things you read on the back of a Contact box.
So it is your body, and not the pollen, that actually causes the problems. Your body, in trying to help, causes you to be miserable, objective, and so for all the times you've abused it on a public out.
If having your body against you isn't enough, there is another twist in the hay fever season. You can't get rid of the pollen. Something always is blooming and releasing pollen.
In the spring it is the trees. In the summer it is
the trees and leaves until the first frost
(it is the highest color of water)
This loathsome weed is the bedbug of the plant world. You just can't get rid of ragweed. Lord
Bush!
In the 1930s, the Work Projects Administration
It is not until October, when the first frost usually comes, that there is any relief. Until then, we are at the hands of the wind and weather.
in New York City tried to get rid of it by spraying salt on 132,600 square feet of rauged, but it was no use. The pollen levels were still as high because the wind had blown more in.
The weather is another area that causes problems. There are two schools of thought on the weather. One says that because the area has not had much rain, there will not be as much pollen to blow around, because the plants won't grow.
Authories say that the best place to live in is the tip of Florida or along the Pacific Coast; Maybe, I remain suspicious. Hay fever is tricky; it follows you, just waiting for its chance.
But there is the other school of thought. It says that the dryness makes it that much easier for pollen to be picked up by the wind and carried to sensitive noses. You just can't win.
I've tried to outfit a couple of times. I was in California for a vacation when I was young. Because people had told me that California is good for allergies, I was looking forward to the trip. After an afternoon at Disneyland, I got worse than I had ever been.
And living in Kansas doesn't help at all. Kansas is a hot spot for blighted lotions. You can't get away from it.
Or if I miss my medicine just once, I will pay for it. Usually this is when I'm out and II'm trying to impress someone. It's really embarrassing to be alone with a stranger or to sneeze in your beer as you make small calls.
But it is useless avoiding it. So I've dutifully stocked up on antihistamine and Kleenex and hope that those 600 tiny time capsules do their stuff.
Ahh, spring. What a wonderful season you could be. In the meantime, I'm counting the days. There are only 192 days until October. Maybe the freeze will be early this year.
Letters to the Editor
KU computer terminal abuses reflect department problems
To the editor:
I was pleased to read the article "Terminal abuse does not compute" about the abuse of accounts on the University computer. I agree that abuse of account resources on the computer is a serious problem on campus. However, according to the definitions of abuse stated in the article, I must list myself as one of those abusers.
As a student assistant in a computer science course, I have the privilege of owning a computer account. Also, as a student in a computer science course, I have access to the computer class account. I use these accounts for the purpose for which they were intended; that is, to program, test and run projects for the classes that are involved.
However, I must confess that after 12 hours of starting into a terminal, I do inquire in an occasional game of "Star Trek," "Lunar Lander" or " Adventure" to relax. Furthermore, I believe that I deserve this privilege. How dare the people of the computer science department and the Academic Computer Center accuse me of stealing data from these games and do these game accounts exist on the system if they are not to be used by people who can have access to them?
There are people who steal resources from accounts for no purpose, but they should not be held accountable for the use of us who use accounts for legitimate, constructive, but otherwise nonacademic, purposes.
David Lerner
David Lerner Overland Park senior
Some of the remarks made by the faculty of the CS department and personnel of the computer center in this article exhibit their arrogance toward, and dislike for, the common student using the computer facilities. My conclusion is that the people running the computer facilities and the ones who attempt to teach computer science do not care about the average student, but just wants a little basic understanding of how a computer operates.
Sh
Doug Cunningham
Pipestone, Minn., freshman
If the Kansan had published instead a picture of two males of roughly that age, would they have been referred to as "two boys?" I think not. When will the Kansan, which professes to be more socially enlightened than the rest of us, speak archaic, chauvinist and sexist practices?
I am writing concerning the caption that accompanied the picture in the lower right-hand corner of the front page of the March 4 Kansan. The caption uses the phrase "two girls." The two females pictured definitely do not look like 10 or 11 years old. Certainly the phrase "two women," or perhaps "two young women," could have been substituted for "two girls."
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University Daily Kansan, March 23, 1981
Page 5
Shooting
From page 1
Police said earlier they were searching through personnel records for clues.
Several employees who asked not to be identified, told reporters after the shooting that security for the emergency room was inadequate.
HARTMAN SAID in the past there had been no security specifically for the emergency room because KU police officers were always patrolling the sprawling facility.
"We will now have security in the emergency room 24 hours a day, seven days a week."
Beck, whom Hartmen described as "one of my best residents," was a second-year resident in internal medicine. He was engaged to Am Vm Tiburc, a first-year resident at the Med Center.
Hartman said. "The most important thing now is providing the employees with reassurance so they can perform."
"He was a highly qualified individual and an excellent person," Hartman said. "He was a
BECK WAS A PHI BHE KAAPPA graduate of the University of Nebraska in pre-medicine.
have a memorial service for Beck, but would wait to see what the students planned. The Med Center is starting a memorial library fund in Beck's name, Hartman said.
Chancellor
Hartman said he hoped the Med Center would
From page 1
Contributions to the memorial fund should be sent to the KU Endowment Association at the address below.
Rybolt, who had brought her mother to the Med Center for tests, worked as a bartender at a Kansas City tavern. Relatives told reporters she had been afraid of guns since she was held up when she worked in a liquor store in Missouri several years ago.
an administrator. While in Nebraska he worked for the governor's office and later became full
Even as an administrator at Illinois State and West Virginia, Budig found time to teach a graduate course each semester. He said he planned to continue that here.
"I also hope to lecture in the School of Journalism from time to time." he said.
But he's going to have to sandwich that in between trips around the state. Buds has difficulty handling this sort of work.
CONSIDERING HIS RECORD in West Virginia. Rudgie should keep his promise.
"During the past four years in West Virginia, I visited all 55 counties at least twice," he said.
Therefore, it is not surprising when he characterizes *erginias* as disappointed at the death of his mother.
But the Budig's two children—Christopher, 16,
and Mary Frances, 12—are excited about the
study.
"Of course, they'll miss their friends," she said.
Because both children are in high school, Lawrence High School during their visit to Iowa.
BUT THAT'S NOT the only way in which the Budig's are preparing for the move.
"I suppose I'd better find out all of the fast food places in town." Mrs. Ruddy said.
places in town," Mrs. Bung said. After hearing about Ike's career that hot
glazed donut haveh, Mrs. Budig turned to her husband and said, "Gene, we'd better not tell Mary Frances about that place. You know how she loves donuts."
THE BUDIGS WILL bring more to Lawrence than their children. The family plans to bring their dog and Mrs. Budig, affectionately called "Gretty" by her husband, is bringing daisies.
"After mother died, I dug up her daisies and took them to Illinois and to West Virginia with me," she said. "They go where we go. They're just the small flowers and they grow anywhere. The gardeners will probably get mad because they'll probably take over the lawn."
In addition to her gardening avocation, Mrs.
Bowdler is interested in art and has advised Mortar
Boarding.
Her husband plays tennis and golf in his sparse time. Budgall says he would play on the University field, but the team wants him to stay.
Surely Budig will find an open tennis court he should stay at KU for as long as he hasp
"I plan to spend five to seven years as chancellor here," he said. "I plan to stay as long as I can contribute something to the University."
Mall
From page 1
not air the issues and discuss opinions" on the mail stult struck him as "completely against the laws of the United States."
However, in a post-meeting interview, Zinn refused to budget from his original position.
"Mr. Clark has demonstrated to me a fundamental failure to understand the difference between procedural due process and legislative process." Zion said.
HE SAID THE commission took on the responsibilities of a judge when deciding the
"In our judgment," Zinn said, "not only is there bias, but there is an appearance of bias. Therefore, it is impossible for us to have a fair hearing before this commission."
Zinn said that, JVJ had not yet decided whether to pursue the matter in court.
Zinn refused to say what he thought were the alternatives.
"We're working at a 30-day deadline on that (from the March 17 hearing)." Zinn said. "But really, we haven't discussed the possibility not as much as some people would like to think."
University community pleased with new leader
By DAN BOWERS
Staff Reporter
As spring enters its first week, members of the University community are viewing the appointment of Gene Budig as the University of Kansas' 14th chance in a breath of free air.
Budge brings with him an impressive record from three universities and a personality that has captivated students, faculty, Regents and other elite also who has met with or heard about him.
"I think honestly that KU has the best overall chancellor anywhere in the United States." Bernard Franklin, Board of Regents chairman, said yesterday of Budu.
"He represents a variety of philosophies that I have about higher education, and he will bring a tremendous amount of recognition to the University."
GLEE SMITH, a member of the Board of Regents from Larned, said Budig fit the mold the Regents were looking for in KU's newest chancellor.
"We had in mind a number of major criteria when we were interviewing," he said.
Smith listed a record of contributing to academic excellence, good rapport with students and faculty, an understanding of the aspects of a University as complex as KU with its College of Health Sciences campus in Kansas City, and a good rapport with the state Legislature as Budig's strong points that were consistent with what the Regents sought.
"In interviews with people he has worked with, colleagues at the universities he's worked with, they've shown a tremendous confidence in his abilities as an administrator." he said.
FRANKLIN SAID he thought Budig's first priority when he assumed office Aug. 1, would be to establish that leadership so that he had the support of the faculty and students.
Franklin noted that Budig's dedication to this was exemplified by the fact that he still taught a course while serving as West Virginia University's president.
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said Budig's acting to understand situations quickly impress.
"I thought he was very perceptive and in-
terested, but I had an ability to quick-
ly perceive situations and grapefruit."
Shankel said Budig had shown an ability to deal with a variety of interests simultaneously, and that be detected a sense of humor that will always serve a chancellor in good stead.
LOCAL LEGISLATORS, who met with Budig during a luncheon on Friday, indicated that they thought Budig would be able to represent the University well in Topeka.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said, "One thing I noticed is that he seemed to be very much in tune with legislation and he could talk about the issues we are considering in the legislature."
Members of the chancellor search committee, who submitted the list of five candidates to the Regens this month, indicated they were about Budig's administrative capabilities.
"He's hard-working, he knows how to work with the Legislature, and he has a very very strong interest in seeing that very strong academic programs are developed." Jacob Kleinberg, search committee chairman and professor of chemistry, said.
KLEINBERG SAID he was impressed by Budig's choice of words.
"He is very deliberate, he thinks before he speaks," he said.
Matt Davis, former student body vice president and a member of the search committee, said he thought that Budig was the best administrator of the five on the final list.
"I got the impression that it wouldn't take him long to get a grasp on the situation." Davis said. "He looked very good on paper, but the interviews really showed his vitality."
BREN ABBOTT, student body vice president,
said that after meeting with Budig, he thought
the new chancellor would be very responsive to
student concerns.
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THE UNIVERSITY Arts Festival THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Monday, March 23
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra with Andre Previn, Conductor
8:00 a.m. Hoch Audioharmonica
10 a.m. Live Performance
Monday, March 23-Sunday, April 12
"Illustration: State of the Art"
Embark in Art and Design Gallery
School of Fine Arts Experimentation
Thursday & Friday, March 28 & 27
"The Sage of Emporia" by Haskell
8:00 p. Swarthout Rectal Hall
University Theatre Presentation
Through Sunday, April 5
Gavali Carnival Lithographs
Exhibit in White Gallery, Spencer Museum of Art
Spencer Museum of Art Presentation
Thursday, April 2
Mistelavis Rrootovopch, Cello
8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
School of Fine Arts Presentation
Sunday, March 29
KU College Museum
3:00 p.m. Spencer Museum of Art
School of Arts Presentation
Friday & Saturday, April 3 & 4, 10 & 11
Carmen, An Opera by Georges Bizet
8:00 p.m. University Theatre
University Schoolof Fine Arts Presentation
Sunday, April 5
Peskanor Brothers, Violin & Piano
3:30 p.m. University Theatre
Chamber Music Series Presentation
Friday, April 10
Archaeology of the Silk Road in China
Melbourne, Murphy Lecturer in Art
6.0 Hour
Spence Museum of Art Presentation
Sunday, April 5-Sunday, May 24
Four Artists and the Map: Image/Process/
Data with guest lecturers Roberta Smith and
Nancy Grace on April 5 8 6
Exhibit in Kaiser Gallery, Spencer Museum of Art
and Design at St. Paul's School.
Saturday, April 11-Sunday, May 24
Artist at the Front: Jean Louis Forlain
Exhibit in White Gallery, Spence Museum of Art
Spencer Museum of Art Presentation
Sunday, April 12
Chamber Music
by the KU Fine Arts Faculty
at 5 p.m.
Sophomore Museum of Art Presentation
)
Page 6
University Daly Kansan, March 23, 1981
On Campus
TOMORROW
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER will present "Remote Batch Entry From Time-Sharing" at noon in the auditorium of the Computer Services Facility.
THE BIBLICAL SEMINAR will meet at 7 p.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
THE TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 292 Robinson.
THE SALT BLOCK BIBLE STUDY V will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the Kansas
*STUDENTS' ANTI-NUCLEAR ALLIANCE*
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union.
'Interstate 70 closed for repair
Richard Hollander's sculpture, "Interstate 70," now has a detour in its black metal frame.
The sculpture, which was on display in the wooded area between Strong Hall and Spencer Museum called Marvin Grove, is being repaired in Kansas called because of recent damage.
"It wasn't necessarily vandalism. People just aren't educated to the fact that sculpture is just to look at. Most people think they have to get used to it, but it can't be used as a lumbery turtle." Holland said.
Charles Eldredge, director of the Spencer Museum of Art, said, "We suspect that it was caused by someone not thinking. It probably wasn't a conscious act of vandalism."
"This points out the need to educate people about the proper treatment of outdoor artworks. One shouldn't write, or jump on an outdoor bench as if one wouldn't walk on a museum bench."
"Interstate 70," which is on loan from Hollander to KU for two years, was inspired by the experience of traveling on a superhighway—speeding cars weaving from lane to lane. The sculpture changes, depending on the angle from which it is viewed.
"It it breaks broken again," Hollander said. "I'd wonder whether it was smart to keep it."
According to local stories, Marvin Grove has a rich history. Former Chancellor Marvin reportedly received a bushel of black walnuts from a farmer friend and together they planted the nuts one Saturday in 1678 in Old North Church. The conspicuous consequence renamed the area Marvin Grove.
Eldridge said he hoped the grove would become the site of a sculpture garden in the
Definition of art determined by future generations
By REBECCA CHANEY Staff Reporter
Visitors to any museum including modern art among its galleries may be tempted to agree with P.T. Barmun's conclusion that "There's a sucker born every minute."
Staff Reporter
However, although many curators agree that some of these high-priced 'master-pieces' may well end up in basement storage, some still benefit from major works of art by future generations.
The bottom line of the controversy over the value of modern art (and it is a controversy, as anyone who has ever dared question a set of values) that the artist can attest) seems to be only time will tell.
The question then becomes, who defines what is art and what is not? Who decides among the many ink blot paintings and purposefully deteriorating rust sculptures of the modern art world which are fit for museum galleries and which for junk heaps.
Ellen Gohen, curator of 20th century art for the Nelson Art Gallery, Kansas City, Mo., said the most recognizable influence on the public opinion was the museum where he is expected to art the fund, who decides what pieces are fit for public display in his gallery.
Gohen said she looked for quality and craftsmanship.
"Some people would disagree with this," she said. "They see art as a transient effort, not meant to be permanent. But I look for a certain attitude on the artist's part—it is a serious endeavor."
Alicia Legg, curator of painting and sculpture for the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, said she knew of no set standard of "work that could apply to individual works of art.
"You have to have what is called an 'eye',
Lagga said. The public takes much longer to
open the eyes."
"Of course, a lot of times, they're wrong. But people with an eye are right more often than they're wrong."
tolerant. Having an eye means having a sense for the future worth of a work.
CORATORS ARE the first to admit their tastes, and their estimates of public taste, are sometimes off-base.
"Lots of art work ends up in museum storage," Gohenen said. "They get taken out from time to time depending on what's fashionable, or as novels."
She said it was much easier to work with older pieces of art.
"It's a process of education," she said. "You're going to make some mistakes. With past periods, it's easier because scholars have already sorted through the works."
Gheen and Legg both said it was impossible to know what modern works of art would be considered important by succeeding cultures.
"What we try to show here for the public is a variety of quality examples of modern art, show the public what the options are," Goheen said. "We pretty well have to let them make some decision about what or not valid as art, what is good or not good."
DURING THE 19TH and early 20th centuries, Goheen said, people thought art could change the world, and was often used as a religious medium or for "practical" purposes. Now, she said, art tends to be very personal, almost diaristic.
"We used to be able to say that art was certain kinds of paintings and sculptures," Gobee said. "In a very simple sense, that art doesn't Modern art doesn't fit into the old categories."
But Gobeen said the definition of what may truly be called art had not changed.
"Take a picture that is an artist's conception of joy. There's nothing wrong with having your spirits lifted by a yellow and red painting. It's simple. It's not very high-minded. But there's nothing wrong with that either."
"If it causes you to see something as you never saw it before, it is art," she said. "What art has always been about is perception, and art never, it still is about differences in perception."
L
ALTHOUGH 20th CENTURY art forms may be seen with a new perspective afforded by history, the museum curators insist that the art of modern art is purely a matter of personal esthetics.
“Composition #23” by Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart
"Whatever is being done right now is interesting," Lee said. "It's very vital and its experience in an Goph was considered a master painter." Works she works haven't had any kind of test of time."
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Dates for tryouts for the K.U. Spirit Squad have been set.
Be a part of a great tradition!
SPIRIT SQUAD TRYOUTS-1981
All students interested in trying out should meet in Allen Field House at 5:00 p.m. on March 26th for an informational meeting. The first clinic will be held after the meeting.
No previous experience is required to tryout.
Requirements
2. 0 Overall GPA
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April 4th
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MINORITY STUDENTS ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE
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What's your interest? Old movies? New movies? Foreign films? Midnight movies? Whatever it is, SUA films wants you to help pick the films for the biggest and best film program in Kansas.
Interviews for positions on the SUA film committee are March 31st. Get your application at the SUA office, fourth level, Kansas Union, or call 864-3477. No experience necessary—just be interested and ready to go.
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University Daily Kansan, March 23, 1981
Page 7
From page 1
Interview
postance to see that faculty and staff are treated fairly. It is naive to think they will remain in higher education without adequate levels of compensation.
We have placed a very high priority on the issues of faculty compensation and fringe benefits at West Virginia University in the past four years and we have been successful.
Q. The Legislature has also made tentative cuts in the Other Operating Expenses budget and budget requesters are saying that they are using inadequate expenses to justify your proposal to propose KU's facilities competition?
A, It takes more than adequate salaries to keep good faculty. It is important to have adequate support for expenses, repairs, alterations and equipment. I believe an effective case can be the importance of support staff and adequate resources to support the academic program.
It is difficult for me to respond to specific questions about your budget when I have not had the opportunity to go into that budget in any death.
Q. The Legislature is considering two bills that would shift the full responsibility of tenure decisions to the Board of Regents. Do you favor this responsibility away from the University?
A. In my judgment, tenure decisions can best be made at the campus level.
Q. How do you view political activism on the part of faculty members?
A. I would just say that freedom of speech is basic to the institutional hierarchy. I have a record of strongly supporting freedom of speech for the faculty as well as students. The university, by the way, must be a forum for ideas, in plenty of room for divergence of opinion.
Q. Students face rising tuition, rising University housing costs and rising student activity fees. That is because it is felt they are not carrying enough of the financial burden. What limits, if any, should be placed on the students' financial burden?
A. I would just say that the University has an obligation to make every possible effort to not price young people out of the educational market. This will become a major issue in the
Q. Do you think that higher costs coupled with cost in student grant and loan programs will be the most important factor?
1980's with the sweeping changes being proposed by the present national administration.
A. It really is too easy to say. I fear that many good students will be priced out of the educational market. This will be a national tragedy. We could have a generation of young people deprived of the benefits of higher education.
4. Thus far, KU has not faced declining
enrolments, but when that occurs, how should
the university respond?
A. It is my guess that enrollment at the University will remain constant throughout the 1980s. I do not anticipate a significant decline in enrollment. The next few years will be exciting ones because it will give the institution the opportunity to address the issues of quality rather than quantity.
Q. KU's classified employees have requested to become a part of the University governance system. They were denied because they have not been appointed to a position in the university ministration. Do you intend to recognize them?
A. I will find ways to see that their views are heard in the administration of the University. By the way, I have done that at West Virginia University and Illinois State University.
Q. Your position also includes your administration of the Kansas University Medical Center. Do you intend to closely oversee operations there, as did former Chancellor Archie Dykes, or do you intend to give the Med Center reein?
A. I intend to assess the situation very early in my tenure at the University. I have responsibility for a large medical center at West Virginia University. It is apparent that the chief administrative officer has a responsibility to care for the medical center. It is important to be able to provide health sciences. It would be a great disservice to disassociate yourself from the medical center.
I have had an opportunity to speak with a number of legalators about the Medical Center and I am confident that the problems at the medical center are resolvable problems. It is a good medical center.
Q. Some legislators have suggested separating
A. I would just say that those faculty members at the medical center in West Virginia feel very strongly about having a direct tie to the university. They would not be interested in being a part of an independent medical center. They very much want the direct tie with the total university. They see themselves as an integral part of the institution.
the Med Center from KU. Do you see any possibility of it becoming fully independent of
A. As I said earlier, there are no problems at the Medical Center that cannot be resolved. In fact, the problems are very similar to those we are experiencing at West Virginia University. They are similar to the ones being experienced throughout the country. They are not unique.
Q. Allegations of poor maintenance at the Med Center have been used by the Legislature to attack KU's budget How do you intend to prevent the government from being used as a political weapon against us?
Q. The demands of an inflation-ridden America have made college more of a preparation for a career rather than learning for learning's sake. Do you see a trend toward universities becoming "career schools" and what are your feelings about that?
A. I have a strong commitment to the liberal arts and sciences. it is important that these areas be protected and enriched in the years ahead. The University is not deserving of that designation without strength in the liberal arts and sciences. These courses of study produce students who are able to function well in society. These programs produce a well-rounded individual.
Q. How do you think the University should attract more minority students?
A. At West Virginia University last year we increased the number of black students by 20 percent. The year before we increased the number of white students, we will increase the number of black students by about 25 percent. We are working aggressively to open the doors of opportunity to more and more people, especially minority students. I cannot wait on the situation at the University of Kansas.
Q. Is it the responsibility of the University to provide remedial programs for the academic distress?
A. You're really talking about basic skills, of course. I would say that it is the responsibility of
It is too easy to blame the other person for the problems involving basic skills. One must remember that those elementary and secondary skills are introduced by the institutions of higher learning.
institutions of higher learning to work closely with the public schools at the elementary level in addressing the basic skills problems.
Q. Some individuals have felt that the previous administrations have put too much emphasis on the University's public image. How will you explain why does the university does not preclude high academic quality?
A. I will deal with substance. I also believe you have a positive substance and have a positive image for the University.
Q. Specifically, how can the attract both high quality students and excellent faculty?
I think it is important also to have strong programs in instructional and faculty development. These are important in attracting and keeping key faculty.
A. At West Virginia University we are in the top 7 percent in the number of National Merit Scholars that we attract. We were just cited in a recent article as a major institution that has aggressively sought young people. We have been able to do this by initiating an aggressive fund raising drive. We support these scholars with private funds.
It is important that we also be in a position to offer a competitive salary. For that reason one must be successful in dealing with the government and state legislators.
Q. How can the University administration keep an adversary relationship with the faculty?
A. During the past years I have had no problem in working with the faculty leadership. I have been for the same things. I have been for the same things and have supported increased faculty and staff positions.
At Illinois State University, I was able to add 125 new faculty positions. At West Virginia University, I have been able to add more than 70 new faculty positions. I know of no land grant staff that has done better than the faculty and staff at West Virginia have done in recent years.
I would hope that faculty members would aggressively support me in my legislative program for the institution. I am here to support them and I am here to be their advocate. I am
he to work for academic excellence. I would hope we'all for that.
Q. You were chosen Chancellor through a closed search process. In future administrative searches, do you feel that the process should continue to be closed?
A. Now, what are you saying? You mean we
should have a sunshine law? Is that what we
mean?
Q. Well, basically, you do support the closed search process of not releasing who the candidate is.
Q. If KU's search process had been open, would you still have been a candidate?
Q. I would not have been a candidate because it
would have embarrassed West Virginia University.
A. I would not have been a candidate because it
Q. Will you work with Acting Chancellor Del
Willem? Before you take office August 17. What will be your
responsibility?
If those individuals interested in the positions had their names made public, they would have been hurt professionally at their institutions where they are presently associated.
A. Well, I plan to spend two or three days a month at the institution talking to various academic officers. I plan to talk with faculty and staff leadership on issues. I plan to seek their views on a variety of items and obviously one of them will be talking with will be Chancellor Shankel
Q. You have requested all of the University's accreditation reports. What will you learn from them?
A. Have you ever read an accreditation report? It is an excellent review of the academic program, pointing out the strengths and the weaknesses.
I am anxious to find out as much as I can about the academic program at the University of Kansas. The best way to do that is to review such material, and then appropriate academic officer. I plan to do both.
Q. Currently, there is a search for a vice chancellor for academic affairs. Will you have an opportunity to apply?
A. I plan to talk to the appropriate student within the University about that position because it is of vital importance to the academic program.
The University Daily
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Employment Opportunities
ARIZONA STREET DUPLXES Availability. Now perfect for Pick-up, 4 bedrooms, 8 baths. dishwasher, washer and dryer, ups, central air conditioning, carpet & draps - off-street parking, unfurnished, no parking. Call 845-3730 or 663.
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SPACIENCE TWO-STORY DUPLICER 1520
all appliances air conditioned, one car garages,
two bathrooms, two bedrooms and two possible option to buy $825.00 Less than a tenant term with optional term
2 contract - basement, 842.68-$825.00
2 bedroom duplex Air Cond., W/D Hookups,
W/ Carpet, Central location, very
clean. $225 mo. Call 843-2774.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Makes sense to use them! As a study
makes sense, the notes are well-
organized preparation. - New Analyze of
the Bookmark. - New Analysis of
The Bookmark. - New Read Bookstore.
Alternator, starter and generator specialist;
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, f84-9069, 3800
™ 6th.
f84-9069
1973 WV 412 Wagon, Auto, Radiale, Body and engine great, 86,000 miles $1752,171 VW Squareback, Auto, Body clean, engine requires work $700,842-715
Ampere V-4 guitar head. New Transformer &
Tubes. $175.00 or best offer 749-1214.
Keep trying. 3-23
Hand, woven oriental rug, 7 by 4½" oval in wall hanging. Rare chance. Contact Haroon 749-2724. 3-23
Window shades, battered golf clubs, sleeping bags, bents, lamps, metal detectors. Everything But Ice, 6th & Vermont. 3-23
Battle Snake eggs. Wall paper, photographic mirrors, chest of drawers, crook pots.
Everything But Ice, 16 & Vermont. 3-23
FOUND
86 Dodge Van, V-8 318 motor, excellent condition, moving—must sell, call evenings —843-7959. 4-3
1980 Datun Pickup, Longbed, 5-speed, Alr.
Sunroof. 1969 VW Bug. Call 749-2728. 3-25
Man's watch found in Snow Hall. Call 864-3410 and identify
Set of keys, GM auto, & Honda motorcycle
keys among others. 841-2021 after 5:00. 3-24
HELP WANTED
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES
experiences with us, as a public service to nursing home resident? Our consumer or
caregiver nurse helps us by providing Nursing Homes (KINN) help and
nursing home condition and assistance for our opinion. All names and correspondence
of the residents. All names and correspondence
913-842-3688 or 913-847-107. Please call us
913-842-3688 or 913-847-107.
Mas. St., #2, Lawrence, Kansas
"French!" Sunglasses, 1st floor Wesco,
Cheryl 843-6556. 3-25
Thursday. Call 864-6117 to identify. 3-24
Found, watch in front of Strong Hall. Call 864-1511 or 2SE Strong. 3-25
Full or part time help wanted. Combination
full or part time help with 15 coats. Cust-
mands. Dancing starting $4.00 each. Node dancing
$7.00 per hour. Your choice. Rent on Hwy 40. 379-9900.
3-24
rente on Hwy 40. 379-9900.
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF
accepted for the Summer Orientation student
advertisement in today's paper or come by
Strong Hall. An equal opportunity em-
ployment.
CRUBSERS CLUB MEDITERIANEAN, SAIL-
MIST OFFICIAL, Counselors
structures, Office Personnel, Counselor
staff, Advisory Board, Handling for APPLICATION
AND OPENING Hours, Handling for APPLICATION
CA, 1850, Box 6219, Sacramento,
CA, 8500
PSYCH INF. If you are interested in psychiatric help, we have a job for you. We have 2immunologist has a job for you. We have 2immunologist times to hot bur his part Time 16 hrs
LOST
Lost one blue down parka in Murphy Hall on March 1. 749-0110. 3-25
Reward, lost blue folder with typewritten research materials. Contact 9-4, 864-3421.
3-27
MISCELLANEOUS
Consumer Affairs Association
for problems with issues,鲜艳, utility merchandise,
auto repairs, home improvement, call or ship by
819 Vermont
460-8088
NOTICE
PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CAMDS, FOR positive, laminated in hard plastic. For de-amine, and application self adhere stamper tape. De-K. Box 252. Temple, Arizona #8218.
PERSONAL
GAY AND LESHISIAN PEER Counseling. A friend is ready to listen. Referrals through K.U. Information, 842-3506, or Headquarters, 842-2345. If
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
ttf 843-4821.
Resume & Portfolio Photographs. Instant Color Passports. Custom made portraits, color, B/W. Swella Studio 749-1611. 4-1
NEED EXTRA CASH? Sell your old Gold and Diamonds. Top price for class rings, gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6377, 841-1476.
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LGE PAIN? BACKACHE Chirropteric Care &
its benefits. Dr. Mark Johnson 405-836-3380
or Blue Cross Blue Cash & Long-
er insurance plans.
SPRING PORMAL RUSH MARCH 27, 28, 29
Register in the Interference Interface Office of
Citee. Call 864-3500 Booth 10. Set up a
phone at 7-8 p.m. There will be a $11 registration
fee.
Design a logo for the KU Sailing Club.
Create a brochure with details of the
shirts, T-shirts, etc. Designer will receive
$15.00 or a club membership. Entries must
be submitted by 3-25
call Barb at 843-3120
3-25
Compliling a “Best of Lawrence” list Best of Lawrence includes found burger club, athlete, hotel, athletic stair, bartender spot for... Best anything else? Ideas and nominations to 2500 w. i
CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS: April 14-15
Petitions available in Student Senate Office
filings deadlines: 5:00 p.m. Friday, March
27.
3-27
Want to be a Priest? Sister? Ages 20-50?
Contact Father Nigro, Gonzaga University,
Spokane, 99258.
3-24
SERVICES OFFERED
wheel to spoor wheel
Skipping classes? Learn to "play the game"
and will make the grade you want. Send $3
ONLINE NATIONAL RESOURCE DIRECTORY.
Box 8555, Wichita, S. 67240.
3-24
We are looking for another mature, non-tenured female. Send resumes (brief, engaged or married) to live with us at 415-792-3088 or visit our pre-school year. Age 14, yet unforeseen. Do not apply until Spring. Are as possible, but do not spring. Dress in spring.
For Sale: Nice '75 Suzuki 185 Street bike.
In exe. cond., 3,000 inl. Call Mike 749-0651-
325.
or racing and repair
843-7095
wheel
We Do!
Do you have a mechanic that races as well as repairs Sports Cars? For fifteen years?
DO IF at GREENS (The big yellow liquor store). The selection of fine wines, imported beers, and exotic liquors. 802 West 22rd St.
self service
copies
now at
ENCORE COPY
CC--
Tutoring M 000-800, Phxse 100-600, Bus
384, 808, 802, Call 843-903-63, tf
M 000-800, Phxse 100-600, Bus
384, 808, 802, Call 843-903-63, tf
3¢
مجلس التعاون الخاص
النظامي للتعاون
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Babysitting done at my home. Preferably from ages 2-5 years. Call 542-2605. 3-27
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476
Experienced typist-term papers, thesis,
music. electric 'BM Selective. Proofreading.
spelling corrected. 843-3554. Mrs. Wright
Dial 842-2001
For Your Tying Upcraft
ENCORE COPY CORPS
25cm and lowa - Holiday Place 842-2001
Experienced typet-thesis, dissertations,
term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectite.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-310. tf
Dial
25th o. a.
Experienced K.U. typist, IBM Correcting
Selectric Quality work. References available.
Sandy, evening and weekends. 768-818.
tf
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4980. tf
Experienced typist-books, teebas, terns paper, dissertations, etc, IBM correcting Selectric. Terry evenings and weekends 842-754 or 843-2671. tl
RESUME—RESUME—RESUME—Professional
Resume Printing and Printing, Encrese
Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa. 842-2001. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast
accurate, accurate. IBM picle illes. 842-2577
evenings to 11:00 and weekends.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING CALL
@IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editine, self-correct Selective:
Call Ellen or Jeannan 841-2172. tf
Experienced typist would like to type thesis,
dissertations, etc. Call 842-3203. 3-30
PUSH TECHNOLOGY
RUSH JOBS our specialty. Reasonable Rates.
IBM 10, 12 niteh. Nathan or Sandy-841-
736-843-8611.
WANTED
GOLD - SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rna-
Weddings Bands, Silver Colns, Sterling, etc.
we pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or
542-2868
We are looking for another mature non-
native with a strong interest in pre-
vocational or engaged marriage to live with us (pre- engaged or married) during the next school year. Aph is yet an ideal candidate as possible but may attend Spring Brief.
$108 per month. Own room. Utilities pd.
Mail roommate needed. Call Tom or Drew
749-3933
3-27
The University Daily
ORDER FORM KANSAN
ORDER FORM
SELL IT WITH A KANSA CLASSIFIED
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T!
If you've got it, Kansan classifies can sell it! just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to. University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall. Lawrence. Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
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CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 inch- $3.75
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, March 23, 1981
Sub's bomb knocks 'Hawks from NCAA tourney
By TRACEE HAMILTON Associate Sports Editor
NEW ORLEANS- The Kansas-Wichita State match in the semifinals of the Midwest Regional on July night was a lot like New Orleans. Bourbon Street-wild, unpredictable, exciting and dangerous.
And deadly, too, for the Jayhawks, who fell, 66-
65, to the Shockers.
The game was wild because of the run-and-gun play, unpredictable because of erratic performances, exciting because of a last second shot and possible uncalled foul and dangerous because of the high pitched emotion of both teams' fans.
THE TWO SCHOOLS met for the first time in 26 years before a crowd of 21,192, which later swelled to 34,060, the most ever to watch an NCAA tournament basketball game. Most of those fans came for the Arkansas-Louisiana State game that followed KU's game.
That large crowd saw Wichita State's sixth man, reserve guard Mike Jones, hit a 30-foot jump shot with six seconds remaining to put the Shockers on top of Kansas by one. The Jayhawks then called a left and the clock was stopped with two seconds left.
then came the play that may or may not have determined the winner. 6-foot-5 guard Booty Neal had the ball out-of-bounds under the Wichita State goal. Darnell Valentine, ran toward Neal to receive the inbounds pass. As planned, Shocker forward Jay Jackson knocked
Valentine down. Neal looked at the official for the expected charging call.
Ku was no call. Neal called a time out and
he regrouped. On the next try, a full court pass
was made to the team.
"I THINK 30,000 people knew it was a foul, but three didn't call it," KU Coach Ted Owens said. "I don't like to be unkind but it was obviously a flagrant foul."
Valentine, who missed a layup that would have put KU up by three with 24 seconds to go, also felt he had been fouled but Shocker Coase Smithson said no call was the right call.
"We told the two out officials about the play. We didn't have time to tell the other but that doesn't make any difference. It should have been called."
The call was not all that did not go Valentine's way late in the game. Besides his missed layup, Valentine missed the front end of a one-and-one play that would have given KU at least a two-point lead.
"We just wanted our player to hassle the inbound passes to - jump up and down vertically, take a big hit," he said.
"If IHAD some nails I would have nailed him
out. But I don't think it was a charging foul."
But, early in the game, Valentine kept KU close. The Jayhawks, who blazed Arizona State, 88-71, in second-round action in Wichita, could have won that game smoothly and Valentine had to score on his own.
nine points. Senior center Art Housey had six points and six rebounds. David Magley, junior forward, led KU in rebounding with seven, but from the corner of the court, usually his best spot.
He had a game high 21 points and John Crawford added 11.6-6 guard Tony Guey, who was right behind him, scored 10.4.
THE SHOCKERS beat KU badly on the boards, grabbing 45 rebounds to KU's 32. Wichita State center Cliff Levington, playing that position in place of Oel Jones, who was put on probation before the tournament, had 14 rebounds and forward Antoine Carried added nine.
Wichita State was spurred by a large and vocal crowd. The Shockers placed advertisements in Louisiana papers asking Tiger fans to cheer for them. It worked. Shocker fans and administrators have been pushing for a KU-Wichita State game and have been rebuffed by the KU Athletic Department. The Shockers took advantage of their chance.
JAHAYKW NOTES: The Final Four was completed yesterday with Indiana defeating St. Joseph's 78-46, in the Midwest Regional and Louisiana State beating Wichita State, 96-85, in the Louisiana Superdome in the Midwest Regional. Indiana and Louisiana State will meet Saturday in the national semifinals at the NCAA tournament, where the game will meet the winner of Virginia-North Carolina on Monday, March 30, for the national championship.
As usual, rumors about the Ted Ewens' job status but this time the rumors are that he will get a contract extension this week. Owens has been on the weekend that his contract would be extended.
54
32
35
14
Art Housey grabs a rebound against Wichita State but the Shockers outrebounded KU Friday and won the Midwest Regional semifinal game, 66-65.
First home loss ends women's season;
By SANDY CLARK Sports Writer
Kansas" women's basketball team didn't lose on its home court in Allen Field House during the regular season. Its timing was very bad when it finally did lose a game in Lawrence.
Before 1,700 hometown fans, the Jayhawks lost Saturday to the tenth-ranked UCLA Bruins, 73-71, in the second round of the AIAW Division I National Championship.
The loss brought the team's season-long hopes or reaching the Final Four to an abrupt end. The loss ended with a win.
"THE KIDS were broken-hearted," KU Coach Marian Washington said. "They wanted it very badly and they gave everything they had. The breaks just weren't there for us tonight."
The breaks the Jayhawks didn't get were at the tree throw line particularly in the second half. The ball was deflected off the ground.
throw attempts in the second half and made just 18 runs hits 17 of 20 from the line in the second half.
“All season we’ve had our problems.” Washington said. “For example, the free throw situation. We’ve had several times when we’ve shot three of six to somebody else’s 20 some old. It’s tough to counter that. I didn’t feel we were getting any over-the-back calls.
"But we didn't hit our free throws like we needed to and their free throws kept them in the
KU LED MOST of the first half, but went into halftime with the score tied at 34.
The Bruins were hot in the opening minutes of the second half, scoring six unanswered points before KU finally scored on a basket by Tracy Claxton.
The Jayhawks seemed to regain the momentum with 9:51 left in the game as they took the lead, 52-51, on a Lynette Woodard jumper.
But the Bruins combined accurate outside and fire throw shooting to build an 8-point lead with 5 points.
The Jayhawks cut the lead to four with 12 seconds left, but Mary Hegarty, one of three freshmen starters on the Bruins team, sank two free throws to seal the UCLA victory.
UCLA Head Coach Billie Moore was more than pleased with her team's clutch free throw
"WE'VE WORKED HARD on free throws and I thought they responded very well at the free throw line in the second half." Moore said. "I don't know if it will be won on defense and on the free throw line."
Washington, perhaps, should not have been too surprised that KU didn't get the breaks Saturday. That has been the general trend for the Jayhawks lately.
Though the Jayhawks won their last four games of the regular season, they dropped from second to fourth place.
Though the Jayhawks won the AIAW Region VI Tournament in Minnesota over spring break to advance to the second round, they fell to sixth in the national rankings.
Even more damaging, however, was that the Jayhawks subsequently were seeded eighth in the AIAW National Tournament instead of fourth, as Washington had expected. The first four seeds received first round byes and the second and third round games at home.
“OUR WHOLE THINKING was that if we had wong regions that we would have one of the top four seeds being ranked third and fourth in the nation,” Washington said. “There’s no excuse for the seeding. I think the kids had to bounce back from frustration there.
"In terms of the polls, I really thought we could handle that. I feel like we had the confidence to give Louisiana Tech our best but it was important to get through this one. Had we had a
few breaks, I'm sure we would have pulled it out."
"I KEPT reading all week that Kansas kept complaining that they didn't want to go to Louisiana Tech," Moore said. "We wanted to go to Louisiana Tech and they didn't. So we decided before the game that we wouldn't send them. So the players tuned in to that."
Moore suggested that her Bruns might have done Kansas a favor by winning.
The Bruins will play the No. 1 ranked Techsters Tuesday.
The Jayhawk's loss was particularly disappointing for the team's two seniors, Woodard and Kane.
"There is no question that the kids wanted this game very badly not just for the team, but for Lynette and Sheba," Washington said. "This is the first team that I’ve had that has pulled players in a way that they’ve been all season. They wanted very much for Lynette and Sheba to get to the final four."
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MOTOBECANE
- - - - - -
Pre-Season SALE!
Mirage
• Alloy Rims
• Q.R. Fr. Rims
• 26.8 Ibs.
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* All Rims
* Q.R. Fr. Wheel
* Sour Turbofront Mounts
Resig $15.00
May $16.00
Aug $4.50
Sep $4.50
Grand Jubile
* Chrome-Molyli
* Double Bucket Frame
* Sumur Cycle Dorealium
Rep. $500.00
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Mick's
Hurry Sale Ends Saturday, April 4
1339 Massachusetts
BICYCLE SHOP
842-3131
OTOBECANE
Bicycle
Your Lunch Home Alternate
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Phones: 542-7398
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7:30 A.M. to 8:00 P.M.
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841-5404
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Property Management, Inc.
RENTALS IN THE LAWRENCE AREA
842-3175
2340 Alabama St.
VALID ID CARDS
immediately. Labeled. Color
available at
I-DOUT SYSTEMS
143-5018
Welcome Back Students! We Missed You!! To celebrate your tanned return, $1.00 pitchers tonight and tomorrow night from 7-10:00 p.m.
The Harbour Lites A First-Class Dive 1031 Massachusetts
The University of Kansas Concert Series presents
The Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Andre Previn, Conductor
Monday, March 23, 1981
Hoch Auditorium
8 pm
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved
Public $7, $8
KU Students with ID $2, $1
Concerto for Flute and Harp Romeo and Juliet Symphony no. 2
Program
Mozart
Tchaikovsky
Brahms
Unive Lawre
'One of the really great orchestras in the land. New York Daily News
M
By TIM Staff R
Attor Dykes,
Univer of all
thousa Norma welfare
structe
The Dykes malici
The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, March 24, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 117 USPS 650-640
KANSAS
14
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
K U
'Hawks miss Final Four
Some KU students took their spring break to New Orleans' Louisiana Superdome last week for KU's seminal game of the NCAA tournament's Midwest Regional with Wichita State (above). Those fans saw guard Darnell Valentine (above left with KU Coach Ted Owens) play his last game for KU, a game ironically lost to a team from his hometown at Wichita. The Cleveland Cavaliers High School teammate Antoine Carr. Junior guard Tony Guy (left) drives past Wichita State's Mike Jones (32) but Jones came back against KU with a 30-foot jump shot with two seconds left to win the game for Wichita State, 66-65.
SUPERDOME TOURS
STUDIO 8, 20 BALL TIME 8 A.M.
MS TOURS KANSAS 11
WICHITA
32
STATE
KANSAS
35
KANSAS
4
By TIM SHARF
Staff Reporter
Attorneys for former Chancellor Archie Dykes, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel and the University yesterday filed a motion for dismissal of all complaints against them in a multihundred dollar slander suit filed Dec. 31 by Norman Forner, associate professor of social welfare, and Clarence Dillingham, former instructor of social welfare.
The suit alleges that statements made by Dykes and Shankel to the media were contrary to company policy.
malicious intrusion upon Forer's and Dillingham's rights to privacy and inaccurate about whether Forer and Dillingham were given due process.
THE MOTION RAISED what it called several "issues" that the court must decide. Among the issues was whether Dykes and Shankel were subject to a right of privacy claims, based on absolute privilege.
The 32-pseudonotion for dismissal, filed in toughe court on October 18, was sent to the Court as specified.
Absolute privilege protects public officials from libel in statements made in the capacity of a public official.
Another issue to be decided is whether the suit's allegations warranted the award of jurisdiction.
THE ALLEGATIONS in the suit stem from disciplinary action taken by the University against Forer and Dillingham after their 1979 trip to Iran concerning the hostage crisis.
The motion also claims KU is immune to punitive or exemplary damages.
Forer and Dillingham were suspended without pay for the time they spent in Iran. During the time they were away the two alleged that their families received threatening phone calls and
See FORER page 5
Hoagland ends efforts to push for tenure bills
Staff Reporter
Bv BRAD STERTZ
After State Rep. Joseph J. Hoagland took a look at the Kansas Board of Regents draft of proposed internal changes of tenure policy yesterday, he promptly called off all efforts to push his two tenure bills through the Legislature this session.
According to Hoagland, who saw the confidential draft, the changes that the Regents had suggested were similar to the changes implicit in the two bills.
Those changes would have given the Regents final say on all tenure decisions and would have allowed anyone to make a complaint against a tenured faculty member, with the Regents acting as the final hearing body in all dismissal cases.
Haagland, R-Overland Park, said that after he learned of the Regents plans, he no longer planned to stay in Haagland.
"I am definitely in favor of the changes that the Board of Regents has suggested," Hoagland, the main spark behind the bills, said. "From what I have seen, it is so pretty much what the bills would have done."
Hoa land's quick switch in position on the bills included calling off several political maneuvers that would have freed the bills from a logjam in a house in *The Way Ways* and *Means subcommittee*.
Chief among those efforts was the plan to have Chief Amongst Games, D-Augusta, introduce the libel in the book.
"Because the board is planning to take the stems that they showed me." Hoadland said, "I
save told Frank not to bring up the issue in the Senate. "
Gaines said that after he heard about the recent changes, he thought that no evidence was needed.
"The Regents said that they were going to handle the problem," Gaines said. "Another reason why I changed my mind was because the Senate President, Ross Dodd, told me to hold off on the bills until the Regents had completed their study."
Doyen, R-Cordonia, was not available yesterday for comment on the bills.
"They won't formally adapt the changes until
they're ready to do that, but by time the
lawsuit is out of session."
One problem that Hoagland foreashed, was that if the Regents decided in their next meeting not to adopt the changes, it would be too late for the Legislature to act.
Hoagland, however, said the House Ways and Means Committee probably would keep the bills on hold for easy access next year if no changes were made.
"I really don't expect too much trouble from the Regents in regard to the changes." Hoagland said. "The Board has pretty much indicated its support to make changes and I am content with them."
John Conard, executive officer of the Regents,
said the next step for the proposed changes was a
migration to a new campus.
When the changes were first brought up, Conard said, the Regents sent them to the Council of Presidents and the Council of Chief Academic Officers. Although some recom-
mendations for the proposed discussion, Conard said, the two boards could add further recommendations to the proposals.
Consulting jobs minor source of faculty income,officials say
By DAN BOWERS Staff Reporter
Despite recent reports and state legislative claims, KU officials say that outside consulting is not a widespread source of additional income for KU faculty.
"Out of 1,300 faculty at KU, I would say fewer than 100 are involved in consulting over an extended period of time," Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor said recently.
Cobb said his estimate was based on faculty members who might be consulting during the interview.
"I would estimate that an overwhelming preponderance of consulting is done during the summer."
FACULTY MEMBERS teaching only during the academic school year are not considered to be on the University payroll during the summer, so students free to make any outside arrangements.
Cobb pointed out that the University had a strict policy on consulting, allowing a maximum of seven faculty members per semester.
"It is, therefore, considered inappropriate to engage in gainful employment outside the University that is incompatible with University commitments," a section in the Faculty Handbook.
But outside consulting has become a factor in the faculty pay raise decisions in the [left].
State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, chairman of
the Senate Ways and Means Committee, said at a dinner with the American Association of University Professors last month that the Legislature was raising salaries by only 7 percent instead of the 10 percent requested by Regents schools partly because of consulting.
HE CITED a Nov. 17 report in the Chronicle of Higher Education, which said the average professor supplemented his income by 21 percent on salary tables through extra professional earnings.
The types of extra income reported were consulting, payments from the faculty member's own school for research and additional teaching and in-depth research work and support at other schools.
The report surveyed 2,400 faculty members.
In a follow-up report, the Chronicle said nine out of 10 professors in business and economics reported extra earnings during the past year, with an average of $11.57 in extra pay.
The report also listed 85 percent of the faculty members in engineering and computer science fields as reporting outside income averaging $10.91 above their base salaries.
AT THE OTHER END of the scale, those professors reporting extra income in the humanities averaged only $3,590 above their base salaries.
Joseph McFarlane, academic officer for the Board of Regents, said none of the Regents schools approached the high numbers of faculty outside consulting cited in the Chronicle's report.
See CONSULTING page 5
University convocation time changed
The time of the University-wide convocation this Thursday has been changed from 4 to 4:15 p.m., according to Jim Scaly, administrative assistant to the Chancellor.
The convocation time has been changed so that University Council members, who will meet at 3:30 p.m. Thursday, can attend, Sally said yesterday.
Weather
♪
Scheduled for the Kansas Union's Woodruff Auditorium, the convolution was called by Acting Chancellor Del Shanker to address major issues facing the University of Kansas.
When Shankel announced the convocation he declined to say what issues would be addressed. Scally said Shankel probably would not reveal the convocation program before Thursday.
It will be sunny today with a high of 64 and variable winds, according to the KU Weather Service. The low tonight will be 35.
Tomorrow will be sunny with light winds and a high near 70.
At 89, Whitcomb to obtain doctorate now will work on career memoirs
By CORAL BEACH Staff Reporter
In 1910, Philip Whitcomb received his bachelor's degree from Washburn University
Now, 71 years later, he will receive his doctorate in philosophy and will walk down the Hill at the KU commencement in May.
Whitcomb, 89, returned to Kansas in 1978 after a career as a foreign correspondent that spanned 64 years, 17 countries and two world wars. Now that the pressure of daily deadlines is gone from his life, Whitcomb said that he still valued his journalism experiences.
"The work of a journalist—a real journalist—requires intense alertness, an almost instantaneous realization of what points, facts or ideas are essential to a particular story, and a need for quick thinking in minutes or hours," Whitcomb said. "The work of a Ph.D. candidate is about the same."
Whitcomb is an Olin Tempelin Fellow in KU's department of philosophy. His doctoral dissertation, "The Distinctions Between Existence and Essence in the Thought of Thomas Aquinas, Giles of Rome and Francisco Suarze," centers on the works of Suarez.
Whitcomb said he chose the University of Kansas to complete his graduate work because Watson Library had the complete 28-volume set of Suarez's work.
Michael Young, associate professor of philosophy, has worked closely with Whitcomb, and said that the department was shocked when the former Toekan sent a letter of application.
He said he was also attracted to KU because Alfonso Verdu, professor of philosophy and one of two U.S. authorities on Suarez, was on the staff.
"We didn't really believe it," Young said. "He almost seemed over-qualified: a Rhodes scholar.
See WHITCOMB page 5
THE WILLIAM J. MUNROE BANKING AUTHOR
Phillip Whitcomb
BOB GREENSPAN Kanaan a staff
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 24, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
No suspects in Med Center deaths
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Two possible leads--one a suspicion the killer was a medical school dropout—into the shotgun slayings in a University of Kansas Medical Center emergency room were run down yesterday as dead ends by a special police squad.
Dalley would not say how officers disproved a theory that a disgruntled or vengeful former medical student was the man who shot an intern and a patient. "I don't think I know," he said.
Police spokesman LL Mike Dalley said the most promising leads were found groundless by some detective legwork.
Earlier an officer had said a former student who flunked out of medical school in 1970 was being sought for questioning. The name of the student was
The assailant was described as 6-foot with medium or shoulder-length hair, a mustache and several days' growth of browhair. Witnesses also said the man was wearing black clothing.
The other dead end, Dailey said, was a tip that one of the victims had testified against a man on a previous charge, and the shooting was revenge. The man that officers suspected was found in the city jail and had been there since Thursday, leaving police with no suspect.
Democrats object to delayed grants
WASHINGTON-Majority Democrats on a House education subcommittee told Education Secretary Terrell Bell yesterday that President Reagan had no right to suspend processing of more than 1 million applications for college student grants.
"Obviously, when I get an order from the president I comply with it," Bell testified in hearings before the Postsecondary Education Panel.
Democratic Rep. Theodore Weiss of New York demanded that Bell and his counsel cite the law that gave Reagan the right to suspend the processing.
Earlier this month, after Reagan's Jan. 29 postponement of regulations, Bell offered several large changes in administration of the grants that he provided to the U.S. military.
James Moore, acting deputy assistant secretary of education for student aid, said 1 million to 1.4 million student applications had been delayed, and if Congress let the department go ahead with the deferral, the backlog could be disposed of by June.
Bell said the deferral would lower the awards by about $120 to students whose families have other income to contribute toward educational costs. He insisted students from families with incomes of less than $11,000 or $12,000 would not be affected.
Senator proposes nine-month draft
WASHINGTON—Democratic Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina proposed yesterday to create a men-only draft for nine-months of military service to remedy racial and class injustices in the volunteer service and to give America "a credible fighting force."
Arguing that the 8-year-old volunteer force is a failure militarily, financially and socially, Hollings said a return to the draft would send a demand for higher salaries.
"The best signal we can give to the Soviets and our allies is a return to the draft. It would show that we mean business," he told reporters before introductory statements.
Hollings envisions a nine-month military service for 18- to 22-year-old men, with certain exemptions. He said he favored drafting women but thought since the issue was still before the courts and would be better left alone for now.
Hollins said, as he had predicted in 1973, that "the poor, the black and the disadvantaged" constituted the bulk of the volunteer force. he asked 25 per cent of volunteers to be paid.
"More than a racial problem, it is a class problem," he said. "Even the white recruits are drawn from the poorer and less-educated segments of society."
U.S., South Africa meet secretly
WASHINGTON-U-N. Aambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick met secretly last week an officer, State Department and South African officials confirmed yesterday.
The previously undisclosed meeting directly contradicted earlier assurances by the department that no members of the South African military delegation had met with any American policy-level officials and the department had not even been aware the South Africans were in the country.
The officials said the Kirkpatrick meeting with Lt. Gen. P.W. Van der Westerhuizen, head of South African military intelligence, took place March 15 in New York, just before the South African and four other officers left the United States at the request of the State Department.
They were asked to leave the country when the State Department discovered their military ranks. Under U.S. policy toward South Africa, which includes a total ban on the sale of military equipment, members of the armed forces are not allowed to visit the United States on official business.
Last week, State Department spokesman William Dyess said the South Africans had met only with a low-ranking member of the National Security council staff, and one of the officers made a social call on an American friend stationed with the Defense Intelligence Agency in the Pentagon.
Officials said an investigation had been ordered to find out who knew the Kirkpatrick meeting had taken place and why an official spokesman was involved.
Court upholds statutory rape laws
WASHINGTON—A fragmented Supreme Court, rejecting a sex discrimination challenge, today uphold statutory rape and punish men who commit such crimes.
The 5-4 ruling, involving five separate opinions, held that California's statutory rape law did not discriminate against men, even though the law prohibits such offenses.
The court said the statute was justified "to prevent illegitimate teen-age pregnancy by providing an additional deterrent for men."
The court also upheld a Uttah law requiring a doctor to notify, "if possible," the parents of a minor seeking an abortion.
ne justices ruled the statute "plainly serves important state interests . . .
and does not violate any guarantees of the Constitution."
and does not violate any guarantees of the Court's interest interests.
Writing for the court, Chief Justice Burger rejected the contention
"The Constitution does not compel a state to fine tute its statutes so as to encourage or facilitate abortions." Burger wrote.
The court refused to reconsider a case that played a key role in its landmark ruling that held a death sentence was not cruel and unusual punishment.
Over the protest of Justice William Rehqunit, the court refused to hear an appeal by Texas of an appeals court decision ordering a new trial for Jerry Lane Jurek on the grounds that his second confession was given involuntarily and could not be used at trial.
Polish union leaders debate strike
BYDGOSZC2, Poland—The independent Solidarity union's sharply divided leadership argued past midnight yesterday in a "life or death" meeting to decide whether it should call a general strike to protest a police attack against its members.
Solidarity leader Lech Walesa appealed for moderation to avoid an open and possibly bloody confrontation with the government, but a union communique said a majority of the delegates at the meeting appeared to favor a strike for Friday.
As the union's national coordinating committee met into the early morning hours, Power-led Warsaw Pact forces apparently extended maneuvers in and around Poland until the end of the week, and Deputy Prime Minister Mieczyslaw Polski warned that the country's fate was in the balance.
But Rakowski was reported to have told Walesa Sunday that the government was not afraid of a general strike and that bloodshed probably could not be avoided.
ASK favors alteration in open container bill
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
TOPEKA—The Associated Students of Kansas want a bill altered so that it would require anyone convicted of transporting an open container of either beer or liquor to give up driving temporarily.
Robert Bingaman, executive director of ASK, asked the House Federal and State Affairs Committee to consider making the change in the bill proposed by State Sen. William Morris, R-Wichita.
The original version of the bill required any driver under 18 convicted of transporting an open container of even if it was not changed.
BINGAMAN TOLD the committee that aslk supported the Morris bill, it thought that "the parameters of law should be made to make it applicable to all drivers."
convicted of transporting an open container of alcohol to give up his license for three months.
The hill is supported by the Kansas Beer Wholserals Association, the dry forces and the Kansas Highway Patrol, in addition to ASK.
The Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee amended the bill last month to allow a judge to restrict a license if a suspension would cause a hardship for the driver. The committee did not consider the age issue.
Debate on the amendment and final action are scheduled today in the House
He said the Morris bill was "an alternative to raising the (beer drinking) age to 21."
BINGAMAN TOLD the committee that ASK, which helped Morria draft the bill, would support the legislation even if it was not changed.
committee, which heard a repeat of testimony given in Senate committee hearings last month.
Merris said he had no argument with eliminating the age limits in the bill, but added that younger drivers accounted for about 70 percent of numbers of alcohol-related accidents.
He said that the 15-to-19 age group, while making up less than 4 percent of the total drivers in Kansas, accounted for almost all of alcohol-related traffic fatalities.
"This alone would cause you to have some concern for that age group," Morris said.
MORRIS TOLD the committee that taking away a driver's license was the best deterrent.
"Probably one of the most prized possessions of a person that age is the driver's license," he said.
Sgt. William Jacobs of the Kansas Highway Patrol said the state had problems with people transporting open containers, but that amending the bill to make it apply to all age groups would not place a stress on the patrol.
First coalition files for ballot
Jacobs said that in 1979, the patrol arrested 1,209 people for transporting an open container.
He said in the first 10 months of 1980, the patrol arrested 967 people on that charge.
With four days left to file, only one coalition has entered the race for next year's Board of Class Officers.
Gail Abbott, Student Senate elections co-chairman, said that candidates probably had waited until after spring break and would file this week.
"We expect a lot more candidates before Friday's deadline." Abbott said.
The Advance Coalition, organized by Chris Mehl, Overland Park junior, and Maureen Regan, Wichita junior, filed yesterday.
Advance's candidates for senior class officers are Mehl, president; Regan, vice president; John Best, Evanston, Ill., junior, treasurer; and Kathy Gibbons, Prairie Village junior, secretary.
The coalfounder's candidates for junior class officers are Gerry McNearney, St. Louis sophomore, president; Anne Cotopassia, St. Louis sophomore, vice president; Fred Barton, Chesterfield, Mo., sophomore, treasurer; and Jane Rasmussen, Lewood sophomore, secretary.
Mark McKeen, Overland Park freshman; Blair Tinker, Winneck, III; freshman; GIGI Gutekunet, Overland Park freshman; and Shari Ashner, Overland Park freshman are the two finalists next year's sophomore class officers.
Mehl said he was surprised that no other coalitions had filed.
"I can't believe that no one else is running against us yet," he said.
Come Hear
THE MOFFET BEERS BAND
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March 26, 1980 ACH presents the 2nd annual
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My Have Eyes For
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$4 at the door for all the beer you can drink
EVERYONE INVITED
SPIRIT SQUAD TRYOUTS-1981
Dates for tryouts for the K.U. Spirit Squad have been set.
Be a part of a great tradition!
All students interested in trying out should meet in Allen Field House at 5:00 p.m. on March 26th for an informational meeting. The first clinic will be held after the meeting.
No previous experience is required to tryout.
Requirements
Enrolled in at least 12 hours Weight in proportion to Height A genuine interest in K.U. athletics
CLINICS:
2. 0 Overall GPA
March 26-27-30-31
On Campus
April 1-2
PRELIMINARIES:
April 12
5:00 7:00
5:30-7:00 p.m.
THE BIBLICAL SEMINAR will discuss "The Spirit" at 7 p.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
April 4th
STUDENTS' ANTI-NUCLEAR
ALLIANCE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
Parlor C of the Kansas Union.
MUSIC HISTORY LECTURE with Harry Hankell, Kansas City Star and music critic, will be at 8:30 p.m. in Swarthout Redial Hall in Murphy Hill.
TRE TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet at ?p.m. in 240 Robinson.
THE SALT BLOCK BIBLE STUDY will be at 7:30 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the Union.
FINALS:
Group solicits human rights support
TODAY
Amnesty International of Lawrence is sponsoring a "prisoners of the month" program to solicit international prisoners of conscience.
THE LINGUISTICS COLLOQUY will sponsor "Semantics of there Construction" at 8 p.m. in 207 Blake Hall.
April 11th
MINORITY STUDENTS ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE
THE COLLOQUIUM ON ASIAN SECURITY POLICIES will host Young Kim on "Military Balance in Korea" at 8 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union.
The program will consist of radio sports and letter writing campaigns, according to Tim Pogacar, group leader for the Lawrence chapter.
THE CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER SESSION will meet at 7:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
LA MESA ESPANOLA (Spanish Table) will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in Winscoe.
SUA FORUM on "Dr. Strangelove" will meet at 9:15 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium of the p.m. in Woodruff
KU CONCERT CHOIR SPRING
Swarbath Reception Hall in Murray Hall.
Swarthout Rectal Hall in Murray Hall.
THE TOASTMASTERS CLUB will meet from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the International Room of the Union.
Arnney International is a London-based, non-political organization that works for human rights around the world. The organization won the Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts in 1977.
"It's a unique program for us." Pogacar said yesterday, "By making announcements on the radio and providing a place where listeners can call in to ask for information, we'll be able to reach people we haven't been able to reach with our campus activities."
During the last week of each
month, KU-affiliated radio station
KANU will broadcast information
concerning the prisoners, Pocacar
said. Interested listeners can leave their names at the KU Information Center, and be contacted later by Armesty International.
"We hope to get a lot of letters written on behalf of the prisoners." Pogacar said. "This kind of program allows us to focus effectively on a few of the most urgent cases."
The prisoners selected as "prisoners of the month" are all individuals who have been imprisoned because of peacefully held political beliefs, Pogacar said. Annesty International does not condone any type of violent expression.
The "prisoners of the month" for March are: Angel Landrove, 50, a Cuban poet and lawyer; Willyrum, 30, an Indonesian government employee; and Saida Elmi, a Somali mother of three. All were accused of anti-government activities, Pogacar said.
---
Spring Formal Rush March 27, 28, 29
Registration:
February 23-March 24
Register in the Interfraternity
Council Office or call 864-3559.
Booths will be set up in Oliver,
Templin and JRP on
March 10, 7-9 p.m.
There will be a $10 registration fee
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University Daily Kansan, March 24, 1981
Page 3
Safety of proposed parking lot questioned On the Record
By DALE WETZEL
Staff Reporter
Well before the wrecking ball's first swing last January, Bryan Anderson's toy factory at 600 Massachusetts St. had been a cause celebre for Lawrence residents opposing the city's plan to pave the site for a parking lot.
The aging building's ruins are long gone but the issue refuses to go away.
A North Second Street billboard, sponsored by Anderson's whimsical "Committee to Save Lawrence From Itself," still stands as a reminder. Stark black-and-white signs reading, "Remember 600 Mass, on April 27." The billboard among flashier placards of Lawrence's six City Commission candidates.
MEWHILE, ANDERSON and A Wright, who argued at last week's City Commission meeting for the city to defer letting bids on the project, are
"We're working on that now," Wright, "1123 New Jersey St., said last night. "It's possible to file an injunction against us if you want a project, but to me that's unliked, no
one really has the time to press the issue like that.
"We probably won't even address the Commission tomorrow night, at least not directly. We'll probably prepare a press release instead."
The Commission voted 4-1 March 17 to go ahead with letting bids for the project, which will be received this morning at City Hall.
"It isn't an easy lot to use." Richardson said. "It's not convenient, and it exits the auto in such a manner that forces it to cross traffic lanes."
WRIGHT CONTENDS that the lot's location is unsafe, and Gaylord Richardson, KU associate professor of architecture and Urban design, agrees
Richardson, who previously had served as Anderson's consultant on the lot's design, later appeared before the court and was accused of a taxpaper "to criticize the lot."
"There is no demonstrated need for a in that location." he said later. "In deliberately pursuing this location, the city is causing a higher cost per car."
RICHARDSON SAID that northbound one-way traffic on New Hampshire
KJHK, KU's student-run radio station, has delayed its power boost a month because of equipment problems.
KJHK power boost delayed
Because an amplifier had to be returned to its manufacturer, the power cannot be increased until April, Irwin station manager, said yesterday.
Brown said the amplifier was new and under warranty so there would be no additional cost to the station because of the problem.
May 5. Brown said that there would be bands and beer, Free KJH bumper stickers and T-shirts also will be distributed.
Student Senate funding and income from underwriting sponsors will pay for the events.
The station is planning several promotional events to recognize the power increase. An open house and a party at Potter's Pavilion will be held
The College Media Journal, a trade magazine, recently named KJHK one of the top seven college radio stations in the country.
The magazine polled 1,500 sub-
serving stations that send copies of
their programming schedules and lists
of top recordings to the weekly
magazine.
About 80 women from sororities and scholarship halls will trade beds, meals and social events today through Friday in the Canellinne Association 'Live In-Childcare'.
Program to unite women's living groups
Begin last semester, the program was expanded to include scholarship hats to mix Greek and non-Greek students. He also took vice president for campus affairs, said.
"The idea is to get to know people in other living groups." she said.
Five women from each of the four women's scholarship halls and 13 sororites will participate.
The residence halls were not included
because of the large number of women who live there, Hanson said.
Nancy Kelly, Overland Park sophomore, who lives in Sellars Hall, said the live-in would help relations between sorcerers and scholarship halles.
"I don't know anything about sororites," she said. "It will be interesting to see how the other half lives, so to sneak."
Street would approach the lot's exit at the point where the street curves west, and that the sight lines out of the lot's exit would be obscured.
Susan Newton, Fairway senior, who lives in Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, said the exchange was designed to give women a different perspective.
"Should someone come out of that lot, there is not enough time for traffic to stop to avoid hitting the car coming out," Richardson said.
George Williams, city public works director, conceeded that, per space, the lot was the city's most expensive yet. It will cost $150,000 for a 32-space lot, or $8,000 per space.
However, Williams said, the expense included better quality asphalt than the city has used for past lots, along with landscaping and other improvements.
CITY ENGINEER Leonard Hoover, one of the lot's designers, also said he had "no problems" with the lot.
"Mr. Richardson and Mr. Morris (John Morris, KU assistant professor of architecture and urban design) suggested some changes on the lot, but they're really quite minor," he said. "There's not all that much to designing a parking lot, as long as you adhere to the standards."
Hoover conceded that the city did not often design parking lots. He said that consultants were usually employed to do the job, but that the low cost and small scope of the project made it more practical for the city to handle.
"I think that any problems that the lot might have can be handled easily by the average driver." Flower said.
WRIGHT, HOWEVER, is worried
about possible legal ramifications of design-related accidents.
Wright and Lawrence Mayor Elder Carter and Commissioner Barkley Clark had accused Anderson's supporters of stalling for the April 7 election, but that all they wanted was an independent study of the lot.
"That lot was ordered by the city and designed by the city to city specifications," Wright said. "If there's a serious accident there that can be improved to improper design or location, the city is setting itself up for a hell of a lawsuit."
"It's like triple jeopardy for the taxpayers. The city is paying an outrageous sum for the lot, it's unsafe to use, and the taxpayers will carry the liability if the city gets slapped with a suit."
"We're not trying to raise unnecessary hell." Wright said.
Anderson, meanwhile, plans to try to change the situation through the ballot box.
"The present City Commission has basically said it doesn't care, that they're going to build it," he said. "It doesn't matter what the pros and cons are. They don't need an engineering department, or a law enforcement officer, and they'ren't about to provide one."
"I'll just go for the election, Nancy Shontz and Tormee Glossave have maintained a pretty consistent stand about that they don't like what's going on."
Women's health conference set
The River City Women's Health Collective, a group that collects and distributes information on women's health at the River City Women's health conference April 4.
The conference will be held throughout the day at the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St.
The conference will include a series of workshops and lectures dealing with health issues, a spokesman for the group said yesterday.
"A lot of women's health problems are not adequately researched by the medical community," Gall Boaz, Prairie Village junior and one of the founders of the collective, said. "Problems like proper nutritional care and information training have itself breast examinations, are readily available."
the collective also plans to sponsor a
"The purpose of the conference is to better educate women about their bodies. Knowing about your body gives you better health, as well as a feeling of power when you know that you're in control of your body."
continuing series of workshops and information pamphlets concerning women's health problems, another member of the collective said.
"There used to be an attitude among women that the doctor knows best." Jana Svoboda, Lawrence junior, said. "We used to find out that it unnecessarily so."
The collective will publish pamphlets on everything from self-breast examinations to herbal remedies, Swoboda said. Since February, the collective has distributed information concerning toxic shock syndrome, fibrocystic breast disease and use of the Pill.
The collective also hopes to provide a telephone line and a non-lending library to serve as a resource center for the campus and the community, Svoboda
"We've received $750 in Student Senate funding, which will help the collective a lot," Svoboda said.
A STEREO SYSTEM, valued at $75, was taken from a residence in the 1100 block of Tennessee Street, police said. The car, curred between Thursday and Sunday.
A lone gunman painted a cocked revolver at a clerk and took about $50 from Town and Country, 901 Ohio State, on early morning, Lawrence police said.
A BURGLAR took $1,600 in cash from a residence in the 2000 block of Ohio Street. police said. The burglary occurred between March 10 and Sunday.
A BURGLAR SLIPPED the lock of a residence in the 2300 block of Haskell Street between Saturday and Sunday and took a pair of skis, valued at $73, a pair of bindings, valued at $75, and a stereo system, valued at $675.
Many KU students returned from spring break to find that their apartments had been burglared.
The man was wearing a blue ski mask and a red stocking cap.
He took the money from the cash
machine and sold out of the store.
VANDALS DAMAGED some foot-path lights east of the Campanile for the second time in a month, KU police said.
Police are still investigating the robbery.
KU police Captain John Mullens said seven lights were damaged and eight were stolen. Police estimated damage to the lights at $3,000.
KU students lose law match
Two KU law students were stopped in the first round of the second annual National Trial Admission Day last weekend in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Kimberley K. Wetzel and Thomas L. Byers, second-year law students, represented KU in the regional competition.
The competition is sponsored by the association of Trial Lawyers of America (ATLA), which plans the national mock trial problem.
This year's problem involved a maid practice case. A man sued his lawyer after an unsuccessful attempt to sue a fabric manufacturer. The man's wife was killed when her dress caught fire.
Each of the seven competing schools was represented by teams of two students. They were evaluated
by three judges on the basis of opening and closing statements, examination of witnesses and prepared briefs.
The briefs were due in January and accounted for 25 percent of the teams' total scores. KU's briefs placed second in the competition.
There were three rounds of competition, but KU did not advance from the first round, in which they competed with Willamette College of Law. Willamette placed second, and University of Wyoming won the contest
This was KU's first year in the competition. The KU team was chosen in January, when the local ATLA held a competition using the Kansas Trial Lawyers Association funded the trip to Salt Lake City.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 24, 1981
29
Opinion
The search lessons
The search is over, but the questions remain.
Why, in the selection of a new chancellor, don't students and faculty members have better representation? Why don't they get to vote on who's to represent them on the search committee? Why is the committee's work done with the secrecy of the Manhattan Project? Why do we vote for city commissioners, the governor and the president but not the chancellor?
The announcement last Friday that Gene A. Budig would be KU's new chancellor brought an end to the questionable search procedure used. But there was a final irony indicative of how the entire search was conducted—the Board of Regents legally skirted public scrutiny of its actual decision on the candidate by making that decision at unpublicized "informal" meetings a week before the "formal" vote was taken.
The lessons to be learned from this search are important ones. The days when a chancellor could be picked in smoke-filled rooms by self-appointed gods are over. True, the present committee's sincerity is not in question, but the methods it used to select the chancellor are in question. Just as in all other aspects of their lives, people today are crying out for a meaningful say in what affects them—and the person selected as chancellor certainly affects many people, both on Mount Oread and off.
The issue of an open search is moot—temporarily. Sooner or later, however, KU's going to have a vacancy in the chancellorship again, and when that happens, perhaps the next search committee can show that it did learn the lessons from this search. Perhaps then the majority of students, faculty members, alumni and administrators will finally get a meaningful role in the selection process.
Reagan's first test
President Reagan's first bona fide national crisis may begin Friday morning. That's when more than 150,000 members of the United Mine Workers are scheduled to strike unless they sign a new contract before the old one expires.
The man Reagan ousted from office, Jimmy Carter, faced the same coal strike situation just as he came into office, and Carter's mishandling of the strike set the tone for his whole administration. Carter waited until homes in the Northeast were without heat before he began setting his famous deadlines—which, when one deadline passed, was quickly followed by another. And another. And another. The result: national crisis.
Reagan should learn from Carter's
mistakes and act more quickly to pressure both the miners and the mine owners to negotiate. Taft-Hartley, while tempting, won't get the coal miners back into the mines, as Truman and Carter found out when they tried it. Reagan's use of executive pressure over both sides is his best shot at avoiding a Carterist crisis.
Most importantly, Reagan should be aware that encouraging lucrative raises for the miners, as Carter wound up advocating, might solve the crisis in the short run but will soon be reflected in inflated prices in steel and energy costs, adding fuel to the already hot fires of inflation.
Malice and sarcastic retorts dispel Kansas' hayseed image
The nation's eyes are on the president. His time of testing may finally have arrived.
Every native-born Kansan is cursed.
A person who admits to coming from Kansas is hanging an invisible albatross around his neck. There's no other state quite like Kansas in the negative image it conveys.
Kansas is known for wheat fields and torndoos. Mention Kansas and the response
Some states convey favorable images. Kentucky brings to mind horse races, bluegrass music and mint juleps, and Hawaii is associated with high-fashion and half-dressed beautiful women done the hula.
JANE NEUFELD
39
elicited is usually, "Hey, Dorothy, where's Toto?"
The children are barefoot and ride their ponies six miles to school in the snow.
According to the image of most outreaches, every Kansan is a farmer. They all drive battered Ford trucks. The men wear overalls and the women wear red gingham dresses.
These Kansas farmers talk about the crops and nothing but the crops in a sort of illiterate hick dialect. "Yep, Martha," they tell their wives, who are baking sourdough bread, "we've got to work." Reckon we ain't gotta make enough from the wheat crop to send Lester on to the fifth grade."
The entire state is flat and treeless, and it is all gray, the way it is in "The Wizard of Oz."
This image of Kansas is certainly not completely false. We have our share of farmers and wheat fields, and a fair number of macho horses. You can tell us to furnish the back of their trucks with mattresses.
But the state also has trees, hills,
businessmen, doctors and lawyers, and its
farmers.
People are unconvinced. They know that Kansas means wheat and tornadoes.
This image produces contemptuous amusement every time Kansas is mentioned. For example, in the James Bond movie "Diamonds Are Forever," the villain hovers his aim of a destructive weapon over Kansas for a few seconds, and then moves it. He can't blow up
Kansas, he explains, because the world might not know it was gone for three or four years.
In the interest of self-respect, we should stop just listening to snide jokes and start striking blonde.
One way to stop the condescending snickers is to pretend you are from New Jersey or California. Most Kansans, however, seem to have a sneaking fondness for the state and aren't really willing to repudiate it. After all, it has some good points. All that fat land makes a difference, and the state's listening to the wheat fields rattle on a summer night while the tornadoes roll by in the distance.
Trying for sophistication is another way to refute the country bumpkin image, but it usually takes a considerable investment of money and time to achieve the look of California chic at the beach. It also makes you have it. Most people decide to wait a year until the look to Kansas at a reasonable price.
Another extremely tempting option is to take the Kansas image and play it for whatever satisfaction it is possible to get from a credulous audience. If this game is the ability to be a straight-faced刃
"Yes, the buffalo herds were pretty good this year," you can say. "The buffalo meat and wild berries should just about see us through the winter. Of course, we'd have had beef jerky but some scruvy rustlers made off with half our herds. But don't worry, wwehung 'em."
The problem with this approach is that a certain percentage of people will never realize it's not serious, and they will propagate even more wild-eyed stories about Kansas.
Perhaps the best solution is to counterattack the Kansas stereotypes with stereotypes of your own. If a New Yorker asks about Dorothy, him if they've got King Kong off of the Empire State Building yet. If someone from Arizona asks if buffalo stamped are a big problem out here, ask him how they keep the Gila monsters out of their gardens.
It may take some research to find somethingoten to say about every state, but it should bewidely accepted.
With any luck, we will gain a reputation for viciousness and sarcasm. At least we'll be striking down the image of flat-country stupidity and naivete. Even a reputation for malice is better than a reputation as half-witted toothless farmers from a treeless state.
KANSAN
The University Daily
(USPS 680-449) Published on the University of Kansas午夜 August through May and Thursday and June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, Kanaus $1.50, Kansas City $2.50, Douglas County $3.00 and for all else made on the $5 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanaus, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas,
Editor David Lewis
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Editorial Editor ... Don Munday
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MACKNEAT THE RYMAN DENGLERS LEADER © 2014 BY CANDICE TRIANGUE
OH THE KIDS WERE NOT TROUBLE AT ALL.
—HOW WAS YOUR TRIP?
SOLIDITY
POLAND
POLISH PARTY
Desert views make trip worthwhile
On the road again
On the road again
Going places where I've never been,
Seeing things that I may never see again,
Can't wait to be read again.
=While Nelson
Willie Nelson
Like a thousand other midterm-worn KU students, three friends and I decided to drive across the country to Arizona, the sunsaturated state in the southwest section of the nation. "Go southwest young women" our souls called out to us, and the pioneering spirit that pushed those first settlers forward pushed us, too.
Besides, it was spring break and who wanted to stay in Lawrence, Kan.?
We packed ourselves into a Chevy Chevette, the four of us, suitcases, bath suits, lunches, diet Pepis and little money we had. Gas was our first priority—staying awake our sec-
Kansas was easy. The Flint Hills, Emporia, Wichita flashed by virtually unnounced. On The Road with Charles Kuralt, CBS and the KU Coeds flashred before our eyes. What a team!
Six hours later the road seemed endless. The tires hummed against the highway, pulling us to sleep. The plastic-tasting coffee and the hurried gas stops in 30-degree weather just weren't enough when the music on the AM radio turned from familiar pen to country twang.
And even the familiar pop became too familiar.
From 9 to 5 we wondered whether the devil had blue eyes and blue jeans and where did we go from them, now that all of the children had grown up? As the discs spun, your kiss got on my list and I kept on loving you even though you didn't want to talk.
By the time we got to Phoenix,we were exhausted.
Somewhere in Texas or New Mexico (in the dark the states all looked alike) Deesco Joey help us herchist the words that used to describe the Wichita lineman and the Rhinestone boy as they feel streaked by the precious and few as the pointed us in the direction of Albuquerque.
On the road again
Bake a batch of gossips we go down the highway
We're the best of friends
Insisting that the world keep turning our way
It turned our way all right—and as it turned it
CYNTHIA
CURRIE
brought with it every conceivable type or crummy weather in the book of meteorology.
--plateaus, buttes and deserts stretched across the miles. In New Mexico, the rubber state that gets longer the longer you travel across it, the tumbleweeds swept across the deserts that dwarf caustics. Dirt daft cactuses, colored a dusty, mossy gray dwarf and stubbled grasses provided the only food for scrawny cattle. Ramshackle shacks with battered pickup trucks in the hardened clay front yards were framed by beautiful magenta, topped with billowing cotton cloudy tiles.
First it was The Fog. It didn't creep on cal cat feet as the poet Sandburg thought, but swept across the blackened mountains and on the road like a being from some horror movie. Adding to the eireness of the evening was the blood smeared across the road, the remains of some chainsaw massacre my vivid imagination. I saw red light bled caked the road—and to our relief was mud only mud, from the New Mexican soil, not the chainsaw remains.
Then there was Gallup, N.M. What a joy it was to drive through Gallup, an hour out of Albuquerque, right before dawn. There was a sawed-off car, ringing, it was at the rate of one inch per second.
Snow beat the windshield, shooting the car into hyperspace as lightning flashed and the wind gusted. At any moment I expected Rod Slering to appear, the time warp open up and students from the University of Kansas, would be sweep up and away from this cruel world.
Obviously, it didn't happen, and we were on the road again.
Mountains and pine trees, cactuses and
It was the same sort of clouds that framed the pine trees that shot as straight as arrows into the sky at the Sigretaes National Forest in Arizona. My car crept up the winding roads, splattering muddy sand, snow and water into the windbills of everyone we passed. The trees, silver in the early morning sun, towered overhead, protected by federal law.
Then, within twenty minutes, we were climbing another type of mountain; craggy, rocky mountains covered with snow. The highway twisted slowly upward, the declines swift and winding. It was as if I was back visiting Germany, staring at the Alps that cover the southern Bavarian region of that picturesure area.
The craggy, pointed rocky slopes began to soften. Huge boulders, stacked as if a giad had carefully built his castle, jutted up from both sides of the highway.
Prickly pear, teddy bear and sanguo caterpillars covered the craps—splatches of green among the reds and grays. Occasionally the dusty green would be accented by brilliant purples, reds and golds of tender desert flowers starting to bloom in the warmings sum of March.
Seeing things that I may never see again . . .
They are images that will remain forever, despite the fact my camera sat at home. It was country so beautiful it could only be seen, and only inaccurately described.
We made it, somehow, through the mountains and valleys, the heat and the cold, the snow and the wind.
I can't wait to be on the road again.
The modern way of scrutinizing problems
New York Times Special Features
By RANDY COHEN
NEW YORK-Q. What do we know about the roots of the problem?
A. We know that it is a deeply rooted problem.
Q. What about its facets? How many does the problem have?
A. It is a multifaceted problem.
A. It is a problem of incredible complexities.
Q. What sort of implications does the problem have?
A. It has profound implications for all of us.
And for our children.
Q. How many aspects of our day-to-day life does it touch upon?
A. It touches upon nearly every aspect of our day-to-day life.
Q. Would it be fair to say that we face a deeply rooted, multifaceted problem of incredible complexity with profound implications touching
Q. Is the problem amenable to some quick fix or easy answer or magic cure?
Q. Who created this problem?
upon nearly every aspect of our day-to-day life?
A. Yes, it would.
2. Who can solve the problem?
A. People can solve it.
...that will solving the problem demand?
Solving the problem will demand sacrifice.
Solve the problem.
A. No, it is not.
B. What will solving the problem demand?
C. Yes, it will solve the problem demand?
A solving the problem will demands their own
Q. From how many of us?
A. People created it.
B. Who can solve the
A. It will demand sacrifice from all of us.
or easy answer or magic cure?
A. No. It is not
4. Will we have to do anything to our beds?
A. We'll have to tighten them.
Q. Will we have to do anything to our belts?
Q. Will we have to do anything to our sleeves?
A. We'll have to hair them.
A. We'll have to tighten them.
B. Will you take the thing.
Q. So, I'm not the only person confronting this problem, am I?
A. We'll have to run them up.
B. What sort of pollution will be required?
A. No, you are not alone. Millions of people face this problem every day.
Q. What sort of approach have researchers developed to the problem?
A. Researchers have developed an initial approach.
A. We'll have to pull together.
Q. How many prongs does this approach have?
A. It is a two-pronged approach.
Q. What about its ends?
A. It is an open-ended approach.
Q. Does this approach delve deeply into the problem?
Q. How can we delve deeper?
A. There is no need for further
A. No, it scratches the surface.
A. No, it scratches the surface.
O. How can we delve deeper?
A. There is a need for further study
O. What sort of need?
A. There is an urgent need for further study.
B. Are you researching a particular disease?
Q. What sort of need?
A. There is an urgent need.
A. There is an urgent need for further study
A. There is an urgent need for further study
B. Are we spending enough on the study?
A. By no means. Much more money is needed.
Q. Are we spending enough on this study?
"And yet, wouldn't you say that there's a problem discovering a long-term solution to this problem?"
A. By no means. More money is needed.
Q. And yet, wouldn't you say that there's:
A. I certainly would. Scientists are confident of developing a long-term solution to the problem.
Q. in the meantime, should we treat in any special way those suffering from the problem?
A. No! These suffering from the problem don't
be to be treated differently than anyone else.
special consider at A. No, they don't
Q. What? You mean they don't want any special consideration?
Q. Well, what do they want then?
Q. How high a priority should we place on finding a solution to this problem?
A. They only want to be treated with respect and understanding.
A. It should be one of our highest national priorities.
4. Everyone has the same opinion of the best solution, don't they?
A. Yes, even among the experts there is a diversity of opinion.
A. Not among the experts. I'll bet.
Q. Not among the experts. I'll bet.
Q. What is the extent of this diversity?
A. There is a wide range of opinion.
Q. Is there any way to narrow that range
A. Yes, but only if we recognize the urgent need for further study and are willing to spend much more money, pulling together and unifying our teams is problem one of our highest national priorities.
Q. That will take real commitment, won't it?
A. It sure will.
Q. But then we can solve the problem, right? A. With a little luck, why not?
Randy Cohen is author of "Easy Answers to
Questions?" and "Didn't Why Didn'T
Think That?"
Co1
"It cert he said." one-tenth sulting."
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, the letter should be typed on the class and home town or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
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University Daily Kansan, March 24, 1981
Page 5
Consulting
From page 1
"It certainly doesn't represent the average," he said. "I'd be surprised if you found more than one-tenth of the faculty members doing consulting."
McFarland and Cobb both said the report was based on schools in larger metropolitan areas, where consulting opportunities were greater than in this area.
"I suspect data on the Eastern seaboard would be much higher, where the consulting opportunities are much more widely available," Cobb said.
MEFARLAND ALSO NOTED that the Chronicle's report defined extra income broadly, including in its figures summer school teaching, study and administrative duties as well as consulting.
Gerhard Zuther, chairman of the department of English, said consulting figures in the English department were far below those cited in the Chronicle's report.
He said most of the consulting conducted by English professors was on a "one shot" basis
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Under University guidelines, Zuther said, such "one shot" consultations didn't have to be reported, but that professors were "not getting very rich" from their consulting efforts.
While overall figures for the University lower than those in the Chronicle's report, the deams of both the business and engineering departments were comparable to the report. Their departments were comparable to the report.
DAVID KRAFT, dean of the School of Engineering, said between 25-40 percent of the engineering faculty engaged in consulting some time during the year.
Kraft said he was supportive of faculty members who took on consulting jobs.
"I encourage a situation that leads to the professional development of the faculty member as long as it is consistent with the priorities of the institution, teaching, research and then outside consulting."
Kraft said the engineering faculty had various motives for doing outside consulting.
"In some cases it leads to their professional development," he said. "In other cases it is a form of punishment."
Whitcomb doesn't consider himself too unbelievable.
JACK GAMNITZ, acting dean of the business school, said the practical experience gained from consulting kept professors abreast of what was happening in their fields.
"Most students generally prefer some examples from the real world." he said.
Whitcomb
with a M.A. from Oxford, capable of translating original works from Latin and Greek-
From page 1
"I don't think what I write is going to attract any particular attention," he said. "I'm doing what I've always wanted to do, after I did what I had to do."
The former Washburn captain and his wife, Genevieve, live in Jayhawter Towers. She attends classes, and he puts the final touches on his dissertation when he is not leading Western Civilization discussions or lecturing at the School of Journalism.
Whitch合 said he and his wife had not made definite plans for their future, except to keep learning, because he believed there was always something new to learn.
He also said he planned to "sift through the 12 million words I remain" from his career to complete what he completed.
"I doubt if anyone will be interested in reading it," he said. "Nobody gives a whoop about what some reporter did in any of the wars. But I'd like to have the material in all of them organized form."
that University officials made slanderous statements.
Forer
In the suit, Forer and Dillingham said that the University did not take any disciplinary action against them and that statements made by the university in connection with the action had been taken damaged their reputations.
The suit charges that the University made statements that disciplinary action might be taken against the students.
From page 1
DILLINGHAM ALLEGED in the suit that he lost his position with the University, received threatening telephone calls, had to spend money and suffered mental and emotional amulet.
Forer said that besides the damage to his professional reputation, the statements made by the University caused mental and emotional distress that required hospitalization.
The suit asks for $10,000 in damages for each charge. Douglas County District Court Judge Ralph King will hear the motion for dismissal at 10 a.m. April 10.
He could decide to dismiss the case, as the defendants' attorneys have asked, or decide that Forer and Dillingham have a valid case and schedule a jury trial.
Your Luncheon Alternativ
Income tax help available
for many people, filing an income tax
turn is a hard but it must be done and
then payed.
To help make tax time more bearable, KU law and business students will figure income taxes free of charge for students and area residents until the tax deadline.
About 30 students are helping with the
Villantary Income Tax Assistance program,
supporting students in getting a job.
The volunteers can figure both long and short forms. However, they can figure taxes only for U.S. citizens. Others must have their taxes done in Toeka or Kansas City.
Those planning to take advantage of the program should take all W-2 forms and file with the U.S. Immigration clinic with them, James Ruane, a law school volunteer said. Tax forms are available there.
Also, the volunteers cannot figure taxes for private business owners.
THE CROSSING
Dawn • Dawn • a week
Happy Hair 4.7 Day
Saturday 9:10
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Maggie's Pantry
7:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
Thursday's til 8:00 P.M.
1000 Massachusetts
841-5404
BIG BLUE
Property Management, Inc.
RENTALS IN THE LAWRENCE AREA
842-3175
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VALID ID CARDS
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available at
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Fund items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 844-158.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ENTERTAINMENT
Hillel Lunch
with
Susan Elkins
on the
Feminist View of Judaism
Wednesday, March 25
12:00 1:50
Cork 1. Kansas Union Catereria
Employment Opportunities
TRAVEL CENTER
TAKING A TRIP?
Travel is Our Business.
The LOWEST FARES available!
As close as your phone . . .
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W. 23rd St. (by Parke)
9 005 50 M.F. 9 30 2:00 Sat.
TRAVEL CENTER
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED COUPLE. Sorry, no children. Must own a car. Send resume to job.com/careers/painting. Work. Housework, mowing, carpentry, cleaning, general maintenance $135.00 per week. Living quarters provided; your own completely furnished housekeeping cabin. Time: June 14-29. Salary based on preference by employer. Apply in writing. Phone: (800) 1000 Sunset Drive, Lawrence KS. 69044.
15 West 9th
FOR RENT
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5, 843-3228. ff
3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W.
6th. 843-7333. tf
ARIZONA STREET DUPLICES Available
HISTORIAZIONE study room, range, refrigerator, dishwasher central air conditioning and carpet central air conditioning and carpet $200 + utilities. Bedroom 84-7393 or 84-7395 $200 + utilities. Bedroom 84-7393 or 84-7395
For spring and summer, Naisimh Hall of Science offers an advantage of an apartment. Good food and plenty of Weekly mad services to clean your room; cleaning activities and much more. If you're looking for a place with a kitchen you want, stop in or give us a call: NAIL HALL, HALL 1900, Naisimh Hall, 843-8538.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 26th and Kasdell. If you're tired of apartments in the downtown area, feature 3 br. latches, all appalachian, at least three carports. We have openings for summer and fall. Call Craig Levis or Jim Bong at 749-1637 for more information on our modestly priced apartments.
Capi Acpi Nurs. Unfurnished studio, 1 & 2 bdm. apts. available Central air, wall-to-wall carpet. quiet location, 25% blocks south of Capi Acpi. 842-9703 after 5:30 a.m. any weekends
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces,
washers/dryers, hookups, fully equipped baths,
entrance hall, phone 822-9295 for additional information.
Med Center Round? Nice. 2-bedroom
supplies available for summer and fall.
Carpet, A.C. appliances, and parking. C:
1-913) - 381-287. 3-27
3 br townhouse for rent now at Pine Lakes Manor, 750 S. 6th St., Pine Lake, WI 53218. Please contact w/ dealer & drier, close to shopping centers. We pay water, $50 per person described. We are not married, or married. No phone calls. Call 643-2814 or 888-555-9999.
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute walk to campus, 1821 Tennessee, $270 rent + utilities. 842-4822 3-25
SPACIUS TWO-STORY DUPLER 12X8
12'x8' appliance, air conditioned, one car garage, yacht. Available May. Rent $25.00
and $30.00 as a square foot, attractive space.尚需 $30.00 as a square foot, attractive space.
2 bedroom duplex Air Cond.. W/D Hookups,
W/W Carpet, Carport, Central location, very
$225.0ms $181.67-837.24
4-3
Large room for rent close to campus. Excellent kitchen facilities. Call 841-9536 or式 or 842-5152 after 7 p.m. 3-24
Subleasing 1 bedroom room apartment available June 1 with option to renew for will parking. Call 516-837-0054, parking close to campus, on KU BUS,路店. Contact Call 516-837-0054, 3-30 CALL. Commal Call 841-838 or 845-235. 3-30
FRESHMEN and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house next year! Apply now. 842-6592. tf
AVAILABLE JUNE A.C. Ist. Efficiency Apt.
Nicely Furnished, A/C. 2½ bays to Union.
$170 + 1/3 utilities. 841-8599 3-30
FOR SALE
Available now. 1 Br. at Jayhawk West Apt.
carpet, refrigerator, store. A/C, indoor and outdoor pool. no deposit required. $207,
month, water paid. Kit Call: K64-3444-2-34
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Make sense to use them! - As study
makes sense, use them! - As study
exam preparation - Available
Analysis of data -
Citer, The Bookmark, and Great Book
Citer.
Alternator, starter and generator specialties,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3900
W. 6th.
1972 VW 412 Wagon. Auto, Radials, Body and engine great, eight.800 miles $1351.171 VW Squarback. Auto, Body clean, engine requires work $700.842-715
1980 Datum Pickup Longbed, 5-speed, Air,
Sunroof 1990 VW Bug Call 741-528-328
68 Dodge Van, V-8 318 motor, excellent
condition, moving—must sell, call evenings
-843-7959 4-3
Mopeds a great way to save gas. Spring selection now. Dealership available, hill Box 62, Osawatomie, Ks. (913) 735-4558
FOUND
Camera= 35 mm Minolta SRT102, Vivacar Flash attachment, carrying case, strap and tripod; fess f55 $220.00 845-3595. 3-30
Home Woodshop—Two bookcases $30.00 and
$7.00. Two 6-foot maple cabinets $18.00 and
$23.00. small oak table $30.00.
orders filled on stereo cabinets. 843-892-82
W V Squareback- This is the VV you have been looking for! 1925 light blue AM radio. The car has a large rearview mirror. 2 owners this car has been well cared for and is in excellent condition. You can appreciate 843-972 after 5 on weekends. 11AM only.
Woman's 10 speed almost new. Call 379-0488
after 5.00 p.m. Ask for Kathy.
3-27
Camaro for Sale, 1967. Good condition, new
paint job. nice interior plus other extras
$1500. Call Rob after 6 843-3715 . 3-30
Man's watch found in Snow Hall. Call 864-
4301 and identify. 3-24
Find a calculator at Watson Library last Thursday. Call 684-617 to identify. 3-24
Found, watch in front of Strong Hall. 3-25
684-151 or 25E Strong. 3-25
HELP WANTED
Set of keys, GM auto, & Honda motorcycle keys among others. 841-2012 after 5.00; 3-24
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES:
experiences with us, as a public service to nursing home residents? Our consumer orientation program allows us the residents. Nursing Homes (KINI) needs your help and input on nursing home conditions and responsibilities. All names and correspondence to the residents. All names and correspondence to the residents. All names and correspondence to the residents. All names and correspondence to the residents.
912-843-7088 or 912-7107-708, or write us at
60044 Mass. St.,段, 24, Kansas, Kansas, if
Found 1 pair of two-tone brown woman's gloves in front of Bailey, Friday the 12th Call 749-1292 3-26
"French" Sunglasses, 1st floor Wesco,
Cheryl 843-6536 3-25
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF
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Port or part time help wanted. Combination dancers & waitresses. Entrance fee $100 per hour. Nude dancing $740 per hour. Your choice. Dancing en route to Hwy 40. $399-990. 3-24 on Hwy 40. 3-990-990.
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42-946
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, March 24, 1981
20
Owolabi sets KU record but'Hawks 20th indoors
By PAUL D. BOWKER
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
KU's Sanya Owolabi did not successfully defend his national title in the triple jump at the NCAA indoor championships but he couldn't complain.
Owlabi, who won the triple jump at the Big Eight Conference championships in late February with a leap of 8-23, set a KU record with a jump of 54-4-3 at the national. He still finished second behind Keith Connors of Southern Methodist University.
tones, originally from England, won the triple jump with a leap of 80-8½, an indoor jump with a leap of 82-8¾.
OWOLABI, the only Jayhawk who scored points at the national championships, said he was ready for the meet and wasn't surprised by his school-record jump.
"Yeah," Owolabi said, "I expected to do well. I was ready at the nationals."
Owaliab's performance, however, was outdone by Connors, who placed fourth in the triple jump at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow.
"He's real good, Owlabah." He "sures he hurt in the world. I just went out there." He "pressed me."
Conner's record-setting jump eclipsed the old mark by a quarter-inch, set by Shamil Abhijasof of the Soviet Union earlier this year.
Owlaboi's second-place finish was the only bright spot for the Jayhawks, who finished in a 20th place tie with Texas-Arlington, Georgia and Virginia.
Sanya Owolabi
Junior Deon Hogan was the only KU spinner to advance to the finals in a race and won the MVP.
BESIDES THE disappointing finish, the Jayhawks lost the services of junior Mark Rau, who fractured his ankle during a qualifying heat of the 600.
The meet was only the second one in the last five years that the Jayhawks have finished out of the top five in the NCAA championship. KU finished fourth the last two years.
"Losing Rai to the fracture . . . that hurt a lot," KU Coach Bob Timmons said. "That offset the 600 and it offset the mule relay. We just had a bad meet.
1
"I think Sanya (Owolabi) did a great job.
He had to go against a world-record jump.
That's the best indoor mark he's ever had.
He could have let down, but he didn't."
The University of Texas-EI Paso won the meet with 76 points, capturing the national indoor championship for the sixth time in the last eight years.
SMU, which had held a 47-point lead after one day of the meet, settled for 51 points and a second-plain finish. Nebraska, which finished with 60 points, was the Big Eight's highest winner.
Owolabi, a junior, said the Jayhawks 20th-place finish should not hurt KU in the outdoor season, which starts Saturday with a dual meet at Arizona.
"We JUST HAD a lot of things that went wrong," he said. "Everything else just started following along. We have a better way to think about animals. Everybody has a getting a little excited now."
JAYHAWK NOTES: The Big Eight's best event at the national championships was the pole vault. Nebraska's RANDY RAYMOND won the men's division. States State's DOUG LYTLE placed fifth (17-0).
UTEP, which is made up almost entirely of foreign athletes, is also one of the strongest outdoor teams in the country. "They only have five American on their team," KU Coach BOB TIMMONS said. "They scored no points with their American athletes."
The Jayhawks, defending Big Eight outdoor champions, travel to Tucson, Arizona. For a dual meet with Arizona, the Wildcats already three weeks into their outdoor season.
KU junior spinner MARK RAU, who suffered a fractured ankle during the NCAA championships, will be out for most of the season. He will be in a cast for five weeks.
The Jayhawks will have just one home meet during the outdoor season, the Kansas Relays. The Relays are scheduled for April 15-18 at Memorial Stadium.
Midwestern swim teams show well in AIAW meet; KU women finish 17th
For years the AIAW swimming championship has been dominated by schools from the coasts.
By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
Kansas" women's swim team was one of three midwestern teams to finish among the top 20 at this year's championship in Columbia, S.C., last week.
Freshman Jenny Wagstaff was named an All-American in six events, an honor extended to the top 16 finishes in each national event. KU won 717th, the highest finish in the school's history.
INDIANA, 12th and Southern Illinois, 16th and the other midwestern teams to finish in the nation.
"I suppose that we could have done better, but every team says that."
Our performance proves that we are making excellent progress on a year-by-year basis with our students. Our students are happy.
Wagstaff capped off an excellent freshman year with individual placings of fifty (100 fly), seventh (200 freewlety), 11th (100 individual medley) and 12th (200 individual medley).
All of the finishes earned Waggastall All-
American honors. Waggastall is also an All-
American in the 200 freestyle relay and the 400
medley relay.
"I WAS VERY happy," Wagstaff said. "That was the first national meet that I placed in. But I guess that I feel that I could have done better. I'm happy, but I could have done better."
Wagstaff's performance caught the eyes of
wagstaff, including teammate Tammy Thomas.
"She's amazing," Thomas said. "Every time an swims she amazes me. She's a great girl, a swimmer."
Thomas was not far behind Wagstaff in All- America honors.
The Lawton, Okla., sophomore returned from
the national meet a five-time All-American with finishes of 13th (50 freestyle), 12th (100 freestyle) and relay finishes of 15th (200 freestyle), 12th (400 medley) and 13th (200 medley).
The fact that Kansas was one of the highest finishers in the Midwest was important to the success.
Thomas echoed Wagstaff's opinion.
"I SWAM for my school, not for myself"
Wangstaff said. "I wanted people to Kansas dao"
"and I'm a teacher."
"I guess that it is in the back of everyone's mind to do well for their school," she said. "I just wanted to do well and make a good name for Kansas."
Despite the loss of seniors Janet Lindstrom and Erin McMorrow, KU will return a strong num-
"We will do well next year," Thomas said. "I think that we will finish in the ten 15 or 12."
"But there is always room for improvement. If there wasn't, Gary (Kempf) would be scared."
Softball team ends trip south with 7-5 record
Some KU students were lured to Texas by the sun and the surf. Others visited for another
Instead of heading for the beaches of Padre Island, the Kansas softball team traveled to the softball diamonds of Texas and Oklahoma for their first games of the spring season.
THE JAYHAWKS compiled a 5-3 record in the southern swing through Texas and finished up 7-5 overall after competing in the Oklahoma Sooner Invitational tournament.
At their first stop, the Jayhawks split their doubleheader with Texas Wesleyan but dropped two games to Texas A&M before taking the next three headers from Baylor and Texas-Arlington.
In the Oklahoma tournament, KU tied for second in its sub-division by defeating its first two opponents, Mexico State and Central State of Oklahoma, before falling to Stephen F. Austin and the winner of the division, Western Michigan.
The four doubleheaders played in Texas were considered warm-up games for the Oklahoma tournament that included 30 teams from around the nation, Coach Bob Stancil said.
Stanlift was disappointed with KU's hitting and defense, both of which were inconsistent on the trip. He said he had not expected that from a team composed of experienced players.
"WITH THE number of experienced players, I expected them to be consistent in both offense and defense but they didn't show it." Stancliff said the trouble was hitting because it was inconsistent."
But Stanclift said he was optimistic about the returning players, and especially about their defense, which he called the team's strongest asset.
"The return of a number of starters and defense will be our strongest suit," he said. "I expect to be better because of our length of time in the league, but we never get to play a game on a natural field."
Men's tennis team's trip fruitless; Emporia State today could stop slide
Spring break was too short for most Kansas students, but the KU men's tennis team probably didn't start back to school early enough for the players.
The Jayhawks will return home for a match today against Emporia State, an NAIA school and not the powerful team that KU met in Louisiana.
Traction competition made for a long week on the team's trip to Baton Rouge, LA., where it lost to Louisiana State, 8-1, Pennsylvania, 7-2, Illinois; in the tournament at Louisiana State, KU finished last.
The tough competition early in the season help the team later in the year, however. Coach Kane said.
Wayne Swail, KU's 1. singles player, had a better spring break than the rest of the team. His high point came when he defeated LSU's Stacy who was ranked No. 2 in the country in singles.
He said his play in that match gave him confidence for today's meet with Emporia State.
"You have to improve playing teams better than you," he said.
Kings hope skid ends on road against Jazz
"I was pretty steady," Sewall said. "I'll have a good match."
SALT LAKE CITY-With the end of the National Basketball Association's regular-season schedule less than a week away, the Kansas City Kings are running out of time.
Caught in a 4-game losing streak, the Kings face the Utah Jazz here at 8:30 tonight. The Kings, 37-41, are tied with Houston for second place in the Midwest Division. Both teams are batting for the last available playoff spot in the Western Conference.
The Jazz, 27-51, are in fourth place in the Midwest Division and out of playoff contention.
After tonight's game, the Kings travel to Phoenix and Houston before closing the season with a win over Toronto.
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841-9555 944 Kentucky
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Unless otherwise noted; all tickets will be shown at Woodford Auditorium for $1,000. Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday tickets are $2,000. Tickets available at the SUA office. Suites union 4th level. Information 864-753-8900 to smoking or refreshments allowed.
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
The University Daily
KANSAN
Wednesday, March 25, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 118 USPS 650-640
Senators kill attempt to restore $9 million to Regents '82 budget
Staff Reporter
By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Senate leadership marshalled enough senators yesterday to quash efforts to restore money to next year's Board of Regents budget.
But the same majority that killed amendments to reinstate the money approved a rider to the Regents bill requiring all professors to hold at least three hours of class each week.
Yesterday's action was tentative. The official vote to approve the $9 million in cuts from the system-wide budget is expected today. The bill would then be sent to the House.
JOHN CONARD, executive director of the
regents, said the plan will be by State Sen.
Bob Johnson's office under a bill of deregulation.
“It’s an unwarranted intrusion into the universities by the body,” Conard said. “It probably won’t do any damage. The damage was not the accident of the Legislature setting Regents policy.”
Roltz, R-Pittsburgh, said the rider allowed professors to get permission from the chancellor to be excused from class if they needed to be absent.
State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, who prompted Rizot to propose the rider, said he was upset by students' complaints about some professors being absent regularly.
CONARD SAID if the lawmasters wanted information on how many professors were doing research and who did not conduct regular research, he had contacted him. He said no one had asked him.
State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said he had not expected the rider to be proposed.
Hess, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, did expect State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, to take a stand against the deep budget cuts.
Last month, Eldredge accused the committee,
former State Sen. Arnold Berriman and former
Senator David Duncan of wrongdoing.
cuts to punish KU. She promised to fight to restore those cuts.
IN THREE HOURS of debate, the Senate
challenged Ridgeley's amendments to restore the full $1 million bill.
Ridgeley said: "We have to do something."
The upper house also killed subsequent amendments to restore only the faculty pay and the operating budgets and to eliminate the proposed 15 percent average tuition increase.
Conard said he was surprised that only 13 senators voted for the Eldredge amendment.
"If anything, I thought it would have had more support," he said.
THE REGENTS BILL was to have been debated last week, but it was postponed.
"During the delay," Conard said, "it was obvious that the Senate leader worked on
The bill as tentatively adopted yesterday would:
- Reduce the faculty pay increase from the governor's request a 8 percent to 7 percent. This is less than a 20 percent decrease in faculty pay.
- Reduce the operating budget increase from the governor's requested 6 percent to 5.5 percent. This is roughly a $1 million reduction. The Senate granted the full 7 percent increase requested by the Regents for the KU College of Health Sciences at Florida State University College of Veterinary Medicine.
- Reduce the enrollment adjustment money from the governor's request $1.5 million to demand that new voters pay a fee.
In addition, the Senate voted to ensure that the universities would not receive an additional legislative allocation if enrollment only marginally increased or decreased.
The Senate also voted to cut $5.8 million in general fund money from the Regents budget, replacing it with money from the 15 percent average tuition increase.
IN THE DERATE on the Regents bill,
Eldredge referred to a study that showed that
their bills are ineffective.
See BUDGET page 5
Tenure proposals not similar, Lawrence legislator asserts
Staff Reporter
By BRAD STERTZ
Solbach said that he had access to the same confidential proposals as Haogland and that Haogland had exaggerated their similarity to his changes.
State Rep. John Solbach yesterday said that State Rep. Joseph J. Hoagland's assertion that the Board of Regents plans to revise tenure policies consistent with his two tenure bills overbroad.
"I looked at the proposals made by the Regents," Solbach, D-Lawrence, said, "and all that was going to be done was a formalization of existential policy."
Hoagland, R-Overland Park, had said that the tenure policy changes proposed by the Regents were similar to those in his two tenure bills and that he would drop further efforts to push the bills through the Legislature. Hoagland was not available for comment last night.
Solbach he thought the Regents' action was simply a way for Hoagland to back out of the tenure bills without suffering a major political defeat.
"I would say that it is reasonable that Haogland found he could not win with the bills, found he had run out of options to push the bills and took this as an easy way out," he said.
Under Hoagland's bills, the Regents would
have been forced to allow anyone to file complaints against a tenured faculty member and to appoint the Regents as the final board in all tenure-granting decisions.
Those proposals, Solbach said, were simply making official what was already done on the ground.
"Their proposals were simply a way for the Regents to try to get rid of the legislation and at the same time to let everybody back off from the situation," Solbach said. "I know that they discussed this for a while because they talked to me about it three weeks ago."
"Now the Regents review 90 to 95 percent of all tenure cases because they are tied in with promotion decisions," Solbach said. "For fiscal reasons these decisions are already made and the changes that the Regents have planned will not change anything very much."
"It is a slightly different approach to what is done now, but not like what Hoagland had on it."
The changes that the Regents had decided upon, made nearly a mile up from the park, according to Solach.
"I don't like to see the Regents blackmailed and I don't think they were to a certain extent," Sobach said. "I am, however, glad that the state finally decided to drop this entire tearing."
Regents officials would not discuss the details of their proposals.
GUJAM
A fencing class takes advantage of the recent mild spring weather to get in some practice behind Watkins Memorial Hospital. According to the KU
DAVE KRAUSIKansan staff
Weather Service, warm temperatures should continue for the next few days, with only a slight chance of rain.
KBI investigates Med Center shootings
By BRIAN LEVINSON
Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—The Kansas Bureau of investigation has taken over the investigation of Friday's University of Kansas Medical Center shooting that left a doctor and a bystander dead.
The KBI took over the investigation late Monday, three days after the shooting. Confusion between KU police and Kansas City, Kan., police ended up in a charge of the investigation caused the delay.
agents, three state troopers have been assigned to the Med center by Gov. John Carlin.
Tom Kelly, KBI director, said yesterday that a supervisor and four KBI agents had been released after the shootings.
Only the police department in charge of an investigation can request KBI assistance. The KU police were originally in charge of the investigation and requested KBI assistance.
"The troopers will work in three shifts so we will have them on duty 24 hours a day." Med. of the Army said.
The additional security was highly visible yesterday. The entrance to the emergency room was locked and patients had to knock on the door to be let in by a state trooper.
Press requesting entrance into the emergency room had to be escorted by a member of the Med Facility staff.
To further tighten security at the sprawling 50-acre facility, workers hurried to install the finishing parts of the Med Center's $100,000 closed circuit television monitoring system. The system, which has taken more than nine months to install, will be completed in about two weeks. Jack Pearson, Med Center director of police, said.
New security procedures were also evident at the chaplain's office, where workers had installed new locks on doors that were always open before the shooting. Facilities Operations took stock working on the lock yesterday, after the chaplain was unable to get back into his office.
Even with tighter security, employees at the Med Center have been shaken by last week's slayings. Several employees, who asked not to be identified, said they thought they were vulnerable because of a lack of security and because the suspect was not in custody.
Police said yesterday that they had no new leads in the case. Earlier police had looked into the possibility that the suspect might have been a disgruntled medical student but later said the suspect had an alibi. The suspect's name was never released.
See SHOOTING page 5
Hunger strike closes with prayer service
Staff Reporter
By EDDIE WILLIAMS III
The KU hunger strike for El Salvadorne ended last night, but the suffering in that country continues. Jorge Valverde, Costa Rica graduate student, said.
After two-and-a-half days with no food and living in tents on front on Watson Library, the Latin American Solidarity group staged a raily to finish the strike. After the rally, about 20 protesters marched to St John's Catholic Church in New York City to march to Archibishop Oscar Romero, Salvadorean religious leader who was assassinated a year ago yesterday.
"The three days of hunger strike doesn't
compete with the one day in the lost EI
team. "Valyverd said at the rally.
AS RAIN FELL at the campisse, protesters held hands and told why they chose to strike.
Marian Sanchez, Puerto Rico senior, said it was her way of showing that she cared about the issues in their community.
Sanchez later said that it was her first time fasting for others.
"Others ways of showing support are fighting and struggling." she said. "But, in our case, we
"I had never fasted for so long but I think we accomplished a lot," she said. "Many people came by and learned for the first time that there is enough proof showing that the U.S. excuses for sending military aid to El Salvador are not valid."
RHONDA NEUGEBAUER, Lawrence
graduate student said for her, fasting was
"Giving up food is scary," she said. "I had to get ready for it. I haven't eaten since Saturday."
I thought about El Salvador a lot. Those people suffer from without food for days. People there suffer from it too.
Neugebauer said the first night was the worst.
"It was too cold to sleep," she said. "When you don't eat, your body freezes. We were on the windiest spot on campus and we were chilled to the bone."
The weather was not the only problem the strikers faced, Cindy Trestler, Hutchinson son.
"The crowd was generally friendly." "Treasurer said, but we did get a few hecklers. One car went by and a guy yelled and threw us an apple. It got too loud and I'm so calm that nothing really appealed me."
"Most of the strikers have had personal experience in Latin America and they understand how to deal."
TWENTY-FOUR PEOPLE chose to fast but only eight lived in the tents, Treasier said.
P.A. WILSON
It's kinda hard for us to expect other North Americans to understand. The only information we can get is that the United States is a
DAVE KRAUS/Kansan staff
Leon Burke III
KU maintenance worker doubles as University Symphony conductor
By KAREN SCHLUETER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The tall, lanky Facilities Operations maintenance man completed his morning mail run, swinging mailbags on the truck and joking with his fellow workers.
He was equally at ease a few hours later as he stepped up on the podium in front of the University Symphony Orchestra, still wearing soiled overalls and work boots, and led the orchestra through its spaces before a weekend concert.
Leon Burke III, assistant conductor and St. Louis graduate student, exemplifies confidence and skill whether he is driving the FO truck or conducting the Lawrence Chamber Players through an intricate string ensemble piece.
ALTHOUGH BURKE leaves an audience and an orchestra with the impression that conducting comes as naturally to him as
walking or breathing, he says he doesn't always feel that way.
"Some of the time when I conduct, I am nervous and sometimes even scared to death," he said. "But I take the stage fright and channel it back into concentration."
"When I'm most scared, I am also the most intense."
Most of his 11-year conducting experience has been with university or community groups. But there have been times, including 15 minutes with the Baltimore Symphony or two summerdirecting the Shenandoah Orchestra, where Barke had conducted professionals.
"If you have that you can conduct a youth orchestra, a university orchestra or professionals. It's all the same."
BURKE, who earned his undergraduate
See CONDUCTOR page 5
"It's all a matter of confidence in your
musicality, the music," the 26-year-old conductor said.
Weather
ROIN
RAIN
It will be cloudy this morning with
showers, according to the KU Weather
Service. Skies will clear this afternoon
until 10 p.m. on Friday. Wetph. will be around
60. The wind will be around 80.
Tenight, skies will be mostly clear with winds from the southwest at 5 to 15 mph.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the lower 70s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 25, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Haig opposed to new crisis team
WASHINGTON—Despite opposition by Secretary of State Alexander Haig, President Reagan yesterday created a "crisis management" team headed by Vice President George Bush to coordinate foreign policy decisions in the foreign policy-making field.
"I read with interest, and, I suppose, a lack of enthusiasm the newspaper report," Haig said.
It was the first major dispute within the new administration. Early in the day, Haig told a House subcommittee he was not pleased with the reported White House plan to put Bush in charge of coordinating critical decisions in the foreign policy-making field.
At his brief interview later, Jim Brady, White House press secretary, was asked whether Hagl had resigned over the issue. "I understand he is on board," Brady replied. Later, Brady told reporters that after the decision had been announced, Hagl had telephoned Hagl about it and said the secretary remained "on board."
Brady said that the purpose of the team would be to coordinate and control all appropriate federal resources in responding to emergency situations,
Solidarity will call protest strikes
BYDGOSZCZ, Poland—Despite warnings it was courting "catastrophe," the leadership of the Solidarity coalition voted yesterday to call two protest strikes unless the government punishes the officials responsible for the beattings of several union members last week.
Solidarity officials said a four-hour warring strike would be held Friday, followed by a one-day general strike Tuesday to protest a police assault on union officials who were occupying a government building in the northwestern city of Bydgoszcz.
Communist Party Chief Stanisław Kania warned the union it was inviting "catastrophe" and "self-destruction" by pushing Poland into its most violent conflict.
Solidarity leader Lech Walesa, who tried with only partial success to avoid a confrontation with the government during Warsaw Pact maneuvers in 1980, also became a prominent figure.
The union demanded the government punish and in some cases dismiss the officials responsible for the beatings. It also raised earlier demands for recognition of a farmers' union and guaranteed union access to the state-run media.
High-level talks between the government and the union were scheduled for today, and both sides said they hoped to reach a settlement to avert the issue.
Additional Salvadoran aid approved
WASHINGTON — A House subcommittee yesterday narrowly approved an additional $5 million in new military charges that the Trump administration withdrew Vietnam-era "Gulf of Tonkin" bombings.
The House Foreign Operations Subcommittee voted 8-7 to reprogram $5 million in military aid for the Salvadoran junta as part of the fiscal 1981 budget. The amount brings El Salvador's military aid program for the current fiscal year to more than $35 million.
The 15-day deadline Congress had to reject the $5 million in military aid expired March 17, but the subcommittee asked for another week. The Senate approved the bill on Wednesday.
The administration yesterday also proposed sending the junta an additional $63.5 million in economic aid this year to bolster political reform programs and help rebuild the war-torn country.
"It is an expression of faith in the country," State Department spokesman William Dyess said.
Meanwhile, in El Salvador, leftist guerrillas observed a 24-hour cease-fire yesterday to mark the anniversary of Archibishop Oscar Romero's death from a bombing in Archibishop Oscar Romero's hometown of San Salvador.
The Roman Catholic Church in El Salvador organized commemorative masses throughout the nation to honor Romeri, to death a year ago by a program sponsored by the American Council of Religion.
Miners approve tentative contract
WASHINGTON—The United Mine Workers bargaining council yesterday approved a tentative agreement with the soft coal industry and sent it to the coal fields for ratification by rank-and-file miners.
The vote, on a split ballot, came after nearly eight hours of examination and discussion in a closed session at UMW headquarters.
Under the union's "no contract, no work" tradition, 180,000 bituminous miners have been expected to leave the mines at midnight tomorrow when the current three-year agreement expires.
But UMW President Sam Church Jr. indicated he would ask the union's bargaining council to decide whether to request the miners to remain on the job.
The tentative soft coal agreement, reached Monday after five hours of overnight bargaining, provides a 36 percent boost in pay and benefits over three years. Bituminous miners, who account for 44 percent of U.S. coal production, currently receive wages of $10.10 an hour.
Ratification is expected to take until next Tuesday or Wednesday, which could mean a strike of four or five working days. With huge stockpiles of coal on the ground, such a walkout would not be expected to have significant impact on the economy or energy requirements.
Blacks say poverty caused killings
ATLANTA — A coalition of national black leaders said yesterday there was no evidence of a racial plot in the killings of 20 black Atlanta children and four others.
"While there seems to be no reason to conclude there is a racist plot, we are nevertheless increasingly concerned about the escalation of violence and insensitivity to poor and black people in this nation," said a statement adopted by the Black Leadership Forum.
Hooks said those who placed a racial motive on the 20 slayings and the disappearances of two other black children during the last 20 months were not alone in their actions.
Ineligible recipients to lose benefits
WASHINGTON-Government figures showing that one-fifth of all households receiving welfare will lose benefits are misleading because many families do not deserve public assistance, President Reagan's top welfare aid said yesterday.
Health and Human Services Secretary Richard Schweiker told a House subcommittee that estimates made by his department show more than 658,000 families would lose all or some welfare benefits under the administration's proposals.
Because 3.8 million households receive some form of welfare, the figures indicate that benefits to 20 percent of those families will be cut to as low a percentage as possible.
But Schweiker said all but 50,000 families received income that was ignored by the government in determining eligibility and, therefore, many really were above the eligibility line for federal programs.
Schweiker later year defined the "truly needy" Keagan promised to schweiker. Schweiker said 20,000 of the 658,000 households did not have a government help. Schweiker said 20,000 of the 658,000 households did not have a government help.
He said another 50,000 not covered by the categories he cited would have their benefits trimmed.
Female draft registration argued in court
WASHINGTON-Registering women for the military draft could hamper the military's ability to meet wartime emergencies, U.S. Solicitor General Wade McCree told the Supreme Court yesterday.
Defending male-only draft registration, McCree told the nine justices that excluding women from signing up for service "rationally relates to the government's concrete duty to raise and maintain an army.
Although only 10 percent of the military forces combat, the turnover at the front is the highest, McCree reminded the court during oral arguments in a case challenging the administration on grounds of sex discrimination.
"Although women can perform effectively and with great credit in noncombat roles, in mobilization what is most critical for success may be who can be rotated." McCree said. "We
RECALLING THE World War II Battle of the Bulge, McCree said: "Cooks, bakers and others were pressed into service." Women now in those types of jobs are barred by law from serving in combat.
The issue before the high court is not whether women should be in combat, although several justices tried to pin down McCree and his opponent, lawyer Donald Weinberg, on how closely the combat ban relates to the case.
"Registration for the draft does not dictate that women will be drafted," Weinbern said.
need flexibility to rotate people into the front."
The case, originated by a group of Vietnam War protesters in 1971 against the all-male draft, has generated considerable interest. Nearly 200 people up outside the court were charged to get tickets to attend the argument.
The Supreme Court is expected to
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Parsons School of Design Summer in France/Japan
Parsons in Paris · July 3-August 14
Paint on the Left Bank, explore prehistoric caves in the Dordogne, visit the masterpieces of Renaissance
Courses include: Painting, Drawing, Art History, French History, Language & Literature, Landscape Painting & Prehistoric Anthropology.
Cost for the 6-week program including 9 credits of study, round-trip airfare and double occupancy accommodations with continental breakfast is $2350.
Photography in Paris • July 3-26
Study the history and practice of this art with extensive darkroom facilities available on the Parsons campus. Courses offered: The History of Photography, Photography.
Program costs including 6 credits of study, round-trip airfare and double occupancy accommodations with breakfast in a 4-star hotel are $2150.
Fashion Design in Paris · July 3-31
Study the history and contemporary trends of French fashion design in Paris under the supervision of museum staff and practicing designers. Haute Couture and ready-to-wear collections will be seen. Courses offered: The History of European Costume, Fashion Design, Fashion Jewelry, The total cost for 6 credits of study, round-trip airfare and double occupancy accommodations in a 4-star hotel is $2250.
Studies in Interior Design, The History of Architecture, and The Decorative Arts - July 3-31
This program is offered in collaboration with the world famous Musee des Arts Decoratifs. The museum staff supplement the Parsons faculty with specialized presentations that include aspects of the museum's collection normally not available to the public. Excursions to points outside of Paris include Fontainebleau, Versailles and Vaux le Vicomte. Courses offered: The History of French Architecture, Studies in European Decorative Arts. The total cost for 6 credits of study, round-trip airfare and double occupancy accommodations in a 4-star hotel is $2250.
Summer Workshops in Japan Clay, Fibers, Metal July 20-August 20
Dean Vieri R. Salvadori
In co-sponsorship with The American Craft Council courses will be offered in ceramics, metals, textiles and the history of Japanese crafts. Workshops will be supervised by master Japanese craftsmans and the Parsons' faculty. Classes will be held at the studio facilities of the Tokyo Design Gakuin College with supplemental visits to museums, klin sites, textile facilities and metalmilshining shops. Cost of the 4-week program, including 6 credits of study, round-trip airfare to Tokyo* and double occupancy accommodations in a deluxe hotel is $2700. Price slightly due to fluctuations in the dollar on admission.
Parsons School of Design 66 Fifth Avenue, New York
66 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011
ATTN: PIT/JAPAN PROGRAMS
GO
Name
Please send brochure(s) on:
By BRA Staff Re
Address
- release send brochure(s) on:
□ Parsons in Paris, July 3-August. 14
□ Interior Design, July 3-31
□ Photography in Paris, July 3-26
□ Fashion Design in Paris, July 3-31
□ Summer Workshops in Japan, July 20-Aug. 20
q
City
The narrow all re-c- of stat employ a legisl-
Curregovern also won Because of the motives Carlin's.
man of Commi
said the
attack o
"Sure House said. " and this
State
7
University Dally Kansan, March 25, 1981 Page 3
5
Governor's opponents say power reduced
By BRAD STERTZ
Staff Represent
Staff Reporter
Currently the process is limited to the governor's office, but under the bill it also would become a legislative matter. Because of this twist several opponents of the bill have said that political pressure on John Carlin's power are behind the bill.
"Sure, that is what is going on," House Minority Leader Fred Weaver said. "A lot of that has been going on and this is no exception."
STATE REP. Mike Hayden, chairman of the House Ways and Means committee which sponsored the bill, said the bill was proposed as an attack on the governor.
The bill was designed to alleviate the problem of re-classification and reallocation," Hayden said. "There have been instances in some jobs where a job was not offered, but it was formed for him and that person got a tremendous salary increase.
"By doing that people have just been going around the appropriation process. Even Gov. Carlin has ex- concerns about the problem with this."
Hayden said that by giving the Legislature the power to review such pay increases, the bill would save the state about $6 million.
ALTHOUGH OPPONENTS are not against saving $6 million, they are still against the bill.
"One of the reasons why I voted against the bill," State Rep Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said, "was because the matter is an administrative matter. The governor's office can easily handle the
reorganization of an agency without the Legislature.
"With this bill, the Legislature is simply encroaching on the powers of the administrative branch."
Charlton also said that she opposed the bill because of its appearance as a cut to the governor.
"This seems to be part of the plan on the part of the leadership in the Legislature to cut the budget, raise no new revenue and so home," she said.
STATE REP. John Solbach, D-
Lawrence, said that he opposed the bill
for some of the same reasons.
"I question whether we need to place an arbitrary freeze on hiring in the state," he said. "It also seemed to be an issue that would not improve nor like quite a bit of other legislation."
"It seemed like this was just aimed to unseat the governor rather than to do the state some good."
Solbach said this bill closely paralleled a bill that passed the House
earlier. That bill would place a freeze on hiring and stipulated that any further job changes would have to go through the governor's office.
"Both of these bills would be a bottleneck to getting things done quickly," Solbach said.
"There simply will not be a problem in that regard," Hayden said.
HAYDEN, HOWEVER, said that he did not see how there would be a bottleneck. He said that the changes that would be ruled on by the governor or the legislative committee were not numerous.
Before the final vote of 65-60 the bill was taken, Charlson said that the bill's opponents worked to convince legislators who seemed to favor the bill.
"The issue passed by a much greater margin on general order," Charlton said. "Before the final vote, however, we all of us went to work to try to kill it today and we ended up only three votes short."
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Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 25, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Haig opposed to new crisis team
WASHINGTON—Despite opposition by Secretary of State Alexander Haig, President Reagan yesterday created a "crisis management" team headed by Vice President George Bush to coordinate foreign policy decisions in the foreign policy-making field.
It was the first major dispute within the new administration. Earlier in the day, Haig told a House subcommittee he was not pleased with the reported White House plan to put Bush in charge of coordinating critical decisions in the foreign policy-making field.
"I read with interest, and, I suppose, a lack of enthusiasm the newspaper report." Haig said.
At his briefing later, Jim Brady, White House press secretary, was asked whether Haig had resigned over the issue. "I understand he is on board," Brady replied. Later, Brady told reporters that after the decision he made, Reagan had telephoned Haig about it and said the secretary remained
on board. Brady said that the purpose of the team would be to coordinate and control all appropriate federal resources in responding to emergency situations, both foreign and domestic.
He said the choice of Bush was guided "in large measure by the fact that management of crises has traditionally—and appropriately—been done within the White House."
Solidarity will call protest strikes
BVDGOSZC2, Poland—Despite warnings it was courting "catastrophe," the leadership of the Solidarity coalition voted yesterday to call two protest strikes unless the government punishes the officials responsible for the beatings of several union members last week.
Solidarity officials said a four-hour warning strike would be held Friday, followed by a one-day general strike Tuesday to protest a police assault on union officials who were occupying a government building in the northern city of Rovoslez.
wisconsin city or by county.
Communist Party Chief Stanislaw Kania warned the union it was inviting "catastrophe" and "self-destruction" by pushing Poland into its most serious labor crisis since last summer's strikes.
serious labor crisis since 2013.
Solidarity leader Lech Walesa, who tried with only partial success to avoid a confrontation with the government during Warsaw Pact maneuvers in Poland, said: "This time we have one leg hanging over the precipice."
The union demanded the government punish and in some cases dismiss the officials responsible for the beatings. It also raised earlier demands for recognition of a farmers' union and guaranteed union access to the state-run media.
meetu. High-level talks between the government and the union were scheduled for today, and both sides said they hoped to reach a settlement to avert the strikes.
Additional Salvadoran aid approved
WASHINGTON—A House subcommittee yesterday narrowly approved an additional $5 million in military aid for El Salvador over charges that the program amounted to a new Vietnam-era "Gulf of Tonkin" resolution.
program amounts.
The House military operations Subcommittee voted 8-7 to reprogram $5 million aid for the Salvadoran junta as part of the fiscal 1981 budget. The amount brings El Salvador's military aid program for the current fiscal year to more than $35 million.
The 15-day deadline Congress had to reject the $5 million in military aid expired March 17, but the subcommittee asked for another week. The Senate subcommittee endorsed the program by taking no action at all.
suspect the entire embassy in Iraq.
The administration yesterday also proposed sending the junta an additional $63.5 million in economic aid this year to bolster political reform programs and help rebuild the war-torn country.
The president's "State Department spokesman"
"It is an expression of faith in the country," State Department spokesman William J. Dwiss said.
William J. Dysse sait:
Meanwhile, in El Salvador, leftist guerrillas observed a 24-hour cease-fire yesterday to mark the anniversary of Archibishop Oscar Romero's assassination. Soldiers patrol the streets to ensure calm.
assessment mission. The Roman Catholic Church in El Salvador organized commemorative masses throughout the nation to honor Romero, sho't to death a year ago by a presigned right-wing wiper while saying Mass in a hospital chapel.
Miners approve tentative contract
WASHINGTON-The United Mine Workers bargaining council yesterday approved a tentative agreement with the soft coal industry and sent it to the coal fields for ratification by rank-and-file miners.
The vote, on a split ballot, came after eight hours of examination and discussion in a closed session at UMW headquarters.
and discussion in a closed session, by R.M. Ackman.
Under the union's "no contract, no work" tradition, 160,000 bituminous miners have been expected to leave the mines at midnight tomorrow when the current three-year agreement expires.
the current year's requirements.
But UMW President Sam Church Jr. indicated he would ask the union's bargaining council to decide whether to request the miners to remain on the job during the ratification process.
Ratification is expected to take until next Tuesday or Wednesday, which could mean a strike of four or five working days. With huge stockpiles of coal on the ground, a walkout would not be expected to have significant impact on the economy or energy requirements.
The tentative soft coal agreement, reached Monday after five hours of overnight bargaining, provides a 36 percent boost in pay and benefits over three years. Bituminous miners, who account for 44 percent of U.S. coal production, currently receive wages of $10.10 an hour.
Blacks sav poverty caused killings
ATLANTA—A coalition of national black leaders said yesterday there was no evidence of a racist plot in the killings of 20 black Atlanta children and blamed the slayings on poverty that promotes violence in the nation's cities.
"While there seems to be no reason to conclude there is a racist plot, we are nevertheless increasingly concerned about the escalation of violence and insensitivity to poor and black people in this nation," said a statement advised by the Black Leadership Forum.
Benjamin Hooks, executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Joseph Lowery, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference; and Corretta Scott King were among the leaders in day-to-day meeting of the forum, a coalition of 16 national organizations.
Ineligible recipients to lose benefits
reutam and Human Services Secretary Richard Schweiker told a House subcommittee that estimates made by his department show more than 658,000 families would lose all or some welfare benefits under the administration's proposals.
WASHINGTON—Government figures showing that one-fifth of all households receiving welfare will lose benefits are misleading because many families do not deserve public assistance. President Reagan's top welfare aide said yesterday.
Because 3.8 million households currently receive some form of welfare, the figures indicate that benefits to 20 percent of those families will be cut to some degree.
some degree.
But Schweiker said all but 50,000 families received income that was ignored by the government in determining eligibility and, therefore, many really were above the eligibility line for federal programs.
Schweiker earlier this year defined the "I need help" reaganism to spare from welfare cuts as people who would die without government help. Schweiker said 20,000 of the 658,000 households did not meet current eligibility criteria but continued to receive benefits.
Schweiter earlier this year defined the "truly need" Reagan promised to spare from welfare cuts as people who die without government help.
He said another 50,000 not covered by the categories he cited would have their benefits trimmed.
Female draft registration argued in court
WASHINGTON—Registering women for the military draft could hamper the military's ability to meet wartime emergencies, U.S. Solicitor General Wade McCree told the Supreme Court yesterday.
Defending male-only draft registration, McCree told the nine justices that excluding women from signing up for service "rationally relates to the government's continued duty to raise and maintain army.
Although only 10 percent of the military forces combat, the turnover at the front is the highest. McCree reminded the court during oral arguments in a case challenging the government's segregation on grounds of sex discrimination.
"Although women can perform effectively and with great credit in nonprofits, they would be needed would be personnel who can be rotated," McCree said. "W
the issue before the high court is not whether women should be in combat, although several justices tried to pin down McCree and his opponent, lawyer Donald Weinberg, on how closely the combat ban relates to the case.
RECALLING THE WORLD War II Battle of the Bulge, McCree said: "Cooks, bakers and others were pressed into service." Women now in those types of jobs are barred by law from serving in combat.
need flexibility to rotate people into the front."
"Registration for the draft does not dictate that women will be drafted," Weinberg said.
The case, originated by a group of Vietnam War protesters in 1971 against the all-male draft, has generated considerable interest. Nearly 200 people have told the court at midnight to get tickets to attend the argument.
The Supreme Court is expected to
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refused to require women to sign up for possible service.
ALTHOUGH NO ONE has been drafted since the Vietnam War, registration resumed last year in response to the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan. But Congress, rejecting President Jimmy Carter's request,
The Reagan administration, although opposed to a peacetime draft, has not stopped registration and has called for bolstering the all-volunteer military.
At yesterday's hearing, several justices questioned Weinberg's argument that excluding women would "them" the sole role we can turn to in a time of emergency.
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Parsons School of Design Summer in France/Japan
Parsons in Paris · July 3-August 14
paint on the Left Bank, explore prehistoric caves in the Dordogne, visit the masterpieces of Renaissance Art in Tuscany.
Art in itself:
Sources include Painting, Drawing, Art History,
French History, Language & Literature, Landscape
Painting & Prehistoric Anthropology.
Cost for the 6-week program including 9 credits of
study, round-trip airfare and double occupancy
accommodations with continental breakfast is $2350.
Photography in Paris • July 3-26
Study the history and practice of this art with extensive darkroom facilities available on the Parsons campus. Courses offered: The History of Photography, Photography. Program costs including 6 credits of study, round-trip airfare and double occupancy accommodations with breakfast in a 4-star hotel are $2150.
Fashion Design in Paris • July 3-31
study the history and contemporary trends of French fashion design in Paris under the supervision of museum staff and practicing designers. Haute Couture and ready-to-wear collections will be seen. Courses offered: The History of European Costume, Contemporary Trends in French Fashion. The total cost for 6 credits of study, round-trip airfare and double occupancy accommodations in a 4-star hotel is $2250.
Studies in Interior Design, The History of Architecture, and The Decorative Arts July 3-31
This program is offered in collaboration with the world famous Musee des Arts Decoratifs. The museum staff supplement the Parsons faculty with specialized presentations that include aspects of the museum's collection normally not available to the public. Excursions to points outside of Paris include Fontainebleau, Versailles and Vaux le Vicomte. Courses offered: The History of French Architecture, Studies in European Decorative Arts. The total cost for 6 credits of study, round-trip airfare
The total cost for 6 credits of study, round-trip airfare and double occupancy accommodations in a 4-star hotel is $2250.
Summer Workshops in Japan Clay, Fibers, Metal July 20-August 20
In co-sponsorship with The American Craft Council courses will be offered in ceramics, metals, textiles and the history of Japanese crafts. Workshops will be supervised by master Japanese craftsmen and the Parsons' faculty. Classes will be held at the studio facilities of the Tokyo Design Gakuen College with supplemental visits to museums, kiln sites, textile facilities and metalismmishing shops. Costs for the workshop include 6 credits of round-trip airfare to Tokyo* and double occupancy accommodations in a deluxe hotel are $2700. *Costs may vary slightly due to fluctuations in the dollar or airline prices.
Dean Vierl R. Salvadori
Parsons School of Design
66 Fitz Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011
ATTN: PARIS/JAPAN PROGRAMS
Dean Vieri R. Salvadori
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Please send brochure(s) on:
□ Parsons in Paris, July 3-August. 14
□ Interior Design, July 3-31
□ Photography in Paris, July 3-26
□ Fashion Design in Paris, July 3-31
□ Summer Workshops in Japan, July 20-Aug. 20
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University Daily Kansan, March 25, 1981
Page 3
5
Governor's opponents say power reduced
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
The Kansas House yesterday narrowly passed a bill that would make all re-classifications and re-allocations of state classified and unclassified employees subject to final approval by a legislative budget committee.
Currently the process is limited to the governor's office, but under the bill it also would become a legislative matter. Because of this twist several opponents have said that political motives alone are behind the bill. John Carlin's are behind the bill.
"Sure, that is what is going on," House Minority Leader Fred Weaver said. "A lot of that has been going on and this is no exección."
STATE REP. Mike Hayden, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, which sponsored the bill, introduced a proposed as an attack on the governor.
The bill was designed to alleviate the problem of re-classification and re-location," Hayden said. "There have been instances in some jobs where a person has left, a higher ranking job or the same job, and the person got a tremendous salary increase.
"By doing that people have just been going around the appropriation process. Even Gov. Carlin has ex-tenured his concern about the problem withblics."
Hayden said that by giving the Legislature the power to review such pay increases, the bill would save the state about $6 million.
ALTHOUGH OPPOENTES are not against saving $6 million, they are still against the bill.
"One of the reasons why I voted against the bill," State Rep Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said, "was because the matter is an administrative matter. The governor's office can easily handle the
"With this bill, the Legislature is simply encroaching on the powers of the administrative branch."
reorganization of an agency without the Legislature.
Charlton also said that she opposed the bill because of its appearance as a contender.
"This seems to be part of the plan on the part of the leadership in the Legislature to cut the budget, raise no new revenue and go home," she said.
1 question whether we need to place an arbitrary freeze on hiring in the state," he said. "It also seemed to be an advantage for the attorney nor like a bit of other legislation."
"It seemed like this was just aimed to unseat the governor rather than to do the state some good."
STATE REP. John Solbach, D-
Lawrence, said that he opposed the bill
for some of the same reasons.
Solbach said this bill closely paralleled a bill that passed the House
earlier. That bill would place a freeze on hiring and stipulated that any further job changes would have to go through the governor's office.
"Both of those bills would be a bottleneck to getting things done quickly," Solbach said.
"There simply will not be a problem in that regard." Havden said.
HAYDEN, HOWEVER, said that he did not see how there would be a bottleneck. He said that the changes that would be ruled on by the governor or the legislative committee were not numerous.
Before the final vote of 65-60 for the bill was taken, Charlson said that the bill's opponents worked to convince legislators who seemed to favor the bill.
"The issue passed by a much greater margin on general order," Charlton said. "Before the final vote, however, some of us went t work to try to kill it today and we ended up only three votes short."
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Opinion
Page 4 University Dally Kansan, March 25, 1981
The Chinas Syndrome
Former President Gerald Ford is visiting Peking this week, not to play golf but to act as a messenger for President Reagan. Ford is believed to be reassuring the Chinese that Reagan is deeply concerned about the status of Chinese-American relations.
Reagan's assurances to China are probably an attempt to diffuse Chinese anger over the possible sale by the United States of F-16 jet fighters to Taiwan and Reagan's pro-Taiwan campaign stance.
However, no matter what reassurances the administration may offer, the Chinese aren't likely to be pacified. That's because after nearly 35 years, the Republic of China and Taiwan each still profess to be the one and only China. The communist government on the mainland views the Taiwan
Taiwan, on the other hand, somehow expects the world to believe that it will someday "reclaim" the mainland—an idea about as realistic as Britain "reclaiming" its 13 American colonies.
President Carter bolstered relations with the mainland by downgrading U.S. support for Taiwan, Reagan, however, now appears to be burning the candle at both ends, hoping to stay on good terms with both China and Taiwan. But the mainland won't remain on good terms for long if the United States continues to support Taiwan, so Reagan had better choose one or the other. The time will come to decide which as a "friend" is in America's best interest.
Computer dating services replaced by advertisements
It probably all started with a Scope mouthwash ad. Or maybe it was that wart remover, Compound W. You know, the one where a distrust but devastating darling female gargles with Scope or puts a foul smelling liquid on her warts and ... Vocalia nobilis in her hands, she get the touch on two legs holding her hand or asking for a good kissless bath.
For that matter, it might have been a Maybelline mascara commercial, I can't be sure.
JUDY
WOODBURN
to lovelern and impressionable teen-agers was the same: Gate rid of those unsightly pimples, smell good, quit scratching your nose. You won't have to, you'll have more dates than you can handle.
A lot of people grew up with that lesson, and they took it to heart as adults. There must be millions of people like this. Their breath is generally unoffensive, they have soft, manageable hair, and they drink Diet Pepsi, because we still looking for that special someone.
I guess the ads were wrong.
Lately, it seems, these people have been fighting fire with fire by taking out their ads. It makes sense. If a commercial can convince them to buy a certain kind of toothpaste, why can't an ad get them a date, too?
The back pages of some big-city newspapers now are plastered with guests for companionship in tiny black type. Once in a year, the personals of the Kansan or Journal-World.
There's even a whole new magazine devoted to the pursuit of a date through advertising. It's called Intrico, a slick magazine with about 15 pages of personal ads smack-dab in the center. Just next door in Missouri, a couple of women are compiling a book titled *Introducing our women names* of "Missouri's most eligible bachelors."
And then there's the woman in New York
who edits a catalog listing available pei lovers. This is for the kind of person who believes "if he doesn't love Fido, he can't love me."
Used to be, people only sing songs about classified romance. Remember the one by "Hot Wax" that started out like this: "Wanted: young man single and free. Experience in love preferred but we'll accept a young trainee."
Used to be, you immediately felt sorry for those poor anonymous souls who were so bad off that they had to advertise for friends. Jeez, they must have been a bunch of losers.
But they're not anymore. Or the ads say they're not, anyway. They're professionals—stockbrokers, writers, professors and scientists. Unless their self-provided statistics are really exaggerated, they're not only, either.
So why are these people lonely? And why doesn't 'hello' work anymore?
Well, first off, you don't have to see "Looking for Mr. Goodbar" too many times to know that it can be a waste of time—and even dangerous—to meet people in bars these days. The sheer awareness-looking stranger you need to be able to relieve your of your money or your life.
The scene isn't much better between the hours of nine and five either. Does the name Mary Cunningham ring a bell? She was the bright, capable and incidentally beautiful woman who was shot down from her job at the Bendix corporation because she had a questionable relationship with the top executive there.
Her plight taught women and men another lesson. Business and pleasure don't mix. You can't become too close to anyone with fear for oomidify your credibility.
But the best thing about mail-order romance is the convenience. Like the now-passe computer date, it's a real timesaver. Busy people don't have to waste valuable lunch hours or evenings doing stupid things like getting to know one another. All they have to do is take but are ad specifying the recipient's name, job, email, witty, serious, nature freak, co collector, neo-Marxist—and then wait for qualified people to apply.
And it's a lot easier than smiling or saying hello.
The perfect couple
KANSAN
The University Daily
(USPS 685-644) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 60455. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $15 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriber prices are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Pilнт Hall, The University of Kansas,
Lawrence, KS 4044
Business Manager Terri Fry
MARVEL
DEREHMOND FABLE LEADER.
© PBI BY ORKASO TIBAIE.
CENTRAL AMERICA
CCCP
Vice president holds special position
By WALTER F. Mondale
who does nothing but deliver pandering praise of a president. The president should want—and people do respect—sound, factual, reasoned arguments in his behalf. The vice presidency is important enough not to be demeaned by its occupant delivering obsequious flattery.
New York Times Special Features
Third, as a spokesman for the administration,
stay on the facts. A president should not want,
anything that would harm the administration.
Second, do not wear a president down. He should be bright enough to catch your meaning the first time. Give your advice once and give it well. You have the right to be heard, not obeyed.
WASHINGTON—For any vice president to play an active, useful role in the government, he must first have the confidence and trust of the president. But, basing my opinion on four years' experience in office, I think that President Carter and I had more than a personal relationship. There is a set of institutional values that should be built up for the relationship to succeed. There is a set of rules he should follow—for him to strengthen the presidency.
Fourth, understand your role as a spokesman. This does not mean that you must defend every idea that comes out of an administration. A wise president, who values the role of his vice president, will be forced of forcing the vice president to speak for something with which he fundamentally disagrees.
First, advise a president confidentially.
The only reasons to state publically what you have told the president are to take credit for a success, or to escape blame for a failure. And either way there is no quicker way to determine your effectiveness by the president and lose your effectiveness in the government.
that allow our aunty assignments. If such an assignment is important, it will cut across the responsibilities of one or two cabinet officers or other agency heads and embroil you in a debilitating bureaucratic fight. If it is meaningless or trivial, it will undermine your reputation and squander your time—as most vice presidents have found.
Sixth, a vice president should be ready to assume the presidency. We all know the story of Harry S. Truman's succeeding to the presidency on Franklin D. Roosevelt's death with no delay. The Manhattan Project—the building of the atomic bomb, which had been going on for a long time.
President Carter did not want me to need
several months of on-the-job training in the presidency, if the need should have arisen. As he often said, President Carter wanted me to be ready the same moment the nation would need me to be ready. And there was no better way to do it. There would be prepared to pursue the course we did.
Finally, not a rule so much as a wish: To strengthen the president, a vice president should have complementary experience and abilities. There is no magic mix of qualities, but a vice president can better help the president if his political experience, his background in executive or legislative government, his attachments to constituencies, his knowledge of foreign affairs—if in each vital field of experience he complements the president's experience.
And as vice president, he must be able to get along with the president. The relationship is intensely personal. It is founded on professional need, but it must proceed on personal respect.
In my case, President Carter treated me better than any president has treated his vice president.
(Walter F. Mondale joined a law firm upon leaving the vice president. This article is adapted from a lecture on the vice president Minnesota, where he is a Distinguished Fellow.)
Letters to the Editor
Solidarity's reasons omitted from article
To the editor:
In the March 6 article on Student Senate budget hearings, the Kansan reported the fact that Student Senate voted to reduce Latin American Solidarity's budget request from $1.645 to $450 (in the preliminary cuts). This fact was explained, however, in complete isolation of Latin American Solidarity's explanation of why a budget increase was justified. Because of this somewhat one-sided reporting of the events and discussion of that day, I include here some of the questions and answers that were given to Student Senate to warrant our budget request.
It was reported that Student Senate's decision to cut our budget was based on the argument that they "questioned the substantial increase," although I did answer a variety of questions pertinent to our activities, membership, goals and educational approach to the matter.
It was also reported that "Latin American Solidarity presented a request for $1,645, a $1,500 increase from last year's allocation." The truth is that last year, at supplemental budget bearings, Latin American Solidarity asked for $1,050 of which a more $85 was granted.
Latin American Solidarity survived and grew! And although Latin American Solidarity's existence is not conditional upon Student Senate funding, the fact that is the money we ask for in our 1981-82 budget request (increased only $855 from our 1980 request) would allow us to more consistently investigate and to offer more detailed information on the reality of Latin American living situations, economic history and modes of political expression.
Latin American Solidarity objects to the fact that the Student Senate would focus on our increase in the budget rather than on the purpose of our group and the increased attention now being paid to Latin America by the KU student population—some of who may actually end up in El Salvador—and student organizations, by the KU faculty and administration and (albeit superficially) by the local, national and international press.
Latin American Solidarity is obviously one of KU's most active student organizations and Student Libraries.
Since the overthrow of Somoza in Nicaragua, and because of the civil war in El Salvador, there is a growing desire to know what the "crisis" in Central America (and Latin America generally) is all about. We have responded to this desire to understand contact with individual and groups, having informational files on these countries and by offering public forums to discuss these issues.
The increase in our budget therefore is justified in this manner, and we demand that our original budget request be granted in order to meet this goal. The president, faculty and administrative population.
Rhonda L. Neugebauer
Latin American Solidarity budget coordinator
Department checked
To the editor:
After the allegations made in the Kansas City Times of Feb. 13 had been seen by the members of the department of English, a careful internal check was make to determine whether any English courses could have been used improperly, out of sequence, with peculiar enrolment patterns or taught by personnel not fully authorized to instruct in such courses.
We have reliably ascertained that the department of English did not teach, staff, authorize or approve any such courses. In fact, the department was never consulted in the creation of such alleged courses or notified of their existence. The requirements of the various schools within the University of Kansas and the existing checks for fulfillment of requirements make it impossible for any student to fulfil graduation requirements in English in any course offered at the university. The requirements in English, taught by the department of English at the University of Kansas, or by properly transferring equivalent credits from another institution of higher learning.
This information is furnished for the sole purpose of demonstrating the noninvolvement of the department of English in any educational programs for which irregularities in staffing, teaching, content and evaluation have been alleged.
Gerhard Zuther
Gerhard Zutter
Chairman, department of English
Liberal arts defended
To the editor:
The column written by he Neufeld in your March 10 edition has left me angry, frustrated
I am angry because of her willingness to sacrifice reasonable assertion to superficial "sophistication." A degree in the liberal arts will rarely cause either unemployment or doom one
to manual labor. In fact, my concrete experience as an adviser in the department of English has led me to conclude that our good students do get good jobs.
I am frustrated because Neufeld appears to believe that Acting Cancellor Shankel's recent statements concerning academic programs at the University are mindless platitudes signifying nothing. She contends, moreover, that "it's hard to see how anyone could be crushed by the charges the Kansas City Times made against the athletes." How one can not be upset with charges that state faculty at this University violated both academic standards and University regulations?
It may be more interesting to find illicit payments being made to athletes, but I consider the charge of faculty knowingly circumventing their academic standards to be far more serious.
Finally, I am bitter. Neufeld's statement that "50 percent of all college advisers are reckless dolls" is inexcuseable. It is inexcuseable because it is not true. It is fun to blame others for one's own troubles, but that does not make the accusation true. Certainly honest people do this. They are more dramatic than the simple story that many, many advisers have done their job well.
It is also more dramatic to print the horror stories than those multitude of tales that accurately show how advisers have spent long hours doing excellent advising. Such advising may not always take the form of statements advises like to hear, but it is honest and accurate and neither "dolish" nor "reckle." But then, it is easier to use cute, cynical labels and paste them on groups of people than to carefully qualify one's own generalizations. Neufeld is, of course, not a "reckle dolt"; she is simply an apprentice columnist.
Neufeld clearly seems to believe that she has been able "to ignore the foolish people who stand in her) way." How about the people, ideas and books that may have made some contribution to her life? Are none of these to be found at the University of Kansas? Perhaps; Neufeld has been so blinded by this question that on the other hand, being humane and careful with one's words does not make for an interesting column. And Neufeld does want to write an interesting column.
Stephen H. Goldman
Susan E. Johnson
Associate professor of English
Coordinator of Undergraduate Advising, College
of Liberal Arts and Sciences
University Daily Kansan, March 25, 1981
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From page 1
Budget
about 10 percent, while the universities were given only 7 percent.
The study on the governor's proposed budget was drawn up for Eldredge by Bissip, assistant KU business director and former state budget director.
"I would hope that the Senate would treat all state employees with an even hand," she said.
Hess said the other agencies got the extra money because they did not spend all of this year's allocation. He said the Regents generally did not carry over any money from year to year.
" if we started on equal footing, we'll end up on equal footing." Eldridge responded.
BUT HESS SAID every state agency must share the burden of cut this year.
state Sen. Ron Hein, R-Toppea and chairman of the Ways and Means KU subcommittee, said if the Senate added money to the Regents budget, it would add to money to other educational budgets.
"When we talk about that," Hei said, "we're talking about bankruptcy the state."
STATE SEN. Merrill Werts, R-Junction City and member of the Ways and Means Committee, said the faculty members he talked to "tell like"
they were being used as a whipping boy" for the Legislature.
"The bottom line is quality of the product at the Regents institutions," Werts said. "If we don't keep the quality faculty, we won't have the quality product."
After the other amendments failed, Sen.
Minority Leader Jack Steinger, D-Kansas City,
tried to eliminate the 15 percent average tuition
increase.
"We're making cuts in the education budget so we will remain one of the states that won't levy a severance tax on one of the wealthiest industries in the nation," he said.
STINEENGER REFERRED to Democratic charges that the Republican-dominated Legislature would rather drastically cut the budget, a governor's proposed tax on mineral production.
Hess responded that the fee increase, which would make university students pay an average of 21 percent of their total education costs, was preferable to increasing the property tax.
He added that the Legislature had a long-standing agreement with the Regents to keep the tuition at about 25 percent of the total cost of an education.
KU students currently pay about 22 percent of the total cost of their education.
Otheir theories being considered by police included someone with a grudge against the Med Center or someone who had earlier come to the hospital, but had been, or thought he had been, refused.
From page 1
Shooting
As the search for the killer continues, David Waxman, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said a room in the Med Center's new library would be dedicated to Marc Bck, 25, the resident killed in the shooting. Earlier, Charles Hartman, emergency room director, said that a memorial service for Beck would be held at the Med Center.
The other victim in the shooting was Ruth Rybolt, 45, of Kansas City, Kan. Rybolt had brought her mother to the emergency room for treatment the night of the shooting.
The state troopers were assigned to the Med Center by the governor for "an initial period not to exceed one week" at the request of Acting Chancellor Del Shankel.
"I consider this action necessary for the effective protection of staff and patients during this period, as time pressures on existing security personnel at the Medical Center and hospital," said David Hornbaker, the present time," Carlin said in a letter to Col. David Horbaker, Highway Patterson director."
degree from Oberlin College, has been conducting since he was 14.
Conductor
He turned to conducting after meeting a pianist who was better than he.
From page 1
"About that time I found that I took to conducting rather naturally," Burke said. "My teacher said I had a 'knack for turning a phrase.'"
Eleven years later, Burke, who is working on his doctorate in conducting, is slowly and steadily making progress toward the elusive goal of selecting, elite, international class of conductors."
In May, he will attend a conducting workshop given by Sir Georg Solti, conductor of the chimesets at the Chicago City Museum, one of the cities chosen, chosen from applications across the United States, to participate in the workshop.
JUST AS HE is proud of his musical accomplishments, which include composing as well as conducting. Burke also finds satisfaction in his non-musical work, including his job with
"I was just made an equipment operator 1, which means I can drive a truck now," he said.
This job, in addition to helping meet bills, gives
him something to balance the demands of a competitive musical world.
"Some of the other stuff I do is as oesthetic and
social," she said. "This job is a relief
because it is really conducive to health."
"I don't have to take it home with me at night and move around paper or furniture, but it is
BUT AS HE sits at the grand piano on stage following the rehearsal, playing Brahms for the sheer enjoyment of hearing the music fill the auditorium and feeling the piano respond, escaping music is the furthest thing from his mind.
"Playing piano is like coming back to an old friend," he said after the last note dawned in
"When I'm conducting, it's so much work. When I'm playing, I like to have it down so it just comes out automatically, and I can be a detached observer listening to myself.
"I feel music very strongly. It sings so clearly to me, and when I conduct I spend all my time trying to get the orchestra to play what's in my bead."
This can be a frustrating experience, but as a friend once told Bukhari, conducting is a matter of pain.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
"Something is dead up the creek!" Certainly this is not a refined, cultured, or elegant statement! It but carries a message very forceful and easily understood. The water may not yet stink, but it is dangerous, not fit to drink, liable to cause disease, an epidemic and death! Clean out the creek! No sane person will question these truths about the water so necessary for our existence and life. Clean out the creek, purify the water, or we are liable to perish.
Until recently we never knew that Alexander The Great was badly defeated and ran away from one enemy. Probably his greatest victory was in the battle of Arbela, where he captured the city from an enemy — figuratively, the enemy was something "he dead up the creek" Just after the great victory he "dad to contend with 3 or 400,000 dead bodies of men, horses, asses, camels, elephants, etc., too many to count." In fact, and Stench "utterly routed his army and put them to飞亡."
The thing that concerns us is "what is dead up the creek" in our church life, polluting "the water of life," that "spring of water" which Christ told the woman at the well about "jesus said unto her, Who whosoever drinks of this water shall drink it; who whosoever drinks of this water shall drink of the water that I shall give shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give be in him a well of
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water springing up into everlasting life. "John 4:13, 14 it is the privilege and duty of the Christian not only to drink of that water, but also to give to drink to the man who thirsty and will giver to take it. Who, and what is it that water? What question did he half prepared for those guilty of "heresy" was one of awful stink and stench, from which there was no escape!
"Beware of false prophets," said Christ in the Sermon on the Mount! The Apostle in warning Timothy of a man "beware of false waters in the stream," spit the word "beware," open, and put Timothy aside. Of whom heware 'twice,' also 2nd Timothy 4:15.
Do you know what "heresy" is? If we mistake not, the word comes from one which means "choice" or "to choose." in the Protestant Christian Church those guilty are the ones who choose to believe the notions and reasons of the Bible. But if someone mistakenly instead of "every word that proceeded out of the mouth of God," from lid to lid of the Bible, Man has the privilege and liberty of making the choice of accepting or rejecting what the Bible says, but the Protestant Christian, if not a hypocrite or usurer, is one who has chosen to accept the entire Bible as the invalid Word of Christ. So you can be sure that you cannot live by these truths, witness and testify to them, and protest against those who do not so believe.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, March 25, 1981
On Campus
TODAY
THE CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER SESSION on "Hell is Hatred" will meet at 7:45 a.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
THE UNIVERSITY FORUM will meet at 11:45 a.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries
LA MESA ESPANOLA (Spanish Table) will be from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 3069 Wescoe. All native speakers and students of Spanish are welcome. The table is sponsored by Sigma Delta
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet in Parlors B and C of the Kansas Union.
THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SPIRITUAL DISCIPLINES will meet at 7 p.m. in the Ecclesian Christian Ministries Center.
THE SUA BACKGAMMON CLUB will meet at 7 m. in Parlor A of the Union.
THE KU TOASTMasters will meet from 8 to 8 p.m. in the International Room of the
THE KU CONCERT CHEF ORCHIN SPIRING CON-
FERENCE 8 p.m. in Swarthout Rectal Hall of
Murray Hall
THE SUA FORUM on "Dr. Strangelove" with
the director of the film at 8:15 p.m.
in Woodward Auditorium of the library.
TOMORROW
ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER
SEMINAR will sponsor "Remote Batch Entry"
from Time-Sharing" at noon in the auditorium of the Computer Services Facility.
LA MESA ESPANOLA (Spanish Table) will
be given from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 3059 Wescoe.
**STUDENT BAR ASSOCIATION 'NOON**
FORUM will host Ben Learner, Philadelphia public libraries and universities to Traditional Public Environments - The Public Interest Law" at 12 noon p.m. in 104 Green Hall.
THE UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 108 Blake Hall.
A UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION with Acting
Conductor DJ Shanklin will be at 4:15 p.m. in
the Theater at 120 West 39th Street, New York,
NY 10017.
MINORITY AFFAIRS FILM "More Than
Stone Hall Auditorium" will be shown at 7 p.m. in the Storm Hall Auditorium.
UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will host Benjamin Sax on "Time and Identity in Goethe's Faust" at 7:30 p.m. in the council Room of the Union.
EAST ASIAN LANGUAGE SYMPOSIUM will host Merle Bolton on "Prospects in Japanese Education" at 7:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Union.
GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF KANSAS
wins at 7:00 p.m. in the International Room
(129) 438-6600
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT COLLOQUIUM will be 'A Nuts and Bolts discussion of Library Resources and Procedures' at 8 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union.
For the first time in the history of the University of Kansas, forces have merged to create a spring arts festival that is hoped will become an annual event.
By AMY COLLINS Staff Reporter
become an art critic.
Included in the festival are lectures, theatre performances, an opera production, art exhibitions and concerts.
According to James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, the University Arts Festival, now in its first week of three, is the school's attempt to establish a school that are a regular part of the University.
Opera, theater highlight spring arts festival
HE SAID ALL but a few segments of the arts were included and that festival committee had been appointed.
he said that about five years ago SUA tried to do the same thing, but with limited success. The effort was student-run.
"We found that the strongest line-up for
the season after the spring break so
we started right from lperu."
This is basically an administrative effort to "pull things together," he said. "We never have a problem."
MOESER SAID the entire purpose of the arts festival was to aid in increasing awareness of the
"We felt it was important to focus attention on the arts," he said.
He said the events composing the festival were a culmination of a series of events in specific areas of the campus that the art festival was tying together.
"We've also added extra events to enhance the festival." Moeser said.
With a budget of $12,000, Moser said, the committee was able to fund an illustration exhibit in the Art and Design Gallery, a lithograph exhibit at the Spencer Museum of Art and a visiting directors form. Further University Theatre director Lewin Goff has returned from the University of New York to direct the opera, "Carmen."
Moeser said that because of a breakdown in communications, some University events were left out of the program. He cited a map-maker exhibit in the Spencer Research Library. Its sister exhibit, part of the festival program, is at the Spencer Museum of Art.
A UNIVERSITY COUNCIL on the Arts has been formed to become a communications line
Moeser said the success of a program like this could not be measured, but speculated that it "already has been a success."
Following is a schedule of the festival events.
- March 24-April 12; "Illustration '81 State of the Art"; an exhibition of more than 30 illustrations by prominent illustrators, located in the Art and Design Building Gallery.
- March 23-April 5: 52 Gavarni Carnival Lithographs on exhibit at the Museum of Spaces
Art. The lithographs depict revelers of the carnival season.
- March 26-27: "The Sage of Emporia," a world premiere based on the autobiography of William Allen White, at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Hall, 1050 N. Michigan Avenue, Wright, professor of theatre, in the role of White.
- March 29: KU Collegium Musicum con-
firmates, Poultosek and Stewart Carter;
at 3 p.m. in the Auditorium.
- April 2: Mestislav Rostoprovic, mph.
He plays a solo concert at 8 p.m. in
Mihail Auditorium.
- April 3, 10-11: "Carmen" George Bizet's
nationwide premiere of *Carmen* 8 p.m.
in the University Theatre, Murphy Hall
- April 5: The Peskian Brothers, a chamber
performing at 3:30 p.m. in the
University Theatre.
- April 5-May 24: "Four Artists and the Map: Image/Process/Data," an exhibition featuring the works of Jasper John, Nancy Graves, Richard Long and Rodger Ewch. The exhibition includes works by several artists in the kress Gallery of the Spencer Museum of Art and features three guest lectures.
- April 5-6: Guest curator Roberta Smith will lecture on "Four Artists and the Map" at 5 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art. On April at 2:30 p.m., three films by Nancy Graves, 'Jay Beasley,' and 'Reflections on the Moon,' will be shown in the Museum auditorium.
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What is the most popular soap?
What is the most popular new happy hour?
A: General Hospital.
A: General Hospital at Louise's Bar.
Q: Why?
A: 75c pitchers everyday during GH1!
($1.50 after GH until 5 p.m.)
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SVA FILMS
Wednesday, March 25
author-screenwriter
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film
DR. STRANGELOVE or how I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb.
Directed by Stanley Kubrick.
Written by Terry Southern, Stanley Kubrick, and Peter George.
7:30 p.m. Woodruff $1.00
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 $2.00; Midnight films are $2.00; The Jazz Union, 4th level. Information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
University Daily Kansan, March 25, 1981
Page 7
be
he
00;
ay
00.
an-
54.
al-
On the Record
Eudora police arrested a Lawrence man Monday for aggravated assault, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and reckless driving, according to Douglas County jail records.
The man, Brian Lee Landon, 314 Frontier Road, was arrested in a Eutoria bar after he allegedly pulled a gun. No one was injured in the incident.
Landon is being held on $17,000 bond.
The Douglas County District Court will formally charge him today.
Tornado drill scheduled today
BURGLARS TOOK $705 of property Monday from a cabin cruiser parked in the 3400 block of Brush Creek Dr., Lawrence police said yesterday.
Police said the thieves stole a depth sounder, valued at $150, a pair of water skis, valued at $300, and other ski equipment, valued at $25.
The University of Kansas will participate in a statewide tornado drill at 10:15 this morning.
Phil Leonard, Douglas County Emergency Preparedness Director.
The drill will be postponed in the event of bad weather. The KU Weather Service has predicted showers for this morning.
said that stres would sound in Lawrence for three minutes.
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13 KU students to attend school overseas
Direct exchange scholarships have been awarded to 13 KU students for graduate study at European universities during the next school year.
Anita Herzfeld, director of Study Abroad, said that this program was one of the oldest exchange agreements in operation.
The program requires that KU sponsor one foreign student for each of the KU students participating in the exchange.
"These exchanges were started after the war, around 1945," Herfeld said. "The program grew out of a direct response to the Japanese KU and the United States as a whole."
Germany because the man who originated the program was German-born."
Seven of the KU students will be studying in West Germany. They are Thomas Keeler, Prairie Village graduate student; Barbara Dooley, Tangonoxic, graduate student; Mark McBride, Salma senior; Greg Galloway, graduate student; Richard Kenepakee, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student; Jon Mikkelson, Columbus, Neb., graduate student and Nancy Wood, Lincoln, Neb., graduate student. French university will host Stuart Miller, butchinson graduate student and Harrill, Anchorville; and Amy Hollowell, Minneapolis, Minn.; seni
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POLICE
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SVA FILMS
Presents
Author-Screenwriter Terry Southern in person — with
YAHOO!
we must protect our purity of existence!
oh hell!
ten women for each man!
mr. president
we cannot allow a dormitory gap!
DR. STRANGELOVE
and love the bomb!
PETER
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and TRACY REED as "MISS FOREIGN AFFAIRS"
JEKAY SOUTHERN *PETER GEDRAGE* & STANLEY KUBRICK
directed by STANLEY KUBRICK
Wednesday, March 25 7:30 p.m.
Woodruff Aud. $1.00
Note: Shakespeare Wallah has been cancelled.
Two KU students, Deborah Matters,
Prairie Village graduate student and
Robin McClellan, Palco senior, will
visit English universities. Peter W.
Kronberg, Webster Groves, Mo., senior
will be studying in Switzerland.
The KU students were chosen to represent the University in the exchange program based on their applications and personal interviews. Ann Arbor, MI is one of the KU students' proficiency in the language of the country they wanted to study in and
their general academic standing were also major factors in their selection.
Each applicant was also required to submit an outline of his intended research project.
There will be an informational meeting in mid-April for students interested in participating in the exchange program next year. Oetting will present the first office would begin accepting application for the 1982-83 exchanges this May.
New Spring Specials At Louise's Bar
General Hospital Hour — 7:5c pitchers, 2:3 p.m.
($1.50 from 3:5 p.m.)
$ 5.50 pitchers
Mon-Thurs: 7:00-8:30 p.m.
Weeknight Happy Hour — Good times every Friday afternoon starting with
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until 8 p.m.
Super TGIF — Just for you, KU student!
from 10:00 AM
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, March 25, 1981
A career in law. Denver Paralegal Institute will be on campus on
April 1st
Contact your placement office to arrange a personal interview. For further information, call collect at (303) 623-0237 and ask for Jeff Johnson, Director of Admissions.
Denver Paralegal Institute
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City accepts lot bids
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
Bids for a city parking lot at 600 Massachusetts St., a subject of controversy since the Bryan Anderson building at the site was demolished in January, were accepted with only scattered protests at last night's City Commission meeting.
Al Wright, who contends the city's lot design and proposed location is unsafe, distributed a two-page summary of his objections, but declined to speak at the meeting. On March 17, Wright had asked the commission to delay letting bids pending a safety review.
City Commission has already shown, to me, that they're impervious to anything that could be evidence that could be presented."
"There was really nothing left to be said," Wright explained. "The
Commissioner Marci Francoac, the lone dissenter in the commission's 4-1 vote to begin the project, read a statement into the record disassociating herself from the edict. She later said she feared future legal action resulting from possible accidents attributable to what she called the lot's unsafe design.
"I talked to several lawyers, and they advised me to do this," she said. "I've gone on record as opposing this thing from the start. My statement was just another precaution."
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SALE
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Ms. Jane Wells-Schooley, vice-president of the National Organization of Women, regards the HLA as 'an all-out attack on birth control.' Although Ms. Spilman in her article concedes that 'intrauterine devices and low-estrogen birth control pills' prevent pregnancy by interfering with (the) implantation of the fertilized egg in the womb,' she nonetheless describes these agents as 'forms of birth control.' The term 'birth control' actually refers to any of several methods which control the frequency of impregnation through the use of contraceptives, which prevent conception, or abstinence. It follows from this definition that 'intrauterine devices, low-estrogen birth control pills' and abortion i.e., the induced expulsion of a human fetus, quality neither as contraceptives nor forms of birth control because none of them prevent conception—instead each arrests the fetal development which follows conception by terminating pregnancy.
Ms. Welski Schoolley also finds ... disturbing ... the federal government ... declaring when human life begins ... Does this alleged state of distress arise from her ignorance of the protection already afforded innocent life by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments; or is its (the state of) distress) cause merely the thought of our once again using the law to protect the innocent rather than to assist in their extermination. The specious reasoning of the National Organization of Women, Planned Parenthood, the National Abortion Rights League and the American Civil Liberties Union is enthusiastically embraced by many who selectively hold that the end justifies the means. To those less pragmatically inclined, reliance on such shameless dismissal constitutes yet further proof that the end and the means are inextricably entwined.
On page 1A of the March 8th issue of the Kansas City Times there was an article, by Ms. Brenda Spillman, entitled "Bill would classify abortion, contraceptives as murder." The bill in question was Senator Jesse Heim's Human Life Bill now before Congress. The passage of this bill would be but one step in a process which its supporters will result in the addition of a "Human Life Amendment" (HLA) to the Constitution. Such an amendment would define the moment of fertilization as the beginning of human life thereby rendering each abortion a murder.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terr.
When State Rep. Jessie M. Branson caught up with the whirlwind of events that carried her child passenger safety seat bill one step further, she found only one more obstacle—Senate approval—in the way of the bill's passage.
Rep. likes bills chances
Branson, D-Lawrence, said yesterday that she was surprised by the rapidity with which her bill was processed and received. Transportation Committees on Monday.
A FEW THOUGHTS ABOUT "PRO-CHOICE"
"Actually, I had thought that the bill would come up around sometime tomorrow," Branson said. "As a consequence, I was taken by surprise by the committee's action Monday and have not had the time to see what the feeling of the entire Senate is on the bill."
The child car passenger safety hill, if adopted, would make it mandatory for children under two years of age to be restrained in a motor vehicle. Volitors would be warned and instructed on the merits of a restraint.
"I really don't know how the Senate as a whole feels about the bill," she said, "but Gov. Carolin told me that he is going to be hit with a bill and will not it if it hit it compared."
The bill's next step is final Senate
approval. Branson said she thought if that hurdle were cleared, the bill would become law.
"I expect to get a lot of support and help from Sen. Jamey Menus, Sen. Robert Talkington and Sen. Tom Rehon," Branson said. "They were very much in favor of the bill in committee and, in fact, helped get it out so quickly. I think they will really fight for it on the floor." Branson she said thought the bill's
Branson said that in the meantime, she planned to talk to various senators to gain support for the measure. It will not be a battle fought alone, she said.
Branson said she thought the bill's Senate chances were 50-50 at the worst.
"That's where the work will come in," Branson said. "I plan to work hard to convince some of the 50 percent that the bill that it is really worthwhile."
EXILE
WITH THE SUNSHINE
Everybody loves the taste.
"I love the taste!"
Everyone finds something to love about our craft. Those because they crunchy. They really. And they make from the finest sourced cheese. The cheesiest cheesed crispies and our very best.
only 49*
Come in and try our mushroom crunchy faces
your way everything about em!
TACO
TICO
Everybody loves our Mucho-Cruncho Tacos
2340 Iowa Street
We Buy And Seil Used LPs
And We Carry Rock Posters
& T-Shirts
15 West 9th
Sale on all Pipes
842-3059
Be a part of a great tradition!
Dates for tryouts for the K.U. Spirit Squad have been set.
All students interested in trying out should meet in Allen Field House at 5:00 p.m. on March 26th for an informational meeting. The first clinic will be held after the meeting.
No previous experience is required to tryout.
2. 0 Overall GPA Enrolled in at least 12 hours Weight in proportion to Height A genuine interest in K.U. athletics
Requirements
2. 0 Overall GPA
CLINICS:
March 26-27-30-31
April 1-2
5:30-7:00 p.m.
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
April 4th
PRELIMINARIES:
FINALS:
April 11th
MINORITY STUDENTS ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE
Tonight: 106 Night
Featuring: KELLEY HUNT & THE KINETICS
$1.06 Admission/$1.06 Pitchers & Drinks 8-9 p.m.
FREE!
Customer Appreciation Night! SUNBURST, HORIZON, SCARE
Reggae, SKA, Dancing with BLUE RIDDUM BAND Last Lawrence Performance till June!
Sunday Night:
JACKSON WESTERN TROPHY
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL
Featuring Ray Benson Texas Swing
SAI scored night the Uta bert
Opening Act:
DENVER LOCKE
K
AD
scorin
Darr
Ben h
14 reb
Special! Only $5.00 in advance! Doors open at 7, Show at 8
Taco Via'
Food available
Cheap Pitchers & Drinks 8-9.
Where the stars are
7th & Mass.
842-6930
Lawrence
Opera House
.
7 Point House
University Daily Kansan, March 25, 1981
Page 9
Kings down Utah; Houston wins
The Kings led by seven at the start of the fourth period, and pulled away easily in the final 12 minutes. Scott Wedman and Ernie Grunfeld each added 12.
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Otis Birdson scored 30 points and Reggie Kugle added 20 last night to lead Kansas City to a 105-82 victory over Minnesota, which Birdson hopes alive for a berth in the NLA playoffs.
ADRIAN DANTLE locked up the NBA scoring title, scoring 32 points for Utah. Rookie Darrell Griffith added 15 points for the Jazz and Steve Gates added 12 and grabbed a game-high 14 rebounds.
The Kings outscored the Jazz, 29-20 in the second quarter to lead, 57-46 at halftime and controlled the game's tempo the rest of the way.
The Kings and the Rockets are both 38-41 on the season and in second place in the Midwest Division. Houston defeated Dallas, 114-111 in last night last to keep pace with Kansas City.
Kansas City, Houston and Golden State are the leading contenders for the final two playoff spots in the NBA Western Conference.
The Mawerricks tied the score at 104 on a three-point goal by Marty Bynes with six seconds to go in regulation but a three-point attempt by Jim Cowan and end of overtime ripped the basket and fell out.
Dallas had fought back from a 15-point deficit midway through the second quarter, scoring the
last nine points of the first half and whitening away at the Houston advantage throughout the game.
THE MAVERICKS, who were shooting for their first three-game winning streak, scored the first point of overtime, but a basket and a free throw from a jumper gave Houston in the extra period gave Houston the lead for good.
Murphy hit six straight points in the fourth quarter when Dallas was making a run at the lead. Tom LaGarde and Brad Davis led the Mavericks with 19 each.
Moses Malone had 30 points for the Rockets and Robert Reid scored 32. Reid hit a field goal with 11 seconds left in the overtime period.
Tennis team confident after victory over Emporia State
The KU men's tennis team did not want its last memories before Big Eight Conference play to be of a spring break trip in which the Javahks lost all their matches.
For that reason, the team considered yesterday's match with Emporia State especially important, and the Jayhawks responded with a 6-3 victory.
KU won five of the six singles matches, but lost two of the three doubles matches, which were played after the singles matches, when the issue had already been decided.
With Big Eight play ahead, the team is
improving, according to Ed Bolen, a junior singles player.
"We're not that far off." he said.
Bolen said that the biggest factor in the slump has been lapes in his concentration.
The victory was especially heartening to Bolen, who has been in a slump that began with the spring break trip to Louisiana. Coach Randy McGrath, however, said that a player will rarely make it through a year without a slump.
The 'Jayhawks' next match will be in Kiahna City Friday and Saturday.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or fewer . . .
Each additional word . . .
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one
$2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.40 $3.60 $3.80 $4.00 $4.20 $4.40
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AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in an email subject by calling the Renaissance business office at 804-358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
For the Executive Director for Associated Students of Kansas, a statewide student lobby. Responsibilities include coordination of activities on several university campuses, management of all facets of the lobby, also research, testifying and lobbying on the issues before the Kansas legislature. Full-time position offered (negotiate with the Board of Directors). Send resume to Associated Students of Kansas, 1100 College, Topeka, KS 66075. Send resume to Galean, Galley, Bck 27, 1981
Employment Opportunities
Condos, Snow, and Sunshine SKI KEY-
room 2. Parking free from 3 days ally (18, 19, 20) rental,
3 days ally (18, 19, 20) rental, 4 days ally (18, 19, 20) rental,
expense only $2000 Contact. Daryl O'Rourke
843-8480 or write ski ek. 147 Kusttien
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED COUPLE Suffice. no children. to house, care for children. Lake Clinton, pain. Work. Housework, moving carpenter. painting general maintenance. Salary varies. Duties include providing, your own completely furnished housekeeping (bake and clean up your elater). Later preferred by employer. Apply in writing. Job requires 1000 Sunset Drive, Lawrence, KS 60044.
ENTERTAINMENT
TRAVEL CENTER
Domestic & International Reservations
• Airline • Escorted Tours
• Hotel/Resort • Eurail Passes
• Car Rental • Group Rates
• International Student Specialists
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W. 23rd St. (by Perkins)
9 005-3 50 M-F * 9 300-2 Sal
TRAVEL CENTER
Reservations
- Airline
- Escorted Tours
- Hotel/Resort
- Eurail Passes
- Car Rental
- Group Rates
- International Student Specialists
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W. 23rd St. (by Perkins)
9:00-5:00 M-F 9:30-12:00 Sat
FOR RENT
Free services to students and faculty 841-7117
AIRIZON STREET DUPLICES Available now. Perfect for 4 students, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths; room range, room, retainer, rotator, desk, office, storage, central air conditioning, carpet & draps, off-street parking, unfurnished, two $pots) = 800 calls. Call 853-2732 or fax 853-2732.
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5. 843-
3228. If
3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace
and cargo. Will take 3 students 2500 W.
6th. 841-7333. tf
For spring and summer, Nailsmith Hall off-campus has a small kitchen and storage of an apartment. Good food and plenty of it. Weekly main service to clean the hall, wash dishes, and brush much more. If you're looking for a hotel in the area, that's where you'll go in or give us a call: Nailsmith HALL, 100 Nailsmith Drive, 862-745-6939.
FRESHIMEN and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house; next year! Apply now: 842-6592. App if
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, perfect fireplaces, 2 car garage, with running
Cairo Capi Acrs. Unfurished station, 1. & 2 bdmr. apts. available. Central air. wks.
Battery Acrs. Unfurished station, 1. & 2 of Fraser Hall. Call 842-9703 after S 30 or anytime weekends.
3 br townhouse for rent now at Pine Haven
180 North 2nd Street, NYC. Please contact m/wather & dryer, close to shopping mall names. We pay water $40 per person or married or married, no pets. Call 913-624-0404 or S-27
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. if
Subleasing 2-bedroom apartment 10 minute
walk to campus, 1821 Tennessee, $270 rent
+ utilities, $42-4822. 3-25
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSE 268 and Kasold. If you're tired of your daily routine, you can enjoy a daytime feature 3 brs. 1/4 bath, all appliances, attached garage, pool, and lots of entertainment. Call Craig Lail or Jim Bong at 749-1697 for more information on our modestly priced property.
Mkt Center Bound? Nice. 2-bedroom
dualities available for summer and fall.
Carpet, A/C, appliances, and parking. Call:
-(1931)-381-2878.
3-27
SPACIOS TWO-STORY DUPLLEX 1328
All appliances, air conditioned one car gar-
age, all appliances, air conditioned one car gar-
age, or possible option to buy $200.00 Less.
for purchase. 410-815-9260 842-6360 5-26
*contact* 410-815-9260 842-6360 5-26
2 bedroom duplex Air Cond., W.D Hookins,
W.W Carpet, Carport, Central location, very
clean, $225/month. Call 843-2774. 4-3
AVAILABLE JUNE 1st. E烽莹 Apt.
Nicely Furnished. A C, 2½ blocks from
$170 + 1/3 utilities. 841-8599. 3-30
Sublearning 1. bedroom apartment available
June. completely review for fall Nite.
Complete online course. Resume,
close to campus, on KU bus route.
Call 841-5830 or 841-5835. 3-50
Call 841-5830 or 841-5835. 3-50
Male roommate needed to rent furnished
apt4, kitchen, washer, p. h., cable tv,
cable TV, 1/3 phone, 1/3 phone, 1/3 phone,
mcall Kevin at Kaiv1-5400-3-27
mcall K Kevin at Kaiv1-5400-3-27
NOW RENTING for fall semester--near new 2 bedroom apartments just north of the stadium—live closer than you can park. Call 653-4788
Applications are now being received for the 2017 Summer Living Experiment for the summer and the fall. Applicants may be addressed to the Ecumenical Christian Ministry Center, 1244 Oread St, Minneapolis, MN 55403.
1 or 2 rooms for rent in a House close to
room. 1019 Illinois. Cell 841-2209. 3-31
Sublease for Summer: 4 bedroom townhouse, 2 baths, carpeted, patio, dishwasher, 3 pools, tennis court. Trailridge Apartments. Call 814-1809. 4-3
Country Cottage located on one acre of land in the rolling hills of Nantucket is loaded with specals; ceramic tile floors; brick patio with hot tub! $350/mo. include meals and shower. Call 412-678-9000 or April 1st call for appt. 845-2600-3-31
WV WSquarkshark—This is the WV warrior who can keep your rear window defender, snow trowel. With a 96,000 mile range and an excellent maneuverability of 96,000 miles, it is in excellent unimchanched condition to appreciate M4-9972 after 5 on weekends 1-4.
**western Civilization Notes.** New on Sale!
Makes sense to use them! A major study makes sense for us. Analyze exam preparation. Learn about the exam. Analyze essay exam preparation. Available in Citer, The Bookmark, and Oread Book Citer. The Bookmark, and Oread Book Citer.
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3800
W. 6th.
Home Woodshop—Two bookcases $30.00 and
$7.00. Two 6 foot maple cabinets $15.00 and
$20.00 small oak table $30.00. Custom
orders filled on skero cabinets. #48-8922.
Sublease for summer 3-bedroom furnished apartment, air conditioned, dishwasher, close to campus. Call 841-8360. 3-31
1080 Datum P肿胀 Longed, S-speed, Air,
Sunroot, 1960 VW Bug. Call 749-2728, 325-
860
4 x 100 watt Mantra Receiver Dual-Poly-
automatic Turntable, 2 Pioneer Speakers
w/wood cabin. Price negotiable. 641-4288
after 5 p.m.
3-31
Mopeds a great way to save gas. Spring selection now. Dealerships available. Bill Box 62, QA, Watamatite, Ks. (913) 755-4658.
3-30
Raleigh bicycle. Excellent condition, super light. Tubular tires with pump $180.00 or best offer. 842-6276. 3-31
1971 Cougar Convertible. Great condition.
V-83 SJ-31, Auto A, C/A, Radials. Full Power,
AM, B/Mt, Silver/black 2750. Sieve
841-3632 3-27
Camera—35 mm Minolta SRT102, Vivatar Flash attachment, carrying case, strap and tripod; lens f55 $220.00. 845-3595. 3-30
A good functional 10-speed. $60.00. 841-
0859. 3-27
Z28 Camaro loaded, 28,000 miles, red, in superb condition. Asking $6,000. Call 842-9300. 4-3
68 Dodge Van, V-8 318 motor, excellent condition, moving—must sell, call evenings.
-863-7595. 4-3
G-string acoustic guitar, looks good, sounds good. Call Steve 842-7888 3-31
Woman's 10 speed almost new. Call 379-0489
after 5:00 p.m. Ask for Kathy.
3-27
GRETCHS 88 KEY PIANO for direct use through PA system. 1 string, per note. 3 strings, per note. 4 strings, per note. 3 used once in concert. EXCELLENT CONDITION. A great acoustic piano sound. Capability of Yamaha Electric Grand. Must sell it (or your first born) immediately. 70-400 hours.
Men's 10 speed, 21" lugged frame. All alloy equipment, perfect condition. $183.43998 after 5. 3-27
Camaro for Sale. 1867. Good condition, new paint job. nice interior plus other extras. 1500. Call Rob after 6 843-7315. 3-30
74 Auid 181 AM AFM 8 track, sunroof,
fnt. whi. Dr. pwr. Dice brakes. Excellent
condition. No Rust. (Meadowbrook) Britol
Terr. Bldg. B$ 1000. 3-30
Women's *10-inch*, lugged frame, rear rack,
*75.* Men's Dunnel 3-speed, lugged frame,
*27.* wheels $60. Boy's Raleigh 3-speed, *26*
wheels, $30. KD-4308 after 5 hours. 3-27
Saturday only, Brass bead, Bax ice box, Sand filter, Children's clothing, 4 Cloth, OAK chairs, Hosel collar mirror, tools, old papers, lots of junk, LK7 W. 22nd. 3-27
10 spd. Men's PUCH巾防溅, like new,
$180 to call 749-1815 MWF after 5 p.m. TR
weekends all day. 3-31
FOUND
Found, watch in front of Strong Hall. Call 864-1431 or 2SE Strong. 3-25
*French*; Sunglasses, 1st floor Wesco,
Cheryl 843-6556
3-25
Found 1 pair of two-tone brown woman's
gloves in front of Bailey, Friday the 13th.
Call 749-1292. 3-26
HELP WANTED
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES
ORDERLIES. We will show you how to use our public service to nursing home residents? Our consumer organization, KANNI (KINI) needs your help and input on nursing home conditions and responsibilities. All names and correspondence of the resident
CRUZERS CLUB MEDITERIANEAN. SAIL-
RIDE OFFICES. Office Permitting. Counselor.
Office Permitting. Counselor.
Career. Send $25,000 to Handling or Grip-
Cruzers Club. 153 Box 60129. Sara CRIUSWHOLE. 153 Box 60129. Sara
MCMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF accepted for the Summer Orientation student advertisement in today's paper or come by Strong Hall. An equal opportunity Hail!
Marketing and Business Majors
*STUDENT ASSISTANT WANTED for general office clipping, clamping and filing resources, and other support activities available from April 8-May 17. 17 Requests will be processed on a weekly application to Barbara Ballard or Nancy source Center. Hall number 424-5086. Send resume to Port Authority Office, 320 Broadway, opportunity Affirmative Action Employer 3-30
Get experience in your field plus make up to $200 a week part time. Must have car and be professional.
PSYCH RN. If you are interested in psychiatric nursing, Lawrence Memorial Hospital has a job for you. we have 2 immediate positions available. Full time, 40 hrs. per wk. Work time 16 hrs. per wk. For interview appointment call us at 322-352-3522, Ks 913-843-3800. 3-25
Call 841-7449 Ask for Mr. Lyons
Travel from Oklahoma to Montana with a wheat harvesting crew. Call collect on weekdays, 913-781-4965; on weekdays 913-567-4695.
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS to MAYAN
part-time 5-20 hours per week. Duties may
include bathing, transfers and towels from wheelchairs,
bathing equipment, and other tasks.
41-0333 ANA AA Employees 297
41-0333 ANA AA Employees 297
"Mother's helper" room/board/salary in ex-
cellence. Send resume to: LAWRENCE CO.
Home country 45 min from Lawrence. Work
out flexible hour with student. Move in by
moving like kids & animals 3-50
1-411-466-3000 3-50
Teachers Wanted Elementary and Secondary. Wanted and other states, $15 Registration费. Mail to: 4685 S. 877-7920 Southwest Teachers' Agency, Box 892, 7920 MN 87196.
Need good paying summer work? Look at hard workers. Mmit schedule. Have entire summer free. Make $253 a week. Call for appointment 831-8711. 4-7
The Department of East Asian Languages and Culture, one year non-track team, temporarily employs with China or Japan specialization. The team also includes a professor trained Preach an introductory interdisciplinary course on Chinese or Japanese and Japanese in courses on Chinese or Japanese in two semesters. Ph D. preferred, not must be Master's degree. Months application. Application April 6; 188. Contact G. Carrion florist of the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, 2148 Horsfall Hall, 6050 6433, 862-300-1200. An Emotional Intervention are sought from all qualified people who have been able to obtain ability, veteran status, national origin, education.
Attention. Business, Students—Nationally known company interviewing students for summer work program High profit and demand. Call 831-8711, c
The Clean, an at present area band, is seeking a 4th member with a desire to play drums. Positive mental attitude, creativity and no attachments will. No weight lifters allowed.
Someone to translate two Japanese scientific articles Call Mark 8417-4472 after
Wanted: Executive Director for Associated Students of Kansas, a state-wide student body with a rich history of activities on several university campuses, managing the administrative and fiscal affairs of the university and laying and lobbying on the issue before the Board of Trustees of $10.000 reaggregate with the Board of Trustees of Kansas, 1700 College, Topeka, MS 66212; Attn: George Gallagher, by March 4, 2015.
WORLD'S LARGEST BUSINESS needs you!
Stay home - paid week). Free details.
Enclos stamped envelope. Peggy Jones. 3228
Glacier Dr., Lawrence KI. 60044.
LOST
Lost one blue down parka in Murphy Hall on March 1. 749-0110. 3-25
MISCELLANEOUS
Reward, lost blue folder with typewritten research materials. Contact 9-4, 864-3534
My friends white Peugeot 10-speed has been maqued up. distinctive features: fondness for music, particularly classical. It was last seen attending bairn Weese cycling class in Dublin. I am sure about this bicycle please call 748-3233.
REWARD, red vinyl wallet with all its d&i in
this plus leather checkbook check as well
as bus pass and American Express card.
Call 149-5633
3-27
PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS, PROOF
laminated, laminated in hard plastic. For
details and application cards visit
Production, Productions,
Dept. K Box 525 Tempra, Armenia A821,
858-210-6447.
NOTICE
PILOTS!! Commercial and instrument ground school to start soon. For more information call 841-0688. 3-27
GAY AND LESHISH PEER Counseling: A friend is ready to listen. Referrals through K.U. Information, 864-3506; or Headquarters, 841-2345.
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
Resume & Portfolio Photographs finance
training, BW, Swells Studio 79-161-11
Engagement portraits of quality only a
few can afford. Swells Studio 79-161-
11
NEED EXTRA CASH! Sell your old Gold & Diamonds. Top price for class rings, gold chains, etc. 841-6491, 841-6771, 841-7476.
HEADACIE, BACKACHE, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? CHIARIC PrepCare Chippeau
PLAN 484-6336 commaalization, accepting Black Cross & Lost
Star insurance plans
Senior portrait special, studio taken with a large selection of scenic background available. Swells Studio. 749-1611. 3-25
Design a logo for the KU Sailing Club.
Logo should be simple, bold,
logo design. osc. designer will receive
$15.00 or a club membership. Entries
must include: name of club; contact
phone; bar call at Barb @ 843-3120.
3-25
Complaining a "Best of Lawrence" list. Best pizza drive & where found: burger sandwich steak burger spot for +, best anything steak burger spot for -, best anything Sand lindt nominations to 2000, Wish Sand lindt nominations to 1980, Wish
CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS: April 14-15
Petitions available in Student Senate Office.
filing deadlines: 5:00 p.m. Friday, March
27.
We are looking for another mature, non-
married woman to join us. (I pref. engaged or married) to live with us in an apartment during the next school year. We must be a good mother, as good as possible, but not during Spring or Summer.
Get the FISHING REPORT and top quality live bait and fishing tackle at Anglers Unlimited, 1449 W. 23rd. 3-30
Attractive male 25 is looking for a sincere female, for a close relational tie. The best way to stand out from the crowd is to pay no attention to the best way to be seen. World talk Love Mary & Marry 3-25
DO IT at GREEN'S [The big yellow liquor store.] The selection of fine wines, imported beers, and exotic liquors, 862 West 23rd St. 3:28
For Sale: Nice 75 Sturuki 185 Street bike
in exc. cond. 3,000 mL. Call Mike 749-0851.
We are looking for another non-profit, non-smoking community or marital couple to live with us in an apartment during the next school year. Call 844-6137 as soon as possible. 5-27
I seen 'em! I think . . . answay, I might
sie em at The Harbour Lites, Monday,
March 30
3-25
INTERNATIONAL PEN FRIENDS regarded one of the Greatest PEN Friend Organizations in the world. With over 50 countries, Correspond in English, French, German, and Spanish, service for blind people. For free details write: International Pen Friends PO Box 8325, Stokholm, MISSION, KS 60208. 3-28
GRILS are you nervous about that big date?
Don't be! We just BIG DADGY brush-up course. H'll review all the moves with Call 643-1452. Group rates available. 3-27
The Kansan apologizes for an incorrect ad
for The Clean from March 9 to 11. The Clean is presently auditing his
work. He also calls for information at 814-5346 for additional information.
my 3 tiks a bum Kent. JERE. & PETE. I just want to say TWANKS for all your patients and consideration and encouragement; we can help with the bad jokes & good times. We had a lot of people love you, so I love from your 5 'anglic' snoon babies. Sandy, Paul, Eleanor, Joan & Joan
Bringing in the Spring. BREW-HA-HA to-
night. 3-25
Yes, you may have heard the rumors, well they're true. Wear your lizard if you're a day is coming quite soon. 3-27
3¢
SERVICES OFFERED
self service
copies
now at
ENCORE COPY
CORPS
Sustainable City Care
Vivint Healthcare
2023
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Tutoring Math 00-800, Phxx 100-600, Bus
384, 804, 806, Bui 434-803.96
Do you have a mechanic that is as comfortable in the pits at Watkins Glen as he is working on your Sports Car?
wheel
sports car racing and repair
wheel
We Do!
843-7095
Babyswitch done at my home. Preferably from ages 2-5 years. Call 842-2605. 3-27
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476.
Experienced typa-rial papers, thesis,
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Additional female roommate wanted to share Victorian house. Rent very reasonable. Contact Lynn 842-6855 at 6:00 p.m. 3:27
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Page 10
Universitv Daliv Kansan, March 25, 1981
1 Point 100.20
Baseball team wins 7, faces Baker today
By ARNE GREEN Sports Writer
When the Kansas baseball team went on its spring trip south last week, Coach Floyd Temple said he hoped to break even. The Jayhawks did more than they expected and it itmes, including winning the Jody Rampage Tourney in Edinburg, Texas.
"This is probably the best competition we've ever had since we've been coming down here," Temple said. "I'm quite pleased to come back with a
**THE JAYHAWKS return to action with home doubleheaders against Baker today and Benedictine tomorrow. Both games start at 1 p.m. on Monday. The Huskies play Eight play at Quigley Field against Oklahoma State, the league favorites.**
"We need to take Baker and Benedictine one day at a time," Temple said. "We can't afford to look ahead to Oklahoma State until we play those
the highlight of the Jayhawks' southern trip was a 4-3 come-from-behind victory over Texas Tech in the roundrobin Edinburgh tournament.
The Jayhawks and the Red Raiders entered that final game with identical 3-2 records. Both KU losses were to Texas Tech, however, while the Kansas victories came in a three-game sweep of host school Pan American.
The Red Raiders also led most of the
game, leading 3-1 going into the bottom of the seventh inning.
IN THE SEVENTH inning the Jahyahs, hilts since the second, led off with a pair of walks. Freshman left field Tiem Heinmann then won the game, lining a two-strike pitch over the left-center field wall.
It was KU's first tournament victory ever in Edinburg, and senior second baseman Roger Riley was especially pleased.
"This was a great thrill for me,
winning the tournament after four
years down there," said Riley, one of
the six Jayhawks named to the all-tournament team. "Overall, it was really a good trip."
Joining, Riley on the all-tournament team were Heinmann, pitchers Jim Phillips and Dennis Coplan, first baseman Brian Gray and shortstop Jeff
Coplan, a freshman lefthander who ran his record to 3-0 with two victories and a save in the tournament, has been a pleasant surprise for Temple.
"We really needed one of those young pitchers to do well," "Temple said," and right now Dennis is a little ahead of the others."
Phillips, who picked up a victory and two saves, also pitched well for KU, but the biggest surprise was sophomore Matt Gibson.
GIBSON, A WALK-ON who pitched only 6% innings last year, started the last game against Pan American and won 1+4 on a four-hitter.
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"I had seen Matt's improvement out here and he deserved an opportunity," Temple said. "He pitched himself into the picture with a good outing."
The young pitchers also came through for Kansas in non-tourney games in Texas. In the trip openers at the University of Dallas, freshmen Matt McFarlane and Kyle Pickup picked up victories as the Jayhawks swept the Crushers, 9-2 and 13-5.
Kansas finished the trip with a split at Texas A&M. The Jayhaws jumped to a quick lead in the opener and held on for a 5-4 win.
They weren't as fortunate in the nightcap, opening an 8-1 lead, to lose 8-8 when the Aggies scored five runs in the bottom of the seventh inning.
TEMPLE SAID he was pleased with the team's play throughout the trip.
"A lot of the young players did well, as well as the older ones," he said. "He took the back, Nezil and Foger Riley were in the batters and I kind of felt they would do well."
"Also, Joe Heeney and Tim Heinemann did a fine job defensively and Heinemann won a game for us with his bat."
1981 SPRING CLASS SCHEDULE
Beginning Weaving
Beginning Week
starts April 1 (Wed) — 6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
tee: $28.00 includes some materials
free $28.00 includes some materials
Racketry
starts March 30 (Mon.)—6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fee: $12.00
Filing
starts April 7 (Tues.) —4 weeks: 7-10 p.m.
fee: $12.00
starts April 7 (Tues.)—6 weeks. 7-9 p.m.
fee: $12.00
Batik
starts April 1 (Wed.)—6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fee: $18.00 includes some materials
starts March 30 (Mon.) — 4 weeks. 7-9 p.m.
fee: $10.00
Rigid Heddle Weaving
April 11 and 18 (Sat) — 9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
tax: $20.00 includes use of pre-warped loom
Tapestry Weaving
starts April 1 (Wed.)—6 weeks. 7-9 p.m.
tee: $12.00
Spring
starts April 20 (Mon.)—3 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fees $10.00 includes some materials
Beainning Knittinc
starts March 30 (Mon.)—6 weeks: 7-9 p.m.
lee: $12.00
telling
starts april 20 (Mon.)—5 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fee $10.00
starts March 31 (Tues.)—6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fee: $12.00
Basic Needlepoint
Filet Crochet
starts April 2 (Thurs.) — 6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
lee: $12.00
Fisherman Knitting
starts April 1 (Wed.) — 3 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
tee: $6.00
Advances and Creative Orchestr
starts April 1 (Wed.)—6 weeks; 7:9 p.m.
fee; $12.00
Advanced and Creative Crochet
starts April 2 (Thurs.)—4 weeks, 7-9 p.m.
tee: $8.00
Basic Needlepoint (Days)
Basic School (days)
starts April 1 (Wed.) — 6 weeks; 1-3 p.m.
lee $12.00
Rug Braiding
April 4 (Sat.)—9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
fee: $22.50 includes all materials
Lace Weaves
starts April 2 (Thurs.)—4 weeks, 7-9 p.m.
lee: $12.00
starts April 2 (Thurs.) — 6 weeks; 7-10 p.m.
tee: $18.00. $6.00 machine rental
Knitting Machine
starts March 31 (Tues.)—4 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
tee: $8.00
Natural Dyes
April 25 and 26—9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Fee $20.00 includes all materials.
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CRAFT DEMONSTRATION DAY
SAT. MARCH 28
Our instructors will be demonstrating their craft so stop by to see what you'd like to learn. Demonstrations all day.
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Thursday, March 26, 1981 Vol. 91, No.119 USPS 650-640
Residence hall pot smokers hard to catch
MARK MCDONALDI Kansan staff
MARK KELLY
By KATHY MAAG Staff Reporter
The marjuana aroma hung heavily in the residence hall corridor as illegal smoke filtered through the door. The three students inside had taken the precautions of rolling a towel under the door, burning incense and opening a window, but the smell still escaped.
The partying residents were interrupted by a knock at the door. But by the time the two hall staff members were permitted to enter, the only students were red-eyed students and an open window
"Often by the time the door is opened, the window is already open and innocent people are sitting there," Fred McElenhie, residential programs director, said. "We must witness it or see evidence. The problem is we have no police powers."
Smoking marijuana in the residence halls is in violation of state law, hall contracts and hall policies. But according to interviews with resident assistants and a survey sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls, punishment is rare and minimal.
Kenny Vickers, Wichita freshman, balances precariously on a skateboard as he rolls down Sunflower Road near Flipt Hall.
Only about 20 first-time marjuana offenses have been reported this year, MoEhime said.
MOREOVER, John Mullens, KU police captain, said that virtually no marriana arrests had been made in the shooting.
McEhlenie contends that the drug use has decreased recently and that alcohol abuse has replaced it. R.A.s say they do not report marijuana smokers unless the resident is a flagrant, repeated violator, and students say the smoking is an accepted activity in many halls.
"I don't get as many complaints as I used to," McElhenie said. "A nationwide survey recently reported the use of marijuana was down among students and the consumption of alcohol was up."
"We've simply replaced one problem with another. Alcohol is a bigger problem than drug use."
One R.A. agreed with McElhenie that marijuana smoking was not as common as in the past.
“It’s never been brought to my attention as a big, flagrant problem,” Marjo Tiaro, Garden City junior and an Ellsworth Hall R.A., said. “I’ve never even seen it on the floor.”
The survey of 200 Templin and Lewis hall residents shows otherwise. According to Jeff Thomas, Fort Scott junior, who conducted the survey, 40 percent of residents contacted said they were smokers in a hall who smoked, and the same number expected to smoke in the halls in the near future.
"They're kidding themselves if they say it
doesn't happen, and one 26-year-old scholarship
student in a high school in New York City."
Another hall resident said he had never been
omitted although he smoked daily.
"Two years ago they used to be a bong in a (a scholarship hall) attic. I know. I smoked that."
"Drugs are pretty much the norm at the halls."
"We never take precautions," he said.
"Nobody will turn you in. The R.D. knows about my bong. As long as you don't make a disturbance, you're OK.
MELENHIE SAID that to his knowledge, hall staff members did not smoke.
But some hall staff members admitted they did smoke marjuaqua and knee of others who did.
"No one has even hinted that any of the staff smoke," he said. "I don't think they do. I have a lot of confidence in our staff that they're not into that sort of thing."
McElihene said that the R. A was models for the institution's responsible for the repatriation to the University.
'If I knew of any R.A. that was smoking, they wouldn't be an R.A. ' he said.
"I smoke marjuana, but never in the ball," one staff member said. "I stand to be in a lot of trouble."
See MARIJUANA page 5
'Strangelove still relevant movie's screenwriter says
By AMY S. COLLINS Staff Reporter
In the climate of today's nuclear war possibilities, "Dr. Stranglelove" is hotter and even more relevant than it was first released in 1964.
"Dr. Strangelove: Or. How I Learned to Worry and Love The Bomb!" takes a satirical stab in the nuclear of war and the forces controlling it. Terry Southern, the screenwriter, depicts the humanness of power in this film as preosterouly funny, yet terrifyingly real.
"Because of its relevance, people recognize their need for concern, and they see the frailty of human power," he told about 250 people in London. "The auditorium was almost full for the movie."
According to Southern, who spoke last night after an SUA showing of the film, "Dr. Strangelove" is still a very real and intense situation, 18 years after its release.
SOUTHERN'S VISIT is sponsored by the English department's visiting writers program. He will be available for an informal discussion and questions at 4 p.m. today in the Jayhawk
Southern said that U.S. military forces refused to cooperate with the filming of "Dr. Strangelove" after seeing a watered-down version of the script.
Room of the Kansas Union and at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room.
“After the first screening, military officers and administrators kept laughing and saying they had a guy in their outfit as crazy as Ripley. You should have seen them realize we were talking about them.”
The screenplay for "Dr. Strangelove" is based extensively on "Red Alert," a book by Peter George, a member of the British Royal Air Force. Filming for the movie was done in England, and newsreels were used to show atomic bomb explosions.
Southern said that today, after the long-run success of "Dr. Strangelove," no sufficent safeguards had been developed to prevent a nuclear holocaust.
"WE'RE IN a more perilous situation now than we were then," he said. "The administration thinks they have the mandate to do anything.
The notion of nuclear war is an ultimate
By BRAD STERTZ
Staff Reporter
Committee out of leads in alleged fund abuses
See STRANGELOVE page 5
The chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee said yesterday that an investigation into possible athletic funding abuses had run out of leads.
State Rep. Mike Hayden, chairman of the committee conducting the investigation, said that the last of 12 reported cases of athletic injuries by law enforcement authorities could not be dealt with by the Legislature.
"I would say that we are no longer pursuing the investigation," Hayden said. "We ran down the last lead, but there was no apparent violation of the law."
Hayden sent the Ways and Means Committee staff out to investigate alleged abuses of state funds by the athletic departments and to see whether there had been any illegal actions by state employees.
When the articles came out, Hayden said that he was not totally satisfied with the explanations given to him by the administrators of the schools.
THE INVESTIGATION by Hayden's staff had been going on for nearly six weeks. It was initiated by Hayden after a series of articles, printed by the Kansas City Times, alleged that abuses had occurred in the athletic departments of Kansas and Wichita State University of Kansas and Wichita State University.
Three weeks ago, Hayden said that of 12 complaints he had been given, only one of them had required further study. He would not divulge which school was being investigated further
because he said he did not want to jeopardize the investigation.
Yesterday, even though the investigation was over, Hayden still would not give out any information.
INSTEAD, HE REITERATED what he had said about the investigation before.
"What we did was to look to see if there had been any misuse of state funds." Hayden said. "We were not ever concerned about possible NCAA rules violations.
"But on the one case that we did look into further, we tracked down as much as we could and presented what we had to the attorney general's office."
Hayden said that the nature of the offenses was not enough to justify legislative or judicial
THE ONLY WAY that Hayden's committee could have taken disciplinary action on any violation was if there had been a violation of stalemate.
"Based on the information that we have at the present, there is no need to continue the investigation," Hayden said. "No further action on the matter is planned for now."
An unusual aspect of the investigation was that most members of the Ways and Means Committee were unaware of its existence. Chief among those surprised about the investigation was State Rep. Bunt Den, R-Topeka, vice-chairman of the House committee.
State Rep. Loren Hohman, D-Topke, minority leader on the Ways and Means Committee, said that the study deliberately was conducted quietly by Hayden.
Shankel to give convocation address
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel will address
the annual meeting of *10* this afternoon in
Woodruff Adaptertown.
Shankel has said that he would discuss major issues facing the University. He has never been involved in discussions.
The convocation was suggested by the KU Chapter of the American Association of University Professors.
Wooldruff Auditorium is on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
my GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter
Lawrence lawmakers battle against Regents budget cut
The Lawrence delegation of State representatives plans to wang the same battle against buddies in the Senate.
But State Rep. John M. Solbach, D-Lawrence, predicted that unless the proposed severance tax on mineral production passed, efforts to reinstate the state budget would be Board of Regents budget would be unsuccessful.
Sobach said that Lawrence and Manhattan lawmakers had considered offering an amendment similar to that unsuccessfully offered in the Senate by State Sen. Jane Eldridge, R-NJ.
"But there won't be enough funds without passing another piece of legislation first." Solbach, referring to the severance tax, said yesterday.
THE HOUSE was handed the Regents appropriations bill yesterday after a 21-13 vote in the Senate. Eldridge's efforts to restore the university were followed by those whose districts included other Renssons schools.
The Senate bill reduces the governor's proposed increases for faculty pay from 8 to 7 percent and for the universities' operating expenses by a 15 percent average increase in student tuition.
The Senate attached a rider to the bill Tuesday that requires all university professors to hold objections.
THE HOUSE WAYS and Means Committee
He said, however, that support for any effort to spend money was scarce at the Statehouse.
Sobach said that when the bill came up for House debate, "we'll work with a whole range of possibilities, none of which will come to fruition without more money."
"I would guess that we'll handle the budget along the lines of what the Senate did with some minor adjustments," Hayden, R-Atwood, said.
will begin hearings on the bill today. Committee Chairman Mike Hayden said there might not be any more cuts proposed.
don't have kates. "he said.
In the Hairy Takes 63 of the 128 members to pass any measure."
THE FATE of the Regents budget and other
governance tasks to the fate of the
severance law, be said.
Gov. John Carlin's proposed mineral tax, passed by the House this month, is being studied by the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee.
"We knew last session that without another source of money, there would not be enough." Soon, she said.
He agreed with Senate Minority Leader Jack Steineger who accused the Senate of making deep cuts in the state budget to avoid passing the governor's severance tax.
"That appears to be the sentiment by the party in power in the Senate," Solbach said.
Steiniger, D-Kansas City, made that accusation Sunday when the Senate debated the Roe case.
Police deny mix-up followed Med Center shooting
By BRIAN LEVINSON Staff Reporter
Press reports had said confusion over which department was in charge of the investigation had hampered initial efforts to apprehend the killer. The reports also said that Kansas Bureau of Investigation assistance was not requested by the authorities after the shooting, because of the confusion.
Police officials denied yesterday that there had been any confusion between the KU police and Kansas City, Kan., police after last Friday's shooting at the University of Kansas Medical
"There was never any confusion," Mike Dailey, Kansas City, Kan., police spokesman said. "The KU Police Department has been in tact since the shooting." The KU Police Department has been assisting them."
coordinated effort between the three departments." Dalley said.
DAILEY ALSO said the KBI was involved in the investigation, so unaffected, from the begin-
There has been a good, cooperative, well-
Mike Thomas, University director of KU police, said he did not think there was a major problem.
"We relied very heavily on the Kansas City, Kan. police simply because of its manpower compared to our small operation at the Med Center." Thomas said. "We needed it initially the KU police would be saddled with the responsibility of providing increased security."
THOMAS SAID THAT if someone thought there was some confusion it was probably because the KU police relied so heavily on the Kansas City police.
"The shooting occurred on the KU campus and was therefore within our jurisdiction," Thomas said. "From that standpoint, the rule of thumb is that it is our case."
Thomas said KU police notified the Kansas City KB1 agent immediately after the shootings.
"Also, because the shooting took place on a Friday night, the normal administration threshold is much higher," mesh
together until two days later when people returned to their offices." Thomas said.
In a prepared statement, Jack Pearson, acting director of KU police at the Med Center, said standard police procedures were followed after the shooting.
"The cooperation between the three departments has been and continues to be excellent."
Confusion is just one issue police have had to deal with because of the shooting.
Kansas City, Kan., police shot out about $5,000 worth of outside lights following the shooting, to protect police sniper. The lights had to be shot because no one could be found to turn them off.
"We had snippers in a high area so if we flushed the suspect out they could see him," Gary Chancellor, Kansas City, Kan., police captain, said yesterday. "We wanted the area where the snipers were dark so the suspect could not see them."
THE SNIPERS WERE stationed on top of the Med Center's multi-level parking garage.
Police shot out four lights on top of two 35-foot
high poles on the top level of the garage, Bob
and other facilities operations at the Med Center, said
"We asked repeatedly to have the lights shut off, but after waiting 20 minutes it became obvious they could not find anyone who knew how to turn them off." Chancellor said.
Since the lights were in the parking garage,
See SHOOTING page 5
There will be an internal investigation into the way Kansas City, Kan., police responded to the shooting.
Before parts to fix the lights can be purchased,
University administrators must decide who will
be responsible.
BROUGHT SAID TWO of the lights had been fixed because Facilities Operations had the parts in stock. The other two damaged lights were fix temporarily until permanent parts could be obtained. Brought said he did not know when the parts would arrive.
"Whenever one of our officers discharges his gun, a shooting team is notified and they conduct an investigation to see if the discharge was instilled," he said.
Weather
MUSIC
SMILE
It will be fair today with a high temperature in the low to mid 70s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
It will be cloudy tonight with a 30 per cent chance of thunderstorms and a low temperature.
Winds will be gusty and out of the south at 15 to 25 mph.
Tomorrow will be cloudy with a high in the low 70s.
9
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Haig still top adviser, Reagan says
WASHINGTON—President Reagan went out of his way yesterday to reaffirm Secretary of State Alexander Haig's status as his "primary adviser" on foreign affairs despite creation of a crisis management team headed by Vice President George Bush.
But officials said the issue of foreign policy control would remain unsettled until the new system was tested in action.
The president took the unusual step of reading a prepared statement to that effect to reporters on the South Lawn where a helicopter was taken to take off. The president then announced that the team would be back.
The issue became something of a public power struggle Tuesday when Haig said he was surprised and enthusiastic to read in newspapers that the White House planned to put Bush in charge of handling foreign and domestic crises.
Reagan said in his statement that "the secretary of state is my primary adviser on foreign affairs and in that capacity he is the chief formulator and spokesman for foreign policy for this administration. There is not nor has there ever been any question about this."
Reagan said Haig had not threatened to resign, as one report stated.
Bush, in his first public comment on the new position, told reporters that his appointment in no way reflected a lack of White House confidence in him.
Court upholds murder conviction
TOPEKA-Arguments that a shot to the head was merely a young woman's way of helping a friend commit suicide were rejected yesterday by the Kansas Supreme Court, which upheld the woman's first-degree murder conviction.
"It it was the hand of Kathleen Cobb which pushed the plunger on the cocaine syringe both times and it was Kathleen Cobb who picked up the pistol, found (Henry) Davis' temple and pulled the trigger," stated the unanimous decision written by Justice Harold Herd.
"Davis did not destroy himself. It is possible Davis may have assisted Cabb in destroying himself, but the actual destruction was performed by Kirkman."
Cobb is serving a life sentence in Lansing Penitentiary for the February 1980 death of 22-year-old Davis of Lawrence.
The defendant had appealed her murder conviction on the grounds that the jury should have been instructed on an 1885 Kansas territorial Statute that established that a death sentence would be imposed.
In the first test of the law in the history of the Kansas Supreme Court, however, the justices held that the statute did not apply in Cobb's case.
Embassy attacked in San Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, EI Salvador-Gunmen pumped rocket-propelled grenades and machine gun fire into the U.S. Embassy yesterday in the third attack on three weeks, injuring no one but blowing a gaping 20-foot hole in the mission's front wall, witnesses said.
The attack was carried out about 2:10 p.m. CST by eight men dressed in civilian clothes and armed with a hand-held grenade launcher and several submachine guns, said Amelia Brenes, a waitress in a restaurant across the street from the embassy.
The attackers calmly walked away from the embassy after the shooting stopped and piled into two waiting cars, sald Oscar Duras, whose office is located in the building.
Journalists who had witnessed the attack said Salvadoran police guarding the bunker-like building opened fire on the unidentified attackers, missing them, but critically injuring two passengers in a bus passing by the embassy.
It was the fourth attack on the embassy since Sept. 16, when alleged leftist guerrillas battled to topple the U.S.-supported government shot two U.S. troops.
Before the attack yesterday, government spokesmen revealed that the 30-year-old daughter of President Jose Napoleon Duarte had survived an apparent assassination attempt similar to one last week against the interior minister.
A red pickup tried to cut off a bullet-proof van carrying Guadalupe Duarte de Navos as she and her chauffeur drove through downtown San Sebastián.
No shots were fired, and Navos and the driver were uninjured.
UMW chief expects short walkout
WASHINGTON—United Mine Workers President Sam Church Jr., said yesterday that 106,000 soft-coal miners would strike at midnight tonight, and he hopes the workers will get their share of the pay.
Despite tentative agreement on a new three-year contract, the union planned to adhere to its traditional "no contract, no work" rule until the rank-and-file members ratify the pact, Church said. The current agreement expires at 12:01 a.m. tomorrow.
If the rank-and-file approves the new pact, it would mean only a five-day strike. The work stoppage was not expected to have significant impact on the
Since most miners do not work Saturday or Sunday, it would cost them a three-day wage of wages worth $253.44 at top scale.
Even if ratification occurs Tuesday, most miners will not return to work on Thursday next week. Next Wednesday is a paid holiday in observance of leap year.
WASHINGTON—The Democratic chairman of the House Tax-writing Committee predicted yesterday that President Reagan would get a smaller tax cut than he wants, but Republican leaders said they would seek the full 30 percent reduction.
Official predicts smaller tax cut
Chairman Dan Restenkowski, D-Dill, said his House Ways and Means Committee would favor a lower tax rate cut, targeted on the poor, middle- income households.
Rep. Barber Connable of New York, the ranking Republican on the Tax-writing Committee, said nothing had come out of several meetings he has held.
Treasury Secretary Don Regan said Rostenkowski's remarks were "most unfortunate," particularly because the Ways and Means panel had criticized the idea of a "certain" rule.
"The tax rate cuts of 10 percent a year for three years are essential to the effectiveness of the total economic program." he said.
Possible lead found in Atlanta case
An FBI spokesman said the agency was working with its Georgia bureau to determine whether Frankie Edmonds, 32, arrested last Sunday in the abduction of a 9-year-old black boy in New York's Duchess County, could be a suspect in the Atlanta case.
NEW YORK—The FBI last night that it was investigating the possibility that an ex-convict arrested for abducting a black child while driving a truck with Georgia license plates might be linked to the case of Atlanta's slain and missing children.
Twenty black children have been slain and two others have been reported missing in the Atlanta area during the past 20 months.
East Fishkill Police Chief Andrew Crisolo said Edmonds was arrested in the town, which is about 80 miles north of New York City, last Sunday and was charged with unlawful imprisonment and endangering the welfare of a child.
Duchess County sheriff Fred Scorallick said FBI had notified his office yesterday that it wanted to interview the suspect now being held on $25,000.
Authorities said Edmonds, who had no identification on him, was believed to be from Queens and was driving a rented Ryer truck with Georgia
Crisolo said Edmonds also was carrying a flier promoting a march in New York City honoring the slain children when he was arrested.
Low salaries linked to librarian turnover
By CINDY CAMPBELL Staff Reporter
Since 1976, KU's librarians have been complaining about low salaries—and relief seems nowhere in sight.
In 1975, the median salary at KU ranked 50th among the 105 Association of Research Libraries member institutions survey, KU's ranking had fallen to 92nd.
According to the KU Library Faculty Assembly salary committee, since 1975 KU librarians' salaries have not kept pace with peer libraries.
"We're not arguing that we should be anywhere above the middle of the ARL ranking, but our salaries are so low now that we're having great difficulty at retaining competent people," Joe Gershoff, salary committee member, said.
FOR THE PAST two years, KU salaries have ranked in the bottom 12 percent of ARL institutions.
The salary committee report said that many universities had taken steps to correct similar salary declines when the faculty level a落等级 of that to KU's.
In 1975, when KU ranked 50th among ARL institutions, there were no resignations. By 1979 the ARL rank increased and resignations had risen to 12 percent annually.
When the University of Missouri was ranked in the 80s during two consecutive years, the university took corrective measures. MU raised its rank from 89 to 38 between 1976 and 1978.
ACCORDING TO Ted Sheldon, head of the salary committee, the link between salaries and full-time employee turnover cannot be ignored.
"Most librarians can't afford the salary being offered here. Married librarians with kids are out of the question. They have to consider how they're going to feed their kids," Shelden said.
KU is an excellent training ground for recent college graduates with no experience, according to Sheldon. He said the school's emphasis on lowering the quality of library service,
"Reference librarians aren't worth their salt for a year after they're hired anyway because it takes them that long
to discover the nuances of the library system. In our situation, we have people training new librarians that "understand" qualified themselves," Sheldon said.
SHELDON ATTRIBUTED the salary lag to legislative inaction.
"The state determines the type of university and library they want to have. And they determine who will work here," he said.
"Acting Chancellor Skanlke is shocked by the fact that he's temporary. The legislator know they are going to have to face him again next year.
"Over the period of six or seven years, these problems are going to affect the quality of state education here in Kansas."
Wescoe to address national conference
A two-day national conference on business and the humanities begins today at the Kansas Union and will feature a keynote address tonight by W. Clarke Wescoe, former KU chancellor. His speech and the conference will not be open to the public.
The conference will end a three-year program to develop a closer relationship between the School of Business and KU's humanities departments. The program was funded by a $300,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Wescoe, who was chancellor from 1960 to 1969, will be among 120 business executives and business and humanities faculty from across the nation expected to attend the conference.
board of Sterling Drug Inc. in new York City, will deliver his speech at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
Wescoe, now the chairman of the
the conference will include a report on the KU project, sessions on broader issues in business and the challenges and a variety of speakers.
"It is our hope that the conference papers, responses and discussions will encourage others to embark on new research in curricular development to strengthen the commitment to general education in the business curriculum," John Tolletton, dean of the college and coordinator committee, said.
He said the exchange between the business school and the humanities department would continue despite the end of the program.
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The theft, which occurred between Monday and Tuesday, was discovered by a maid in a residence in the 2100 block of 35th Street. They found no signs of forced entry.
LAWRENCE POLICE are uncertain whether the $15,550 sterling of silver tableware this week is connected with a series of silver burglaries that occurred in December, Lawrence police L.L. Lyse Sutton said yesterday.
A series of burglaries that began in late 1980 resulted in the theft of almost $200,000 of sterling silver; said Ron McBride, a police chief. No arrests have been made.
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University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981
Page :
Budig outstanding president West Virginia colleagues say
By KATHRYN KASE
Staff Reporter
If nominations for administrative sainthood were taken tomorrow, Gene Budd would be at the top of the list, according to West Virginia University administrators, faculty and students.
Budig, KU's new chancellor, is president at West Virginia, where fellow administrators describe him by using the words "exceptional."
"He is outstanding in terms of being able to delegate authority," Ray Haas, vice president of administration, said. "He also has the amazing ability to grasp what kind of style a particular situation demands, that may sound like a man for all seasons, but he knows when to act."
HAAS, ALSO A professor of administration, said Budig was an outstanding administrator because he was both a student and practitioner of the discipline. He said that his education in administration field by teaching courses in higher education administration.
"As long as I have known him, he is one of the few presidents or chancellors in the country who
teaches classes," George Taylor, vice president of student affairs, said.
Taylor characterized Budig as being particularly active in minority faculty, student and administrator recruitment.
"When he appointed me, I was the first black vice president in the history of West Virginia University," Taylor said. "I will think you are the most courageous individuals in that regard in higher education today."
During Budig's tenure at West Virginia, black student enrollment has increased 30 percent, Taylor added.
FACULTY SALARIES also have risen, Robert Swartout, faculty chairman, said.
"West Virginia University is a member of the Southern Regional Education Board." Swartout said. "When he took over, our faculty became more involved in the SREB faculty salary list. Now we are approaching parity."
Swartout, also faculty representative to WVU's budget committee, said that salaries still were not ideal, but that was because the state had then constraints imposed by the state legislature and Board of Regents.
Faculty relations is another of Budig's strong points, Swartout said.
"He makes it a practice to meet with the faculty of each department of the university," he said. "In the first year, he met every faculty member."
WITH STUDENTS, Budig maintains an open-door policy, Taylor said.
Rick Ridgeway, editor of the school's student newspaper, the Athemenum, affirmed Budig's quest for student opinions.
"He even goes to freshman orientation," Ridgeway said. "And that was a precedent here. Budig is one of my classmates. And I don't mean that as a slam."
Budig also has made gains for students at the state level, according to Bill Cambell, student body vice president.
"Through his efforts and the Regents, we are allowed additional input at the state legislative level," Cambell said. "In my viewpoint, the students have never been given by him to the legislature."
Budig, who was appointed chancellor by the Kansas Board of Regents last Friday, will take office Aug. 1.
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Lawrence High coach to head KU athletic fund
He also has coached at Coffeyville Junior College, Russell High School and Rich邱 Township Central High School in Olympia Fields, III. At Lawrence high he also is the girls cross country coach and assistant track coach.
sponsored by Panhellenic Association and the Interfraternity Council
The head basketball coach at Lawrence High School has been appointed executive director of the educational Fund for athletic scholarships.
Time . . . 9:30-2:30
Before coming to Lawrence High four years ago, Frederick was an assistant coach at Stanford University for two years, at Brigham Young University three years and at KU under basketball Ted Owens for two years.
By REBECCA CHANEY Staff Reporter
Athletic Director Bob Marcum announced yesterday that the coach, Bob Frederick, would replace John Novetry, who resigned March 1 to become national sales manager for Packer Plastics of Lawrence. Frederick's appointment is effective next Tuesday.
A 1982 KU graduate, Frederick is working toward a doctorate in educational administration at KU.
A Kirkwood, Mo., native, Frederick played basketball at KU under former coach Dick Hart. His last year was 1961. He began his career career as a graduate assistant under Harp, Owens' predecessor, in 1962.
Place . . . Kansas Union Ballroom
"My wife and I had made a decision in 1977 that if we could get a high school coaching job in a university town where he lived, I would look at," Frederick said last year.
Frederick, 41, said he was glad to get back into college athletics. This will be his first administrative position.
"The big push for contributions is normally in May and June with meetings at various places around the state," he said.
According to Marcum, the athletic department received about 60 applications for the position Frederick of seven candidates interviewed.
"He's here in Lawrence," Marcum said. "That's an advantage since he can come down and look things over before he actually takes over."
Lawrence High has released Frederick from his contract, effective April.
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"The Board of Education voted today to release my contract and I'll finish at the school on April 1," he said.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981
Opinion
Shankel holds the key
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel has reserved a 4:15 p.m. appointment today with the entire University community.
In Woodruff Auditorium, Shankel will discuss important KU issues during a convocation, an event that could be enlightening for the University. That is, if one important condition is met.
Openness, Shankel must be as direct as possible with everyone during the convocation. Simply reaffirming KU's high academic standards or reading a prepared University Relations' speech will not be enough.
The KU leader must level with the community if KU's problems are going to be tackled. Otherwise the proceedings will be a complete waste of everyone's time.
Unlike his predecessor, Archie Dykes, Shankel has always been an open-minded, easy-to-talk to person. A convocation could be the perfect way for Shankel to talk directly to the community.
Issues that need to be discussed, among others, include academics and athletics, tenure, free speech and KU's legislative dilemma.
For too long, students and faculty have been kept in the dark concerning these and other vital issues. In a time of controversy and transition, it is important for all of us to be aware of the issues.
Shankel now holds the key. If he keeps to his tradition, today's convocation will prove to be something to remember him by.
Reagan administration cuts could derail Amtrak service
California over spring break. That's the place to be! I boarded Amtrak's "Southwest Limited" at Lawrence for the 1,750 mile, 29-hour run to Los Angeles. A pleasant, uniformed attendant took my bag and showed me to the side airplane-style seat. Minutes later we were rushing into the night, heading for the sun and surf of the west coast.
The ride was smooth and without the clickety-clack of old-time rail travel; the evening soup, pan-sautéed trout and risotto, a spaghetti dish, and coach fare from Los Angeles was only $231, about $100 less than by
PETER
SOMERVILLE
MICHAEL SCHNEIDER
air. There was only one problem traveling Amtrak: it is now so popular that reservations for long-distance travel must be made weeks in advance.
Few rail journeys in the world could match the U.S. overland routes for sheer length and scenic magnificence. And with air-conditioned, wall-to-wall carpeted carpets, reading lights, 118-volt power outlets for electric shavers and dryers, dining car service, bar, electric piano in the lounge, sleeping bunks . . . Amtrak's new Superliner facilities are excellent.
When the U.S. government set up its own passenger train authority in 1971, Amtrak was the biggest rail modernization program in the history of the steel wheel. It was believed then that a passenger rail service would many overseas, there was a need to maintain a passenger rail service throughout the country.
Now, however, the Reagan administration Office of Management and Budget is recommending drastic cutbacks on Amtrak and huge increaseares. Reagan's proposal would force Amtrak to dismantle its passenger rail service everywhere except the Northeast corridor, between Boston and Washington, according to National Conference of State Railway officials.
The point is that most overseas rail networks are subsidized, and under the proposed funding cuts no rail system—not even Japan's—could survive. The United States now has the dubious honor of possibly becoming the only developed nation without a passenger rail system.
on the nationwide Amtrak system, passenger fares offset only 41 percent of the system's operating costs. Congress has mandated that Amtrak users pay 80 percent of costs by 1985, but it has not reduced the current administration's proposed level of 80 percent user cost is wildly unrealistic.
Fares would increase from 50 percent to 300 percent over current levels—and that’s not even taking inflation into consideration—but the airline would go from $13.50 to $33.50. Of course, most passengers
wouldn't tolerate these face hikes, and patronage would drown off substantially.
On the Los Angeles-San Diego run, the second busiest in the nation, passenger fares now make up 82 percent of operating costs, according to figures supplied by Amtrak. Even this run would be discontinued by Reagan's $613 million budget proposal. Certainly it would make more sense to eliminate the rail lines that are worst producers first, if cuts are inevitable.
About 22,000 Amtrak employees would have to be laid off if services are limited to the Northeast corridor, with expected labor settlements costing $200 million in the first year alone.
Obviously, the more service Amtrak provides, the fewer employees will be affected by the cuts and the labor protection costs less. And if aggressive pricing and marketing strategies are employed, even greater finances could become available for operating other routes.
It is ludicrous that just when Amtrak's ridership is increasing, when train on-time performance is the highest ever and when brand-new railroad cars are in service, the administration is proposing to lower the already meager commitment to passenger trains.
A balanced budget does make sense. But the allocation of funds within the Department of Transportation needs investigation. Despite the rhetoric, the proposed cuts are not equal; Amtrak is threatened with obliteration, although the funding would be only slightly affected.
..uns save energy, ease traffic congestion and pollution, use existing tracks, serve large and small towns. Yet they have never received the support funds given to other transportation systems.
If we want to get federal spending under control, then sure, we are going to go without some luxuries. But providing an efficient nationwide passenger rail service is a government responsibility. And as gas prices and air travel costs become prohibitive for many people even now, the government is now the time to upgrade and improve the existing rail facilities—not tear them down.
High-speed railways, before diesel and some operating at 127 mph, were developed in other countries in 1909. Today they have been developed to even greater standards.
Are we to close down what we have not really tried? The true potential of a modern railway has not been developed in this country. When the people are provided with a fast, modern service at reasonable cost, rail patronage has skyrocketed in other countries.
It seems that the Reagan transportation advisers either want a paying service or no service! This is what is being attempted by the budget proposals now in committee in both houses of Congress. That concept has been rejected upright by European railways, but it appears we can't learn from anybody else. As long as you read the opus of Paul Tundt funding must be reversed; railroads don't always pay, but they do provide an essential service.
REGENTS
90e Montos B
Students, faculty, alumni . . . I'm proud to introduce your new chancellor.
America's paranoia threatens world
He was irate in French. She was up against the wall in both French and English, truly a distressful situation, much compounded by occasional emphatic jabs from his index finger.
"You Americans are cowards, you are scared," he said flatly, pushing the lolstice of red socks over his feet.
She took a brace-myself gulp from the wine and, returning to her hank, offered him, it was the first time he had a casual breakfast.
But she had lied, or rather, in the heat of that sticky summer night, she couldn't yet admit, even to herself, that his accusation, indeed her own dreaded suspicion, might be true.
That is, at the very base of all the arms buildup, the nuclear strategies, the military aid and the superpower hands-on policies, is the horrid fear that "we" never not survive. But "we," in this case, is much more than a two-letter personal pronoun in the first person plural.
Although March 1981, the United States of America, is much removed from June 1980, Bourges, France, in many respects, what clearly unites the two situations is the shade of truth in the young French student's statement. People here are scared, particularly the powerful people, and the frantic fear of some may well be edging the rest of us to destruction.
Europeans are frightened too, a fact not only evidenced in the Frenchman's fiery debate, but even more so in a burgeoning mood of anti-militarism that is spreading throughout Europe. Even across our northern border, the Canadians are acared, and their fear surfaced recently in hostile demonstrations against visiting President Ronald Reagan.
American students are scared as well, staging quiet demonstrations and hunger strikes in protest of U.S. involvement in El Salvador, such as the recent attack on KU Latin American Solidarity July this week.
What, then, is all this fear about? The answer is very simple: survival.
The irate French student was speaking for more than himself and his three companions
when he accused the United States of destroying "us" in its fear-driven military enemy. He was, he claimed, a Communist, so perhaps he spoke nobi for the protelariat, for the workers and students of France, who in turn are the soldiers, of which he has defiled in order to preserve the rich man's world.
Belgians, the West Germans, the Dutch, the Spanish, the British, for Europe as a whole, or rather as a portion, a portion of the world, that is, which happens to lie quite unfortunately, and uncomfortably, between the tremendous jaws of the mighty East and West.
However, it seems more likely that he spoke for many more, for the French in general, for the
AMY HOLLOWELL
Quite clearly, there is fear among the Europeans, and the rest of the world, that they will be gobbled up by one or the other of the two superpowers, if not by both, in the Soviet-American struggle for supremacy. There is fear, as a British Labor Left-Winger put it, "that we will be annihilated to save the United States and the eastern part of the U.S.S.R."
Yet, unlike the fears of the Europeans, who helplessly stare at U.S. missiles on one side and at Soviet ones on the other, American fears, generally ungrounded, border on paranoia. Moreover, we don't even stop in our paranoid rage to think about the consequences.
But Americans are scared, too; they are scared because their leaders and policy-makers, who feel that their power and influence are somehow jeopardized by a strong Soviet Union, are scared. And their "we" is a way of life, and that "is" diametrically opposed to "theirs."
It had to have been paranoid that prompted a bristly Secretary of State Alexander Haig to assert before a congressional committee last week that a Communist take-over of El Salvador
is the hoped for second stage in a four-part Soviet plot to win Central America, to be followed, "obviously," he said, by control of South America, and then by who-knows-what.
These were hardly the gracious words of a confident diplomat. Instead, they were harsh stabs at a highly sensitive rival, at a rather inportune time, from a deeply insecure and somewhat macho U.S. Army general. But, even worse, they are received in the international community as American doctrine, raising fears in Moscow, in Peking, in Bonn, in London and back across the Atlantic in the cities and towns of a baffled America.
Pacifists and anti-militarists regard such dangerous rhetoric as stirring up unnecessary trouble. So they do all they can: they demonstrate, as the Canadians did upon Keanan's visit, that the Canadian air force had recently against the proposed deployment of U.S. missiles at Holland's Soesterberg Airbase.
Not that the Soviets are not guilty of stirring up trouble as well. After all, their 1979 invasion of Afghanistan hardly made the rest of us feel secure. Of course America responded in protest, boycotting the Moscow embassy and emulating it in the Soviets. But we don't tend to see ourselves in the same light.
So then given the opportunity to make amends, the Americans turn up their nirses and flip off the Russians, as the Reagan administration did recently in response to Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev's invitation to summit talks. We just don't seem to think.
And now the Reagan administration announces a campaign to convince Western Europeans that they simply defend the United States against militant Islam, abandon their "rather-red-than-dead" attitude.
For the Europeans, though, their attitude is not the problem. They want peace, they want to survive. If compromise stops war, then compromise is for it is many Europeans. They are arguing.
He handed the half-full bottle back to her. He was silent but his eyes were screaming at her, and he turned around.
MARKLEY PROPHANADEN'S LUNDER
© PUBLISH BY GIACOMO BURAUE
MAXNEY
“Perhaps,” he said, in English, with a casual shrug, and it made her think.
PERIHANDADEWS LEEER.
© 1981 BY CHUGO DUBAE
ECONOMY
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The University Daily KANSAN
(USPS 658-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Monday. Mail your resume to USPS, Attn: Wanda J. A. Crawford, $2 a mailer in Douglas County and $1 for six months of $3 a month outside the county. Student subscriptions are $a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lafayette, Kansas.
Editor David Lewis
| DEVELOPED LEADER | |
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| Managing Editor | Ellen Iwamoto |
| Editorial Editor | Don Munday |
| Art Director | Bob Schaud |
| Campus Editor | Scott Fausn |
| Associate Campus Editor | Gene Myers |
| Assistant Campus Editors | Ray Formanek, Susan Schoenmaker |
| Assignment Editor | Kathy Brumueli |
| Sports Editor | Kevin Bertels |
| Associate Sports Editor | Tracee Hamilton |
| Entertainment Editor | Shawn McKay |
| Lesbian/Female Entertainment Editor | Blake Gunprecht |
Business Manager Terri Fry
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National Sales Manager Barb Light
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Kansas Adviser Chuck Chowina
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He r e r u a l
University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981
Page 5
Marijuana
From page 1
1 FOOT PAGE
HE SAID HE had not turned in any violators.
put them together in my bottles.
"If it were blasted at me, I would smoke in the room, like if I could kick down the hall and get stoned from the smoke, I would knock on the door and confront them," he said.
"It's best not to be so obvious," he said. "Open a window or take it out of the building."
The first punishment for marijuana smoking is a warning from the R.A., he said. On the second offense, an incident report is written by the R.A. and sent to the hall's resident director and Office of Criminal Investigation for an accumulation of violations or a recurring problem leads to hall probation and possible eviction.
"I don't think an R.A. would write up an incident report unless it is obvious," he said.
The police usually are not called, the staff member said.
"A student doesn't deserve the aggravation of the police if we can take care of it in the halls," he said.
ORP AND POLICE must give 24-hour notice to a resident before they can enter a room without permission, McEhlenie said. Without 24-hour notice, police and law authorities may enter only if they are invited, if they have a search warrant or in a "life and death emergency."
KU police learn about marijuana violations from resident complaints or if they evidence inquiries.
However, the officer does not arrest the student, he said. He may confiscate the plant and equipment.
district attorney, who makes the decision whether to prosecute.
But fear of punishment does not scare residents, another resident said
"You won't get caught if you're smart," he said.
Strangelove
R.A.s AGREE THAT secrecy is the best
nolicy.
From page 1
"I've never written anybody up," Shahin Tabriz, Tehran, Iran, junior and a McColum R A. R., "if I did write up a resident, it would just increase tension.
'I try to handle it myself. To be honest, a lot of people smoke and a lot of people deal in the halls,'
'I don't really care.'
"If I hear about it, I don't care. I just don't want to see it."
monstrosity. It's hard to imagine that those responsible can believe it's possible."
Southern urge the audience to join him in his fight against nuclear arms and power, suggesting that they write their congressmen to complain.
I've been active for as long as I can,
and I've found that the whole thing is
suckin. There's no doubt about it.
Maybe I should be a bit more active.
"This issue is not as simple as ignoring fire. We still haven't dealt with the whole problem of fires."
He accused some nuclear advocates of being unscrupulous and said they used the cause for punishment.
Southern cited the 23-story complex built
Shooting
From page 1
Brought we he thought the garage's operating expenses budget would pay the bill. But Don Kearnes, director of parking services, said he did not know who would pay for the lights.
"Because of the unusual aspects of why the lights were damaged, I don't suppose we could hold the city of Kansas City, Kan. responsible," she said. "I thought (the police) for the way they got the lights off."
OROKE SAID HE had not talked to Brought about the exact extent of the damage, but said he was at least confident.
Kearnes said the decision would be made by Rodger Oroke, University director of support services. Oroke said the bill would probably be used to cover a budget but a final decision had not been made yet.
beneath the Pentagon as an escape for privileged military and government officials. He said that the area was actually supposed to be war operations in the event of a nuclear attack.
While administrators decide who will pay for the lights, the investigation into the shooting continues. Police said yesterday that there were three shots, and the police leads the police checked into earlier fell through.
Marc Beck, 25, a second-year resident on duty in the emergency room, and Ruth Rytford, 42, both of Kansas City, Kan., were killed instantly by the killer's shots.
Funeral services were conducted for Beck in Omniha Heights and for Hybelt in Kansas City, Ky.
The killer walked into the emergency room late Friday night, fired four shots and fled, after exchanging jumfite with two Kansas City. Kan, who were in the emergency room at the time.
May renovation planned at Wichita Med Center
HE THEN described the filming of "Dr.
Strangelove" and its desired effects.
Weichert said the first phase would include reduction of the window area and installation
The first phase of a $4.4 million renovation project at the University of Kansas School of Medicine - Wichita will begin in May, Allen will be director of facilities planning, said yesterday.
A Wichita firm, Hahner, Foreman and Harness Inc., was the low binder for phase one work, which will include energy conservation renovation. The firm's bid was $13 million.
of double-glazed windows and sun screens on the exterior walls.
A new roof, roof insulation and replacement of electric heating and air conditioning systems with less expensive gas systems also be part of the renovation work. Weichert said
The first phase of the project should be completed next January. The Kansas Legislature appropriated $1.3 million for the first phase of the renovation work.
"We filmed it in black and white because it seemed to suit the ultimate somber notion of the subject," he said. "Eighteen years ago it was difficult to imagine a serious film in color."
Southern said that the director, Stanley Kubrick, also preferred black and white. He described working with Kubrick as working with a one-man show.
"Stanley Kubrick's idea is not to be a director, but a film maker to the end," he said. "Kubrick is different in the sense that he might resent himself for being an outsider, taking himself, even right down to writing the music."
"But he's a genius."
Although Southern was reluctant to say that "Dr. Stranglove" was a complete success, he did acknowledge that a movie still popular after two decades had to be satisfying the public.
The film won the British Screen Writers Award in 1964.
Southern gave hints last night of a possible sequel to "Dr. Strangelove." He said he was just finishing up a screenplay based on an experience of the late Pete Sellers, who played three parts in the film. The screenplay is about armored ships to Third World countries. It is called "Grossing Out."
Some of Southern's other screenplays include Candy Kisses," The Cincinnati Kid," "Barbary Blake," and many others.
SPIRIT SQUAD TRYOUTS-1981
Be a part of a great tradition!
Dates for tryouts for the K.U. Spirit Squad have been set.
All students interested in trying out should meet in Allen Field House at 5:00 p.m. on March 26th for an informational meeting. The first clinic will be held after the meeting.
No previous experience is required to tryout.
Requirements
2. 0 Overall GPA Enrolled in at least 12 hours Weight in proportion to Height A genuine interest in K.U. athletics
CLINICS:
March 26-27-30-31
April 1-2
5:30-7:00 p.m.
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
NORITY STUDENTS
PRELIMINARIES:
April 4th
FINALS:
April 11th
MINORITY STUDENTS ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE
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6 University Daily Kansan, March 26, 198*
On Campus
TODAY
LA MESA ESPANOLA (Spanish Table) will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 3059 Wescoe Hall.
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER
SEMINAR on "Remote Batch Entry from Time-
Sharing" will be at noon in the auditorium of
Computer Services Facility.
THE STUDENT BAR ASSOCIATION NOON FORUM will present "Alternatives to Traditional Legal Practice - The Public Interest Law" at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall
THE UNIVERSITY COUNCIL MEETING will be at 3:30 p.m. in 108 Blake Hall.
THE UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION with Acting Chancellor Del Shankel will be at 4:15 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
THE MINORITY AFFAIRS FILM. "More Than Bows and Away" will be at 5E on Wednesday.
THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SPIRITUAL DISCIPLINES will discuss "Submission" at 7 p.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
THE KU GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 4085 West 16th Street will give a presentation of the book "The Trial."
THE EAST ASIAN LANGUAGES SYMPOSIUM ON EDUCATION will host Merle Bolton on "Prospects in Japanese Education" at 7:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Office.
THE GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF
MILFORD, p.m. in the
independent Uniform of the p.m.
THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT COLLOQUIUM will host Rob Melton on "A Muts and Bots Discussion of Library Resources and Procedures" at 8 p.m. in the Wainland Room of the
'The Sage of Emporia' does not credit the sage
By PAUL STEPHEN LIM Contributing Reviewer
"The Sage of Emporia," a monologue play on the life of William Allen White by Henry C. Haskell. Performances tonight and tomorrow at 8 n.m., in Swarthownt Reed Hall.
Plays in which the characters onstage turn around and address the audience directly, in which the conventional invisible wall between "them" and "us" is torn down and we are asked to be part of the action, must quickly transition from "perception" to the unfolding drama. Who are we? Where are we? Why is our presence required?
SUCH QUESTIONS are answered with some of our more successful contemporary projects.
In "The Glass Menagerie," the narrator invites us to enter his consciousness as he begins to remember the life he led with his brothers and sisters. As a child, mind, we are, in effect, the young man he was, and therefore there is no more need for him to talk to us directly. Only at the end of the play, when he snaps out of his reverie and starts thinking more to be ourselves, does he speak to us again.
Whatever else one may think of these plays, there is no denying that the playwrights involved knew exactly what they were doing to their audience.
UNFORTUNATELY, SUCH IS not the case with playwright H.C. Haskell, whose new work, "The Sage of Emporia," is being performed at KU's long-awaited University Arts Festival.
"The Sage of Emporia" is a one-character
play based on the voluminous autobiography of William Allen White. When the play opens, we see the 74-year-old Emporia newspaperman aislepee in a chair in his study. After he is awakened by a dream he has been having (the voice of his mother calling him), he doesn't seem the least bit surprised to see all of us in his study.
THE YEAR, we are told, is 1942. But who are we, and what are we doing in his study in Emporia? Are we journalism students from the University of Kansas in nearby Lawrence, waiting for a chance to interview the famous editor? Are we neighbors who have nothing better to do than to watch him sleep? We never find out.
One thing we do find out is that we do not eat lunch. Halfway through the first act, White shuffles offside briefly and then brings in his meal on a tray. "I wish there were enough here for everyone," he says, and then continues to feed us more facts from his factified life.
PARKER
MARK MCDONAL DIKANSA staf
At the end of the play, he puts on his overcoat and says he has to meet his wife at the park. He waves goodbye and leaves, even though we are all still in his study!
GIVEN THIS VERY troublesome relationship that we in the audience have with White, it is difficult to concentrate on what he is actually telling us about his life. Much of it seems like a mere recitation, chronologically, of humdum things he did, famous people he has known, then he wrote. None of it is very interesting because precious little is fully dramatized.
For instance, he says of Theodore Roosevelt: "I've never known another man so vital, nor another man so dear." Again, we are not shown how or why. This Sage of Emporia is not sagacious; he merely speaks ex cathedra.
Still, there are three moments in the play when one is moved, a unique testament to
William Allen White (Jack Wright) recounts one of his famous newspaper articles in Henry Haskell's play, "The Sage of Emporia."
Jack B. Wright's actomy sensibilities and craft. The moments: White's description of his mother's watch, then his admission that he was never able to communicate with his father, and thus his account how he came to be a minister in editorial on the death of his daughter Mary.
THE SCRIPT, unfortunately, does not allow actor Wright or director Ronald Willis to create more of such moments. Playing the roles of Mr. and Mrs. While's autobiography, stringing them together in
such a way that hardly any of the scenes build toward any kind of climax. They merely amble along, and it makes almost no difference in the many stories and anecdotes come in.
At the end of the play, just before he leaves,
White says: "I've been wondering where to
end my biography. May be here might be
as a good place as any. . . What I want
is say that I've never had a bored hour in my
life."
He said it, I didn't
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New Spring Specials At Louise's Bar
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Startling with Weeknight Happy Hour
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SVA FILMS
Thursday, Mar. 26
Edvard Munch
Peter Walkins' brilliant depiction of the life of the painter of "The Scream" and its creator, Peter Jackson, has ever been approached by the co-founder of Expressionism from every angle. Walkins creates a stunning portrait of a man who was terrested in any aspect of artistic creation can afford to miss. John Simon, New York-based artist (Calgary), Swabishdishes.org, 7.30.
Friday, Mar. 27 The Warriors
Walter Hill (The Long Riders) retelling of the legend of Xenophon, set in a jazzy neon urban night setting. A gang leader and a master strategist are blamed; hunted by 100,000 gang members, the lone Warriors must cross Brooklyn to get to their own turf. With his suspenseful direction, this is an exciting, mesmerizing film. With Michael Beck, James Remar, Debron Van Valentine, Timothy Bates and Dinosaur! (94/7 min.) Color: 3:00-9:30
Wise Blood
The new film by John Huston is one of his best and one of the strongest American movies ever made. Based on Plainman actor Renee Zakeloff, hazel Muster (Brad Dourif of One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest), who revolts against his evangelist past by marrying a doctor, only one of many desperate, mystic cills in ruin Geogia. A sardonic, bizarre but brilliant film with rich, documentary effect that leaves behind goes beyond. With Ned Beatty, Harry Dean Stanton, IAmy Irving. And JanLenice's "Landscape" (10:28 m)
Dark Star
An early film by John Carpenter (helio-
wen), written by Dan Bannon (Allen),
demonstrating the deteriorating space-ship, this low-budget, high-quality science fiction film easy on distances $4 million more than its predecessor, is funny cast and philosophical bent. A class act. Plus: "The Wizard of Space" (*8/38* min.) Color, 120- Midnight.
Unless otherwise noted all film will be shown at Woofworth Auditorium in the evening of Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday Fridays. Saturday, Popular and Sunday Fridays are £200 available at the cinema. Film tickets available at the Union 4th level. Information 864-3477. No smoking or refresher admissions at the theatre.
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University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981
Page 7
THE BLAIRS
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
Exercise is an excellent way to relieve stress, according to several KU professors and physicians. Wayne Omess, professor of health, physical education and recreation, suggests running.
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beginning of month
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Beginning Clubsite
starts March 30 (Mon.)—6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fee $12.00
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Spinning
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Exercise can relieve stress
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By KARI ELLIOTT Staff Reporter
Depressed? Under a lot of stress?
Then exercise.
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starts April 1 (Wed.) — 3 weeks: 7:9 p.m.
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one of the best cures for depression is exercise, according to Robert Conroy, psychiatric physician at the Menninger Foundation in Topeka.
starts April 2 (Thurs.)—4 weeks; 7:9 p.m.
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"It's not a curative for all kinds of depression, but exercise seems to alleviate certain types," he said. "It will help alleviate temporary depression that students might get, like the blues."
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starts April 1 (Wed.)—6 weeks. 7-9 p.m.
fee: $12.00
Filet Crochet
WAYNE OSNESS, professor of health, physical education and recreation at KU, suggested running to relieve stress.
Tatting
"Running should be a time when there's no demand on yourself, 'Ossess said. "Take mental vacations, the five-minute vacation where you can see the sun."
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If you work long hours,you need to exercise even more.
"If you exercise regularly, you can work longer and harder and be more productive," he said.
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starts April 1 (Wed.)—6 weeks. 1-3 p.m.
loan $12.00
starts April 2 (Thurs.) --4 weeks. 7-9 p m.
pay $12.00
April 4 (Sat.)—9 a.m. -3 p.m.
fee: $22.50 includes all materials
Rug Braiding
starts April 2 (Thurs.)—6 weeks; 7-10 p.m.
lee: $18.00, $6.00 machine rental
starts March 31 (Tues.) — 4 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
lee: $8.00
CRAFT DEMONSTRATION DAY
SAT. MARCH 28
Natural Dyes
April 25 and 26—9 a.m. -5 p.m.
Fee: $20.00 includes all materials
*******
Knitting Machine
Pre-registration
required
20% off
class
materials
Lace Weaves
Our instructors will be demonstrating their craft so stop by to see what you'd like to learn. Demonstrations all day.
Macrame
730 MASSACHUSETTS
P.O. BOX 334
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-842-4333
Osness emphasized that the exercise should not be competitive.
"Exercise should eliminate stress and competition," he said. "Exercise is a stress reducer."
"We actively encourage our patients not to go beyond their abilities," Conroy said. "They should set goals that are too high or unrealistic."
CONROY, WHOSE PATIENTS exercise regularly as part of their treatment program, agrees that exercise should not be competitive.
The unit's exercise program, Help Opportunity Program, began in 1978 with each patient exercising for one hour and then exercising regularly as long as they are in the unit.
"Most of us learned that exercise was painful, but this type is enjoyable," he said. "The patients do aerobic exercises to music. Or they stretch and limber up. Some jog, but that's usually on their own."
Conroy said the exercises in the program were fun.
ONE NURSE DIRECTS the fitness exercises 20 hours a week and, with a physician, gives an exercise prescription for patients.
"There is a clear indication that exercise decreases depression unquivocally," he said. "For the profoundly depressed, exercise is not a treatment for depression." Exercise is part of the treatment program, but they need more help."
"Our goal is that each patient has an exercise program by the time he is discharged," Conroy said.
Conroy has done research measuring depression before and during an enlargement of the brain.
ALTHOUGH EXERCISE has its benefits, it has a bad side, D.W. Goodwin, KU Medical Center psychiatry department chairman, said.
"People try jogging, but drop out," he said. "They are a failure at it and suffer a loss of self-esteem."
"It's assumed that running is 100 percent beneficial," Goodwin said. "Exercise can make you grimy, irritable and worn out in the morning."
Goodwin said some people became addicted to running and suffered withdrawal symptoms when they could not run.
"I can't make a blanket approval that the quality of life is improved."
Village Inn on
PANCAKE HOUSE
RESTAURANT
Village Inn
Now Open 24 HOURS
on Fridays and Saturdays.
PANCAKE MOUSE
RESTAURANT
Featuring 10c COFFEE
from 12:00 AM to 6:00 AM
821 Iowa Lawrence
Selling something? Place a want ad
Come Hear THE MOFFET BEERS BAND
AOII Presents
March 26, 1981 AOII Presents the 2nd annual
All Procedes to
Arthritis Research
"I Only Have Eyes For You"
8-12 p.m. Thursday Night at the
ENTERTAINER $4 at the door for all the Beer you can drink.
EVERYONE INVITED
BORGEN'S LIQUORS
917 Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
.
The finest selection of wines, liquors and beers in Lawrence.
.
Beers
American & Imported
-
Mexico
Germany
Ireland
England
Australia
Denmark
Holland
Whiskeys
American & Imported
from:
Canada
Scotland
ireland
-
Vodkas
American & Imported
from:
Finland
Russia
England
from
France
Yugoslavia
Germany
Italy
Spain
Greece
Rum
American & Imported
Jamaica Puerto Rico
.
Wines
American & Imported from:
Denmark
Israel
Germany
France
Greece
Japan
Italy
Portugal
Spain
Yugoslavia
-
Cordials & Liqueurs
American & Imported
American & from
Jamaica
Switzerland
England
France
Israel
Italy
Scotland
Ireland
Canada
Denmark
Holland
Mexico
Greece
Belgium
.
Brandies & Cognacs
American & Imported
BORGEN'S LIQUORS
Hillcrest Shopping Center
842-3990
Page 6 University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981
On Campus
TODAY
LA MESA ESPANOLA (Spanish Table) will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in 3059 Wescoe Hall.
THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER
SEMINAR on "Remote Batch Entry from Time-
Sharing" will be at noon in the auditorium of
the Computer Services Facility.
THE UNIVERSITY COUNCH MEETING will be at 3:0 p.m. in 108 Blake Hall.
THE STUDENT BAR ASSOCIATION NOON FORUM will present "Alternatives to Traditional Legal Practice - The Public Interest Law" at 12:30 p.m. in 104 Green Hall.
THE UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION with Acting Chancellor Del Shankel will be at 4:15 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
THE MINORITY AFFAIRS FILM "More
Work will be at 7 p.m. in the
auditorium of Strong Hall
THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SPIRITUAL DISCIPLINES will discuss "Submission" at 7 p.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
THE KU GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 485 Woods, Geerchow Gorham will give a presentation to the club's members.
THE EAST ASIAN LANGUAGES SEMIPOSIUM ON EDUCATION will host Merle Bolton on "Prospects in Japanese Education" at 7:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Union
THE GAY AND LESBIAN SERVICES OF
Maryland. One p.m., in the
Interior Chamber of the P.C. Trust
THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT COLOQUIUM will host Rob Melton on "A Nurses and Bolts Discussion of Library Resources and Procedures" at 8 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the
'The Sage of Emporia' does not credit the sage
"The Sage of Emporia," a monologue play on the life of William Allen White by Henry C. Haskell. Performances tonight and tomorrow at 8 p.m., in Swarthout Recital Hall.
By PAUL STEPHEN LIM Contributing Reviewer
Plays in which the characters ontage turn around and address the audience directly, in which the conventional invisible wall between "them" and "us" is torn down and we are asked to be part of the action, must quickly define the ground rules for our "par- ment" in the unfolding drama: Who are we? Where are we? Why is our presence required?
SUCH QUESTIONS are answered with four questions and inquired about some of our more successful peers.
In "The Glass Menagerie," the narrator invites us to enter his consciousness as he begins to remember the life he led with his family. In "The Darkness," mind, we are; in effect, the young man he was, and therefore there is no more need for him to talk to us directly. Only at the end of the play, when he snaps out of his reverie and becomes to be ourselves, does he speak to us again.
In "Our Town," we are being invited to tour not just a turn of-the-century New England town but also all the lives there, with the kindly and generous anger, who acts as our kindly guide throughout.
Whatever else one may think of these plays, there is no denying that the playwrights involved knew exactly what they were doing to their audience.
UNFORTNATELY, SUCH IS not the case with playwright Henry C. Haskell, whose new work, "The Sage of Emporia," is being published by KU's long-awaited University Arts Festival.
"The Sage of Emporia" is a one-character
play based on the voluminous autobiography of William Allen White. When the play opens, we see the 74-year-old Emporia newspaperman a sleep in a chair in his study. After he is awakened by a dream he has been having (the voice of his mother calling him), he doesn't seem the least bit surprised to see all of us in his study.
THE YEAR, we are told, is 1942. But who are we, and what are we doing in his study in Emporia? Are we journalism students from the University of Kansas in nearby Lawrence, waiting for a chance to interview the famous editor? Are we neighbors who have nothing better to do than to watch him sleep? We never find out.
One thing we do out is that we do not eat lunch. Hallway through the first act, White shuffles off briefly and then brings in his meal on a tray. "I wish there were enough here for everyone," he says, and then concludes by feed us more facts from his factified life.
MARK MCDONALD KANSELL
At the end of the play, he puts on his overcoat and says he has to meet his wife at the park. He waves goodbye and leaves, even though we are all still in his study!
GIVEN THIS VERY troublesome relationship that we in the audience have with White, it is difficult to concentrate on what he is actually telling us about his life. Much of it seems like a mere recitation, chronologically, of burdum things he did, famished with his possessions he wrote. None of it is very interesting because precious little is fully dramatized.
For instance, he says of Theodore Roosevelt: "I've never known another man so vital, nor another man so dear." Again, we are not shown how or why. This Sage of Emporia is not sagacious; he merely speaks ex cathedra.
Still, there are three moments in the play when one is moved, a unique testament to
William Allen White (Jack Wright) recounts one of his famous newspaper articles in Henry Haskell's play, "The Sage of Emporia."
Jack B. Wright's actomy sensibilities and craft. The moments: White's description of his mother's watch, then his admission that he was never able to communicate with his father, and thus his account how he came across Mary's editorial on the death of his daughter Mary.
THE SCRIPT, unfortunately, does not allow actor Wright or director Ronald Willis to create more of such moments. Playwright Nicholas Benedetto will autobiography, striving them together in
such a way that hardly any of the scenes build toward any kind of climax. They merely amble along, and it makes almost no diffrence in the many stories and anecdotes come in.
At the end of the play, just before he leaves,
White says: "I've been wondering where to
end my autobiography. May be here might be
as good a place as any... What I want to
say is that I've never had a bored hour in my life."
He said it. I didn't.
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HILLCREST 3 ALBERT BROWN ALEXANDRA HENDERSON
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CINEMA 2 DONALD SUTHERLAND MARY TYLER MOORE Ordinary People EVE 7:20 AM & 9:25 AM WEEKEND MAT 2:00 A CACADEMIC MOVIE
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KANSAS UNION
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843-1211
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kinko's
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904 Vermont 843-8019
New Spring Specials At Louise's Bar
General Hospital Hour 7:30 pitcher, 2:0 p.m.
(8) .50 from 3:5 p.m.)
$ .50 pitcher
MonThurs: 7:50-8:30 p.m.
Good times every Friday afternoon starting with
6H hour; then $1.25 pitcher, 7:5c schoolers
until 8 p.m.
Super TGIF Just for you, KU student!
from LOUISIANA WINE BAR
Student Senate funded
Pine Room, Kansas Union
U. S. Department of Education Kansas City
NOW OPEN OPENING SPECIALS NOW OPEN
TUE-THUR 11:30-10:30m
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SAT 1:00-MIDNITE
SUN 1:00-10:30m
Thursday, March 26 at 7:30 p.m.,
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1:30-10:30m
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TUE-THUR 11:30-10:30m
FRIDAY 11:30-MIDNITE
SAT 1:00-MIDNITE
SUN 1:00-10:30m
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DISCRIMINATION IN EDUCATION DELORES LEWIS,
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Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
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Boyds Coin & Antiques
Cut out this taco and bring it in Thursday through Sunday, March 26-29.
TACO JOHN'S.
Monday Satunda
9 a.m-5 p.m
Lawrence, KS 66044
Offer good at participating Taco John's listed below with coupon only.
1626 W. 23rd St.
Taco Sale. 299c
1101 W. 6th St.
UPSIDE DOWN
Margaritas
$1.25
AT
PRESTON'S
815 New Hampshire
SVA FILMS
[1978]
Thursday, Mar. 26
Edvard Munch
Peter Walkins' brilliant depiction of the life of the painter of "The Scream" and others is the greatest biography of an artist. The founder of Expressionism from every angle, Walkins creates a stunning portrait of a painter interested in any aspect of artistic creation can afford to miss. John Simon New, *Sweets and Snips*, 7:30 (Cal). *Sweats and Snips*, 7:30.
Friday, Mar. 27 The Warriors
Walter Hill (The Long Riders) retelling of the legend of Xenophon, set in a jazzy neon urban night setting. A gang leader and a daring hunter are blamed; hunted by 100,000 gang members, the lone Warriors must cross Brooklyn to get to their own turf. With a twist, the warrior is suspensive direction, this is an exilizing, mesmerizing film. With Michael Beck, James Romar, Deborah Van Valkenberg, the director of The Dinosaur! (947 mm², Color: 3.90-3.93)
Wise Blood
The new film by John Husner is one of his best and one of the strangest American movies ever made. Based on Flannery O'Connor's novel, hazel Makes (Bradour of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest), who re-entertains the fictional foundering of the "Christian Without Christ," only one of many desperate, mystic cults in rural Georgia. A sardonic, bizarre but poignant story, the movie is a mesphere and a sense of humor that goes beyond black. With Ned Bedesty, Harry Dean Stanton, Amy Irving, Plus and "Landscape" (102/8 mln). Color: 7:00.
Dark Star
an early film by John Caperton (Halloween), written by Dan O'Bannon (Alien), and directed by deteriorating space-ship, this low-budget, high-quality science fiction film easily out-distances those $40 million of the universe with a funny cast and philosophical bent. A class act. Plus: "The Wizard of Space" (*8/31*) Color. 12:00 Mid-night.
Unless otherwise noted all films will be shown at Woodfair Auditorium in the morning or Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $150. All DVDs are $20.00. The DVD selection is based on Union, 4th level. Information: 864-387-911. No smoking or refresheral visits.
of
om-
men-
men
re-
re-
but
bit
at
at
us
us
in
illo-
of,
of a
lim
lim
sth
idid
the
the
lay
lay
644
644
University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981
Page 7
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
1980
Exercise is an excellent way to relieve stress, according to several KU professors and physicians. Wayne Osness, professor of health, physical education and recreation, suggests running.
MY HAIR'S SO FINE AND THIN
HOW CAN I GET RID OF
TMESE &/?**
FLUPS?
I HAVE THIS
COWLICK HERE
HOW CAN I GET MY HAIR TO SHINE?
MY HAIR'S SO COARSE AND UNRULY . . .
I WISH
I HAD MORE
BODY IN MY
HAIR!
MY HAIR AND SKIN ARE SO DRY
I NATE
MY NAIR! WHAT CAN I
DO WITH IT?
SOLUTIONS to these problems and more . . .
with help from
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809 Vermont 843-8808
MARY AND JIM BROWN
1981 SPRING CLASS SCHEDULE
Beginning Weaving
Basketry
starts April 1 (Wed.) - 6 weeks, 7-9 p.m.
fee: $28.00 includes some materials
starts March 30 (Mon) — 6 weeks: 7-9 p m
tee $12.00
Feltina
starts April 7 (Tues.) —4 weeks; 7-10 p.m.
tue $12.00
Wheat Weaving
starts April 7 (Tues.)—6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
tee: $12.00
starts April.1 (Wed.)—6 weeks, 7-9 p.m.
tee $18.00 includes some materials
starts March 30 (Mon. )—4 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
tee: $10.00
Riqid Heddle Weaving
April 11 and 18 (Sat) — 9.30 a.m. - 3.30 p.m.
lee. $20.00 includes use of pre-warped loom
starts April 20 (Mon.)—3 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
tee: $10.00 includes some materials
starts April 1 (Wed )—6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fee; $12.00
Beginning Knitting
Tanestrv Weavino
starts March 30 (Mon) —6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fee $12.00
Beginning Crochet
starts april 20 (Mon.) — 5 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fee: $10.00
Basic Resume
starts March 31 (Tues.)—6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
tee; $12.00
Basic Needlepoint
Exercise can relieve stress
YARNBARN
By KARI ELLIOTT Staff Reporter
Depressed? Under a lot of stress?
Then exercise.
*Net Crochet*
starts April 2 (Thurs.) — 6 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fee $12.00
One of the best cures for depression is exercise, according to Robert Conroy, psychiatric physician at the Meninginger Foundation in Topeka.
"It's not a curative for all kinds of depression, but exercise seems to alleviate certain types," he said. "It will help alleviate temporary depression that students might get, like the blues."
Filet Crochet
Fisherman Knitting
starts April 1 (Wed) — 3 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
fees: $6.00
Tatting
"Running should be a time when there's no demand on yourself," Osness said. "Take mental vacations, the five-hour weekday you can see the waves hitting the beach."
WAYNE OSNESS, professor of health, physical education and recreation at KU, suggested running to relieve stress.
Advanced and Creative Crochet
starts April 1 (Wed.)—6 weeks. 7-9 p.m.
tenge. $12.00
STUDIOHOCK LACB
starts April 2 (Thurs.) — 4 weeks: 7-9 p.m.
$8.00
If you work long hours,you need to exercise even more.
Fisherman Knitting
Basic needleshop (days)
starts April 1 (Wed.)—6 weeks: 1-3 p.m.
mee $12.00
**Booking**
April 4 (Sat) — 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.
lee: $22.50 includes all materials
"If you exercise regularly, you can work longer and harder and be more productive," he said.
Basic Needlepoint (Davs)
starts April 2 (Thurs.) -4 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
tie $12.00
starts April 2 (Thurs.)—6 weeks; 7-10 p.m.
tee: $18.00; $6.00 machine rental
Advanced and Creative Crochet
INCLUDES:
starts March 31 (Tues.)—4 weeks; 7-9 p.m.
lee $8.00
Knitting Machine
Broomstick Lace
Natural Eyes
April 25 and 26—9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Fee: $20.00 includes all materials
Lace Weaves
CRAFT DEMONSTRATION DAY
SAT. MARCH 28
*******
Our instructors will be demonstrating their craft so stop by to see what you'd like to learn. Demonstrations all day.
730 MASSACHUSETTS
P.O. BOX 334
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-842-4333
Osness emphasized that the exercise should not be competitive.
"Exercise should eliminate stress and competition," he said. "Exercise is a stress reducer."
"We actively encourage our patients not to go beyond their abilities," conroy said. "They shouldn't set goals that are too high or unrealistic."
CONROY, WHOSE PATIENTS exercise regularly as part of their treatment program, agrees that exercise should not be competitive.
The unit's exercise program, Help Opportunity Program, began in 1978 with each patient exercising for one hour daily and regularly as long as they are in the hospital.
"Most of us learned that exercise was painful, but this type is enjoyable," he said. "The patients do aerobic exercises to music. Or they stretch and limber up. Some jog, but that's usually on their own."
Conroy said the exercises in the program were fun.
ONE NURSE DIRECTS the fitness exercises 20 hours a week and, with a physician, gives an exercise prescription for patients.
Conroy has done research measuring depression before, during and after an attack.
"Our goal is that each patient has an exercise program by the time he is discharged." Conroy said.
"There is a clear indication that exercise decreases depression unequivocally," he said. "For the profoundly depressed, exercise is not a cure." Another indication is exercise is part of the treatment program, but they need more help."
ALTHOUGH EXERCISSE has its benefits, it has a bad side. D.W. Goodwin, KU Medical Center psychiatry department chairman, said.
"People try jogging, but drop out," he said. "They are a failure at it and suffer a loss of self-esteem."
Goodwin said some people became addicted to running and suffered withdrawal symptoms when they could not run.
"It's assumed that running is 100 percent beneficial," Goodwin said. "Exercise can make you grimy, irritable and worn out in the morning."
"I can't make a blanket approval that the quality of life is improved."
Village Inn
PANCAKE HOUSE
RESTAURANT
Village Inn
Now Open 24 HOURS on Fridays and Saturdays.
PANCAKE HOUSE
RESTAURANT
Featuring 10c COFFEE
from 12:00 AM to 6:00 AM
821 Iowa Lawrence
Selling something? Place a want ad.
Come Hear THE MOFFET BEERS BAND
AOII Presents
March 26, 1981 AOII Presents the 2nd annual
All Procedes to
Arthritis Research
"I Only Have Eyes For You"
8-12 p.m. Thursday Night at the
ENTERTAINER $4 at the door for all the Beer you can drink.
EVERYONE INVITED
BORGEN'S LIQUORS
917 Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
O
The finest selection of wines, liquors and beers in Lawrence.
-
Beers
American & Imported
Mexico
Germany
Ireland
England
Australia
Denmark
Holland
.
Whiskeys
American & Imported
from:
Canada
Scotland
Ireland
.
Vodkas
American & Imported
from:
Finland
Russia
England
.
Rum
Jamaica Puerto Rico
American & Imported from:
.
Wines
American & Imported
Denmark
Israel
Germany
France
Greece
Japan
Italy
Portugal
Spain
Yugoslavia
Cordials &
Cordials & Liqueurs
American & Imported
Australia or from:
Jamaica
Switzerland
England
France
Israel
Italy
Scotland
Ireland
Canada
Denmark
Holland
Mexico
Greece
Belgium
.
Brandies &
Cognacs American & Imported
American Airlines
from:
France
Yugoslavia
Germany
Italy
Spain
Greece
BORGEN'S LIQUORS
Hillcrest
Shopping
Center
842-3990
age 8 University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981
By ALVIN A. REID Staff Reporter
Flamboyant attorneys and dramatic opening statements affect jury decisions as much as evidence, evidence to a KU psychology professor.
Lawrence Wrightsman, psychology department chairman, said that everything a juror heard during trial went into his decision-making process. Many times the judge recognize what is and not evidence.
"The state assumes that jurors consider only solid evidence in their decisions, and this simply is not true." Wrightsman said.
"A jury feels pressure to do a good job and make a fair decision," he said. "They begin to form opinions, anything but facts and evidence."
WRIGHTSMAN SAID witnesses as well as lawyers used dramatic language and gestures to persuade the jurors in their favor.
"Sometimes lawyers have trouble deciding which witness to use first—one who gives a convincing statement or one who gives helpful information but in a non-flashy style," he said.
Wrightsman said making videotapes of the trial available to the jury and giving exact definitions of "evidence" and "reasonable doubt" were two ways to simplify jury decision-making.
"During jury deliberation, much argument takes place on exactly what was said in the courtroom and in what context." Wrightsman said.
"This problem could be eliminated by having a videotape recorder available so the courtroom question could be studied over again."
He said jurors usually were not allowed to use notes during deliberation so the video recorder was sent to the jury to clarify a great deal of confusion.
WRIGHTSMAN SAID the defendant was at a disadvantage because many jurors don't know what reasonable doubt is.
"In most jurisdictions, juries are not given any instruction on reasonable doubt until right before deliberation," he said. "The jury should be given these instructions before the trial. By the time a juror is advised, he already has an idea how he will judge the defendant."
Wrightsman said in cases where the jury was informed about reasonable before the trial, a percentage of defendants were found not guilty.
He said that for his two solutions to become part of trial procedure, the U.S. Supreme Court would have to address the "effects of a "psychological evidence".
"Since juries are burdened with difficult decisions, they should be given as much assistance as possible," Wrightsman said.
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The NCAA had projected that schools in its tournament would receive $90,000 plus expenses for first- and second-round games, $225,000 plus expenses for regional games and $300,000 plus expenses for final-round play.
By REBECCA CHANEY Staff Reporter
Under the Big Eight's revenue sharing plan, all income from the tournament goes into a pool and is divided into nine parts. The schools in it take two parts of what they earned and the other seven schools get one part.
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The giant-killer basketball teams from Kansas, even though they failed to advance to the Final Four, should provide a giant financial boost for the team.
KU may get $170,000 in tourney income
According to National Collegiate Athletic Association projections, KU may expect to receive about $170,000 from the NCAA.
LINGLE SAID the exact amount of
OF KU'S PROJECTED $170,000,
$90,000 should come from the three
games played by the Jayhawks, $70,000
from Kansas State University's four
games and $10,000 from the University
of Missouri's one game.
However, Art Lingle, KU assistant athletic business manager, said he thought the NCAA predictions could be overestimated.
"Whether our expenses will be more or less than the NCAA expense account, I don't know. It'll probably be a couple of weeks before we know for sure."
In any case, this additional income will help decrease an athletic department deficit that is now between $100,000 and $500,000.
All Big Eight schools should receive at least $115,000 from the tournament.
"We won't really know how much income we'll get from the tournament until we get a final report from the Big Eight Conference in mid-June." "Lingle
"I'd estimate that football income this year was about $100,000 less than budgeted and that basketball income was about $12,000 less," he said. "And expenses for everything are a little bit over."
Lingle said he thought the department probably would be a little in the red on June 30, the end of the fiscal year.
Shankel will meet with the KU Athletic Corporation Board in April to set the budget for fiscal 1982. He said he would budget a project that was not balanced.
Athletic Director, Bob Marcum, said
"I can't responsibly approve a budget that isn't at least balanced," he said. "That might mean we have to identify additional sources of revenue."
"I expect we will be able to end this year with a balanced operating budget," Shankel said. "It should help to receive a little bit more in basketball revenue than we had anticipated earlier."
the deficit would not be known until the department's March report was completed, but that he expected the figure would be less than $100,000 after receipts from the NCAA tournament basketball ticket sales were included.
As for the current fiscal year, Shankel said, "We are clamping down in every way possible to economize wherever possible."
it was too early to accurately assess the department's financial position until after spring break. He was unavailable for comment yesterday.
But of the $1 million in contributions budgeted, he said, the fund has only received about $550,000.
Whether the department will end the fiscal year in the black depends heavily on the amount of contributions received by the Educational Fund, Linda said.
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said he thought the department would probably end the year in the black.
Lack of profits fails to disappoint author-
Staff Reporter
By CORAL BEACH
Throughout history, authors, musicians and artists have received notoriously scant compensation for their work. Bunch, a local poet, is no exception.
Earlier this month, Bunch, a lecturer in the English department, published the fifth issue of "Tellus," a literary periodical consisting mostly of poetry and short stories. For the fifth time he suggested a monetary收 on the publication.
Bunch is in charge of the editing, producing, publicity and stapling of the magazine. In short, he does everything except the original writing and the final printing. He also pays for the entire production.
"All of the expenses come out of my own pocket," he said. "I feel I'm doing well it can cover the printing costs."
always had enjoyed it and wanted to continue with it on a part-time basis.
"Making a living at it is unlikely, that idea just doesn't coincide with poetry in this country or anywhere in the world really." he said.
Three years ago, Bunch's strong interest in poetry gave birth to "Tellus." The magazine is published from writers across the country.
Bunch took the name for the magazine from the ancient Roman goddess of the Earth. He said his interest in mythology and the word's built-in pun convinced him there was no other name quite as suitable.
BUNCH SAID HE probably never would make a career of poetry, but he
"I felt there was a need and room for writers an early literary periodical in this area. I try to strike a balance between local writers—not just from Lawrence, but throughout the midwest—and writers from other parts of the country that people here wouldn't normally be exposed to."
"Several of my friends knew that I was interested in doing it and they encouraged me to," Bunch said. "Finally I did."
BECAUSE OF THE large cost involved, Burch said he usually had only about 150 copies of the magazine printed.
"Oddly enough though, 'Tellus' is available in San Francisco, Rochester, New York and Alququerque," he said. "People find out about it pretty much through grapevine-connections and word of mouth."
"The work I do on it is not regular." he said. "Just old hours here and there. I put the magazine together in my spare time. The final typing usually takes between eight and 16 hours, usually on the weekends."
Receiving two or three contributions a week, Bunch uses his spare time to work on the magazine. He said that in 1986 he worked for the publication was not widely known.
He fears he would be swamped with material from aspiring writers if more books of his kind were published.
Besides working on "Tellus" in his off-hours, Bunch also writes poetry. His work has been published in several journals and periodicals including the
"Cottonwood Review," a locally published poetry periodical.
"I doubt that there is anything of mine that people would be familiar to him," he said, "except for the Cottonwood." **30** Kansas Poets Anthology.
AS A POET, Bunch can sympathize with the authors who contribute work to "Tellus," knowing that they will not be paid. He said that sometimes the satisfaction of just knowing their work was getting published and read was the only compensation many poets ever got.
"They (the "Tellus" poets) deserve to be paid, but that's just not possible." Bunch said. "The only thing they get for it is two free copies of the magazine."
Bunch said the magazine originally was supposed to be published in the fall and spring of each year, but problems with its fall's issue to be postponed until now.
Copies of "Tellus" are available at the Orend Bookstore and several local libraries.
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AURH COMMITTEE CHAIR OPENINGS Fall '81 Spring'82
Board of Appeals Contracts Coordination and Review Housing Services Public Relations and Publicity Social Programming University Resident General Manager
airs Open Chairs Open Chairs Open
Compensation Compensation Comper
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Applications Due Wed., April 8
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We are looking for a faculty member or spouse, graduate student or administrative person who would like to supplement present income with a second career in college textbook publishing.
The role is one of public relations. The prerequisites are relationships and familiarity with the academic community. We will help you with the skills and knowledge about textbook publishing.
We are a 63-year-old publishing house with many authors already on campus. The person filling this position would consult with on campus faculty members about the unique aspects of our NEW DIMENSION Group as well as provide a liaison with our traditional publishing groups. Your inquiry is completely confidential so send a letter and resume . . . to . . .
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University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981 Page 9
Student aid may be delayed
By KARI ELLIOTT Staff Reporter
The Reagan administration's decision to suspend support Pell Grant applications last week will affect the student's entire financial aid package.
Pell Grants, formerly known as Basic Education Opportunity Grants, are the foundation of financial aid on which loans and other grants are based.
"If processing does not begin by May 1, it may be Aug. 1 before the backlog is handled." Joan Holland, assistant director of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, said yesterday.
"Any delays in processing will delay the student eligibility report to the institutions," she said. "One award must be another, and it just starts snowblowing."
AT THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas, the financial aid office awards Pell
Grants by May 1, but this year it might be later.
The formula for determining how much low-income families should pay toward their children's college education has not been settled.
A family's contribution is based on its total income minus some cost of living expenses. This inflation factor was to rise by 12.5 percent, but the Reagan administration wants to eliminate the increase.
KU financial aid office can make an estimate on the Pell Grant, Jerry Rogers, financial aid director, said.
"It isn't fair to base an award on an estimate, then the student may not get that much money later," he said. "But other aid money may not be available."
ROGERS SAID IT was important for students to accept their awards as soon as they got them.
"If students accept by the end of July, or possibly the first of August, they should get their money in the fall," he said.
The processing delay is an 'un- comfortable situation' for the financial aid office, Rogers said.
If the delay continues, it will mean a savings for the Reagan administration, William Blakey, counsel to the House Education subcommittees, said.
"The money won't be spent unless students enroll and receive the grants." he said. "Some students won't enroll unless they know they have a grant."
HOWEVER, HOLLAND was hopeful the students would receive their award.
"There are going to be changes in the award program," she said. "If the changes require legislative approval, the regulatory, it will take more time."
Regulatory changes, such as adjustment in the inflation index, do not need congressional approval.
Nationalway, $2.6 billion is awarded annually in Pell Grants. Five million students apply for the grant, and 2.6 million receive an award.
Spring fun means sprains at Watkins
By ALVIN A. REID Staff Reporter
Warm weather allows outdoor activity and that means a busy schedule for Watkins Hospital's physical therapy department.
"Spring semester and warm weather bring our heaviest load of patients," Jan Garber, director of the Watkins Hospital physical therapy department, said people have been able to play games and run and generally just get out and go.
Last spring more than 500 students were treated by the department, and Garber said this figure would be higher in students knew the department was there.
"Most students have no idea they can come here for treatment for such things
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as sprained and twisted ankles, she said. "Also, they don't know their first four visits are covered by the health fee in tuition."
Garber said many of the physical therapy patients had had surgery over semester or summer break and had been hospitalized at KU rather than at home.
"The therapy most students receive here consists of heat, ice and exercise, but we do have modern physical therapy equipment," she said.
Equipment in the department includes a high voltage galvanic stimulator and ultrasound and ultraviolet light machines.
"It's a Natural"
935 Iowa
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"A lot of people are frightened by the use of electricity or sound waves on their bodies," Garber said. "But both have some drawbacks, so much more comfortable than pain."
"Our department is staffed by four individuals and myself, all of whom have at least a B.S. in physical therapy. We accept all referrals, but we are not responsible for any student should feel free to come here if he or she feels they need our services."
The Watkins facility is one of three physical therapy departments in the Lawrence area, Garber said.
After a student's fourth free visit, treatment is $2 to $$, she said.
Ladies' and Gents' Night
Every Thursday night—
everyone receives a free
drink coupon from 9 - 11
NO COVER!
GAMMONS
SNOWWOW
DAVE KRAUS/Kansan staff
Bill Keih
Announce their GRAND OPENING.
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
Lawrence's Newest
Optical Boutique
4 E. 7th 841-1113
Buy 1 pair of eye glasses at regular price, then choose from a second frame
Jeanaffer Palmer, Overland Park freshman, reads a book for class as she donated blood yesterday morning at the Blood Center of Kansas University Council and the Panhellenic Association. The drive continues today from 9:30 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. in the Kansas Union Institute.
TOM HARRIS
Gerry Riley
from special selections during our GRAND OPENING SALE. expires May 1.
Bucky's DAIRY BAR IS NOW OPEN! OPENING SPECIAL
&
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thru Sun.
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UNIVERSITY FLORAL
Weekend Special
1 Dozen Long Stemmed Roses
For $12.00
Cash and Carry Only Please
UNIVERSITY FLORAL
THE DUTCH BARN SOUTH ON IOWA AT
2103 WEST 28th ST. TERRACE
843-6990
Chancery Club, KU's Pre-Law Club,
a speaking contest addressing the topic
"The most significant legal issue of our time."
- speeches memorized, 6-8 minutes
- judged by law professors
- contest held on Law Day, May 1.
Questions, contact Eric Behrens for more information, 749-5135.
THE MUSLIM STUDENT ASSOCIATION (MSA)
Invites everybody for this informative lecture
"ISLAM: ANALYSIS OF THE PAST,THE PRESENT AND THE FUTURE"
By Professor "HAMEED ALGAR"
Professor of Persian and Islamic Studies at the University of California—Berkley; and an Islamic Scholar who has been writing extensively on Islamic History.
FRIDAY 27,1981----7:30 PM
FORUM ROOM, KANSAS UNION
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, March 28, 1981
Tornado drill called successful
The statewide wendot drill yesterday morning went smoothly in Lawrence, the Douglas County *Emergency Preparedness director said.*
"Everything went just fine," the
director, Phil Leonard, said. "All stations checked in, and we had very good response."
Leonard said that light rains hampered the drill, which started at 10:15 a.m.
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A career in law. Denver Paralegal Institute will be on campus on
April 1st
Contact your placement office to arrange a personal interview. For further information, call collect at (303) 623-0237 and ask for Jeff Johnson Director of Admissions.
Denver Paralegal Institute
Moscow trip memorable, students say
ny ROB STROUD Staff Reporter
Moscow is an unforestable place to visit, but a brab place to live in, according to KU students who traveled there for spring break.
"It appeared very depressing to me," Sara Snyder, Prairie Village junior, said, echoing the opinions of others on the trip. "I never really appreciated the United States as I do now."
Twelve students went on the trip, which was organized by student senator Larry Metzger through the U.S. Student Association. Each paid $1,156 for transportation, lodging and food.
THE STUDENTS, none of whom spoke much Russian, visited such attractions as the Bolshi Ballet and the Lenin Mausoleum. Much of their time was spent independently exploring the city.
McMurray said he also was surprised at the living conditions in Moscow.
"I was surprised at how much freedom we had," Steve McMurray, Lawrence graduate student, said.
"I didn't expect it to be as bleak as it was." he said.
COLLEGE OF PHOTOGRAPHY
He added that shortages of
The 12 KU students who went Russia over spring break found the country interesting to visit, but depressing. The trip, organized through U.S. Student Association, was designed to be the first trip in an exchange with Moscow students interested in Russian culture.
grocery and household products led to long lines at stores, which invariably carried selections that were poor by American standards.
"It was a very claustrophobic feeling," David Henry, Overland Park senior, said about shopping in Moscow.
HENRY SAID that because of the poor selection in shops there, an active black market thrived on domestic goods. He said he had received one offer of about $85 for his designer Levi's.
were resigned to the harsh economic conditions.
Henry said the people of Moscow
"Life's tough there and it's always been tough," he said.
McMurray agreed, saying of the people, "There is a sense of dissatisfaction, but it's a resigned dissatisfaction."
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University Daily Kansan, March 26, 1981
Page 11
Lake patrol gears up for summer
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
Spring is only four days old, but judging from the number of lake enthusiasts who visited Clinton Reservoir Saturday, it's already summer.
"We're expecting up to, 1,200,000 Clinton visitors this year, according to the Army Corps of Engineers," Rex Johnson, Douglas County sheriff, said yesterday. "Golly, I think we had that last weekless."
With Clinton's campified and state-operated campesillas scheduled to open this summer, Johnson is anticipating help soon to combat traffic, litter and the other problems that usually accompany an influx of people.
THAT HELP, in the form of $40,000 contract from the Army Corps of Engineers, is due to arrive any day now, Johnson said.
"As soon as the ink is dry on that contract, we'll be hiring two new officers." "However, we'll have to make do with what we have for most of the summer because it'll take awhile to train them."
Johnson said he was very pleased to get the funding.
"Last year, we didn't get any money, and of course we had to cover the area anyway," he said. We obligated to do county service, funding no funding.
"It will be harder this year, because of the number of people we're expecting."
“四 or five of our officers are also sportsmen and they have boats too,” Johnson said. “I hate to say this, but we'll probably have four or five drowning this year. We had one last year, along with a boat accident.”
JOHNSON SAID that the county planned to add a half-fon, four-wheel-drive pickup to its patrol fleet and that a motorboat would be available on loan from the emergency preparedness department.
Johnson said he also anticipated traffic problems both en route to Clinton and on some of the reservoir's newly constructed access roads. He already has begun to notice a significant increase in litter.
JOHNSON SAID he also planned to hire two additional employees next year, in addition to this year's two new employees and two who were added in the past said he hoped they would be sufficient to handle Clinton patrol duties.
Johnson, who lives just north of the town of Clinton, said he had not heard any complaints from the area's about crowds of out-of-towners.
he said. "If there's anything I can't stand, it's litter."
"Our obligations in other areas are growing, though," Johnson said. "Our civil process-serving department, which serves civil papers, is doing about eight to 10 times the business it did five years ago."
"The main problem people have been having has been getting adjusted," he said. "There have been a lot of roads closed. It used to be that people in Clinton could get to 59 highway by driving seven or eight miles, and one morning they woke up and they had to drive 17 miles."
Freshmen entering the bachelor of general studies degree program next fall in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will be required to take at least one non-remedial math course.
Math class requirement added for BGS degree
The College decided before spring break to add the requirement. Students are allowed to earn the degree now without completing any math courses, Charles Himmelberg, chairman of KU's math department, yesterday. The program has only recommended the math courses.
"The BGS degree was, perhaps, being abused by college students, and I think the degree is reasonable now," he said.
The new requirements are:
- Students must complete Math 002 or demonstrate proficiency.
- Himmelberg said the BGS degree was created 10 years ago to relax requirements for students who did not pursue the bachelor of arts degree.
- Students also must select one of the following math courses: 101, 102,
111, 113, 115, 121 or to complete
beyond 902 or one course in logic.
With the change, both degrees will have the same math requirements.
Hammelberg said the BGS would continue to give students the flexibility of planning their own programs.
The University Daily
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Sound items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the Kansas business office at 846-458-300.
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Hillel
SHABBAT
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by Thursday, March 26
5:30 at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland
for reservations call 864-3948 by Thursday, March 26
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54 skiing winter (18, 19, 20), ski rental,
55 skiing winter (18, 19, 20), ski rental,
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EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Wanted: Executive Director for a statewide student lobby. Responsibilities include coordination of activities on several university campuses, management of the lobby, research of the lobby, also researching, bestelling and lobbying on the issues before the Kansas legislature. Full-time position with no collegiate with the board of Directors. Send resume to Associated Students in Kansas, 1700 College, Topeka, KS 64092. Mail George Gallion, by March 27, 1981.
ENTERTAINMENT
TRAVEL CENTER
TAKING A TRIP?
Travel Is Our Business.
The LOWEST FARES available!
As close as your phone ...
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W. 23rd St. (by Penins)
9:00-5:30 M-F • 9:30-2:00 Sat
TRAVEL CENTER
Employment Opportunities
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED
Young, no children. Must own
car. Place. Place.
plain. Work. Housework, moving carp-
ing. Main general maintenance. Salary:
$35.00 per week. Required to
provided; your own completely fur-
tured with housekeeping坐椅 (s). Later preferred by employer. Apply in writing.
1000 Sunset Drive, Lawrence, KS 60044
FOR RENT
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5, 843-3228. tf
3 bdm, townhouse with burning fireplaces and carpot. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333.
**ARIZONA STREET DUPLEXES** Available on study, bathy room, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, central air conditioning, carpet and central heating air conditioning. Prices per person: $200; pets $00 - unlitites. Call 843-5739 or 842-
For spring and summer, Naimish Hall of Homes offers an advantage of an apartment. Good food and plenty of freshly maid service to clean up the kitchen and get ready activities and much more. If you're looking for a place that isn't what you want, stop in or open your door at Naimish Hall, 1800 Naimsh Hall, 843-835-8344.
FRESHIMEN and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house next year! Apply now: 842-6592.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Includes fireplaces, room for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces, dryer/waterer units, fully equipped kitchen/dryer units, daily at 2290 Princeton Blvd., or phone 842-315-6150 at 2290 Princeton Blvd., or phone 842-315-6150.
Cavir Capi Apt1. Unfurnished studio, 1 & 2 bdrm. apt1. available. Central air, wall-to-wall carpet. quiet loftroom, 2½ blocks south. bathroom, 484-7930 after 5:20 am/weekend times.
3 brownhouse for rent now at Pine Haven
Rentals. A private room must/water & dryer, close to shopping
malls, restaurants & banks. $5 per night.
nurses 1 pay water, $80 per week.
unmarried or no married. Call 843-204 or 847-
219. No pets
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5000. if
Med Center Bound? Nice, 2-bedroom failers. Available for summer and fall. A/C, appliances, and parking. Call: (1-913) - 381-287. 3-27
SPACIUS TWO-STORY DUPLEX 1220
all appliances in a standard air conditioner, one carousel unit or two, plus possible option to buy $425.00. Less than the contract price - 847, 640, 847, 640
Country Cottage located on one acre of land in the village of Glenfield, is loaded with special; ceramic tile floors, laminate flooring, vinyl flooring, and potato with hot tub $20/mo. includes use of water heater and electric panel. April Call for appl: 860-343-8511
Sublease for, Summer; 4 bedroom town-house, 2 baths, carpeted, patio, dwelling, 3 pools, tennis court. Trailside Apartments. Call 641-1869. 4-3
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 2018
and Kassidy you like to spend of apartments
you buy! You like a large apartment
feature 5BR, two bathrooms all appliances,
at least 4 bathrooms, pool, big playground.
have openings for summer and fall. Call Craig Llewr or Jim Bong at 745-1907 for our about modelli townhouses. pf
2 bedroom duplex Air Cond, W/D Hookups,
W/W Carpet, Central location, very
clean. $225/mo. Call 843-2774. 4-3
Male roommate should to rent furnished apt, kitchen, washed, p. dryer, cable tv, LED TV. Call Kaitlin (exec) (exec) call Kaitlin y! Pets allowed: 310-27, call Kain at 6514-127.
Applications are now being received for the summer internship. Information and application may be obtained at the Living Experiment for the summer and the fall semester. information and application may be obtained at the Institutes Center, 1204 Orcad or call (617) 352-8980.
NOW RENTING for fall semester—near new
2 bedroom apartments just north of the
stadium—live closer than you can park. Call
843-7498. 4-7
1 or 2 rooms for rent in a House close to
1019. I109. Call 841-2209. 3-31
AVAILABLE JUNE 1st. Efficiency Apt. Nicely Furnished, A.C. 2/3* blocks from Union. $170 + 1/3 utilities. 641-8599. 3-31
Subleasing 1 bedroom apartment available June. June completion to rent with own parking area. Campus computers with own parking area, c
2 Bdrm Apt. for Rent. Available May 15.
Room 2311. Water, Waterfall,
Call: 841-841-6431
Sublease room for summer. Ideal for summer school: close to campus, inexpensive, kitchen facilities. 811-6426 occasions. 4-1
Summer sublease: 2. bedroom, 1½ bath.
Bent, & electricity: Call 841-7077, after 5.
Summer sublease -- Trailridge 3 BDRM
Townhouse June & July Great Summer!
Living! Tom or Son 842-7214 4-2
Summer Sublease: plush 2 bedroom fully furnished apartment, 5 minutes from campus
841-0469
4-1
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale!
Makes sense to use them 1. As study
makes sense to use them 2. As study
guest preparation 3. Analyze of data
preparation 4. Analysis of data
Criter The *Bookmark*, and *Oread Book*
Criter
Alternator, starter and generator specialties,
Parts service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069. 3900
W. 6th. ff
86 Dodge Van, V-8 318 motor excellent
carsion, moving -must sell, call events
74 Dodge Van, V-8 318 motor excellent
carsion, moving -must sell, call events
Camera-35 cm Miranda SKRT102. Vivatar
Camera-35 cm Miranda SKRT102. Vivatar
tortoise lens i5502$200.85 $40.35 3-30
tortoise lens i5502$200.85 $40.35 3-30
Home Woodship—Two bookcases $20.00 and $75.00. 2六 foot map cabinet cabinets $175.00 and $200.00, small oak table $50.00. Custom orders filled on stereo cabinets $83-8892.
Mimpaus a great way to gaseg gas. Spring
North Dakota, South Cox 62. Owatotope Ks. (913), 210-
784. Box 62.
Woman's 10 speed almost airtel. Call 379-0408
after 5.00 p.m. ASK for Kathy.
Camaro for Sale: 1667 Good condition, new
paint, leather interior.
$1500 Rob after R. 843-5715. 3-30
4 X 100 watt Maranta Receiver. Dual-Powered
cabinet. Designed for up to 450W cabintire. Price reimbursable. Ai-4320
and Ai-6720
1971 Cauzier Convertible. Great condition.
V-83 I-2V- Auto A/ C, Radicals. Full Power,
AM, AU/Track, Silver/ black. 4250. Sweep
841-3632. 3-27
Raleigh bicycle. Excellent condition, super light equipment with pump. $180-$360. 842-676-765
Z28 Camaro loaded, 26,000 miles, red, in super condition. Asking $5,500. Call 842-
9300. 4-3
GRETCHEN 88 KEY PIANO for direct use
and/or keyboard per music note, 3
string top cello with percussion
nurser, used once in concert. EXCELLENT
solo piano. A great acoustic piano sound
at 1/3 the size of a piano. Price of
Yamaha Electric Grand. Must sell
your first born instrument, 700-41-
Tim.
74 Auid 105 LS AM F5 track, amroof,
wht. whr, dfw. Pier, else honee. Excellent
condition. No Runt. (Meadowlark Bristol
Terr. Bldg. B$10.00) **3-20**
Saturday only. Brass bead, Oak oak box, Sand
box, collage mureture, beds, old papers, box,
collage mureture, beds, old papers, box
Women's 10-5 speed, lugged frame, rear rack.
$7 Men's. Dumbo 3-speed, lugged frame,
27" wheels $56. Boys' Failleigh 3-speed,
26" wheels, $38.439-308 after
3-27
Men's 10 speed, 21" lugged frame. All alloy
equipment, perfect condition. $125, 843-3098
after 5. 3-27
10 spd. Merit's PUCH pathfinder, like new,
$180 call 749-1015 MWF after 5 p.m. TR
weekends all day.
68 Mustang. Low miles. Excellent shape 12
mo. No rust. Store: Scaleb 811-40-1 10
Lawrence advertising medium for sale. Well known, high profit, good opportunity. Call 1-800-526-7398.
FOUND
Guitar amp, Holmes 200 watt Head with 410" cabinet. Like new. 749-5290 3-31
Why have a high school teacher at KU51 work for $25.90 machine for $75.90. Office Equipment is required.
HELP WANTED
Bus pax and temporary id of Robert Archaea-
co, Pharmaceutical Office, 111 Flint St. 3-20
Kansas Business Office, 111 Flint St. 3-20
Found 1 pair of two-tone brown woman's gloves in front of Bailey, Friday the 13th. Call 748-1292. 3-26
TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES,
you will have your share of work
experiences with nursing home residents? Our consumer or
nurving home residents? Our consumer or
nurving Home Nurses (KINN) need your help and input on nursing home conditions and
residency. All names and correspondence
the residence. All names and correspondence
913-842-3088 or 843-7177, or write us
913-842-3088, Mass. 31, Lawrence, Kansas
60041.
CRUISERS CLUB MEDIEVERANEAN, SAL-
struction, Office Personnel, Counselors,
structures, Office Personnel, Counselors,
struction, Office Personnel, Counselors,
APPLICATIONS OF OPENNESS, Handling for AP-
PLICATIONS OF OPENNESS, 153 Box 60129
153 Box 60129
Travel from Oklahoma to Montana with a wheat harvest crew. Call collect on weekdays, 913-781-4945; on weekends 913-567-4649
4-2
"Mother's helper" room: board hairdryer, in ex-
celsis bedding. Country home 45 mm from LaWarenes.
Work out flexible hips with student. Move in by
workout like kids & animals. 3-30
1+411-486-303
1+411-486-303
Someone to translate two Japanese scientific articles Call Mark 841-4775 afterward.
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS to MANY
part-time 3-5 hour per week. Duties may
be related to bathing, transfers to and from wheelchairs,
Liavo Mountains AA AO 190 H 72,
Liavo Mountains AA AA 190 H 72.
Teachers Wanted Elementary and Secondary.
West, and other state $15 Registration
Fee which is Refundable - PHI. jr2053) 877-
477-6188 Teachers' Agency -邦克市,
NB Alk, NM 8196)
The Clean, an at present area band, is smoking a 4t mimber with a desire to play the guitar. No equipment or no attachments must. No weight lifter or Metallic Heroes. Call 815-494-3567.
STUDENT ASSISTANT WANTED for golf courses, clipping and filing documents, and other duties. Apply by August 4-8. 17 Requires availability from April 8-May 13. 17 Requires weekly application to Barbara Ballard or Nuney School of Education at Source Centre, 218 Strong Hall, 863-552-3220, Tuesday, March 10 We are an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Marketing and Business Majors
Get experience in your field plus make up to $200 a week part time. Must have car and be professional.
Call 841-7449
Ask for Mr. Lyons
The Department of East Asian Languages and Culture seeks a Visting Assistant Professor in sociology, cultural replacement. Position in the social science department, Anthropology, Sociology, Anthropology, and Economics prefers Trait an introductory interdisciplinary course in Chinese or Japanese and Japan a course in Chinese or Japanese courses in two semesters) Ph.D. preferred. A Bachelor's degree in another month. Application deadline April 19, 2018. Contact C Cameron Khorn or Charles J-Hueley. Language and Cultures, 2129 Wheaton Hall, University of Michigan, 6045 (813) 862-3300. An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applicants should have a record of race, religion, color, sex, education, national origin or ancestry. **3-27**
Attention, Business Students—Nationally known company interviewing students for summer work program. High profit and competitive job market. Call 843-8711. 3-31
Need good paying summer work? Looking for hard workers. Must relocate. Have entire summer free. Make $253 a week Call for appointment 843-8711. 4-7
Wanted: Executive Director for Associated University College of Human Services. Responsibilities include coordination of activities on several university campuses, leadership and job responsibilities at the faculty of the library, also research, testing, teaching and lobbying on the issue before the Board of Trustees of $10,000 in repayable with the Board of Trustees of the University of Kansas, 1700 College, Topeka, KS 68211, Alton: George Gaughan, by March 31.
WORLD'S LARGEST BUSINESS needs you!
Stay home - paid weekly. Free details.
Enclosed stamped envelope. Peggy Jenny. 3229
Glauer Dr. Lawrence. Kw 60444
Now hire for Spring & Summer gatherer positions. Must be able to work 20 hrs a week. Apply in person during the day: Henry's 'Haircutery' at Miami & 6th Avenue.
LOST
Reward, lost blue folder with typewritten research materials. Contact 9-4. 864-3421. 3.97
REWARD, red vinyl wallet with all'd in it plus leather covered bookcloth as well as bus pass and American Express card.
Call 749-5663
3-27
My friends white Peugeot 10x2 spied hat on the front of my car, with headlights mounted on front fender. It was last seen behind Wesley Carr, who told me about this bicycle, please call 748-3293.
MISCELLANEOUS
PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS. Proof positive, laminated in hard plastic. For details and application seed cards see the Production Dept. K. Box 525, Temple, Arizona 83218.
Consumer Affairs Association for problems with tissues, bony meridians, motor neuron disorders call or ship by 819 Vermont Avenue
NOTICE
GAY AND LESBIAN PEER Counseling. A student is ready to listen. Referees through K.U. Information, 864-3506, or Headquarters, 812-345. tf
PILOTS! Commercial and instrument ground school to start soon. For more information call 841-6088. 3-27
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
Bussums & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports. Custom made portraits, color. B/W. Swells Studio 749-1611. 4-1
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can give at prices students can afford. Swells Studio, 749-1611.
HBD KEIKI MANHART
WE LOVE YOU
LOVE
ME
NEED EXTRA CASH? Sell your old wine and Diamonds. Top price for class rings, gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6777, 841-7476.
HEADACH, BACKACH, STIFF NECK,
LEG PAIN? Quality Chiropractic Care
Johnson & Johnson 843-9328 for
consultation, accepting Black Cross &
Lace Star insurance plans.
Compiling a “Best of Lawrence” list. Best pizza at Joliet's best burger club, stool at Champs-Élysées, stalk at bartertea, spot for "Best anything we've ever had." Best idas & nominations to 250th Wed. of Jan. 18, 2014.
CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS April 14-15
PERDITIONS available in Senate Student
Filing. F. d.adkins: 5:00 p.m. Friday, March
3-27
DO IT at GREEN'S ('The big yellow liquor store). The selection of fine wines, imported bitters, and exotic liquors. 802 West 22rd St. 3-28
Attractive male 25 is looking for a sincere female for a close relationship 842-986-4-1
***
Get the FISHING REPORT and top quality live bait and fishing tackle at Anglers Unlimited, 1449 W. 23rd. 3-30
We are looking for another mature, non-
emotional, well-behaved woman to reside
in an apartment during the next school
year. We will yet undeni. For more info
864-132-5070.
INTERNATIONAL PEN FRIENDS regarded as one of the Greatest Pen Friend Organizations in the United States and among countries, Correspond in English, French, German, and Spanish for all age groups. Send details to: Pen Friend International For free details see: www.IntERNATIONAL_PEN_FRIENDS.com. K-12, M-685, KN-896.
The Korean analogies for an incorrect ad that ran for *The Clean From March 9 to May 14* with a dueting auditioning for a mini film with a drama for Call 811-9546 for additional information
Yes, you may have heard the rumors, well they're true. Wear your Izod if you're gay day is coming quite soon. 3-27
Senior portrait special, studio taken with a large selection of scenic background available. Swella Studio. 749-1611. 4-8
How do the Artists celebrate the New Year? Come to The Harbour Lifes and join the Artists New Year Celebration Monday, March 30
3-56
There is an extension of the deadline for acceptance of nominations for Women's Recognition till April 1. 4-1
**VEGETARIAN TURNA** a few minutes walk from the Union! Morn-Fri. 11:30-3:40 824 Illinois, Apt. D. Ph. 749-5899. All you can, no strings attached;
SENIORS - only six weeks of school are left. This is the final push. Jobs and careers are nearing. It's time we all got serious, so they can finish next week. For the final filing. 3-27
Almort 19- The last two weeks have been the best. I really enjoyed the change in Stil. I co-hosted Rovaley, rose beach Still co-hosted Rovaley, rose beach Stil. I
Dance in our 24-hour Superdance for M.D.:
April 10th, 8:18 p.m. 8:18 p.m. Spanned
outside: Weston, Register at the bout
outside: Wesco, Spring 48th-57th on
3:27-498-0383 www.wesco.org
WAIMERS and WAIMERTTFS unite!
Friday night. Around The Opera House
we'll be a Blue Ridden. The LAMBS like to
Rugga to go with le-ram Kev the Rey.
Rolf, Mike. Bob, Rob. Rcareball, Wolfman, Pine, Peever, Holtz, Scott. Who could ask in vain? Thanks for the enjoyable time over Spring 2013! Gone! Zona & Mush Mouth. 3-36
HEY MEMS! It's your birthday you can count on. We're a lot like a bus. The AMM's will be 12 celebrating this year's birthday in all their allyer shape, around the 'girl's day' and 'boy's day.' Happy Birthday! Berry! Love, Drea 3-26
Random Firings: Transcend Potatelsim! 3-27
SERVICES OFFERED
Tutoring Math 000-800, Phix 100-600, Busf
388, 804, Call 843-906, Thus
tt
Do you have a
843-7095
26th and Iowa
whee
Sports Car Mechanic that has been Factory trained? At the Factory?
wheel We Do!
---
Babybaiting at dmv on my home. Preferably from age 2-5 years. Call 842-2605. 3-27
GARDEN TILLING, sawing, mowing.
Jmi 841-2379. 4-1
TYPING
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term papers, mime. IBM correcting selectite.
Barb, after 5 p.m. #82-310. **tf**
Experienced K.U. typist. HIM Correcting
Seluctive, quality Work. References available.
Sandy; evening and weekends. 748-
9818.
Experienced typed-term papers, thesis,
music, electric "BM Selectric" Proofreading,
spelling corrected. 843-9554. Mrs. Wright
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast
reliable, accurate. IBM ipc elite. 822-
ttf evenings to 11:00 and weekends.
842-2001
I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476.
I can still handle two or three additional
thursdays before April deadline. tf
Dial
250 p.c.
For Your Typing Odyssey
ENCORE COPY CORPS
own - Holdenv Plano B42-200
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra.
841-4080 If
RESUME—RESUME—RESUME—Professional
Resume Preparation and Printing, Encore
Copy Corp. 25th and 842, 824-2001.
tt
Experienced typist—books, thesas, term papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting Solitric Terry evenings and weekends. 842-7544 or 843-2671. tf
Reports, discriptions, lessons, legal forms,
graphics, editsine, self-correct. Selective.
Call Ellen or Jeannan 841-2172. tt
Experienced typed would like to type thesis,
*statements*, etc. Call 842-3203. 3-30
RUSH JOBS our specially Reasonable Rates
IBM 10, 12 inch. Nathan or Sandy-841-
605, 642-843-844-845
I specialize in what you need typed! Call Debby any afternoon or evening 841-1924.
Fact and clear typing Call anytime 841-
6846 3-31
Typing. Wanted. Experienced technical typist can and will type anything. Call Laurel Moyer 842-8560. 4-1
WANTED
$108 per month. Own room. Utilities pd.
Mal) roommate needed. Call Tom or Drew
3-27
349-333.
ATTENTION PSYCHIOLOGISTS Psychology
north needs summer employment working
to gain experience in the field. Call 841-
6632 3-31
Quiet, studious male roommate to share
very nice apartment. Close to campus, own
room $7.50 mo plus 1'; utilities $42-884
3.99
Responsible woman to share very nice 2
BR duplex, now or summer. $132.50 + ½
utilities & deposit. 749-2618. 3-31
We are looking for another mature, non-smoking couple with a stable relationship and living in a rental apartment in an apartment during the next school year. Call 864-1637 as soon as possible. 3-27
Want to Buy Car; B would consider
Corvette. Pontiac T.A. Firebird. Z-28, 66-
76 Challenger S.S. or G.T.O. any condition.
No calls. D = 1-379-0788 or 1-379-0533.
Part time liquor store clerk Must be able to work on a day or two, a week or weekend with at least three hours of attentive亲身体验 Must guarantee at least two weeks of responsible work at an adult personality Must be very responsible and willing to do work that requires you to work in necessary. Must be able to follow in job that is more than "Just a Job" Call for resume.
Female roommates wanted. Share 5 bedroom hours. 12 month lease beginning June 1. Call 841-2688. 3-31
2 KU girls want 2 more to share house near campus in June. Call 841-1467-4-7
Part time maintenance help wanted.
Apartments, Saturdays, Sundays. Must be expert in appliances for an interview between 2.30 and 4.30.
Female employees wanted for Jawahar College.
Female roommate wanted for Jayhawn
Tower Apt. $85.50 month-utilities paid
$172.25
Additional female roommate wanted to work on your suite. Contact Lyon 842-9659 at 6:00 pm or Lynn 842-9659 at 6:30 pm. Marge roommate to share two bedroom furniture and furnishings. Rent paid, share electricity and post-door rent. Pay monthly rent of $1,500 per month invested in learning English or majoring in nursing. Call 842-7867 or 842-4223 after 20:30.
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 26, 198*
Sports
HALL OF FAME
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
An obviously displeased Head Coach Ted Owens signals for a time-out during the KU-Wichita State game. The Owens was offered a new three-year contract yesterday to replace the one year left on his current part.
After Kansas' basketball team ended last season with a 15-14 record, many KU fans and alumni called for the firing of coach Ted Owens. He eventually was given a vote of confidence, but not after much speculation that Owens would either be fired or would take a job at Oklahoma.
24-8 season earns Owens 3-year pact
After the Jayhawk's 24-8 record this season and the team's subsequent trip to the semifinals of the NCAA tournament's Midwest Regional, there won't be any sexual con.
KU Athletic Director Bob Marcum announced yesterday that Owens had been offered a new three-year contract. The contract will replace him as Owens's current contract and includes a pay raise.
"We at the University of Kansas are very proud of the job turned in by Coach Ted Owens and the team and feel he's说的 of a new contract," Marcum said. "There was one year when the Owens current contract, and it was decided to issue a new contract totaling three years."
The 51-year-old Owens completed his 17th year as coach of the Jayhawks, a career in which he has won 322 games and lost 152, a 68.1 winning percentage. Owens has taken two teams to the NCAA Championship and 1974. He also have been involved in postseason play nine times, seven of those in the NCAA.
ACTING CHANELLOR Del Shankel said he also was pleased that the athletic department had offered Owens a new contract, and he stressed Owens' off-the-court achievements.
"I am very pleased with the decision to offer Coach Owens a new contract," he said. "He and his teams have represented the University in an important manner, both on and off the basketball court."
"In addition to being a fine coach, he is a great example and leader for our players, as well as a mentor."
fine careers in sports, business, medicine and other professions. I hope that Ted and the University will continue to be associated for many years."
Owens said he would strive to continue the tradition established by F.C. "Phog" Allen, the only coach in KU history, to have won more games than his team has won the fifth person to have coached the Jayhawks.
"BASKETBALL has been a great source of pride at the University of Kansas for many years," Owens said in a prepared statement issued by the Sports Information Department. "I'm pleased that our teams during my time at the University have contributed to that great tradition. I am dedicated to continuing this excellence in basketball."
Owens was out of town recruiting and was unavailable for further comment.
Fambrough plans alum game, first practice
By TRACEE HAMILTON
Associate Sports Editor
Spring football practice begins Monday, and
Head Coach Darnam intends to take
them.
The echo of bouncing basketball has barely subsided in Allen Field House, and it's time for footballs to cut the spring air at Memorial Stadium.
"WE ONLY HAVE 20 sessions according to NCAA regulations," he said yesterday. "That's not much time. We have to make every day count."
Fambrough said, however, that he did not intend to suit up for the contest
"It's not definite yet, but it's in the wind." Fambrough said. "We've got at least 35 commitments, including the seniors from last year's team that are still in school."
But the last day of practice, though not the most important, should be the most fun. Fambridge said his staff was planning an alumni memoirimage for May 2, the final Saturday practice.
"If I got out there, all 11 of them would come at me.
"he said, laughing.
But Bamfroub was very serious when he met of his team's progress and its plan for the spring.
"WELL START off with full pads," he said.
"We plan on a controlled scrimmage on the first Storm."
"Spring practice is really when a player makes the team. At the end of it we should know the first two teams. Every position is wide open. We need to learn how to achieve and show coaches what they can do."
Fambrough said he expected about 90 players to participate in the spring sessions.
"We don't have a large number of players," he said. "I hope this within another year we'll have a few of them."
"WE JUST CAN'T afford the luxury of three outstanding players in one position. By the end of practices I expect to be two deep in some, and maybe even three."
Fambridge often uses the Nebraska football program as an example of what he would like to teach at his college. He says,
almost always a Top 20 team, finished second in the conference to Oklahoma last season.
"I'm really jealous of what they've got," Fambrough said of the Haskers. "We're working hard on our walk-on program. With a 30-second ride, we're a must to have a strong walk-on program.
"That's why I'm saving more scholarship than usual for our walk-ons—to encourage them. We'll probably have four scholarships left by next fall."
Fambrough doloed out one of his remaining scholarships yesterday, when he signed Paul Swenson, a 6-3, 228-pound offensive lineman from Osawatomie.
Myrtle touches all bases for softball team
Swenson, who carried a 3.75 grade point
and was a varsity athlete, attended a
Farmhouse on his first excursion Monday night.
"We've had him in football camp a couple years," Fambrouch said. "I'm excited about him because he turned down two appointments to the Air Force and Naval Academy to come here.
"HE'S THE TYPE we like to recruit. We're a fine student, an engineering student. We're getting better."
Sports Writer
By BRENDA DURR
Shawn Myrtle can play all the infiltrate positions from first to third, and catcher, too. But her tough challenge is learning to play the role of a defensive lineman in infielder for the Kansas women's softball team.
"When I didn't start, it was really tough to sit on the bench." Myrille, Wiltshire sophomore, said. "It's a common position for most freshmen, and I don't think this year because there's a lot more seniors."
BUT SITTING on the bench and waiting for a chance to play is the assignment given to a utility infielder. Her worth to the team isn't reflected in the number of times she starts, but in the ways she uses her skills as she moves from one infield position to the next.
She might be called upon at any time in the game to replace an injured player, or perhaps to pinch hit with runners on base. Such situations are tough for any player, Myrtle said, but especially for players who have to stay in the game both physically and mentally.
"I always have to be ready, and still be
competitive, even coming off the bench cold," she said. "I like to do the best that I can. Being mentally prepared is more of a routine type of thing."
Even though she encourages her teammates to their best, Myrtle says sometimes discuses the point. "She will be with us."
"DEALY, I would like to start. But if a player is hurt, I'll come in and do the best I can," she said. "I've been really fortunate to come on as a backup player when they needed it."
"There was kind of a conflict situation, always being the desire to play, but trying to be as supportive."
But Myrtle may become more than just a reserve. She filled in at both shortstop and third center, and she was an elite defender.
After regular shortstop Sue Sherman injured her hand in a collision at second base, Myrtle started every game at shortstop in the Oklahoma City team. The 281 batting average - third best on the team
"Certainly she has proven herself and deserves much more playing time than before," she said.
utility player but now deserves a chance on the first team."
Myrtle said, "People were really pleased I could come off the bench and do it. Nothing spectacular, but I made the plays, and that was the key."
Mytle had some experience making key plays at Wichita Heights High School, where she was a freshman.
"I've played softball since I was 7 and was kind of raised on the softball field," she said. "I was the tomboy in the family, and followed Dad around for years. He was very supportive. My dad also coached my team for four years."
But after four years of high school, one of the few goals Myrtle had left to attain was a place on a major college team. After initially trying out in the Big Ten, she came back again with the possibility of becoming a walk-on.
"A major goal since I was little was to try for a major college team and make it," she said. "Softball always has been a big part of my life, but it's not the only reason for choosing KU. The first time I saw this campus, I fell in love with it."
Baseball team will meet Benedictine today
By ARNE GREEN Sports Writer
Sports Writer
The weather, not Baker University, stopped the Kansas baseball team yesterday when early morning rains washed out the Jayhawks' doubleheader with the Wildcats.
The Jayhawks will try again today with a 1 p.m. doubleheader against Benedictine at Quigley Field. The games are the team's final game. For Big Eight play begins this weekend.
"When you play baseball in the spring in Kansas, or anywhere in this area, there's a danger of rain," he said. "That's why we try to play so many games at home early in the season."
KANSAS COACH Floyd Temple said that he was disappointed with the rainout but that it seemed to be a bad sign.
"It's unfortunate that we lost to the rain the
A pair of lefthanders, freshman Dennis Copi and junior Randy McIntosh, will start against Benedictine, but Temple said he planned to look at several other pitchers.
home opener after spring break, but it really shouldn't be too detrimental.
Coplan, 3-4, is off to a fast start this year,
inming both his starts this year and picking up a
new one.
"Coplan and McIntosh will pitch about two
rings each," he said. "It'll probably use
eight."
METNOSH, HAMPERED by a hamstring pull this spring, has struggled, however. Has an 0-1-1 ratio?
"Randy's problem has been lack of control early in the season," Tenned said. "He got a late start."
"They had a pretty good team last year and they have a good coach," he said. "It's a game where we need to play well if we're going to win."
Temple said that he did not know very much about Benedictine but that the Jayhawks would take him.
The Jayhawks have tomorrow off, then open the Big Eight season against Oklahoma State with doubleheaders Saturday and Sunday. The games are set for 10.m. at Quigley Field.
"WE PLAYED some tough competition in
the play that that's any indication, I think we
are ready to go."
Senior second baseman Roger Riley, KU's leading hitter with a three-hit streak, is ready for Eight-play.
Temple also said he thought the team would do well against Bir Elech competition.
The Jayhawks won seven of 11 games on their Texas trip over spring break.
"I think so," he said. "We might be outmanned in personnel, but our kids believe in themselves and I am confident."
Graves and Neumann meet the seated in the top 20 in individual events. Graves is seeded 13th in the 100-yard breast stroke, 16th in the 200 stroke and 20th in the 200 individual medley.
KANSAS
SOFT BALL
Neumann is seeded 15th in the 100 backstroke and Wright is seeded 42nd in the same event.
KU swimmers to compete in NCAA
Top collegiate swimmers from across the country, including three Kansas swimmers, will give the pool another stuff test in the first round of the state swimming and diving championships in Austin today.
Because it is wider and deeper than most swimming pools, the University of Texas' pool consistently gives up some of the fastest times in the nation.
DAVE KRAUSI/Kansan staff
Co-captain Steve Graves and sophomores Chuck Neumann and Gardner Wright will compete for Kansas in the meet, which will continue through Saturday.
"I was reading in the newspaper that winning the NCAA championship is tougher than winning the Olympics, and it's true. There is some great competition.
"But I think that our guys are going to do well. I feel really good about it."
Shawn Myrtle, a reserve infielder for the KU softball team, warms up during practice earlier this week. Myrtle has earned a spot on the starting team when she came off the bench to bat .281 during a spring break tournament.
Spahn said the NCAA championship was the toughest meet in the world.
Although traditional powers California, Florida, UCLA and Texas are returning strong teams to this year's championship, Spahn said he hopes the Big Eight representatives to hold their own.
"Missouri, Iowa State and Nebraska all have fine teams and should do well in the nationals," he said. "But we have the best chance out of the teams from the Bie Eight."
"Our guys are already well," KU Coach Bibb Spahi said. "They are all really close to Batman."
Syracuse's Erich Santifter hit his last 11 shots of regulation play en route to a game-high 26 points and sent the game into overtime. The team scored on the next play at the regulation bunzer to tie the score at 82.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Tulsa's Greg Stewart scored a team-high 25 points and a tie-breaking win with 30 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter of 88-84 victory over Syracuse at the NIT final.
Tulsa wins NIT in overtime. 86-84
Tulas finished the season at 26-7 under new coach Nolan Richardson, who came from Texas Junior College to inherit an 8-19 team that didn't enjoy a winning season since 1974-75.
Phoenix is not yet champion and the Kings still are in the race on the strength of their 110-101 victory last night. Scott Weddian had a lot of work to do, but his unfield scored 25 points as the Kings shot 62 percent.
The Phoenix Suns needed one victory to clash the Pacific Division championship, and the Kansas City Kings hoped to avoid the one loss that would have been one of the two remaining playoff spots in the NBA.
Kings get needed victory over Suns
Kansas City hit its first nine shots of the game, took a quick 10-point lead and never trailed despite an 11-point streak by the Suns that made the score 91-10 in the fourth quarter.
For the Suns Walker Davis scored 27 points, Dennis Johnson had 19, Truck Robinson hit 18 and Alvin Scott and Alvan Adams had 12 each. The Suns shot only 42 percent.
Reggie King was the third King with more than 20 points, and Otis Birdsong, Kansas City's All Star guard, scored 16.
.
Kansas City has only two games left, one Friday against Houston and one Sunday against Dallas. Kansas City and Houston both are left in the playoff spot. Should the two teams have identically beat the season's end, the Kings would get the playoff on the basis of the regular season's play.
4
KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, March 27,1981 Vol.91,No.120 USPS 650-640
Shankel discusses problems, solutions
By KATHRYN KASE Staff Reporter
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel acknowledged yesterday that the University of Kansas had problems, but said none of them was of major significance.
Shankel also urged the University community to speak up about internal and external matters to colleagues, friends, legislators, administrators and parents.
"Let your voices be heard." Shankel told about 256 people, mainly faculty members, in Woodruff Auditorium. "You have a stake in this University and an obligation to defend it. KU is not perfect, but it demonstrably an excellent university—and perhaps the best in this region."
Shankel was speaking at an all-University convocation he called three weeks ago to address
Honored with a standing ovation at the close of his speech, Shankt said the issues were athletic academic standards, the University of Kansas and the University of Missouri obligations and faculty consulting arrangements.
Additionally, Shankel said KU had two other concerns—its increasing tendency toward "cannibalization" and the politicization of the University.
CANNIBALIZATION OCCURS, Shankel said,
when the University faces hard economic times and
a recession.
"When faculty within the University begin to pit the needs of one department or program against the needs of another department or program and to attack the budgets of other units," he said. "I believe I see this tendency being reinforced.
1 "know of several instances where faculty is accused other faculty, without grounds, of illegal conduct."
Cannibalization also was evident when legislators and KU administrators received anonymous letters from persons in the KU department, who complainedantilized claims about collagines. Shankar told
Later, when pressed for particular incidents of cannibalism, Shankel refused to be more spartan.
Shankel said politicization, his other concern, occurred when University community members wanted political intervention in KU's internal administration.
"If the University, however, resorts to political expediency or if members of the University community request political intervention in the internal administration of the University," he said, "then I believe we have established a dangerous trend which can only lead to political intervention in areas where it might not be requested or desired."
TO CURB THAT TREND, the University must remain a forum for student and faculty ideas, especially as it evolves.
See CONVOCATION page 5
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
Acting Chancellor addressers students and faculty members at a University convoitation in the Union's Woodruff Auditorium. Shankel (inset photo) listens to questions from audience members after discussing issues facing the University.
Transfer of KU research funds is questioned
SCOTT HOOKER/Kansan staf
By BRAD STERTZ
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-A House Ways and Means subcommittee has found a set of extra-legal monetary transfers between the University of Kansas and Parsons State Hospital.
According to State Rep. Sandy Duncan, R-Wichita, surplus research funds of the University had been transferred from the KU budget into the Parsons State Hospital budget without any records being kept on what those funds were used for.
"There is quite a large chunk of money that is being used, but no records are kept on it," Duncan, a member of the subcommittee that investigated the matter, were concerned about was that this money was
spent without the consent or knowledge of the Legislature."
Duncan emphasized that at the present time the transfers were not illegal, but he did not rule out the possibility that illegal practices had taken place.
"What happened was that equipment was bought by KU for its facility down at the hospital and then the next year that equipment would turn up on the inventory sheets of the hospital," Duncan said. "Some of the research money was also being spent for things ranging from a meat grinder for the hospital kitchen, to the salary of a lab worker, to a lab spectrophotometry machine."
The reasoning behind the transfers of the funds was unknown to Duncan and the subcommittee.
payment to the hospital for letting the KU facility use its patients for research.
THE KU FACILITY is located on the campus of the Parsons State Hospital. The KU branch is titled the University Affiliated Facility at Parrsons College, which conducts research on mentally retarded children.
"There are several kinds of things that are happening down there," Duncan said. "Nothing, and nothing."
Richard Von Ende, KU executive secretary,
said yesterday that the entro affair was more a
difficult one than before.
"But it is really not a problem such as," Van E. Eckhart says, "think that there needs to be more education."
Duncan, however, said that the subcommittee was seriously interested in finding out where all of the cases are located.
"I would say that of general use funds the Legislature should have accountability," he said. "But there isn't any now. The funds are personal expenses."
"We haven't had the time yet to check out if the employee in question down there is on the KU payroll or the hospital payroll. If the person is on the KU payroll, then there is a problem."
THE SUBCOMMITTEE, according to Duncan, has asked for a study on the fundings from the Board of Regents. He said the subcommittee also asked for the hospital's budget with an explanation of what was spent where for the past several years.
Once the subcommittee gets the hospital budget, it would then compare the expenditures with programs approved or disapproved by the Legislature.
"It is one thing if this turns out to be an effort in creative management, where funds were found for programs that simply could not be afforded," Duncan said. "But it is something entirely different if we said no, we don't want you to do this' and the hospital did it anyway."
From what the subcommittee had learned so far, Danean said, the former case seemed the
"But still, what possible connection does a meat grinder have with university research?" Duncan asked. "It certainly does not excuse the practice."
Duncan said that at the moment it was too early to make accusations about the matter.
"There is a good working relationship between the hospital and the University down there," Duncan said. "Our interest is not to ruin that relationship."
House panel heeds advice on Regents budget
By BRAD STERTZ
Staff Reporter
TOPEK A—As State Rep. Mike Hayden had predicted, the House Wayz and Means Committee yesterday gave its approval to nearly all of the Senate's recommendations on the Board of Regents budget, including a 7 percent increase in faculty salaries.
Hayden, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, had said this week that most of the cuts made by the Senate would stand. The committee failed to get through the entire budget for over four hours of debate. Debate on the remainder of the budget and a final vote will be taken today.
Center, University of Kansas Medical Center,
St. Louis, Missouri State University and Kansas Technical
University.
The committee passed the system-wide Regents budget and individual budgets for the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, Kansas State Veterinary Medical
THE COMMITTEE must still decide on the
nomination of the State University and
Wisconsin State University.
Throughout most of the budget discussion, debate on Senate cuts to Gov. John Carlin's economic policy was ongoing.
Two notable exceptions to the near blanket approval of the Senate cuts was the extension of a 15 percent tuition increase for the Med school tuition for the K-State Veterinary Medical Center.
The House committee made one surprise move during the debate. The committee decided on a close vote to strike a concession to President Obama and installed in the budget during floor debate.
least three hours of classroom teaching,
unless excess by the university's chancellor.
The rider would have required all people with a regular faculty appointment to carry at
Before the committee deleted the rider from the budget, several committee members suggested raising that requirement to allow classroom work. That motion narrowly failed.
On the individual KU budget recommendations, the House committee made statements.
ONE OF THE MAJOR amendments was the decision not to support a KU law enforcement training program with an insurance premium tax. That proposal was the budget by a House Ways and Means subcommittee that wanted to escalate the program.
The committee was split almost evenly on a proposal to raise the faculty salary increase from the Senate's recommendation of 7 seats. See NOVEX report.
See BUDGET page 12
Street band stages comeback in Lawrence
By PENNICRABTREE Staff Reporter
"We're not interested in any record dals or big concert performances," Mark Lumpie, banjo and ukulele player for the band, said yesterday. "We are interested in jamming and making people happy."
rocking on a guitar or banjo and literally singing for his supper, the street musician is an endangered spec in anywhere but the largest cities.
Before stereo, radio and the $12-a-ticket concert, there was the street musician.
THE FLATLAND BAND, which consists of Lumpe, a senior from Scranton; Dick Powers, a resident of Prairie Village; Tony Harrison and Narayana Brown, both Lawrence residents, performs at various places on campus and in the Lawrence downtown area.
In Lawrence, a group called the Flatland String Band is trying to keep the street musician肌体
"Basically, we play whether and whenever the sun is shining," Lumpie said. "Sometimes we pass the hat, and sometimes we don't, depending on how the authorities are feeling towards us."
The band has not obtained the $25 license
See BAND page 12.
JACKSON SINGER
Three members of the Flatland String band, left to right, Dick Powers, Mark Lampe and Tony Harrison, perform outside Wescoe Hall.
Amyx drops out of race for city commissioner
Staff Reporter
Bv PAM HOWARD
The surprise withdrawal of City Commission candidate Mike Amyx and allegations by two commissioners that two candidates were representing specific interest groups highlighted the League of Women Voters candidate forum last night.
The forum, which featured the six City Commission candidates, was designed to help voters decide who they would support April 7 to fill three commission vacancies.
"I, as of now," Amyx said in his resignation speech, "am directing 100 percent of my support and effort to assist Mr. Bob Schumm in his re-election bid to the Lawrence City Commission."
Amysa said that he was resigning from the campaign because he was concerned about the state of the economy.
"I also am concerned that there is a coalition forming that, if elected, would drastically change the character and spirit of Lawrence for years to come." he said in his speech.
HE ALSO CLAIMED that candidates had been changing their positions to match different audiences. Amyx cited this as another reason for his resignation.
"Over the past two weeks I have become very concerned, at times alarmed, that some of the candidates feel they have to tell a different story to different audiences," he said.
City Commissioner Barkley Clark, who is running for re-election, said that he did not agree that candidates were taking different positions under different circumstances.
He said that questions were asked differently
at each forum and so they would naturally be answered differently.
Clark did, however, speak of a polarization that he thought was forming in the campaign that may have been the forming coalition that Amyx referred to.
"I sense in this campaign a polarization I have not sensed in any other campaign," he said. "I am not confident."
"Two candidates, I'm not going to say whom, are appearing at coffees and teas together."
During the forum, Tom Gleason denied that polarization was occurring.
Gleason said that neighborhood associations were no more power groups than the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, the Downtown Association and many other Lawrence organizations.
"I wish we could drop these false divisions," Gleason said.
"Divide and conquer is an old political tactic." Gleason said after the meeting. "In any city as diverse as Lawrence you can draw lines and say people are on one side or the other.
"There are differences in opinion and attitude, but you can't say there are two camps."
COMMISSIONER SCHUM also spoke of a polarization movement in the campaign.
"There is a group of people that are interested in forming a city council." It he said.
in forming a city within a city," he said. Schumann he said he had not expected Amyx's re-
"This is kind of a surprise move and I didn't know about it until just before the meeting." Schumm said. "He (Amyx) indicated a real concern about this election."
See CANDIDATE page 5
Father PLEAGANT
Weather
It will be partly cloudy today with a high of 70, according to the KU Weather Service. There will be a 50 percent chance thundershows in the afternoon.
Winds will be gusty out of the south at 10 to 25 mph.
Tonight there will be a 70 to 80 percent chance of thunderstorms. The low is 54°N, 126°W.
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and cooler with the high in the upper 50s. There will be a slight chance of thundershowers.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 27, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Council to fight government fraud
WASHINGTON—Vowing to nab "any crock we find," President Reagan yesterday created a special council to fight government waste and waste in the nation.
The President, who as a candidate often complained of the $2.5 billion lost every year to fraud and waste by federal government, said he was creating the President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency because "the American neocole are demanding action."
Reagan named Deputy Budget Director Edwin Harper to chair the council, promised it more assistance from the FBI, and predicted it would be a successful effort.
As he sat in the Roosevelt Room flanked by his inspectors, Reagan pledged, "Belleme me, we are out to get control of our lives, and we are going to follow every lead, root out every incompetent, and prosecutate any crook we find who's cheating the people of this nation."
The President still has 10 more inspectors to select.
After his inauguration, Reagan fired all of the inspectors serving as inspectors in the department. The department is now administrated as consultants and some will simply move back into their offices.
Suspect cleared of Atlanta killings
ATLANTA—FBI agents yesterday questioned a black man arrested in New York state for kidnapping a child and indicated later that they had been tortured.
FBI Director William Webster said the agents were told to question Frank Albert, a former ally of Al Qaeda, in prison in East Forkiibl, N.Y., and in the Atlanta jail and slaying.
But after two agents met with Edmonsdin in Poughkeepsie, where he was being held, FBI spokesman Neil Herman said the investigation was "in lull."
"What I thought was going to materialize by now hasn't," Herman said. He refused to elaborate.
Edmonds was arrested Sunday, and Atlanta authorities, notified within hours, apparently never considered him a serious suspect.
Meanwhile, two medical examiners involved in the Atlanta cases discounted published reports that investigators had found dog hairs in the victims' shoes.
The New York Daily News reported yesterday that Atlanta detectives had determined the hairs came from either a Rusky or a chow and had enlisted the aid of New York City detectives and the American Kennel Club in an effort to identify the animal and trace its owner.
China asked to help contain Soviets
PEKING--Former President Gerald Ford said in an interview published yesterday that China and the United States should join forces with other nations to address climate change.
Ford, who is on a six-day visit to China, told the official Xinhua News Agency "the vitality" of Peking and Washington to meet Soviet aggression on a global basis.
"We have also the responsibility of meeting that threat on a global basis," he said.
Ford said in his interview that "both the United States and China have the requirements for their own security to meet the threat of any Soviet invasion."
On the last leg of a world trip, Ford told the news agency that "it is the consensus among the leaders with whom I have talked that the Soviet Union was on the brink of war."
Before arriving in China Sung, Ford visited Ireland, France, West Germany, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Singapore and India.
He will stop in Japan before returning home
Burnett awarded $1.6 million in suit
The two-week trial featured testimony from the entertainer that the article had rekindled memories of her alcoholic parents and had changed her own life.
HOLLYWOOD—A jury ruled yesterday that the National Enquirer libeled Carol Burnett in a gossip item implying the comedian was drunk in a Washington restaurant, and assessed $1.6 million damages against the supermarket tabloid.
The six-woman, five-man superior court jury, reduced to 11 members after Johnny Carson blasted the writers's assays "iilars" on national television, found that the Enquirer acted with malice when it reported Miss Burnett was loud and boisterous in the Rive Gauche restaurant. The tabloid wrote that she argued with former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and soiled wine on a diner.
The jury awarded Burnett $1.6 million in punitive damages—$24,615 a word for the 65-word item.
The entertainer originally sued the Enquirer for $10 million, but reduced the figure on the last day of the trial.
In his instructions, Judge Peter Smith told the jury that because Burnett was a public figure the panel must decide whether there was "clear and convincing evidence" that the tabloid acted with reckless disregard for the truth" when it printed the gossip item on March 2, 1976.
WASHINGTON—Interior Secretary James Watt said yesterday that he planned to open the Wilderness Preservation System to exploration for minerals as part of an emerging policy aimed at revitalizing the American mining industry.
Plan will open mining in wilderness
Watt revealed the plan, which is sure to draw fire from environmentalists, during testimony before the House Mining Subcommittee.
He said he had "instructions" from President Reagan to go ahead with the development of a "national nonfuels minerals policy" that would help reduce reliance on fossil fuels.
Watt said he was considering opening public lands found unsuitable for wilderness to mining and also was reviewing existing "provisions permitting exploration for and development of minerals within the wilderness system."
the Wilderness Act, under which wilderness is set aside for preservation in its virgin state, has provisions allowing exploration for and the use of such areas.
Thatcher says no proof on Hollis
In a statement to Parliament, Thatcher said a book by British journalist Chapman Pincher "contained no information of security significance which is new to the security authorities and some of the material is inaccurate or distorted."
LONDON—Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said yesterday there was no conclusion on whether the heart of Britain's intelligence agency can still operate from 1965 to 1985, as a Soviet vessel did.
In the book "Their Trade is Treachery," serialized this week by the Lambda Research Center, Pincher has Hollis may have been a Soviet KGB Intel service agent.
Thatatcher said that former Cabinet Secretary Lord Trend, who investigated such charges earlier, found nothing to confirm them.
"Mr. Pincher's account of Lord Trend's conclusions is wrong," she said. "The book asserts that Lord Trend 'concluded there was a prima facie case that MI-5 (Britain's counterintelligence service) had been penetrated over the US government.' The book asserts that the book went on to say that he named 'Hollis as the likeliest suspect.'"
Thatcher also said, "Lord Trend said neither of these things and nothing resembled them."
Poles brace for strikes, Soviets' threats
WARSAW, Poland - Soquitany workers hung red-and-white Polish flags on factories across the country for a nationwide strike today, idling up to 100,000 workers in a giant confrontation with its Communist government and with Moscow.
The East German news agency ADN said that the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact military maneuvers in and around Poland had been extended indefinitely, and officials in Washington said the situation in the Eastern European nation of 36 million people "seems to be falling apart."
Reports of panic buying surfaced and shopmers lined up in the capital of Warsaw yesterday for scarce goods on the shelves after state television announced that the country had only 12 days of food stocks left.
Solidarity workers began putting up flags and carrying food into factories yesterday after last-ditch talks between the union and government on averting the walkouts were postponed until Solidarity said the strike would go on.
"The strike was proclaimed and it will take place." Lech Walesa, leader of the 10-million-member union, said. "We do not want to strike, because a strike is against our own interests. But there is no other way to fulfill our demands."
THE FOUR-HOUR strike, a protest action against police beating of Solidarity members last Thursday in the northwestern city of Bydgoszeg, was slated to be the biggest of Poland's eight-month free trade union strikes. The summer strikes when the Solidarity union movement was born.
In addition, Solidarity has voted a
general strike next Tuesday of indefinite duration unless the government of Wojciech Jaruzelski agrees to its demands—an investigation of the beatings, dismissal of officials responsible for the attack, recognition of rural farmers' union and the freeing of political prisoners in the nation.
JARUZELSKI APPOINTED a commission led by Justice Minister Jerry Bafia to investigate the Bydgoszcz incident but then challenged part of the findings, which diplomatic sources said agreed with Solidarity's claim that the incident was a deliberate police provocation.
The strike today shattered the 90 days of labor force peace asked for by Jaruzelski last month to let Poland come to grip with its economic problems—food shortages and a foreign debt of some $24 billion.
In addition, Moscow has said it will not tolerate "chaos" in the nation and reported this week that the Polish and Soviet soldiers were capable of issuing a "suitable rebuff to hostile ideological diversions."
Officials in Washington and the East German ADN news agency said that Soviet troops and their Warsaw Pact allies—East Germany, Czechoslovakia and Poland—have indefinitely extended their苏奐42军 war games. They also emphasized an Italian in Poland amphibious lands along the Baltic.
The maneuvers were the largest since just after the 1968 Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia, which removed the reform领导struiring for a liberal Communism in the so-called "Prague Spring" movement.
At the beginning of the maneuvers last week, Washington reported that its fears of a Warsaw Pact invasion of Poland to stifle the free trade movement had abated, but yesterday the White House said it was "concerned that the Soviet Union may intend to take repressive action in Poland."
Presidential press secretary Jim Brady also said the Reagan administration was concerned that Poland might use force to put down the labor movement, "We belive Poland should be allowed to resolve our own problems without outside interference of any kind."
threatened national action in October,
when a widespread one-hour stoppage was staged at selected factories and in many cities throughout the country a strait to press request demands.
Only twice before has Solidarity
The October token walkout was the first legal strike in Poland. Solidarity won the right to strike in the August strikes, which began in the shipyards of Gdansk, now the national headquarters of Solidarity.
The Bettmann Archive
In Vienna, UFI correspondent Joseph Reeves reported that members of the Warsaw Pact also showed signs of conflict with Poland's continuing labor unrest.
Report critical of contributions
WASHINGTON—President Reagan and his wife, Nancy, raised $735,911.91 in private donations to redecorate the White House instead of accepting a $50,000 Congressional appropriation for the
Although the list of contributors to Mrs. Reagan's White House Historical Association runs for eight pages, a published story noted that 23 oil industry donors gave a disproportionate $270,000.
But now their efforts to demonstrate that private capital can take the place of tax money in pursuit of a public cause, cast in a critical light by a keen report.
The story said the oil donations were solicited by close Reagan associate and unofficial adviser Holmes Tuttle in a lawsuit against arming for alleged past favors.
Some of the oilmen were quoted as saying they gave money in appreciation for Reagan's treatment of their industry, although not to curry future favors. Reagan campaigned on an unabashed platform of oil decontrol, which he ordered Jan. 28 to unleash the industry to find new energy supplies.
"It's a gratuity for services rendered, thanks the administration for decontrol and for the way it cut the Energy Department budget," charged Edwin Rothschild, a persistent critic of the oil industry and a member of the White House staff. "I'm better way to honor a President who has done so much for so few."
One White House aide close to the fund estimated that there were several hundred individual contributions from 100 donors, $70,000 gift from the Annenberg Fund.
*1980 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis*
C. LEPRENTZ.
Now comes Miller time.
time.
University Daily Kansan, March 27, 1981
Page 3
Towers rent will increase
By KATHY MAAG Staff Reporter
Jayawkher Towers will undergo many changes within the next couple of months, including a 10 percent rent increase, longer leasing periods, a new manager, a new tenant and a required parking permit fee.
Apartment rates will range from $395 to $110, up from this year's rates of $235 to $375, J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said yesterday. Costs vary depending on location and use of kitchen, dishwashers and bars.
"The rates are comparable to other apartment complexes in Lawrence," Wilson said. "We're one of the few that pay all utilities."
"It's intended this be a self-supporting, self-liquidating
operation for the Endowment Association and the University."
Leases are being printed and won't be available until April 15, Wilson said. Leases are accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis.
However, current Towers residents have the priority to re-ent their apartments until April 30.
"We wanted to announce our rates earlier, but we weren't in a position to." Wilson said. "We're still four months before school starts."
Contracts were lengthened to simplify leasing, he said. Nine-month contracts were offered this week that will enable the lease will run from Aug. 5 to May 31.
"Early Bird Specials," discounts for early leasers, will not be offered this spring.
"We found it was easier to start earlier than have a lot of specials," he said.
Summer leases will run from June 5 to Aug. 1 and will be covered under this year's rates.
The Towers will also have a new manager. Don Bebau, two-year project manager, is resigning April 19 that will replace him in the position.
This year, free permits were issued from the Towers office.
But along with a new parking lot, residents will also have to buy a $22 parking fee from the University.
In an attempt to ease the parking problems at the Towers, a new 70-car parking lot will be built this summer so Irving Hill Road
"Towers residents will pay to park for a University lot, just like any residence hall, scholarship hall or Stouffer Place," Wilson said. "But a parking spot still will not be guaranteed."
604 pints exceed goal for blood drive
The KU Panhellenic Association and Interfraternity Council all-campus blood drive ended successfully its project 609-pint coal quote.
A total of 604 pints of blood had been donated when the blood drive ended, Joy Ann Hanson, Lawrence junior, Panellenic vice president for campus
affairs and its blood drive chairman, said. The drive ran from Tuesday through yesterday.
Hanson said a total of 193 pints were donated on Tuesday, 192 on Wednesday and 219 yesterday. A daily quota of 200 pints had been set for the drive.
people registered show up to give blood, but we had a lot of walk-ons."
"We had a real good response," Hanson said. "We probably had more
She said that more than 100 volunteers from KU Greeks housed one-and-a-half hour slots to sign people into the program, where they serve refreshments and handle the blood.
Hanson said the 600-pint goal was comparable to past blood drives.
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Parking lot addition creates conflicts
By KATHY MAAG Staff Reporter
Much to the anger of Stouffer
Neighborhood residents Jayhawker
Towers will have a new 70-car parking
space directly behind Stouffer builders 23.
Concerns about safety and noise top the list of Stouffer complaints about the parking lot. The proposed site will force the relocation of 10 small gardens and come about 29 feet away from the Stouffer building.
“It’s just not fair,” Tim Grillot, Parsons second-year law student and a Stouffer resident, said. “Although it is fun, campus, it’s quiet here and we have kids.
"We really don't want the parking lot at all."
Griot said he planned to write letters to J.J. Wilson, director of housing, and Acting Chancellor Del Shankel.
Similar complaints were voiced by several Stouffer residents.
"I know they have parking problems at the Towers, but so do we." Bonnie Byers, Lawrence junior and a Stoffer resident, said. "I have a 2-year-old kid and they're cutting down the area the kids can play in."
THE PROPOSED SITE was chosen because it was the closest land available near the Towers, Wilson said.
"We think the greatest use of the land is for Towers parking," he said. "We'll relocate the gardens and children's playing area (near building 23)."
"I am willing to talk to Stouffer residents anytime they want to talk about it."
Wilson said the residents had nothing to worry about.
"I do not think the Stouffer residents have any more fear of Towers residents the Towers residents to do of Stouffer." It's not necessarily a valid concern.
But Stouffer Neighborhood Association chairman Bill Carswell said the residents were concerned about the proposed lot.
"We have asked the architect to place some kind of barrier between Stoutufer and the lot," he said. "But he said there were not enough funds.
"We want a commitment they will physically isolate the lot."
Wilson said the architect was looking into the possibility of a chain link fence to separate the two properties. One resident suggested a cement wall, but Wilson said that would be too costly. The new lot will cost about $100,000.
AN OPTION to build additional decks on the current lots was dismissed because of an estimated $400,000 cost.
Carswell said that one new lot would not alleviate the Towers parking problems.
"I want to assure Stouffer residents they will not have to pay for the new lot," Wilson said. "Only Towers will be used to pay for it."
Bill Keih
Second KU black fraternity buys house
For the first time in 49 years, two KU black fraternities have houses in Lawrence.
wanted to be centralized instead of spread around."
Omega Psi Phi fraternity moved to 114 Kentucky St. March 1. They plan to have an open house at 5 p.m. Sunday to宴请 beoon with the fraternity.
"We got a house so we can be more open to the community," Harvey Laster, Junction City junior, said. "We
The only other KU black fraternity to have a house is Alpha Phi Alpha. The first house at the university is its first house in 1892 and its present house at 104 Mississippi St. in 1964.
&
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, March 27, 198
Opinion
A disconcerting affair
Andre Previn and the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra startled KU concertgoers earlier this week when they appeared not in traditional formal concert attire but instead in street clothes. They gave a blue jeans performance in Hoch Auditorium.
It is a shame, Previn complained, that KU does not have adequate performing arts facilities to accommodate visiting musicians. They couldn't get dressed backstage, he said; there wasn't enough room for the wardrobe cases.
Yes, it is a shame that KU doesn't have such facilities. But it does have Hoch, and the many who put on Rock Chalk there a few weeks ago managed to cope with cramped conditions. And there are facilities in Murphy Hall for various performances. Murphy, too, is cramped, but what building on campus isn't?
Perhaps Previn, instead of being cramped inside Hoch, would have preferred the vast expanses of Allen Field House, which numerous rock groups have
found satisfactory? And why is it that other visiting orchestras have managed to appear formally dressed before Previn was humiliated in street clothes?
Apparently Previn doesn't understand that KU is primarily an educational institution, not a cultural one. Like it or not, KU isn't, and never will be, the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Building an addition to Haworth Hall so that biology students can hold labs, or getting architecture students enough space to learn their trade, simply has a higher priority than building a fine arts center so that visiting orchestras won't be inconvenienced.
First, let's get the problems of education solved here at KU. Once that small task is completed, then perhaps KU can become Wolf Trap Farm of the West.
It would be nice to have such a center, but like most other cultural and artsy facilities on campus, it'll have to wait for a generous millionaire benefactor, because the state can't be expected to subsidize a hall for visiting orchestras.
Register women, too
Possibly the most important case the Supreme Court will decide this year will be the one challenging the constitutionality of registering only men for a potential draft. President Carter last year had asked for registration of both sexes, but Congress, apparently afraid that America's sugar-and-spice daughters would get their petticoats soiled if exposed to the military, opted to register men only.
If the Supreme Court finds that the current registration system is unconstitutional, Congress might find itself having to register both women and men or scrap registration altogether.
In recent years, the court usually has uphold governmental discrimination on the basis of sex only if the law or practice serves an important governmental end, or if it helps to atone for past discrimination against women. But on either of these grounds, male-only registration, and a male-only draft, clearly would be violative of the equal protection clause of the 14th amendment.
That's because registering men only doesn't make up for past discrimination; if anything, it continues discrimination against both men and women.
Besides, women can't be excluded from jury duty simply they're women, so why should they be immune to the "duty" of possibly serving their country?
And although the government's argument that having only men listed on registration rolls would reduce problems in assigning front-line troops, mere administrative convenience if not considered a legitimate excuse for the government to discriminate because of sex.
Whether the country needs a draft is still a big question; there's a lot yet to be tried to make the voluntary system work. But if the court strikes down the obviously unconstitutional all-male registration, then all of America's potential young draftees will be on an even footing.
That would probably make the draft more unpopular than ever, but more importantly, it might lead to a realization that if the draft has to be reinstated, it can't be done like it was in the past. Random selection of names from a fishbowl, or even from a computer, singles out the few to defend the many. If the draft is to stage a comeback, everyone—male and female—of draft age must be required to serve.
KANSAN
The University Daily
USPS 65940-64 published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas or $30 outside the county. Student subscription are $2 a semester, paid through the smarter activity. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanaan, Fidl Hall, The University of Kansas.
Editor David Lewis
Managing Editor Ellen Iwamoto
Editorial Editor Den Munday
Business Manager
Terri Fry
Retail Sales Manager Larry Leibengood
National Sales Manager Barb Light
General Manager and News Adviser
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Chuck Downs
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© 2008 MIAMI NEWS
KU-Y hiding behind service facade
Sometimes the decisions we make are difficult, if not downright painful. The choices often aren't clear cut nor the answers answer. My previous involvement with Student Senate revealed the problem of making fair value judgments and separating the worthwhile from the ineffective. Particularly during spring budget hearings, perhaps the Senate's most important difficulty is finding each group requesting funding is reviewed first by a committee and finally by the entire Senate. The decisions made often are subject to controversy.
At the same time, KU-Y's involvement with service came to a standstill. Rock Chalk, Big Brothers-Big Sisters and Volunteer Cleaninghouse all became virtually independent of KU-Y. Although several still are connected with KU-Y on paper, the relationship ends there.
The Senate's Student Services Committee determines a group's worthiness for future funding based largely on these criteria and passes its recommendations along to the full Senate. If the Senate continues to use this rule of thumb next week in making its final decisions, clearly KU-Y should not be funded with student activity fees.
Although there are no ironclad rules to follow, certain guidelines generally need to be used. One such guideline is deciding whether a group has met its goals and has provided effective service to the campus community during the past year. Groups such as Consumer Affairs, Headquarters and KU-Y generally are judged in this manner, in this manner.
KU-Y was for many years primarily dedicated to campus and community service inspired by the ideals of its parent organizations, the YMCA and YWCA. This KU-Y began Rock Chalk Revue decades ago. This KU-Y coordinated a strong Big Brothers-Big Sisters program on campus. This KU-Y assisted in establishing Volunteer Clearinghouse, an organization that coordinates community agencies with interested student volunteers.
About five years ago, however, KU-Y began shifting away from campus and community service. In its place, KU-Y focused increasingly on advocating political and social positions. Out of this new emphasis sprang such groups as the KU Committee Out of South Africa (KUSA), the American Committee and Latin American Solidarity, some of which eventually separated from KU-Y.
WELL, LET'S SEE HOW THAT CHOPPER CHECKS OUT, MANUEL...
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ADVISOR
PRESS
KU-Y simply isn't living up to its end of the deal in claiming to be a service organization.
I beg to differ.
However, in a letter printed in the recent Rock Chalk Revue program, Pamela Johnston, current KU-Y coordinator, wrote, "The KU-Y is a student organization reaching out to perhaps the widest community of any other group on campus."
DAVID
HENRY
After talking to countless people, and conducting a lengthy interview with Johnston, I found most people consistently connected KU-Y with KUSA, the anti-draft committee and Latin American Solidarity and not with Rock Chalk or Big Brothers. Yet, curiously enough, we find absolutely no mention of KU-Y's political advocacy in either Johnston's letter or in KU-Y's budget request, except for weak reference to its "commitment to social justice."
Presently, KU-Y claims to be a service organization, yet clearly it is not. Although it has proven effective in expressing its political and social positions, it is funded by the Senate for a completely different purpose; namely, campus and community service. This purpose KU-Y no longer fulfills well enough to deserve future student funding.
My opposition to KU-Y's funding in no way stems from opposition to its particular political and social platform. Although I believe its primary beneficiary is the methods of persuasion as dated as love-ins and the Jefferson Airplane, I also believe that decidedly minority viewpoints should be encouraged—particularly on a university campus. My concern is that encouragement can take the form of Senate funding.
However, Bren Abbett, student body vice president, noted, "KU-Y serves a purpose on this campus. While I question some of the ways we have been able to feel that I feel they have a right to express their opinion."
KUV's service is twofold. It no longer acts as a service organization for which it serves its Users, so its mission is to acquire its
Perhaps KU-Y's lack of conviction stems from the fear that the Senate would not fund a politically active group. Johnston told me, "There are some (people) in Student Senate who have been harassing us for our leftist political tendencies."
political advocacy—the one thing it does effectively—behind a cloud of previous service activities. In coming to Senate as a service organization, it should be judged accordingly. If, however, it wishes to be viewed differently, then it must not hide behind Rock Chalk Revue or Bie Brothers.
Johnson said, "Ideally, I would like KY- to progressive social organization committed to progressive social
However, I suspect KU-Y is scared of its own shadow.
Members sincerely believe in their political and social convictions and express them strongly through posters, hunger strikes and silent vigils. But when they are forced each year to account for their actions to the Senate and the readers of Rock Chalk programs, the courage of their conviction evaporates; KU-Y becomes as controversial as the Rotary Club.
Political positions couched behind community service are shallow indeed.
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 a graduate student, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty and staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Pot Shots
it's spring, and it seems as if the hearts and minds of KU students are turning not to love but to
Or, more accurately perhaps, their dun-lop-over-the-bell stomachs.
No longer able to hide the results of TGIF beers and Joe's doughnuts behind down jackets
Cynthia Currie
and thick wool sweaters, the Wescob Beach bathers now find that it's diet time.
There've already been masses of juggling joggers running through campus, breathing heavily and sweating profusely, trying to slim those calves and firm those thighs.
Dedicated dieters have sworn off Zara's hot fudge sundaes and McDonald's french fries.
Have you ever confronted a door and lost it? It never used to think that going into a door took it.
I've lost track of the times I've tried to go out a door, only to discover that I am pushing on the wall.
And all for what? Why, for a chance to rival Derek and the Mariborlo Man. Why torment yourselves you dieters, you? All that extra heat the holly is just a little more to love—right?
It never fails. I push, but nothing happens. I
Dan Torching
stand there, looking as if I am admiring the nose prints on the glass while adding a few of my own.
"Try the other side, stupid," it says. Sure, it works.
You would think that opening a door wouldn't be that hard. After all, there is a 50-50 chance that you will push on the right side of the bar. But I mess up, even with those odds.
They ought to put arrows on the door so you know which side to push. Or how about installing revolving doors? But with my luck, I'd probably have trouble revolting out.
University Daily Kansan, March 27, 1981
Page 5
Convocation
From page 1
Recognizing that tenure is one protection for controversial faculty ideas, Shankel reminded the gathering that tenure was not a protection for incompetence.
"It should be viewed as a protection of the role to espouse, teach and do research into new and emerging areas and ideas," he said. "It is an important protection for academic freedom in the real sense."
Candidate
From page 1
Clark voiced a similar opinion concerning the resignation.
Tenure does not protect faculty salaries, however. One professor later asked Shankel why KU faculty should不union after years of using the Legislature slash faculty salary request.
"I'm still a little bit in shock about the whole thing," he said. "I don't know what to think."
The league accepted written questions from the audience and the remaining candidates answered five of these. Each candidate was allowed two minutes to respond.
"I've observed around the nation and in Kansas that those faculties who have unionized are not receiving salaries that are significantly lower in terms of economic benefits," Shankel said.
All of the candidates agreed that the older neighborhoods in Lawrence should have increased public services, including new waterlines.
Candidate Nancy Shontz said that funds for waterline replacement should not come from their present source, water utility funds, because water utility original purpose was to provide new lines and replace them.
'What we need is a capital improvement program . . . so we don't rely on these stopgap measures . . . money that might be used in some other way,' she said.
Gleason said, "Historically, the cities that die from the inside out. I would hope the city
would take steps in the future to provide more individuals distribution of service throughout the city."
The candidates also agreed that the city should look into the development of public transport.
"If we're going to do anything other than stack parking to the moon," Gleason said, "we're going to have to look seriously at public transportation."
Nancy Harbleton, commission candidate,
said "We're going to have to come up with
capital to buy the buses. We're going to have
to be creative."
Clark mentioned the possibility of shuttle bases, an extension of the KU bus system and a new bus for a variety of other locations.
He said that "a pipe dream" of his was to unearth the trolley car tracks that stretched from the Kansas Union to Eighth and Mississippi streets.
"It would be one of the greatest tourist attractions in the area," he said.
EARLIER IN THE CONVOCATION, Shankel told his fellow educators that they must be like Caesar and his wife—above suspicion.
Unionization also reduces faculty collegiality and creates an adversary relationship between students and faculty.
"I believe that we consider it essential that we meet our teaching obligations, meet our classes as scheduled, meet our students for individual appointments, follow prescribed University guidelines, observe the duration of classes and the holding of classes throughout the academic year, etc," he said.
Faculty also should report consulting arrangements and follow other University regulations applying to research, teaching and service, Shankel said.
"The University, and each individual in it, must hold itself accountable to the greater society," he said. "If we are to retain our freedoms to teach, do research and serve our country, we must also be financially accountable, and the University must be able to be accountable on behalf of each of us."
Four steps are being taken, he said, which include:
Earlier, Shankel related how the athletic department was being held accountable for questions raised by the Kansas City Times and others who practiced and academic standards for athletes.
- An athletic department review of questions concerning compliance with Big Eight Conference standards.
- An athletic academic standard review board the examining athletes' advising and academic
- A review by Shankel and others of the administrative structure of the student athlete academic advising program.
- A review by academic deans of course approval and advisor assignment mechanisms.
But Shankel told the gathering nothing new about the four steps, which he originally revealed March 3 in an open letter to the University.
He did say that the University was not reviewing the questionnaires raised by the times journalists.
"I find we discover any truib to the concerns that have been raised, we will learn from any mistakes that man has been made," Shankel satishes and we will see it to that they do not recur.
THE ACTING CHANCLELLOR then turned to the problems facing the Med Center, stressing that those problems were neither new nor being ignored.
"Similarly, I would say to you that the reports of problems at the Medical Center have been so extensive that they are hard to absorb."
Shankel then gave three examples of such problems, beginning with the allegation that KUMC was short almost $2 million in funds because Medicare and Medicaid bills had not been submitted on time to the appropriate state agencies.
This allegation is being reviewed with the agencies involved, Shankel said.
"It turns out, as I had expected, that almost every bill has been submitted on time by the personnel at the Medical Center," he said. "But there are many explanations involving several different agencies and firms for a backlog of payments which changes from day to day as
checks are received and new bills are submitted."
Shankel also labeled false another allegation that funds for remodeling old hospital areas were misused. He said KU's internal auditors were in the process of verifying that.
Furthermore, the claim that Med Center budget funds have been used inappropriately to pay personnel whose primary responsibilities were on the Lawrence campus is untrue, he said.
THE ALLEGATION AROSE because some people who served both campuses were budgeted totally at the Med Center, he said. Others who served at other campuses totaled totally in the Lawrence campus bed, he said.
The budgeting, Shankel said, was a matter of structure and convenience.
"I believe that the distribution of these funds is appropriate and a full study has justified the use."
Shankel urged the gathering to visit the Med Center and to tell him if unacceptable conditions
"I doubt that you will," he said, "but if you do, please have the courtesy to bring your findings to the attention of someone who can do something about it—someone inside the University who has experience and the obligation to take care of that problem and any others which you might observe."
The importance of the University's taking care of its own problems echoed through Shankel's speech, along with the plea that the University aid in the resolution of those problems.
"We will continue to do our part," he said,
"and we hope you do yours."
Chancery Club, KU's Pre-Law Club,
announces
a speaking contest addressing the topic
"The most significant legal issue of our time."
- judged by law professors
- speeches memorized, 6-8 minutes
- contest held on Law Day, May 1.
Questions, contact Eric Behrens for more information, 749-5135.
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FRIDAY 27,1981----7:30 PM FORUM ROOM, KANSAS UNION LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, March 27. 1981
On Campus
TODAY
THE HIPER DANCE FILM SERIES will show "Dance: Four Pioneers" and "Anna Sokowla's Rooms" at 9:30 a.m. in 300 Bailey Hall. They also will be shown at 2:30 p.m. in 3 Lippincott Hall.
THE AEROSPACE ENGINEERING COLOQUIUM will host Bill Kitzura on "Engine Stability and Instabilities due to Flow Distortion and Disturbances" at 3.80 p.m. in 3143 Wescool Hall.
THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT READING will feature Terry, Southern reading from "Youngblood" at 4.p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
THE SLAVIC CLUB SLIDE SHOW/COM-
PETITION will be at 13:00 in the Council Room of the
Museum.
AN AFRICAN ART EXHIBIT LECTURE on "icons of the Kongo Atlantic World" will be at 8 p.m. in the Main Gallery of the Museum of Anthropology.
THE LAWRENCE SYMPHONY OR CHESTRA will present a concert at 8 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Union.
TOMMORROW
THE SIGMA ALPHA IQTA MUSICALE will be at 3:30 p.m. in Swartworth Rectal Hall in Murphy
The violence in 'Scanners' goes beyond revulsion
SCANNERS, starring Steve Lack, Patrick MacGoohan, Jennifer O'Neill, Lawrence Dane and Michael Ironside. Directed by David Cronenberg.
By MIKE GEBERT Contributing Reviewer
★★★
Sick to death of watching young babybats育嬰s chafed by crazies with knives in fins bearing the name of some holiday? If it's Crondenberg's "Scanners" may be your meat.
But beware before you venture into "Scanners": Cronenberg has no interest in the cheap thrills of "He Knows You're Alone" or "My Bloody Valentine." Cronenberg is after primal fears, as ancient as Oedipus and as close to home as the mind that turns against itself.
"Scanners" is tremendously gory. It will be too much for some, perhaps most, people. But it is worth trying.
IT IS UNLIKE the offerings of "Halloween" rip-offs in that, although it is commercial, it was not made for a quick buck. Nor was it, unlike "Hallowen," the "The Shining," "Dressed to Kill" or "Altered States," made as a sort of exercise in the sport of baseball, which was made for Cronenberg and no one else.
It is a fortuitous coincidence that his private
demons are similar to the attributes of a marketable horror film: the horror of modern science, the horror of one's own body, turning on itself with death and disease. These are animals whose fears, besides horror movie trappings are bloody icing on nihilistic, hateful cake.
"Scanners" does have a story, a rather good one. Scanners are people who have the ability to read minds and can with training, manipulate them with their minds. But it is not a gift, it is a curse.
A far more demonstration of scanning is demonstrated shortly afterward. A corporation called ConSec is giving a demonstration to industrialists to show its potential as a weapon.
They cannot avoid others' thoughts, and their minds are filled with the din of what everyone is thinking. They are derelict; they cannot concentrate, they hurt other people by thinking about them.
THE HEARER, Cameron Vale (Lack), is first seen wandering through a cafeteria like a burn, picking up unseen food. A woman expresses concern and the instinctively causes her to faint and convulse.
The demonstration has been infiltrated by a man named Daryl) Revack (ironside) who volunteers to have his mind read. However, Revack scans the demonstrator and explodes his mind.
has forced one police car to crash and directed a policeman to shoot his partners and then him
IN THE MEANTIME, our derelict here has been picked up by ConSec's scanning expert, Dr. Paul Ruth (MacGoohan). MacGoohan uses a drug to suppress the scanning and for the first time in his life, Vale can think clearly. The agent is working an army of scanners that will take over the world and trains Vale as the world's first line of defense against Revack's diabolical plan.
Once again, treachery is all around-ConSec could very well be setting up Vale, ConSee's own chief of security is working with Revack. And Vale's loyalty is, though he doesn't realize it, more logically to his fellow scanners than to the corporation.
It only makes sense that in a morally empty world, the heroes and villains have more in common with one another than with ordinary people.
"Scanners" continues on a predictable yet satisfating course, redeemed by Cronenberg's imagination. With the help of a woman (Jennifer O'Neill) who is the last survivor of a group of altruistic-minded scanners wiped out by Revack's thugs, Vale tracks down the secrets behind Revack, scanning and ConSec's cultivation of scanners.
THERE ARE spectacular scenes throughout the film: the scene where the man's head explodes is guaranteed to reduce any audience to jelly. Amazingly, it is seen in toto and with no other explanation in the film's coming attractions preview, creating enormous curiosity and incidentally devastating the impact of whatever movie follows it.
YET CRUNENBERG does not exploit violence for violence sake, unlike so many of the horrorschlock mongers. There are several scenes of violence that feature not a drop of blood, particularly when guns are involved. George Eichhorn uses blood in "dawn of the Dead" and other films to inflict endless chaos and destruction in society, but Cronenberg's violence explodes from within.
In "Scanners," he tries to even out the black-and-white. Part of this is accomplished by a basic, John LeCarreyou-can't-trust any-bodyincluding yourself atmosphere with the twist being Cronenbauer's fear of the body itself revolting and betraying you.
Revack, younger, had drilled a hole in his head to "let the voices out"; and in the battlemic scanning battles the opponents do not so much as either as force the opponent's body to attack itself.
Cronenberg's great talent comes in creating violence that goes beyond revelation, playing on fears not of slaughter but of injury, mortality and self-destruction. In his most transcendental moments, he gives the cheap horror film a resonance it has never before known.
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BECERROS PRESENTS
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SVA FILMS
Friday, Mar. 27
The Warriors
Walter Hill (The Long Riders) retelling of the legend of Kenyon, he in a jazzy dress and his long hair is killed and another gang, the Warriors, are blamed; hunted by 100,000 gang members, the lone Warriors must cross a bridge to get to Dazzling night photography and Hill suspenseful direction, this is an exhilarating, measuring film. With Michael Beck, James Remar, Deborah Van Valkenburg, Jason Meehan and Dinosaurus (947 min) Color: 3:30, 9:30
(1980)
Wise Blood
The new film by John Huston is one of his best and one of the strangest American creations. The new film O'Connor's novel of a Southern dffer, Hazel Mozels (Brad Dufour of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest), who rejoice in her victory over tounding the "Christ Without Christ," only one of many desperate, mystic cults in rural Georgia. A aardonic, bizarre but compelling story, with its mesmosphere and a sense of humor that goes beyond black. With Ned Bedette, Harry Dean Stanton, Amy Irving. Plus, "Landscape" (1082 m/4.700).
Dark Star (1974)
An early film by John Carpenter (Halloween), written by Dan D'Announ (Allen), is about a space-ship that deteriorates space-ship, this low-budget, high-quality science fiction film easily outlastes those $4 million movies. It's both fun and funny cast and philosophical bent. A class act. "The Wizard of Space" (8:38 mins). Color, 120-2 Midnight.
Saturday, Mar. 28
Wise Blood
3:30, 9:30
The Warriors
7:00
Dark Star
12:00 Midnight
Sunday, Mar. 29
Fellini Satyricon
(1970)
An attempt to make a film without an attempt to create a gun that Christians can safely use, this opens up the decadence of Rome has been called the last Jungian film, the mastemake rap song of the 1960s intellectual hedonism. With Martin Potter, Capucine (120 min.) Color, Italian
Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodstock Auditorium in the morning or evening on Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50, Midnight films are $2.00, Adult films are $3.00, USA Union 4th level, Information #84-6290 or smoking or refreshments allowed.
University Daily Kansan, March 27, 1981
Page 7
Five student senators suspended for absences
By KAREN SCHLUETER Staff Reporter
If the number of student senators receiving suspension notice this week is any indication, cutting the Student Senate's size in half succeeded in removing some of the Senate's dead weight.
Octavio Vivero, Senate executive secretary, sent letters to five senators this week informing them that they were suspended from the Senate until they were removed before the Student Senate executive committee to justify their absences.
Last October, before the Senate cut its size from 120 to 65, 45 senators were suspended because of excessive excused and unexcluded absences.
The five suspended senators are Jon Frobish, liberal arts and sciences senator; Phebe Hau, graduate student senator; Peter Sackett, graduate student senator; Rick Stanley, business
senator; and Kevin Boldt, engineering senator.
EACH OF THESE senators had four absences, excused or unexcused. There have been four Senate meetings this semester.
Viveros said the senators would have a chance to justify their absences at the StudEx meeting Monday. If StudEx approves their excuses, they will be missed. If they miss two more meetings they will no longer be senators.
The absence policy in the Senate rules states that any senator with two unexcused absences or four absences of any kind is suspended from Senate. This is no definition of what constitutes an excused absence in the rules.
Bren Abbott, student body vice president, said that senators were excused for personal emergencies, class conflicts on the nights of Senate
He said that studying for a class or writing a paper were not sufficient excuses for missing a Senate meeting.
meetings or other excuses approved by the executive secretary.
Abbott said that many senators missed meetings this semester because of class conflicts on Tuesday and Thursday nights. He said Wednesday nights were the regular meeting time for senior senators, where conflicts with KU basketball games, there had been only one Wednesday meeting this semester.
“It’s an understanding that Senate meetings will be on Wednesday,” Abbott, the senator had said. Wednesdays class, I would expect him to resign.
FIFTH-THREE SENATORS attended the first Senate meeting this semester, 40 attended the second, 38 attended the third, and 24 attended the fourth meeting. These figures were
Abbott said he thought most of the senators' excuses were legitimate, but there was a problem with senators leaving meetings early.
taken from the roll call taken at the end of each meeting.
"I have noticed abuse in the sense that people are leaving meetings early to write papers or study for tests," he said.
Abbott said he was satisfied with the results of cutting the Senate's size so far.
"I'm probably stating this prematurely, but as of now it's met its goal," he said.
"We've had no problems making quorum even though we have had what I would consider poor attendance."
Abbott said the main reason for the cut was to ensure that the senators who were elected were interested in doing their job.
"Cutting the size increased the competitiveness of being elected, so in
theory you elect those who really care to do the job," he said.
Viveros agreed with Abbott, saying that he did not feel that student representation had been hurt by the cut.
"As far as getting a diverse group, I think it's worked very well," he said. "There hasn't been any group who's representation has been cut."
"I seriously believe that the objectives they tried to achieve by making the cut have been satisfactorily realized."
GREG SCHNACK, former student president and an advocate of the cut, said that although the Senate had been meeting quorum this semester, it early to judge whether the cut had been successful in improving its efficiency.
Schnacke said that the effectiveness of the cut could be better judged when
"It can be judged when there are more frequent and exciting meetings, dealing with issues other than the budget," he said. "If the committee system is working well, then I think a smaller Senate works better."
the Senate was not preoccupied with budget issues.
He said he supported the cut because of problems in remeeting muorum.
"We'd get into a long meeting where stuff had to get done, and people would be," he said. "Then someone would be with us, and we would have to postpone business."
"Also, a lot of the seats were uncontested or we had to fund volunteers to fill them."
Matt Davis, former student boo2 vice-president also supported the cut. He said that he had not been following this semester's Senate close, but that he did not think the experiment had been run very scientifically.
Bill to change residency requirement fails
By BRAD STERTZ
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-State residency requirements for university students were among a package of Board of Regents proposals that the Senate Ways and Means Committee acted on yesterday.
In a set of bulk roll-call votes, the committee finished work on three bills and held three others for further study.
The committee killed a bill that would have changed the residency requirement for in-state tuition from 12 months to six months.
Officials from Wichita State University headed the unsuccessful efforts on the bill. They said they wanted the change made because the 12-month return deadline was unlikely to recruit part-time students who also worked in Wichita industries.
A Wichita State spokesman said that the current system was devised for the traditional student from out-of-state who would shop around for a school, go to that school and never intend to live in the state permanently.
At Wichita State, however, most of the students come from families that are new to the area, he said. A large percentage also comes from full-time workers who enroll in summer or night classes.
Jim Foster, a spokesman for Boeing, Inc. said a shorter residency requirement would help his firm recruit who hadn't completed their degrees.
Foster said that people throughout the state who would be affected were the families who had been living in Kansas for seven months, owned property, were paying state taxes and working at a full-time job.
JOIN CONARD, executive officer of the Board of Regrets, told the Senate committee that residency was not required for those who had lived in the state 12 months.
"Each campus has residency committees to try to determine the intent of an individual," Conard said. "It is up to those committees to
determine that the individual had reasons other than going to school for four years in trying to establish residency.
"Actually it gets down to trying to mind-read the individuals' intents.
Conard said that if a student came into school as a full-time student, that student normally did not file for residency.
He said that if the same number of people took advantage of the residency process at six months as did under 12 years, the number of would be $300,000 system-wide.
"We introduced this last year in the House," Conard said. "It was defeated when the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee asked our attorney if we would rather have this or building at Kansas Technical Institute.
"Of course this year, remembering what happened last year, we decided
not to push for this, but the Regents do support the idea in principle."
BEFORE THE VOTE, State Sen. Jack Steinger, D-Kansas City, said that taxpayers' money spent for higher education should be used only for permanent taxpayers and not for transient residents.
"It is my understanding that our out-of-state fees are still very competitive," he said, and I don't think we have to worry about it. "Most who are in the state for a short period."
In other action on bills affecting the Regents schools, the committee:
- Approved funding for the recruitment of personnel for educational institutions. This was also required to keep recruitment standards for state schools competitive.
- Held up a bill that would have allowed unclassified employees to have state death and disability benefit coverage after 90 days on the job.
Bon Voyage Party Tomorrow Night
Love Boat Cruise Giveaway! (for two)
- two $50 food and drink prizes
- four $25 food and drink prizes (no purchase necessary)
Bon Voyage
- Becerros taco bar at 7:00 pm
GAMMONS SNOWMONS
23rd and Ousdahl
Taco Sale.
with coupon.
Cut out this taco and bring it in Thursday through Sunday, March 26-29.
TACO JOHN'S.
Offer good at participating Taco John's listed below with coupon only.
1101 W. 6th St.
Lawrence, KS 66044
1626 W. 23rd St.
ROS
ROV
CH
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Presents
Mustslav Rostropovich
Cellist
8:00 p.m.
Thursday, April 2, 1981
Houston Auditorium
This KU concert is one of only four solo sape
panes by Host the world this season.
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All state public HS $10 and SB. Students with ID & DS and S4. Special ticket rates for patrons of the theater and member Music Series. For reservations, call 913-648-3982
V
"The world's greatest cellist and possibly the greatest who ever lived." New York Post
The Arts
SUA FILMS
Presents
THESE ARE THE ARMIES OF THE NIGHT.
Tonight they're all out to get the Warriors.
100
Premium Pictures Corporation
THE WARRIORS
Paramount Pictures Presents A Lawrence Gordon Production "THE WARRIORS" Executive Producer Frank Marshall Has Based Upon the Novel by Soil Yurick. Screenplay by David Shaber and Walter Hill. Produced by Lawrence Gordon. Directed by Walter Hill
HIKING
R RESTRICTED BAR RIGHTS
Friday—3:30, 9:30 Saturday—7:00
"AN AMERICAN MASTERPIECE! One of the most important American films to be released in years. THE PERFECT MOVIE."
"A SINGULAR ARTISTIC ADVENTURE!
The most eccentric American movie in years."
"★★★, A MIRACLE!
A film of savage humor and extraordinary performances."
Reprinted by JOHN HUSTON
"AN UPROARIOUS TALE!
It is always alive and exhilarating...
lyrically mad and absolutely compelling."
"★★★,
A BRILLIANT BLACK COMEDY!"
Richard Frenzel / NASH NEAL / NEW LINE MEDIA
John Huston's WISE BIODD
Based on the novel by Flannery O'Connor
Starring BRAD DOURIF / NED BEATTY / HARRY DEAN STANTON DANNY GORD, MY WRIGHT, MARK NEEL SAWTACTOR2 - Music by ALEX NORTH, Annalee Producer; HANS BRIKMAN, Screenwriter by BENEDICT FITZGERald - Produced by MICHAEL and KATHY FITZGERald Directed by JOHN HUSTON
From NEW LINE CINEMA
John Huston's WISE BLOOD
Friday—7:00, Saturday—3:30, 9:30
Friday and Saturday, March 27 & 28
Woodruff Auditorium $1.50
—No refreshments allowed—
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, March 27.1981
KU crew season starting
By ALVIN A. REID Staff Reporter
The KU football team hasn't been the only squad preparing for its upcoming season by running and lifting weights.
Cliff Elliott, KU crew coach, said both his men's and women's teams had been conditioning since 1987. It is now possible to practice on-water rowing.
"When we began our practices the Kansas River was frozen solid," Elliott said. "The team ran steps, crossed a river and runs arms and practiced rowing on shore."
Crew captain, Brian McKinney,
Topeka senior, said KU's training
program was common to many
midwestern schools.
*Most schools here in the Midwest or up north are forced to practice off water during the winter because the lakes and lakes are unavailable.* he said.
"The running and weight training pays off because of the increased strength and stamina they provide. Their attributes are essential to rowing."
Elliott said the crew had practiced
everyday on water since Feb. 25 regardless of weather conditions.
"Sometimes it rains or gets pretty cold out there, but we still go ahead and practice," he said.
THIRTEEN WOMEN and 28 men make up the crew team, which opens its fourth season tomorrow against Washburn University. The match will be played on the Kansas River. Men's and women's teams will compete.
The squad's only other home match will be the State Regatta April 18. Competing then against KU will be Washburn, Kansas State University and Wichita State University.
"We're really looking forward to the State Regatta," Elliott said. "That will be a big weekend for us and hopefully we'll be able to excel."
KU crew is a member of the Midwest Association of Rowing Colleges. The United States Rowing Association sanctions all collegiate and amateur races. There are no professional rowing teams.
ELLIOTT SAID sanctioned rowing matches were 2,000 meters, but that sometimes they were longer.
"During spring and summer, matches are the usual 2,000 meters which is roughly 14 miles," he said. "We race up to lengths of three miles."
Elliott said that KU had never placed in a national event, but that the crew would send representatives to the regional finals in Madison, Wis., and the nationals in Syracuse, N.Y.
"This crew team has never placed nationally, but I'm sure we can go to these matches and perform well," he said.
"Being with crew is a lot of hard work, and takes up a big chunk of your time because of practice hydration. But we're always looking for new crew if anyone doesn't mind giving up the time we'd be glad to have them."
McKinney said that crew took a lot of time, but that it was worth it.
Elliott said anyone interested in the team should contact him and spectators were welcome at the team's match and the State Regatta.
"Rowing is an exciting form of competition, and I'm sure many more people would enjoy the sport if they gave it a try," he said.
Airport hangar to be multi-purpose building
Aerospace engineering students will soon have a new $561,000 home at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
The home, a 14,000-square-foot hanger, will contain four offices, one classroom reception area and two shopping shops. Construction began early this month.
The new hangar will replace a wooden hangar built in the late 1940s and will be attached to a second hangar, which houses University
airplanes. It will be used as a propulsion laboratory.
The School of Engineering is paying $200,000 of the total expense with donations from aircraft industries and alumni.
Vincent Maurithe, director of the aerospace department, said the department's program would be upended. The facility was completed in September.
The new hangar also will have a reinforced concrete floor to put test apparatus on.
"We needed facilities for our undergraduate program, and we will have
The aerospace department owns two Cessna airplanes, one for transportation and the other for research. The airplanes are for general University use.
additional opportunities for the graduates," he said.
There are now two KU hangars at the airport but in June one will be torn down and converted into a parking lot.
Aug, 6, 1945, a U.S.-made atom bomb hit Bihiroshima, Japan.
By ANNIKA NILSSON Staff Reporter
The same day, Clark Bricker, KU professor of chemistry, realized the purpose of the project he had been working on for several years.
Prof unknowingly worked on bomb
In a recent interview, Bricker said that his involvement in the research for the first atom bomb started in late December 1941.
Bricker was working on his doctoral dissertation at Princeton University when his research advisor asked him to accompany a visiting physicist and the adviser to a Westinghouse plant in Bloomfield, N.J.
"I had no idea what we were going to Bloomsfield, NJ., for," he said.
AT THE PLANT his adviser, the physicist and the plant superintendent discussed uranium production. Bricker said the physicist asked whether the technology to produce 1,000 pounds (99.99 percent pearce uranium a day).
"In 1941, no metal had ever been made that pure." Bricker said.
He added that the plant superintendent said there was no way they could even analyze for that kind of purity.
"From that day I never touched my doctoral research again," he said. "I finished my doctoral research on an entirely new problem."
He and his adviser were to work on the analysis of the uranium throughout the production process.
Bricker said that in the final oral defense for his doctoral degree, he could not address questions related to his research.
"In fact, I did two research projects. The second one was classified as secret until 1952." he said.
"Then I suddenly realized why I was sitting there." Bricker said.
"Everyone knew I had been working on a classified project," he said. "Nobody even raised the question what my dissertation was about."
BEST BEST
BRICKER'S RESEARCH advisor was the only person who saw the dissertation, "The Analysis of Strategic Materials for Trace Components," and Bricker said the adviser had to certify that his dissertation met the requirements.
Bricker said that at the time he did not realize his research was part of an atomic bomb project.
"I knew we were working on some super source of energy," he said. "I was so naive, I thought we were on some fuel for airplanes and shuts."
Kansan Staff
He said he should have understood, but that he was more concerned about
doing the job he had to do than asking why.
"I realized what I was doing when I came home from work and heard that the bomb had been dropped on Hiroshima." Bricker said.
He said that when his wife told him a very special bomb was dropped over Japan he said, "Now I know what I have been doing."
He said that even though he had ambivalent feelings about the work he had done, he did not regret it.
"I felt that what I had done probably shortened the time of World War II," he said. "I think in the long run, we saved lives."
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Any Sunday or Monday
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French Fries &
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NEW MENU ITEMS Onion rings and mushrooms 2554 Iowa 8416
AWARD GROUP
WORLDWIDE
In the spring of 1977 the National Socialist (Nazi) Party decided to hold a demonstration in Skokie, Illinois. Of this Chicago suburb's 70,000 residents some 40,000 are Jews, 7,000 of whom are survivors of Hitler's holocaust. Eventually the judicial conclusion that this parade, with its participants wearing military-style uniforms and flaunting the hated swastika, was a form of expression protected by the First Amendment. Please bear with me when I note that recently a 79-year-old widow was strangled to death in her Salina, Kansas home. If a few individuals were to congregate here in the central business district and praise the murder of this virtually defenseless woman would such behavior be an expression of free speech or an incitement to riot. The misanthropy and violence of World War II found expression in killing someone. The practice of wanton murder is such a breach of the social contract that even its advocacy is obscene and therefore an act of license unlawful. The ACU, in what was admittedly a courteous decision, agreed to defend the敢脱 free speech rights of the Nazis despite some 15 to 20 percent of its (the ACU) membership leaving the organization in furious protest.
A RESPONSE TO MR. CARDARELLA
A recent effort by Arthur Brisane, Kansas City Times columnist, features an interview with Phil Cardarella, local attorney and president of the Kansas City chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACU). Mr. Brisane opens by asking if the activities of the ACU have it open to the charge of being "a . . . a knee-jerk institution that spends its time defending Nazis, Klansmen, and other anti-social types." Mr. Cardarella, after searching "thoughtfully for an answer," says that he considers it "the hily to duty support the rights of . . . all criminal defendants." One of these "rights" which Mr. Cardarella feels duty-bound to support is a lower bail for criminal defendants. Mr. Cardarella completely ignores the possibility of a high bail resulting from the accumulated evidence of the defendant's conduct, indicating that the individual in custody is indeed guilty. He's evidently also unwary of posting of bail for a suspect has resulted in the intimidation or disappearance of a cooperative witness. Mr. Cardarella's and the ACU's unqualified commitment to lower bail for criminal defendants is a conditioned response, a learned form of behavior that one would expect of a "knee-jerk institution."
Mr. Cardarella, onetime secretary of the local National Organization of Women, is also a proponent of abortion-on-demand which he views, in Mr. Brisbane's words, as "... a woman's right to choose whether she wants to have a child." The ACLU was founded in 1920 to champion "the rights of man set forth in the Constitution and the Constitution" with itself being the most prominent of these protected rights as it is that of women. She argues that the right of woman to make the Court abortion decision, the ACLU discovered a "right", which could be gained only by the "total repeat" of all laws prohibiting abortion prior to the viability of the fetus. This metanavia *i*. fundamental change of mind, was a sympathetic response to the outpourings of the burgeoning women' s liberation movement and was inspired by neither a legal nor a scientific insight. The ACLU, by turning its back on the most helpless member of the scientific community, the assumption of 'a' etro and the collective knowledge of the scientific community. The assumption of just another display of organizational philanthropy by a "knee-jerk institution".
Mr. Cardarella concludes the interview by describing law enforcement as "a criminal industry which in order to perpetuate itself has to convince people they have something to be afraid of. If crime in fact is rising as fast as they say it is one simply could not get through a day without being Murdered." Obviously the ivy tower in which Mr. Cardarella lives is the city's most dangerous place. "They know any information. Otherwise he'd be at least aware of the nationwide increase in crime which, according to Newsweek magazine, '...exploded... in 1980... (with) New York, Los Angeles, Miami and Dallas (showing) record levels of murder, robbery and burglary.' As Mr. Cardarella has already categorized all such pronouncements as the self-serving propagations of a "criminal industry" one can only wonder if he'll ever tire of them. In fact, in which, for instance, a unilateral undertaking becomes the embodiment of freedom.
William Dann
2702 West 24th Street Terr.
Tonight and Tomorrow:
BLUE RIDDUM BAND
Reggae • SKA • Dancing!
Cheap pitchers & drinks 8-9!
FROZEN DOWN
Special!
Only $5.00 Cover!
SUNDAY:
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL
Featuring:
Ray Benson
Texas-Swing!
Don't miss these exciting shows!!!
Doors open at 7—Show at 8
April 1: THE GLORY BOYS
April 1: THE GLORY BOYS
w/Lynch & McBee Duo
2: COLT 45
2. COLT 45
Great Rhythm & Blues
3&4: Son Seals Blues Band
...
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University Daily Kansan, March 27, 1981
Page 9
TMI accident to be recalled
By ROB STROUD Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Two years ago tomorrow a nuclear reactor at Three Mile Island near Harrison, Pa., began to overheat because of a mechanical failure, and the city set up a warning and setting off this nation's worst accident at a commercial nuclear plant.
A million gallons of contaminated water are gradually being released into the adjacent Steuqua塘河, River, and Lake. The water is then released into the air from the crippled plant.
And while plans continue to reopen the facility, 50,000 people are expected to mark the second anniversary of the accident by marching on Harrisonburg.
A KU group, the Students Anti-Nuclear Alliance, has scheduled a rally for tomorrow, "in remembrance of the group's death," the group's president, said yesterday.
The rally will begin shortly after noon at South Park, 11th and Massachusetts streets. Barnes said he expected about a hundred people to march downtown, scheduled for 12:30.
"We'll be carrying signs and making people aware of the dangers of Three Mile Island," he said.
BARNES SAID the dangers of nuclear energy were more severe than most people realized.
"People say no one has ever died
from Three Mile Island, but they're lucky we can't trace the cause of cancer," he said. "There have been several cases of radiation released into the food chain."
He said it would take forwards the effects of radiation leakage at Three Mile Island to be fully realized. He added that incidences of cancer in adults from nuclear tests were conducted 30 years ago far exceeded the national average.
An accident similar to the one near Harrisburg could also happen at the Wolf Creek nuclear plant under control of the Army Corps, miles south of Lawrence. The plant is scheduled to be completed in 1984. Officials of Kansas City Power and Light, a financier of the plant, do not believe an attack is likely, however.
"The Wolf Creek steam-supply system is generically like the one at Three Mile Island, but it was built by a different company and has a different design," Victor Poirier, KCP&L community affairs manager, said.
POIRIER SAID an automatic backup system at Wolf Creek that was not in the Three Mile Island plant would continue to feed water to cool the reactor even in the event of failure in the primary system.
But anti-nuclear groups have raised questions concerning the strength of
Wolf Creek's foundation mat, upon which the reactor sits.
"Some testing cylinders did not meet the required standards," Poier said. The cylinders act as cushions for the mat.
Rather than correct the deficiency, however, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission lowered its standards for Wolf Creek.
"That estimate was made before anything about the plant was known," Poirier said, adding that the first solid estimate was about $900 million.
"Further tests determined the cylinders were well within the requirements for what Wolf Creek should have," Porier said.
THE ESTIMATED COST of completing construction at the Wolf Creek plant is $1.7 billion, compared to the original estimate of $560 million.
He said the main reason for the escalating costs was the increased regulation of nuclear plants in the wake of Three Mile Island.
"The U.S. already has a nuclear system that is the safest in the world," he said. "What we're doing now for the purpose of way beyond what we necessary."
He said he was not sure whether the Reagan Administration would decrease regulation on the nuclear program to emphasize it would not increase regulation.
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Phone(913)842-1811 Ext.10
P. O. Box 2, Lawrence, Ks. 66044
Enrollment changed for spring 1982; departments get more schedule time
Fred Vanveck, professor of math,
proposed the amendment for calendar
revisions for the 1981-82 and
1982-83 academic years that will
change the enrollment period for the
spring 1982 semester.
Next year's spring enrollment will have a new twist to it because of a change made by the University Council yesterday.
In its original form, the revision would hold registration and enrolment on Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan. 12 and 13, 1982, with an orientation and registration period on Monday, Jan. 11.
The change will move the start of the enrollment period to noon on that
Vanlock said the change would give departments extra time to schedule changes to accommodate students' start on Thursday, Jan. 14.
Monday, ending it at noon on Wednesday.
He said the math department normally had a high demand for math classes, and it needed extra time to complete minute changes in course offerings.
He noted that many of the larger departments needed the extra half day to allow more flexibility to make more classes available to students.
With the council's action, or-
tation will begin next fall on Wed-
nesday, Aug. 19, with classes
beginning on Monday, Aug. 24.
Fall semester classes will end Monday, Dec. 7, with the finals period running from Tuesday, Dec. 8 through Friday, Dec. 18.
The last day of classes for the spring semester will be Saturday, May 1, 1882, with finals beginning on Monday, April 4, and ending Thursday, May 13.
Commencement for the spring 1982 semester will be held on Sunday, May 16.
Commencement had originally been scheduled for Monday, May 17, but the change to Sunday has been encouraged by University officials who feel Commencement would have better attendance, and have a more festive atmosphere if held on a Sunday.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
This 2nd Psalm, of God's Book of Messages to man,
asks this question and then answers it by saying the heathen rage to get rid of God's Commandments. It appears our nation, in fact our world has just about nothing to do with them! Several places the Bible says at times the people of God so low that they were "worse than the heathen!"
Commandments perfectly for us, paid our penalty for disobedience, rose from the dead and engaged Himself to power over them.
A number of times in recent years have seen news items telling of other nations, whose government and people were considered pagans by the more enlightened nations, refusing to let some movie films produced in this country be shown in their land as being too immoral and debasing for their folks to see" "WORSE THE MAN THAT SPEAKED!" speaking by some of His Prophets God said: "SHALL I NOT BE AVENGERED ON SUCH A NATION AS THIS?"
The man in hell fire Christ told about in Luke 16th chapter pleaded that his five brothers still alive on earth be warned last they come where he was. He was told the prophet to tell them how Jesus came to Prophets ... if they hear not Moses and the Prophets neither would they be persuaded though one rose from the cave of Moses to Lord Jesus Christ, for the salvation of believers. He said:
We see and hear of many who speak much of His
sacrifice in the suffering of those who suffer again in power and glory with His Holy Angels, and to reject, neglect, or put little attention to the Ten Words delivered to Moses by God Himself, and proclaimed by them.
The demands and commands of Christ for discipleship are indeed severe: Forsale all for Me! And — a Christianity that tails to present and insist upon its members meeting the commands and demands to 'count Bare Basement Christianity.' One is be likened to a 'Bargain Basement Christianity.' One into the bargain basement to get something 'cleaner.'
The modernist cloak of Christianity is worn out that many are going about in near or total nakedness. Revelation 16:16 tells of the battle of Armenedgordon. In the verse just previous, the 15th, Christ says this warning:
"B绍来, I take as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth,
LHEST HE LEST HE LAKE NAKED
AND THEY SEE HIS SHAMAN."
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan, March 27, 1981
Colleagues pay tribute to Med Center victim
By BRIAN LEVINSON Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan... The shotgun blast that killed a second-year resident at the University of Kansas Medical Center last Friday night echeled yesterday when Marc D. Smith was shot to him in a memorial service.
Don Campbell, a second-year medical resident, said Beck "was a gentleman, in the truest sense of the word.
"Marc was a nice guy and any other description would be inadequate," Campbell said.
More than 100 students, faculty and staff at the Med Center sat somberly in Battentfield Auditorium as Campbell spoke.
Beck's family came from Ormaha. Neb., for the service. Beck was buried in Ormaha Tuesday.
"He was one of the best of us and he will be sorely missed," Campbell said.
David Waxman, Med Center executive vice chancellor, expressed the anger that many of his colleagues fell about his death.
"The Med Center grounds are
holy," Waxman said. "This must never be forgotten."
Waxman said Beck lived his life to the fullest in the time he had.
"Marc gave his life in the service of his profession." Waxman said. "There is no holier mission than one that serves mankind."
William Ruth, professor of medicine, expressed the fears of many Med Center employees as he remembered Beck.
Waxman, who called the "important service an "important tribute," said that Beck would live in the memories of those who knew him.
"This tragedy has personal meaning for each of us," Ruth said. "Each one of us knows he could have been Marc."
"We mourn together the waste of a loved one."
Med Center chaplains, the Revs.
George Mundinger and Jerry
Spencer, read from the Palms as
referred sympathy to Beck's
family.
As the Med Center praised Beck yesterday, police continued to search for the gunman. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation said yesterday there were no new leads in the case.
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Friday and Saturday, March 27 & 28
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شهد البخاري في المقال الحادي عشر
توفي في قرية بغداد
الكلام الدقيق الفرعي بصورة :
تُحضر منه نفس البخاري في الحادي عشر . ثم تحضر منه أبي طالب في الحادي عشر .
الأبى طالب بن عمرو بن علي بن عبد الرحمن
كما يسمح بالنفط في الأخبار أهمية هذا الموضوع سعيد بن محمد بن سعد بن علي النووي
اللجلي ٧-٩-١٠٢٨ م نيوي صحيح باب الحق والرئاسة في العلاقة بين الحق والرئاسة
بأن الحق قد يكون على الحق أو غير الحق ... وقد يكون على الحق أو غير الحق
حيث ينصب عليه الحق الرئاسة في العلاقة بين الحق والرئاسة (الأصول الفكرية)
وفي الحقيقة الحديث Hoch Ad. من جامعة University
للاسلام بمركز التحريم البشرية في المنهج الديني
بأن الحق قد يكون على الحق أو غير الحق ... وقد يكون على الحق أو غير الحق
حيث ينصب عليه الحق الرئاسة في العلاقة بين الحق والرئاسة (الأصول الفكرية)
وفي الحقيقة الحديث Hoch Ad. من جامعة University
للاسلام بمركز التحريم البشرية في المنهج الديني
By BRIAN LEVINSON Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, KAN - Investigators have resorted to hypnotizing witnesses in an effort to get an accurate description of the shotgun killer who slayed an emergency room doctor and was waiting for a patient last Friday.
Hypnosis fails to yield Med Center clues
The gunman left many witnesses but few clues when he walked into the University of Kansas Medical Center emergency room and killed Marc Beck, 28, a resident doctor at the Med Center, and Ruth Rybolt, a 54-year-old woman who was waiting for her hospitalized mother.
"We've interviewed a lot of folks and eliminated people who wed been informed might be involved," David Johnson, eastern supervisor of the
Kansas Bureau of Investigation, said yesterday.
Johnson said the hypnosis sessions had yielded no strong information. He said that investigations into seven leadings brought dead ends with no suspects.
The list of leads has been shrinking under police investigation but officers still have no suspect.
"Only one door to the emergency room is open now, and that is manned by a state trooper," Susan Shipley, Med Center spokeswoman, said.
Meanwhile, security measures at the Med Center have been tightened significantly.
THE TROOPERS were assigned to the Med Center by Gov. John Carlin for one week. Several permanent security changes have been made to protect the Med Center after the troopers leave on Monday.
A $100,000 closed circuit television monitoring system is being installed. The system, which has taken nine months to install, will consist of 31 cameras that will be monitored by the KU police dispatcher at the Med Center.
Other security measures at the Med Center include 22 direct telephones to the police and 11 direct alarms, similar to bank teller alarms.
Some additional locks have also been installed since the shooting and additional security measures are being considered, Shinley said.
Both an emergency phone and a direct alarm are in the emergency room but neither was used last Friday night.
THE OTHER SECURITY measure at the Med Center is a $100,000 computer-monitored door security system. Shipley said.
"There are alarms at every perimeter door in the complex," she said. "When a door is open the police dispatcher knows exactly where it is."
Shipley said the door alarms had been accepted by the hospital and were now being tested.
KU police at the Med Center continue to walk preventive patrols 24 hours a day throughout the entire Med Center complex, Shiley said.
A check of other Kansas City area hospitals revealed that hospitals were evaluating their security procedures but had not made substantial changes
Chris Smith, spokesman for St. Luke's hospital in Kansas City, Mo., said that hospital had added one more emergency room (from 8.9 to 16.8 m)
Smith said he did not know of any other changes the hospital was considering to improve security.
Haskim said no security changes had been made because of the shooting.
"We have three guards on every shift and they are all ex-police officers," Haskins said. "We also have an alarm system on the doors."
KEVIN HASKINN, security director at Shawnee Mission Medical Center, said his officers continue do the same as before there at the shooting in the KU Med Center.
"We have never had any problems with security here," he said.
The attorney for a former Lawrence woman whose murder conviction was upheld Wednesday by the Kansas Supreme Court will attempt to get her client's sentence reduced from life imprisonment.
Camille Nohe, attorney for Katieh
Cobb, said yesterday she would discuss
with Cobb what further action they
could pursue.
"Anything less than life would be great," she said.
Cobb murder conviction upheld; appeal planned
The Kansas Supreme Court unanimously upheld a first-degree murder conviction of Cobb in the 1980 murder case she claimed was a victim of suicide.
Cobb, daughter of KU executive vice
chancellor Robert Cobb, was convicted in June 1880 for the death of Lawrence resident Henry Davis. She had sought to overturn her conviction because she said she was assisting in the victim's suicide, a lesser offense.
However, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that no suicide was involved, therefore there could be no claim of assisting a suicide.
Cobb was found guilty last summer by a Shawnee County District Court jury and is now serving a life sentence as an executional Institute for Women in Lansing.
THE VICTIM, Henry Davis, died Feb. 26, 1980 in after Cobb shot him in the head, in order to kill him after a lethal
injection of cocaine failed to kill him.
She gave him the injection as part of an agreement to help him commit suicide, she said.
Noha said Koolbod would not be eligible for parole for 15 years under a life sentence.
Noh argued throughout the appeal that the court made several procedural errors.
She said the jury should have been instructed that it could convict Cobb on a lesser offense than first-degree murder—assisting a suicide.
That offense is punishable by a
criminal sentence in prison, or
according to Krusan state law.
Noho also said the jury should have
been given instructions about what constituted malice. Nobe contended in the trial that no actual malice was involved in Cobb's actions, and therefore, they did not constitute murder.
The Kansas Supreme Court ruled those instructions unnecessary because there was 'a suicide in the first place. Cobb caused Davis' death.
Cobb admitted during her trial that she shot Davis. However, she testified that she did so only because of an injury to the gun. She would not let him suffer a lingering death.
C
Davis, she said, planned a suicide by injecting two grams of cocaine to cause an overdose.
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University Daily Kansan, March 27, 1981
Page 11
Ex-chancellor visits addresses meeting
By BOB MOEN Staff Reporter
Puffing on his cigar, former KU Chancellor W. Clarke Wescook took a stroll across the campus yesterday. He was anonymous, even as he walked by the long, low-slung building that bears his name.
"Once you're gone, you’re pretty well forgotten."
"The only ones who remember me are gray-haired and bald," he said. "The buildings and grounds crew remembered though."
Wescoe, who was chancellor from 1960 to 1989, returned yesterday to give the keynote address at the national conference on business and the humanities. The conference continues today at the Kansas Union.
HE SAID THAT the campus looked wonderful and that he always found something new on campus during each of his infrequent visits.
Wescoe said that he was pleased that students congregate at "The Beach" in front of Wescoe Hall. He called the building "myst last achievement."
"When I was walking today, there were musicians playing on the side of the building," he said. "That's the way it should be. A place to be lived in."
In his speech to about 100 business executives and faculty members, Wescoe said that the building had been built in the heart of the campus because the humanities stand at the heart of education.
Now the chairman and chief executive officer of Sterling Drug Inc. of New York City, Wescoe said that he
could never come back as chancellor, even though he missed the contact with students and faculty.
"It keeps you young," he said of the chancellorship.
Despite his absence from Kansas University, he said he still noticed KU's unique style.
"Something that has always stood out among the other Big Eight schools was KU's style." Wesco said.
He termed the style different, from the faces of the students to their responsiveness. There is a sense of emotional feeling not present elsewhere.
Even in the chancellorship there is a certain style, he said, although each chancellor has his own style.
Wescoe speaks proudly of his nine years as chancellor.
UNDER WESCOE'S GUIDANCE, KU's enrollment grew from 9,375 to more than 17,800. Its operating income almost doubled, the basketball team won its 1,000 game and a number of other victories; halls were added to the campus.
But there were also problems during his tenure, he said. Problems with enrollment growth and faculty pay, plague KU today, were present then
In all, Wescoe served KU for 18 years, including eight years as the dean of the College of Health Sciences. Just as Wescoe Hall is located at the heart of KU, KU will always be in Wescoe's heart.
"I have an extraordinary affection for the University and the faculty," he said.
---
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Lucas said the school was pushing for Marvin to be completed by August so that it would be ready for next fall.
MOTOBECANE
Advertise it in the Kansan.
Pick one
Pick one
What's your interest? Old movies? New movies? Foreign films? Midnight movies? Whatever it is, SUA films wants you to help pick the films for the biggest and best film program in Kansas.
Ken Pete, project manager of the renovation, said the general contractor, R.D. Anderson Construction Co., was aiming for a July 1 completion date.
Interviews for positions on the SUA film committee are March 31st. Get your application at the SUA office, fourth level, Kansas Union, or call 864-3477. No experience necessary just be interested and ready to go.
TATAS
"Next year we'll see some very exciting things happen in the school," Lucas said.
Former Chancellor Clark Wescoe
Whenever the project is completed, Lucas and Dennis Domer, associate dean of the school, said they saw a bright future.
The school is now spread out among Blake Annex, the Visual Arts and design building, Carruth-O'Leary Hall, the sculpture, Powder Hall and Lindley Annex.
Marvin Hall completion set for fall classes
After facing problems with lighting and vandalism, students and faculty of the School of Architecture and Urban Design are anxiously awaiting the completion of the $1.8 million Marvin Hall renovation.
"We're all very excited about going into Marvin," W. Max Lucas, dean of the dispersed school, said.
Domer, who served as acting cean until last月夕, said the school was in a "cultural volcano" with a new curriculum and supportive alumni.
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However, both Lucas and Domer said the problem of limited space for architecture and Urban design students would continue.
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MORRIS Sports
1916 Massachusetts
1016 Massachusetts
SPIRIT SQUAD TRYOUTS-1981
Be a part of a great tradition!
Dates for tryouts for the K.U. Spirit Squad have been set.
All students interested in trying out
should meet in Allen Field House
at 5:00 p.m. on March 26th
for an informational meeting.
The first clinic will be held
after the meeting.
No previous experience is required to traint.
to tryout.
Requirements
2. 0 Overall GPA Enrolled in at least 12 hours Weight in proportion to Height A genuine interest in K.U. athletics
CLINICS:
March 26-27-30-31
April 1-2
5:30-7:00 p.m.
PRELIMINARIES:
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
April 4th
FINALS:
April 11th
MINORITY STUDENTS ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, March 27, 1981
Budget
From page 1
percent to 8 percent. The amendment, along with a subsequent effort to raise the increase to 7.5 percent, failed.
State Rep. Mike Meacham, W-Richita, the leader of the efforts, said he was disappointed with the outcome. Meacham said that he thought he had enough votes, but that a couple of them did not come in as expected.
Another issue that caused considerable debate was whether to put utility expenses back into the school's Other Operating Expenses Accounts.
Proponents of the move of utilities back into the account said that it was an incentive plan for the universities to save money on utility bills.
They complained that because the Legislature paid the bills regardless of the amount, the universities were not trained - year-old energy conservation program.
Funds saved on the utilities could be transferred over to the schools' Other Operating Expenses Accounts, the proponents said.
Hayden and several other committee members, however, quickly pointed out that such a proposal only would encourage the universities to overestimate their utility costs so that they could get the surplus for their Other Operating Expenses Accounts.
Foreign & Domestic Parts
DON SCHICK AUCTION PARTS
*Part Stop*
1208 East 123rd
841-2200
THE PANEL CHOSE to follow the Senate and governor's recommendations to give the utilities funds a 12 per cent discount and keep them as a separate line item.
Senate-approved items that the committee passed quicklv included:
- A student salary increase from $3.10 to $3.35 an hour. That would bring an 8.1 percent increase in employee salaries, starting in fiscal year 1982.
Three Mile Island Anniversary Rally
- increased fee waivers for graduate teaching assistants from 60 percent to 75 percent. The increase was made to reduce the compensation 15 percent increase in tuition
South Park Saturday 28th — 12:30
South Park Saturday 28th — 12:30 Procession through Downtown
A special plan for funding adjustment for enrollment changes. This provision would establish a 3 percent enrollment-change "band" for which no adjustments could be made. Funding would not be made, however, if the enrollment figures fell outside of the 3 percent increase-decrease "band."
Procession through Downtown
For information, call 864-5736
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Shankel impresses crowd. draws ovation
Acting Chancellor Del Shankel appeared embarrassed yesterday as he stood at the podium in Woodruff Auditorium.
By DAN BOWERS Staff Reporter
ministration of the College of Health Sciences or legislative barbs about the ineffectiveness of a person in the role of acting chancellor.
The source of his embarrassment, however, was not the charges made by him. Times on the possible compromises that may have occurred for KU athletes, charges of poor ad-
On the contrary, Shankel was humbled by the standing ovation directed to him following his speech at yesterday's convocation.
"Thank you. I really wasn't expecting that," was the modest response to his reception from the 250 people in attendance.
THE CROWD WAS mostly faculty
From page 1
required by the city for street performers, Lumpes said.
"When we play on the streets in Topeka, no one bothers us." Lumpe said. "Here in Lawrence, they don't like us asking for contributions.
"I don't know why they should mind so much, we try to put the money we earn immediately back into the economy. We usually spend it on beer and food from the place we happen to be playing in front of."
THE BAND PLAYS a melody of blue grass and traditional country, on instruments as complex as the banjo and as simple as the kazo.
According to Brown, the effect is tremendously successful.
"Our audiences give us great response," the fiddle player said. "It's guerrilla music; we hit and miss and utilize the surprise attack.
Brown said the band originally evoked from a series of impromptu jam sessions held last year on campus.
"We all knew each other socially, and the band just began taking form." Brown said.
Tomorrow, the Flaitland band will be leaving the streets briefly for a half-hour stint on radio station KJHK's Ethnic Boycow program.
"We'll be playing live music at noon, mostly the stuff people hear us on doing the streets." "Lumpie said, internal—no electronic street music."
Lumpe said that the group didn't plan to take their music off the streets.
"People love it, they come up to us all
"In cities like Paris, a great deal of their culture is derived from street performers," he said. "We'd like that kind of community participation here to get people out of their houses and back onto the streets."
Drinking Myth of the Week No. 9
"I'M IUST A SOCIAL DRINKER"
"I'M JUST A SOCIAL DRINKER"
Just because you never drink alone doesn't mean you can't have a drinking problem. Plenty of "social drinkers" become alcoholic.
the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong
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While Shankel intended the convocation to serve as an opportunity for him to address a number of issues confronting the University, those in attendance turned it into a shot in the arm for the man at the lectern.
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"More than anything, it was a show of support for the chancellor," George Worth, Senate executive committee chairman, said last night. "The reception he got was extremely cordial."
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National Leadership Honor Society
Applications for
Worth said that Shankel effectively pointed to the economic problems facing the University via extensive data analysis and "the author's" of the University in the Legislature.
ATTENTION JUNIORS;
OMICRON DELTA KAPPA
Worth said he got a "very positive" feeling from Shankel's address.
are due Friday, March 27.
Applications can still be picked up at 216 Strong Hall.
Dave Shulenburger, vice president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, echoed Worth.
"I thought it had the right mixture of reassurance and pointing to a lot of real issues that exist as opposed to phony issues that have been raised by the press, Legislature and others outside of the University," he said.
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FOLLOWING SHANKEL'S speech, T.P. Srivinasan, professor of mathematics, generated another round of applause when he praised Shankel, who will return to the faculty next fall as a microbiology professor.
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"I think he covered the issues that have come up one at a time, and he dealt with them in a unified fashion," Shulenburger said. "I think he did very well, as was indicated by the standing ovation."
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"They like him as a scholar, and they will certainly welcome him with delight when he returns to faculty status," Skrivinasa said.
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Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Phone 843-1833
"We do want to thank you for being a typical scholar besides being an administrator," Srinivasan said.
Srinivasan said last night that the reception for Shankel demonstrated the University community's support for him.
He said Shankle's message was clear. "He is clearly concerned about the onslaught that has been made in Topeka and people in Teopak and elsewhere," he said.
"He expressed the hope that the state would not be so short-sighted as to forget the asset of this state—the University," he said. "I hope that message gets across."
Bren Abbott, student body vice president, called the convocation a "pep rally" and said it made people feel good about the University again.
Abbott said the sparse student attendance of the convocation concerned him.
Busby said the convocation renewed a feeling about the University community.
"It's frightening," he said. "The students don't realize that there are some things to really be concerned about until they actually hit them in the face. And then it's too late to do anything about it."
LOREN BUSBY, liberal arts student senator, called the poor student turnout an "embarrassment to the student body."
He said he had hoped that Shankel could have been more specific in addressing the issues, but he added: "Maybe some of those things the admirer would benefit with on its own. We shouldn't be putting our dirt laundry out for everyone to see."
Richard Cole, professor of philosophy, said it was important that the chancellor address the issues, but he said the University's direction would not be determined from that single presentation.
"It's really typical, but I don't know what can be done about it," he said.
A
"How the University moves from here is dependent upon the new chancellor," he said. "The new chancellor and the new dean of the College (of Liberal Arts and Sciences) are the ones that are going to provide the academic leadership of the University."
Available now for check out
through the Service Center. Must have K.U. ID Some games include backgammon, checkers, Chinese checkers, playing cards and more.
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University Da , Kansan, March 27, 1981
Track team opens outdoor season at Arizona
By PAUL D. BOWKER
Sports Writer
Dual track meets are rare during the outdoor track season. Most teams desire larger meet because of the better times and distances that usually result from a large contingent of talent.
This spring, however, the KU men's track team is competing in two duals, but for good reason. Both of them are against teams ranked high in the nation, Arizona and Oregon. Both teams are members of the Pacific-10 Conference.
This year, the Wildcats are determined to improve their 1980 performance, which included
THE FIRST of the Jayhawks' duals is tomorrow night in Tucson, AZ, where the Jayhawks take on Arizona, which placed 11th in the NCAA outdoor championships last year.
The Wildcats are undefeated in four meets, including a first-place finish in last week's national championship.
Arizona qualified two athletes in three events and its 400-meter relay squad for the NCAA championship.
State. The Wildcats scored 73 points, while the Cornhuskers placed second with 67 and the Titans third with 58.
DESPITE THE momentum, Arizona Coach Willie Williams respects the Jayhawks, who will be competing in their first meet of the outdoor season has been practicing outdoors less than a week.
"Kansas is always very tough," Williams said. "Perennially, they're one of the top five teams in the nation. We've got to have some very strong players." The team will still balance and does not have any weaknesses.
The Jayhawks can be beaten, though, a point well illustrated at the NCAA indoor championships two weeks ago when Kansas finished in a tie for 20 with eight points, a disappointment after the team's fourth-place finish in 1979 and 1980.
The Jayhawks easily won the Big Eight outdoor championship last year and finished eighth
JEFF BUCKINGHAM, the nation's seventh best pole vaulter last year, was sidelined for the season when he suffered a ruptured disc in his back after a meet early in the indoor season.
Mark Rau, a junior transfer who qualified for the NCAA indoor championships in three events, will be out four to six weeks because of a fractured ankle. Besides leading KU in several races, Rau was a member of the Jayhawks' mile relay squad.
Other KU athletes have experienced problems in the last month, including sprinters Deon Hogan and Mike Ricks, pole vaulter George Buckingham and runner Van Sucker. Buck-Hoffe, deff's brother and Schaffer are both listed as doubtful for the dual against Arizona.
Senior Jeiol Light, who missed the NCAA and Big Eight indoor championships because of a kidney infection, will be competing in his first meet since early February.
nationally, but injuries could prevent the Jawhaws from doing as well this season.
disappointing finish to the Jayhawks' indoor season, Coach Bob Timmons did not think the Jays were ready.
DESPITE THE growing injury list and the
"I don't think it'll add to the pressure because it's a different sport," Timmons said. "We're eager. We want to do well and it's not because of the indoor meet."
Besides competing in the triple jump, Owolabi is also scheduled to run the fourth leg of the 440 relay, perhaps the Wildcats' strongest running event.
Owolabi, who set a school record in winning second place in the triple jump at the NCAA indoor championships, could help the Jayhawks in more than one event against Arizona.
Triple jumper Sanya Owolabi said, "From that point of view, we want to show we're a better team. We are a better team. They're not letting us perform the better team than what happened at the national."
THE WILDCATS' 440 squad qualified for the nationals with a time of 39.68. Peter Odkogode, who also qualified in the 100- and 200-meter, runs the first leg for the Wildcats and is followed by
Rod Barksdale, Tony Gaston and Raymond Threatt.
Preceding Owlabi on the relay team are Anthony Polk, Mark Hanson and Warren Wilhoite. The meet will serve as a homecoming for Polk and Wilhoite, both of Winslow, Ariz.
Timmons must the Jayhawks must do well in the field events if they were to break the Wild-
"We're going to have to get all the points we can out of the field events," Timmons said. "We need to try and stay in the sprints and do well in the steeplechase. Arizona has a very fine team.
Junior Paul Schaltz, defending Big Eight champion in the steeplechase, will be leading the pack.
"IM EXPECTING A very closely contested dual. Arizona is very strong in the sprint and relay events, so that should be an interesting area to watch. This is the first time since I've been at KU that we've taken a team to Arizona, so we're looking forward to it."
The University Daily
Williams, however, insisted the Wildcats will be ready.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
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AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
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The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Pound items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 843-458.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 964-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Wanted. Executive Director for Associated Students of Kansas, a university that includes coordination of activities on several university campuses, managing the administrative and fiscal affairs of the university, testingify and lobbying on the issues before the Kansas legislature. Full time position required (neoplastic with the Board of Directors) Send resume to: Associated Students of Kansas, 1700 College, Topeka, KS 66401. George Gallion, by March 27, 1981
Employment Opportunities
Cindee, Sunshine and Sunshine SKI KEY-
renting. 3 days skiing (April 19, 18, 20) ski-
renting, ice skating, insurance, and transportation
key rentals. 48-8360 or write SKI e.c.t. 106 Kentucky.
SKI-EU-8360 or write SKI e.c.t. 106 Kentucky.
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED COPY. Sorry, no children. Must own a car. Apply for job at CPA plain work. Housework, moving carpentry, painting, general maintenance. Salary: $40,000 per year. The teachers provided; your own completely furnished housekeeping cabin. Time: June 1 to July 3. Applicants must be preferably by employer. Apply in writing. Visit www.1000 Sunset Drive, Lawrence, KC 6004-43. 1000 Sunset Drive, Lawrence, KC 6004-43.
TRAVEL CENTER
TRAVEL CENTER
Domestic & International Reservations
• Airline • Escorted Tours
• Hotel/Resort • Eurail Passes
• Car Rental • Group Rates
• International Student Specialists
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W. 23rd St. (by Perkins)
9:00-5:30 M-F 9:30-20 Sat.
FOR RENT
ARIZONA STREET DUPLXES Available now. Perfect for 4 students, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, room range, refrigerator, dishwasher, laundry room, balcony, central air conditioning, carpet & dapres. off-street parking, unmanned, no charges. Call 843-5720 or gc63
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5, 843-3228. tf
Via Capri Apts. Unfurnished studio, 1 beds, & 2 berms. apts. available Central air wall, to-wall carpet, quiet location, 2+ beds south of apartment. 486-9730 after 3:30 a.m. weekdays
Med Center Bound? Nice, 2-bedroom duplexes available for summer and fall. Carpet, A.C. appliances, and parking.Call 3-1913) - 381-2878.
1 br-2 rooms for rent in a House close to campus. 1019 Ullmins, Call 841-2208. 3-31
For spring and summer. Naimish Hall of Design offers an advantage of an apartment. Good food and advice from a friendly maid service to clean your room and bath and help activities and much more. If you're looking for something special, you want. stop in or give us a call: NAIL HALL, HALL 1800, Maintown Drive, 843-858-3233.
FRESHMEN and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house next year! Apply now. 842-6592. tf
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS
room accommodations, feature wood burning fireplaces, room decorations, features wood burning fireplaces, water/dryer hookups, fully equipped bathrooms, daily at 29th Princeton Price, or phone 812-634-5200.
3 brownhouse for rent now at Pine Haven
965 N. 12th St. Apt. 708. Marsh m/w & waferer & driver to shopping
nance. We pay wafer $50 per person de-
mand or married no pets. Call 843-2842 or 843-2848.
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. tf
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 126 and Kawanai TOWNHOUSES like all of apartments you'll like. Your apartment will feature 3 br., 15 baths, all appliances, attached garage, pool, and lots of privacy. We offer a variety of custom-built Craig Lea or Jim Bong at 749-1607 for private townhouses on the most stylish of townhouses.
3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace
and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W.
6th. 843-7333. tr
2 bedroom duplex Air Condition, W-D Hookup,
3-bedroom apartment - W-D Hookup,
$225; $250. Call 863-274-713.
Sublease for Summer: 4 bedroom townhouse
3-room apartment - Trailside Apartment
3 bedrooms Court. Trailing Apartment
Country, Cottage located on one acre of land in the heart of Montclair. Cottage is loaded with special ceramic, tile floors, tint glass windows, stone stairs, Oriental lamps, antique refrigerator, furniture, and Avail cabinets. Cottage is located on 3 acres.
Male roommate needs to rent furnished ap. kitchen, kitchen, w. poyer, p. cable tv, a. pool, r. central, s. pituitary, t. ittullium. All allowed: $130-2
m. Call Kevin at 841-5470.
Applications are now being received for the Riverside Living Experiment for the summer and the Winter of 2016. Applications may be obtained at the Equalitarian Chatham Institutes Center, 1204 Orcall or call 843-843-5881.
NOW RENTING for fall semester—near new 2 bed apartments just north of the stadium—live closer than you can park. Call 843-4798. 4-7
AVAILABLE JUNE 1st. Efficiency Apt.
Nicely Furnished, A/2%, 8/15 yards from Union.
$170 - 1/3 utilities. 841-8599. 3-31
Subleasing 1 bedroom apartment available in the West Village. New, completely furnished with own parking, close to campus, on KU bus route. Call 641-2853 or 841-2854. 3-300
Sublime room for summer. Ideal for design kitchen facilities. 841-662 events. 4 Bdm Rent. for Rent. Available May 15. Sublime room. Water, Tater. Paul. Call 841-664.
Sublease for summer 3-bedroom furnished apartment, air conditioned, dishwasher, close to campus. Call 841-6590. 3-31
2 bdm. Townhouse for sublease June and July. $320/mo. + utilities. In Trailrider. Call 841-5714. 4-9
Summer Sublease – Tailored BDRM
Berkshire Summer Bedroom Great Room
Living! Tom or Scott M4-282-714.
Summer Sublease: plush 2 bedroom fully furnished apartment, 5 minutes from campus
Summer sublease: 2 bedroom, $1\frac{1}{2}$ bath.
Rent & electricity. Call 841-7077 after 5.
4.1
Available May 1st Large, 2 bedrm. apt., 1 block from Union $179.00 + utilities. Call
843-6536. 4-9
Wanted: 2-Christian girls to sublease a
BR Duplex across street from campus for
summer. Total rent is $220/mo. + utilities.
842-632-8838
4-2
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them 1. As study makes sure you use them 2. Analysis of Western Civilization 3. Analysis of Western Civilization 4. The Bookmark, and Gread Book-Catcher. The Bookmark, and Gread Book-Catcher.
'68 Dodge Van, V-8 318 motor, excellent condition, moving—must sell, call evenings, -443-7859. 4-3
Alternator, starter and generator specialties.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-909-3900
W. 6th.
Camera-35 mm Minolta SR120. Vivat
Flash attachment, carrying case, strap and
tripod; lens 55 $29.90 - 84-35935. 3-30
Home Woodhead "Two bookcases" to be
sold. One $29.90, two $39.90, three
$29.90, small oak table $69.90.
Cards ordered filled on stereo cabinets: 843-9892.
Woman's 10 speed almost new. Call 379-0408
after 5:00 p.m. Ask for Kathy. 3-27
Moped's a great way to save gas. Spring selection now. Dealer-sales available. Bill Kissman, Box 62, Onwatiorne, Ks. (93) 755-4658.
Camarer for May 1967. Good condition, new
phone number. Call 843-5451.
$150 Cail Rob after 8.443-5451. 3-30
4 x 100 watt Mantel Receiver, Dual-Flu
Automatic Tumbleable, 2 Pioneer Speakers
w/wood cabinets. Price negotiable. 841-4088
after 5 p.m. 3-31
1971 Cougar Convertible. Great condition.
V-8 351-VJ. Auto A, C. Adjals. Full Power.
AM. A/track. Silver/black. $250. Siever
481-3632 3-12
A good functional 10-speed. $60.00. 841-
0859. 3-27
Raleigh bicycle. Excellent condition, super light. Tubular tires with pump. $180.00 or best offer. 842-6276. 3-31
228 Camaro loaded, 26,000 miles, red. in superb condition. Asking $5,500. Call 842-
9360. 4-3
6-string acoustic guitar, looks good, sounds
good. Call Steve 842-7688. 4-2
GRETSCH $88 KEY PIANO for direct use through PA system. 1 string per rate, 3 top strings up to 24 octaves in concert EXCELENT CONDITION. A great acoustic piano sound for beginners. Cost of Yamaha Electric Grand. Must sell it (for my first born) immediately. 7d-80.
Men's 10 speed, 21" lugged frame. All alloy equipment, perfect condition. $125. 843-3098 after 5. 3-27
Women's 10-mile, lugged frame, rear track,
75.1-mes. Durable Dirt Track, 3-speed
2-wheels, 8-diamond, 3-speed
2-wheels, $43, $403-908 after 5.
3-27
Audi 140 Ltd AM LS 5-mm RH track, int夫 with dr. dr. dr. bush blower, brookwind Trr. Bldg $1,000. 3-20
10 apd. Men's PUCH athlete, like new,
$180 call 740-1915 MWF after 5 p.m.
weekends all day. 3-31
Saturday only, Brass bead, Basil ice box, Sand bag, Children's clothes, 4 chairs, Oak chairs, Housar mirror, tools, old papers, lots of junk, 130 W. 230 ft. 3-7-7
Why have a high school typewriter at KU? Buy a '13!' Corrective Element Business machine for $755.50. Office Equipment Inc. 411-0200. 4-8
21 mpg. No rust. Storm. Call 841-110 for sale.
Lawrence advertising medium to small.
Well known, high profit, good opportunity. Call
3-141-1292. 4-1
Sansui AU-217 Ann, 30 watts per side.
Great condition. $180 o b c. 749-0847. 3-31
Guitar amp. Holmes 200 watt head
410" cabinet. Like new. 749-5269.
3-31
Pioneer PL-A450 (Top Model), 78 rpm recording studio, used bookstore furniture, antiques and furniture All priced to $31
Phone Rick 842-317 leave message 3-31
Forda motorcycle. New condition.
Only 11 miles, many extras. Askin:
$1055.00 #42-7305
Craig Powerplay FM-8 track stereo under-
dash slidmount $45. Negotiate for Jensen
speakers and tapes. John 411-3347. 4-1
FOUND
Bus pass & temporary id of Robert Arrocha.
Please bring id to arrave. Being held at
Kansas Business Office, 111 Flint Hall. 3-30
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES.
Ensure you have experiences with us, a public service nursing home residents! Our consumer organization, Kansas for improvement to provide care and input on nursing home conditions and input on nursing home conditions and the residents. All names and correspondence kept confidential. Please call us 913-826-1921; NWI #5, Maa St. #4, Lawrence, KAN
HELP WANTED
Set of keys in front of Allen Field House with U of K key ring. Call 864-8541 3-31
"Mother's helper" room; board/salary in exchange for childcare (1 infant 2 toddlers); help with the car; help out flexible box; with student. Move in by 3-4 hours. Like kids & animals. In 1:41-450 PM.
CRUISERS CLOUD MEDIEBERANEAN. SAIL-
HERES CRUISES. Offices Performant, Counselors,
Instructors, Office Personnel, Counselors.
CRUISES OPERATORS Handling for APPLICATION
& OPENING. 153 Box 60129, Califor-
nia CURIESWORLD, 153 Box 60129, Califor-
nia
Travel from Oklahoma to Montana with a wheat harvesting crew. Collect on weekdays. 913-781-4945; on weekends 913-567-4649.
4-2
Attention. Business Students-Nationally known company interviewing students for job work program. High profit and great expert service. Call 843-8711. phone call 843-8711. 3-31
Teachers Wanted Elementary and Secondary.
West and other states, $15 Registration
and/or certification available. Pt #21608
7802 Southwest Teachers' Agency, B63 4317
Aib. NM 87166.
PERSONAL, CARE ATTENDANTS to meet with clients 30 minutes per hour. Part-time 5-30 hours per day. Duties may include busking, transfers to and from wheelchairs, Latrina Morton Independent Inc. 1910 Hewlett Parkway, Los Angeles.
The Clean, an at present area band, is seeking a 6th member with a desire to play the instrument on the band and do association work. No weight lifter or Metallic Heroes. Call 841-5943. 5-27
STUDENT ASSISTANT WANTED for general office clipping and filing resources, and other general office duties. This position will be responsible for work-study eligibility and 10-20 hours per week. Apply to Barbara Ballard or Nuney Starr at the university source center. 218 strong Wall. 644-3522 Tuesday, March 31. We are an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. 3-10
Mites of the Emily Taylor Women's Behavioral Clinic, 281 Strong Hall, Houston, 863-5522; data center, 863-5524; Tuesday, March 31. We are an Equity Office and do not accept compensation for any participation in the Department of East Asian Languages and Culture seeks a Visiting Assistant Program to work with students in position in the curriculum replacement. P
Someone to translate (two Japanese scientific article) Call Mark 841-4775 after 5 hours
Need good paying summer work? Looking for hard workers. Must relocate. Have entire summer free. Make $23 a week Call for appointment 843-8711. 4-7
WORLD'S LARGEST BUSINESS needs you!
Stay home-paid weekly. Free details.
805-736-2121 www.worlds-largestbusiness.com
Glacier Dr., Lawrence K, 66044
4-7
Wanted: Executive Director for Associated
Banks. Job responsibility includes coordination
and management of the administration and fiscal
affairs of the bank. Manage the filing and lobbying on the issues before the
Kanata Legislature. Full time. Minimum salary:
$15,000 per year. Two months as Director(s). $25 resume to associated Stu-
dies. Attn: George Gallion, by March 37.
Now hiring for Spring & Summer catering positions. Must be able to work 20 hrs a week. Apply in person during the day. Henry's Restaurant, 6th & Missouri; 4-11
LOST
Reward, lost blue folder with typewritten research materials. Contact 9-4. 864-3421. 3-27
REWARD, red vinyl wallet with all its cards!
in 11 plus leather covered cardcase as well as
bus pass and American Express card.
Call 749-3663
3-27
CAMI 491-6863 3-27
The following Project (Project 605) was begun with Displastic features, featuring with headlight mounted on front hood. On 3/12 at 10:09 am. you have information about the project and its location.
MISCELLANEOUS
8 month Female Irish Setter, left near campus.
Call 841-6230 after 6 p.m. reward. 3-30
LIVE FROM NEW YORK. It's Philly's favorite brunch! Serve Polish sausage and Dr. Brown's cream soda, then serve it with our signature caviar, his cart Superkraut and somes at no expense and Mains (every Thursday), Friday and Saturday. $12.95
PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS. Proof positive, laminated in hard plastic. Proof detailed and application self addressed card. Dept. K, Box 252, Tampa, Arizona $851.
GAY AND LESIHAN PEER COUNSELING-
A friend is ready to listen. Referrals through KU. Information, 864-3506, or Headquarters, 812-3454.
NOTICE
PILOTS! Commercial and instrument ground school to start soon. For more information call 841-0688. 3-27
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports. Custom made portraits, color, B/W, Swells Studio 749-1611. 4-1
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can give, at prices students can afford. Swells Studio. 749-1611.
**NEED EXTRA CASH?** Sell your old Gold &
Diamonds. Carp% off for class rings,
chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6377, 841-
7768, 1f
There is an extension of the deadline for acceptance of nominations for Women's Recognition till April 1. 4-1
Get the FISHING REPORT and top quality live bait and fishing tackle at Anglers Unlimited, 1449 W. 23rd. 3-30
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compliance with Blue Cross and Leaf
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Random Firings: Transcend Potatcism! 3-27
Compiling a "best of Lawrence" list Best
award, at law firm of Lawrence; hotel,
bar, athletic, hotel, restaurant, restra-
tion, catering, hospitality as long as it applies to Lawrence or KU S.
district nominations to 2500 W. 14th St.
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DO IT at GREEN'S (The big yellow liquor store!) The selection of fine wines, imported horts, and exotic liquors. 802 West 23rd St.
CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS. April 14-15
Petitions available in Student Senate Office.
Filings deadline: 5:00 p.m. Friday. March
21.
3-27
---
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Yes, you may have heard the rumors, well they're true. Wear your lizard if you're gay day is coming quite soon. 3-27
SENIORS~only six weeks of school are left.
This is the final push. Jobs and careers are
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we get to work on next week.
For the final fling. 3-27
BOOK LOVERS. The Summer Museum Book Shop is a wonderful place to browse for a book over 1000 art titles, posters, point-of-interest museums, and the Art World at Museum Collections, and the Art World at Museum Bob from Ottawa, I think I'm turning Janssen, but my water glass needs to be filled great and shave next time or you'll get stuck waiting for it. The chance of a lifetime! Even you might be able to say, "I SEEEN KK YEARS PARTY Monday, March 30, M-F-MIDNIGHT."
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Female student wants reliable female room,
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next year. Call 842-5085. 4-2
You know the place, the downs the stairs and the elevator. You know the night. The remodel is having, well be ready to go at that time. We will unhook the phone. The evening is long and we have all night. So unscorch the staircase. And then you are done.
KC—Because of you the last year has been a wonderful year, and ever spent, and that includes quite a few sins. I am so old. Sure there have been many people who have been many more good people than there have been many more good people, but it is a very special and unique relationship in the entire world. I would not trade what I have, for anything else (not even a motorcycle). And can you be happy anniversary? KC 28 8-77
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D. G. Dara, Libby, Judy, Julie, Anne, and Terri, Spring break in Dallas with me. I took a photo of her and bravenu! Siping Kankamats and saking in the Kankamats and saking in the Kankamats!) (Ask Anne LaBares again, shame on your bedroom at Alive. Always Scott P. SLI, Marvin 3-27
The deadline for acceptance of nominations for Women's Recognition will be extended until April 1st. 4-2
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49-3333
3-27
ATTENTION PSYCHOLOGISTS. Psychology
nursery needs summer employment working
to gain experience in the field. Call 841-
6632 3-31
Quiet, studious male roommate to share
very nice apartment. Close to campus, own
room $7.50 mo plus 1½ utilities $42-384
3:57
Responsible woman to share very nice 2 BR duplex, now or summer. $132.50 + 3-31 utilities & deposit. 749-2618
We are looking for another mature, no
living or retired female responder (
ref. engaged or married) to work in an
apartment during the next school
year. Please contact us at:
h84-6137 as soon as possible 272
Want to Buie Car? Would condealer
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798- 1:798- 1:793- 533- 533-
Part time lumber store clerk. Must be able to carry 4-1 one or two lines, a week or weekend and be proficient in using the pleasant personality. Must guarantee at least five hours of work per day. Must be very responsible and willing to do whatever is necessary. Must be able to follow instructions when necessary. Must be able to follow instructions when more than one Job 'Call' must be given to the manager.
Female roommates wanted. Share 5 bed-
room house; 12 month lease beginning June
1. Call 841-2686 3-31
2 KU girls want 2 more to share house near campus in June. Call 841-4407. 4-7
Campbell in June 'Call 511'
worked on job wanted, posited
time painter and odd job person. After-
mours Saturday, Sundays. Must be experi-
ence between 2:30 and 4:30. 3-31
Faxal: roommate wanted for Jayhawk Tower Apt. $98.50/month—utilities paid. Call 749-2489. 3-21
Additional senior roommate wanted to work with your family. Contact Lyman Lyon 842-7667 at 8:40 a.m. p. 3:27. Male roommate to share two bedroom furniture and bedding. Post-pdoc. Rest paid, shared electricity and water. Interested in learning Japanese or majoining them in Japan. Call 842-7677 or 842-4247 at 1:20 a.m. p. 3:27.
Female roommate for summer. $265 monthly.
Deposits and utilities paid, on bus route and
walking distance to campus. GASLIGHT 4-2
APARTMENTS 749-1287.
Roommate wanted, female immied, and/or
through summer. Nice 2 bd. Meadow-
brook apt. on bus route. Natalia 749-2682
after 5:00.
1.
Page 14. University Daily Kansan, March 27, 1981
1.
KU takes two from Benedictine
The Kansas baseball team finished the pre-conference season on a strong note yesterday, as they overpowered the Brewers, 4-1 and 3-1 at Quigley Field.
The Jayhawks hammered out nine extra-base hits in the doubleheader, including three home runs, and Coach Stephen looked at eight different nitches.
"The THING YOU need to remember about games like this is to win and go through without getting anyone hurt," Temple said. "We were able to use several pitchers and I thought they pitched pretty well."
Freshman lefthander Demia Copel pitched the first three innings of the opening game, giving up two hits and
striking out three, on the way to his fourth win without a loss.
Third baseman Russ Blayck helped put the game out of reach in the third inning with his seven home run of the Jayhawks, 12-5, grabbed a 4-0 lead.
Blaylock not only leads the team in home runs, but is well ahead of Matt Gundelfinger's pace last year. Gundelinger hit 16, a single season record.
Blaylock said he was aware of the record.
"Oh yes, some of the guys are talking about it," he said. "Sure, I'd like to break it."
WITHOUT A strong wind blowing from center field to left, Blaylock could have finished the day with three
homers, as two shots cleared the fence, just foul.
"I kind of thought they would stay fair," he said. "I guess I got my bup on them a little."
Freshman Joe Heeney also homed for KU, his first, but more importantly moved in from right field in place of the injured Jeff Nezuil at shortstop.
"Joe showed he's a good athlete," Temple said. "That's one area of weakness, infield depth."
Neuzil, the Jayhawks' third leading hitter with a .379 average, pulled a game in practice Tuesday, but Temple was far off from playing in the conference opening Saturday.
"Nezuil is the type of player who can play hurt," he said. "He says he'll be
25
BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan staff
Mitch Labin (left) and aid left fielder Tim Heinemann congratulate teammate Joe Heeney after Heeney, a freshman, hit a triple. The Jahywens went on to win that game, 9-1, over Benedictine, and also took the second game of the doubleheader (1).
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In the second game, designated hitter Juan Ramon was the big gun for the Jayhawks, driving in all three runs with a two-run homer and a sacrifice fly.
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"I had a good idea it was out," Ramon said. "I haven't been hitting the ball very good, so it's about time. My bat's been in intensive care."
Gray, KU's career leader in hits,
doubles and RBI, entered yesterday's
games with a .234 average and went
hitless.
"We have to have Jo's Joe bit in the most of the time." Temple said. "The only concern I have right now, though, is our left-handed hitting. Brian Gray is in a tremendous slump. He just doesn't look comfortable with the bat."
The Jayhawks' other big left-handed hitter, Kevin Clinton, came to life in the first game yesterday. Clinton, who was a freshman, played a single and a triple in three at-bats.
KU's pitching was solid in the second game, as five pitchers combined for a five-hitter.
Rightishander Kevin Clinton (1-1) and Jim Philips (3-1) will start for the Jayhawks tomorrow, with Copper (4-0) playing (6-1) scheduled to work on Sunday.
The Jayhawks host Oklahoma State in the Big Eight season opensers at Oakland and Sunday. The doubleheader are set for 1 p.m. at Quailfield.
Midnight Madness - Fri & Sat
JIAYHAWK NOTES: First baseman Brian Gray collected his 139th career hit last week to pass Lee Ice as the Jayhawks' career hit leader, Gray, already the career doubles and RBI leader, has 142 hits.
Roger Riley, the Jayhawks' leading hitter, continued to hit the ball hard, going 4 for 7 yesterday, to raise his average to 436.
Shortstop Jeff Neuzil had a 12-game hitting streak snapped against Texas A&M last week. Neuzil has hit safely in 13 of 15 games.
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Royals down Orioles in seven-hitter. 4-0
FORT MEYERS, FLA. (UP1)—Dennis Leonard, Jeff Kenyon and Gary Christenson combined on a seven-hitter yesterday to lift the Kansas City Royals to a 4-9 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
Leonard, a 20-game winner last year, struck out five batters in as many innings to take the victory. Leonard pitched nine innings each had a double and two RBIs.
Oriole Manager Earl Weaver was ejected from the game in the top of the eight inning by ampire Joe Brinkman. It was Weaver's first
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Monday, March 30, 1981 Vol. 91, No. 121 USPS 650-640
Public outcry kills bill to limit investments in money-market
By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter
It came through the Legislature like a thief in the night and will go to its almost assured death today as a prisoner, shackled by the jeers of the authorities, people like KU graduate student Roland Schenk.
The issue is a tacked-on amendment to an otherwise innocuous banking bill. The amendment would severely limit the convenience and availability of money-market investment funds.
Money-market funds are investments that can be purchased for short periods with high interest rates and small required deposits. Some money-markets require deposits as low as $100 for interest as high as that on a $10,000 savings account. But back is that the money-markets are not insured.
THE AMENDMENT, which passed the House by a 73-2 vote, would limit the investment opportunities of more than 40,000 Kansas small investors—people like Schenk.
"I'm convinced that money-market is the way to go for the student investor." Schenk, a business graduate student, said "In the past, I have gotten loan money and put it in a credit card. I've been able to get it and can put the money in a high-interest account and I don't have to let the money get all tied up.
"With a money-market account I can withdraw about $500 chunks, which is ideal for school, and I get about three times the interest that I would in a bank account."
The tale of the amendment reads like a suspense thriller, one in which the evil-deer sneaks up on his victims, catching them unaware, shocked and outraged.
THE AMENDMENT began its journey to controversy as simple Senate Bill 131 - a bill that would have better defined new types of banking accounts.
Just before the bill was scheduled for its final vote, the metamorphosis transpired.
Without public hearing, without committee debate, this mild bill gained a leech-like success.
states, the question of the viability of money market funds was raised.
But before this, amendment made by State Rep. Jerry Andre, R-Merriam passed out of the public's reach, the cries of outraged investors, stoked by the complaints of money-market brokers, have stopped the amendment in the Senate.
NOW THAT the Senate has been faced with the full burd of constituent outrage, that amend- ment was necessary.
It seems that nobody wants to come out in support of the amendment. House Speaker Wendell Lady, a former supporter, said the House Republican only allowed to raise the issue to the public's attention.
Even some supporters of the bill in the House have retracted their support, claiming that under the stress of the vote, they did not have the power to realize the implications of the amendment.
A AT A PRESS CONFERENCE Friday, Lady, R-Overland Park, said he had been assured by Senate President Roy Doyen that the Senate amended the amended bill pass through without debate.
"I would hope to put the bill in a conference committee and then hold hearings on it," Doyen, R-Cordonia, said about the amendment. The bill was issued issue full hearings before the session runs out."
If the session does run out, however, the bill probably would be shelved until next year's session. If the Senate does approve the bill, then it will not be criticized and the bill at a press conference Friday.
"The whole issue of the money-markets should not have gone through the House without both sides of the issue having their say." Carlin said. "I think it would be like I will be able to deal with it on my agenda."
THE QUESTION that remains in the minds of the amendment's opponents was how the legislators could have let such an apparently unopposed issue pass.
"It is of the magnitude that it merits more than procedural passage by the Legislature."
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, a representative who voted for the amended bill,
"I think it took almost everyone by surprise," Charlton said, "but the problem with the vote on the issue was not that there was confusion, it was just that there was very little time to decide one way or the other on the sides that were presented on the House floor."
said the problem rested in the need to make a snap decision on the matter.
Charlton said that she did not have the time to sift out the bad from the good points in the bill and voted as she had in a preliminary vote on the bill to remain consistent.
"In the question of retired persons' pension funds that are included in the amendment, it seemed to be a matter of whether to have the pensions with a 15 percent insured interest rate, or to have a 19 percent interest rate that was insured," she said. "That's the kind of thing I voted for."
EVEN NOW, Charlton does not think that the idea behind the amendment is all bad.
"A lot of money has been flowing, not only out of this state, but out of this country because these funds," Charlton said. "It is not often that I will be on the side of the banks against the small investor, but in this case I think there is some merit to the idea."
Charlton said that since the vote was taken on Thursday, she has received about a half dozen phone calls asking about the vote that she calls "unfortunate, but got distrous."
One of the people who called Charleton was beset with fear and he called Charleton to have her explain贝他.
"I had been considering getting a money-market certificate for next year," Schenk said. "With the interest that I could make off the money-market, I can easily afford to buy some of it." Charlton came up on concern about Hap. Charlton's vote was to find out if this would be available for me next year."
WITH THE AMENDMENT, Schenk was afraid that the money would not be there for his investment. He said that he was hoping and was ready to accept the amendment not get past the Senate.
"I hope that this does not pass," he said,
because with the extra $400 to $501 I could earn
money for the day.
SPEED
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More than 250 runners turned out Saturday for the "Dam Run." a 10,000 and 20,000 meter race sponsored by KU Recreational Services. The race was from gate Park to Clinton Dam and back.
Leavenworth convict hopes key locks out violent past
By KIRK TINDALL Staff Reporter
LEAVENWORTH-Willie Bosket was initiated into the Phi Beta Kappa scholarship society in the spring of 1890 when he was a graduate of Princeton with a bachelor's degree in psychology.
He was given his Phi Beta Kappa key in a simple ceremony at the Leavenworth Federal Auditorium.
Monday Morning
I am sorry, I cannot read the text from the image. It appears to be a monochrome illustration of a person reading a book.
years of his life. His grade point average was 3.97 on a 4.0 scale.
Bosket is a man who, by his own admission, is not easily moved. But receiving his key was an emotional experience for him—the culmination of the most rewarding experience of his life. He was presented his key teachers and other prison students looked on.
IT IS NO SMALL irony that Bosket, a man who has spent all but five years of his adult life behind bars, would be given a key, a key that won't unlock a single door at Leavenworth. But it does represent the only escape into Bosket, an escape into books and ideal.
JOHNE RICHARDSON/Kansan staff
"I had never been in an environment where ideas were exchanged—esoteric ideas, philosophies. Basket said. "I found myself in the situation it in. I took off—I found myself."
Most of Bosket's life was spent getting an education of a different sort. He grew up on the streets of Harlem, "a street kid doing street stuff."
It was street stuff that gave Basket the second most intense educational experience of his life, his years in the Eimira Reformatory for Boys.
"It was stupid. Just a bunch of street kids who what you do on the streets," he said. "It was bad."
BOSKET'S FACE is tense when he talks about Elmira, and it is easy to see that some
Bosket was 15 when he was arrested for the liquor store robbery, and 16 when he went into Elmira. He is now approaching 40. At an age when most Phi Beta Kappas are wearing three-piece suits with their keys dangling from them, they may have vests. Bosket wears prison fatigues that lack pockets to display his key, even if he were, as he said, "into symbols of that sort."
of the fear Elmir inflicted on a 16-year-old street kid still remains. There are scars, too—real scars, across the ridges of his eyebrows, or scars from the chin, broad deep scars on his forearms.
"It was a very physical environment and one had to become very physical to survive in that environment and remain whole," he said.
Bosket is not a bitter man. Yet he has trouble talking about the environment he is living in and has lived in for most of his life. An environment that has grown worse since he received the Phi Beta Kappa key. He is afraid that he will seem negative.
Weather Z
"I am a very positive person," he said.
"I've had it to isolate myself. The atmosphere is very conducive."
See BOSKET page 5
Tomorrow it will be warmer with a high in the upper 78s.
Winds will be out of the west to southwest at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be clear to partly cloudy with a low in the lower 40s.
It will be sunny and warm today with a low in the middle to upper 60s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Power failure hits residence halls, Towers
By KATHY MAAC Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A power outage in west Lawrence late Saturday night left students stranded in elevators, and the auxiliary lighting system at Towers malfunctioned. KU police said yesterday.
The two-hour power failure, which started about 10:15 p.m., was caused by a blown transformer at 15th and Kasol streets, a Kansas Power and Light snooksman said.
The substation serves the west of Woch Auditorium, including the Daisy Hill residence hallls, the Towers and Meadowbrook Apartment, and the Rockknocked out in the Perry and Lecompton areas.
The Computer Center also was down as students were guided through campus buildings
FIREFIGHTERS TURNED off the Tower's auxiliary灯 after reports of smoke in Tower D, Fire Chief Jim McMain said. Carbon monoxide fumes from the gas-powered motor were eliminated after the generators were shut down.
The auxiliary unit generates electricity for the auxiliary' emergency exit signs and stairwell lights.
"We will be checking out the auxiliary system and make sure we get it working well." J. W. Jones
Residence halls and the Towers are both equipped with emergency lights, except the halls' lights are battery-powered and the Towers' are gas-powered. he said.
According to John Fuldner, Springfield, Mo., senior, who was in the Towers during the blackout, the fumes spread throughout Tower D. The firefighter then moved toward Tower D to the generator room to shut down the system.
TWO PEOPLE were rescued from the elevators after being trapped for about 20 minutes.
Students also were rescued from an elevator at Lewis Hall, Kathy Rose, Lewis assistant resident director, said. However, they were released by a resident before maintenance personnel arrived.
"It was more of a party-type atmosphere," Carol Schiavone, MColllum assistant resident director, said. "Everybody handled it really well. Nobody panicked."
"People were hanging around and playing backgammon in the bathrooms where there were lights," she said. "They were trying to make the best of it."
Other residents described the blackout atmosphere as wild.
STUDENTS In Templin Hall got roldy after the electricity went out, according to Vince Ferguson.
"Two bottles were thrown out the window," he said. "People get crazy when the lights go out. You have a lack of electricity and all hell breaks loose.
"You know what happened in New York, don't you?"
A party on the seventh floor of Ellsworth Hall
occupies about electricity, Mark Tinsley,
Merrigan sophomore.
"People still partied even though it was dark," he said. "We had a live band, which had to stop."
THE COMPUTER CENTER temporarily shut down to reset its system, according to David Gardner. Healy junior and the senior student at About 48 people were in the center at the time.
"the computer has a pretty fail-safe system," he said. "It stores everything that was being at the time it shut down. To my knowledge, no one lost their computer program."
Facilities Operations also reported no major problems during the blackout, according to director Thomas Anderson. After the power was off, the building heated and cooling motors in campus buildings.
High winds caused spot shortages yesterday in central Lawrence. KP&L dispatcher Nancy Riley
Power was out yesterday from 5 p.m. to 6:20 in the 800 blocks of Illinois, Louisiana and Indiana streets. The 1700 blocks of Tennessee and Kentucky streets also had power failures, probably because of high winds or blown transformers, she said.
Legislature considers drug paraphernalia bill
By MARC HERZFELD
Staff Reporter
Head shop owners and opponents of legal paraphernalia are fighting over a bill in the legislature that would outlaw the sale, possession and advertising of drug parapher-
The bill passed through the House with almost no opposition and is now being considered by the Senate Judiciary Committee. If the bill becomes law, the sale of drug paraphernalia to minors would be a felony to adults and other offenses would be a misdemeanor.
Leading the fight for the bill is State Rep. Robert H. Miller, R-Wellington, sponsor of the bill. Heading the opposition is Topeka attorney Dick Brewer, lobbyist for an organization of head shops, the Kansas Retail and Trade Cooperative.
"Government and the free enterprise system," Miller said, "are allowing this paraphernalia to be advertised and merchandised just like hot dogs and apple pie."
"The idea that you're going to stop or curtail drug use," Brewer said, "by curtailing some of its implements is like saying you're going to cure cancer with aspirin."
THE BILL. Brewer said, would make a pipe that is legal in a tobacco shop illegal in a heat shop.
But State Sen. Jane Eldridge, R-Lawrence, a member of the Judiciary Committee, argues that packaging and advertising of the paraphernalia would show illegal intent. If marijuana is illegal, she says, then accessories also should be illegal.
Steve Flack, owner of Exile stores in Lawrence and Overland Park, called the bill "historic."
The law also might present legal problems. A similar law in Ohio was declared unconstitutional in federal court last year, Miller, a former prosecutor, and the defect in the Ohio law had been corrected.
"You can get rolling papers in any grocery store," one said.
BUT JOHN SOLBACH, D-Lawrence, said that the bill might be unconstitutional and that the governor should act.
Customers interviewed in Lawrence's head shops agreed.
"It's not going to stop me from using drugs," another said.
The impact the bill would have on drug use is uncertain. DON Flesher, owner of Mother Earth in Topeka and president of the Kansas Retail and Consumer Bank, said the bill would have no effect on drug use.
Lawrence has three head shops, White Light Paraphernalia, 704 Massachusetts; Bokonon Imports, 12 E. Eight; and Exile Records and Tapes, 15 W. Ninth.
Eric Voth, a fourth-year student at the University of Kansas Medical Center who testified in favor of the bill, said the bill would impose the "atmosphere of drug abuse" in head shops.
"Very young people are targeted," he said, water pistol-pipe combination and a Frisbee stick.
Voth said the paraphernalia industry financed the "pro-pot lobery" attempting to stop the bill. The lobby was trying "a heck of a lot of slippery maneuvers to get around the bill." he said.
One question surrounding the Kansas bill is enforcement. Solbach compares the law to the Missouri law, which he said does not have
INTENT is an important part of any criminal law, he said. Just as an electrician could own a burglary tool for legal purposes, so a tobacco chemist was not permitted to intent was not to smoke controlled substances.
Lawrence Assistant Chief of Police Ron Oln
the bill would be enforced, although it would not
that the judge
For now, the bill is in the Senate Judiciary Committee. State Sen. Elwaine Pomeroy, R-Topkea, chairman of the committee, said the bill requires more study before being sent to the full Senate.
BUT SOLBACH, a member of the House Judiciary Committee, predicted that the Senate would approve the bill if the Senate Judiciary Committee recommended it.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 30, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Haig: Soviet intervention possible
WASHINGTON—Secretary of State Alexander Haig said yesterday that Soviet military intervention in Poland was "neither imminent nor inevitable" but that the Kremlin was engaged in "increased posturing" that could lead to intervention.
"We are watching the situation very, very carefully," he told television interviewers.
The secretary was interviewed on NBC-TV's "Meet the Press." He said there were no indications that Russian troops had moved into Poland.
Asked whether Americans should not welcome such a move in the hope it could lead to a dissolution of the Soviet empire, Haig said, "Any application of force could have unforeseen and most dangerous consequences. I know of no officials in this administration who could wish for it."
"Soviet intervention in Poland . . . varies hour by hour, as various postures are taken by the Soviet forces," Haig said. "Right now, they are at a heightened state of readiness, with increased posturing that could lead to intervention."
Asked whether there are any "good signs" emerging from Poland, Haig said, "Yes. There is some indication that the moderate elements in the political structure there seem to be surviving well and lending some hope they will prevail."
Hijackers spell out new demands
BANGKOK, Thailand—Heavily armed hijackers of an Indonesian jet shot and wounded two passengers made new demands today, and a police officer was killed.
As the orchestr at Bangkok's Don Muang airport entered its third day, 50 of which were attacked by gunmen. In particular, which the terrorists threatened to blow up in their demands was not met.
Thai officials said the hijackers-suspected to be Indonesian Modern extremists-made new demands calling for the "punishment of (Indonesian) vice president Adam Malik for taking kickbacks from a U.S. company" and the expulsion of all Jewish officials and Israeli militants from Indonesia."
The hijackers, armed with grelenes, dynamite and pistols, have already demanded that Indonesia release 64 political prisoners. President Sahar油arto of
Officials said American businessman Karl Schneider, 47, of Lubbock, Texas, who was shot by the nijackers during an escape attempt yesterday, was out of danger after doctors operated to remove bullets lodged near his spine.
The condition of an Indonesian crew member also shot by the hijackers was unknown.
Negotiators said the Indonesians were prepared to take a "harder line" with the hijackers if no country could be found to accept them. They said the deadliest way to do this was to move to Indonesia.
Polish leaders withdraw resignations
WARSAW—The crisis session of the Polish Communist Party Central Committee ended early today with a vote of confidence for the country's leadership. Resignations submitted during the stormy meeting were withdrawn.
The announcement by the official Polish news agency PAP after the 16-hour session—held during the country's worst crisis since last summer's labor unrest—indicated that the conflict between party moderates and hardliners had not been resolved.
The Central Committee also postponed a party congress that was scheduled for this month—a further sign that the country's leadership was unable to convene.
But the standoff mean that moderates led by party boss Stanislaw Kania, independent Solidarity union, have kept their fragile hold on the government.
How the Soviet Union would react to the session was uncertain.
Meeting against the background of a threatened nationwide general strike tomorrow and increased Western concern over feared Soviet intervention, the committee debate was marked by attacks on the Solidarity union and criticism of party policy.
11th body found in condo collapse
COCOA BEACH, Fla. — Rescue workers worked their way through chunks of concrete and twisted metal rods yesterday to unearth the body of the 11th construction worker killed in the collapse of a five-story condominium.
Darrell Nowakowski, 22, a window fitter, was the last worker definitely known to be in the Harbour. City condominiums when it crashed down on a building in New York City.
Rescue workers paused in their work and clustered around the southwest corner of the disaster scene when two paramedics carried out a blood-stained T-shirt and a battered tool box filled with stones and pieces of concrete.
Then a phalanx of white-heLMETED rescue workers carried the body wrapped in white sheets, to a temporary morgue in a nearby Army tent.
Inspectors from the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration interviewed survivors and company officials and examined the construction firm's log book, which contains such information as when concrete floors were poured.
Mike Mervis, spokesman for the builder, Univel Inc., said the company would conduct its own investigation and would make a decision within a week.
"We certainly not going to rebuild right away, but it's a gorgeous site. My guess is something will be rebuilt," he said.
Demonstrators revive TMI issues
Thousands of protesters in Harrisburg, Pa. and other cities throughout the United States spent the weekend reviving their anti-nuclear cause and taking aim, in the words of Bella Abzug, at the "ultraright-wing and the Moral Majority."
The occasion was the second anniversary of the accident at Three Mile Lake when alerted people all over the world were risking nuclear energy and forcibly displaced.
"The real threat to security is the military complex, the ultra right-wing and the Moral Majority," said Abzug, a former Democratic congresswoman from New York, at a demonstration in Harrisburg.
Although the Harrisburg demonstration was the largest anti-nuclear rally in Pennsylvania, it was much smaller than the huge demonstrations in Washington and New York after the Three Mile Island accident March 28, 1979.
The demonstration had been billed as a major national event by the sponsoring labor unions, which financed and organized it after local environmental groups found themselves financially strapped.
Although it was advertised as an anti-nuclear rally, the protesters brought up a number of other concerns such as Reagan's budget cuts, the Salvador, and the government shutdown.
the 11 unions sponsoring the protest represent 20 percent of the unionized labor and were rebuled by pro-nuclear building and construction unions.
Priest says church not tied to left
SAN VALADOR, El Salvador—A leading Catholic clergyman yesterday denied churches that the church was partial to the left, saying it was a sign of anti-Semitism.
"The church is going to marry neither with the unified revolutionary directorate nor with any other group," the Rev. Robert Fornula said his bishop during a news conference on Friday.
*Standing in for San Salvador's acting archbishop, Arturo Rivera y Damas, orruella made the declaration in response to charges that the church is *partly* Christian.*
The unified revolutionary directorate represents the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, a coalition of five leftist guerrilla groups and an organization that has been involved in many conflicts.
Torruella's statements reflect a growing tendency by church officials to move away from alignment either with the military-Christian democratic model or with the current Christian model.
City race heats up amid accusations
By PAM HOWARD Staff Reporter
Last Thursday night, after Mike Amxy withdrew his bid for a City Commission seat, the race turned from one of issues to a race of accusations.
Amny, who left the League of Women Voters' candidate forum without commenting further on his four-page resignation speech, said yesterday that the formation of what he considered a coalition between candidates Nancy Shontz and Tom Gleason had a part in his decision to leave the race.
In his resignation speech, Amyx said that he was withdrawing from the campaign because he was concerned about the direction it was taking. He charged that a coalition was forming and that candidates had been changing their positions to match different audiences.
HE SAID he feared that if Shontz and
Gleason were both elected they would not represent the city as a whole.
Amyx, however, said he was not sure what special interest groups both Shontz and Gleason represented.
City Commissioner Bob Schum, to whom Amyx threw his support, had no doubt whom Shontz and Gleason represented.
"I don't know," he said. "I'd really have to check on that."
"I would say that they probably represent the neighborhood groups and maybe not a very large percentage of those," Schumm said.
"I'm glad to have the support of the people in the older neighborhoods," she said. "I'm glad to have the support I've got from people in the new neighborhoods. I'm glad for the support I's getting from business people. Because I feel I'm representing all of their interests."
SHONTZ DENIED the accusation.
Shontz went on to explain why she thought the accusation was generated.
to have a terrible fear of the people who represent perhaps a quarter of the geographical area of the city and a third of the population as somehow controlling the whole community," she said. "In the past, these older neighborhoods have been ignored by the rest of the city and now the people living there are asking to have their problems corrected."
"They (the other candidates) seem
GLEASON ALSO denied representing any special interest in the campaign.
"I think they are trying to create some divisions and get people to choose one side or another when those are really false divisions," he said.
Gleason also had an explanation for the origin of the accusation.
"My suspicion is that people who are, or who have been, on the City Commission would just as soon not have their records examined too closely and to distract attention away from the examination of those records," he said.
COMMISSION CANDIDATE Nancy Hambleton said she was disturbed by the way some of the Shonitz and Gleason supporters had been campaigning.
"The thing that worries me is in some of the people who are involved in those campaigns have proceeded in a very negative manner in their dealing with the needs of the community," she said. "What we have are groups whose whole campaigns are against everything."
Hambleton said she thought the people working on Shontz and Gleason might be shaping the campaign more than the candidates themselves.
CITY COMMISSIONER Barkley Clark, who is running for re-election, was unavailable for comment yesterday.
"I think that's an important distinction because I don't know exactly how this has come about," she said.
Three city commissioners will be elected on April 7 from the remaining five candidates.
Protesters remember Three Mile Island date
By PENNICRABTREE Staff Reporter
One demonstrator, a resident of Harrisburg, Pa., an area near the
Staff Reporter
Anti-nuclear energy demonstrators marched through downtown Lawrence at noon Saturday to mark the second nuclear accident at Three Mile Island.
"We never hear the horror stories told by those families. The media doesn't want to cover it because people don't believe, they don't want to hear about it."
Nearly 25 people, many carrying anti-nuclear banners or wearing black armbands, marched silently from downtown down Massachusetts Street and back.
ACCORDING TO SMITH, the black armbands worn by the demonstrators were worn in sympathy "for those held captive" in a running danger at Three Mile Island."
"The Three Mile Island disaster demonstrates that we're dealing with a dangerous technology," Tolly Smith, a law enforcement official, said. "A Lawrence anti-nuclear group, said.
"There are a heck of a lot more people held hostage in the Three Mile Island area by radioactive waste than were held hostage in Iran," Smith said.
"We don't think that nuclear energy is the only way we can get electricity. Three Mile Island shows that putunium and neoble can不mix."
Three Mile Island nuclear plant, said the accident had taken a heavy psychological and physical toll on Harrisburg residents.
"People in Harrisburg are waiting to see what happens," Pat Sick, Harrisburg graduate student, said. "We feel helpless because we've been told to. We have nightmares, and people are becoming ill."
SLICK SAID Lawrence residents might soon experience the same apprehension when the Wolf Creek nuclear plant was completed.
"Lawrence may have to deal with being situated downwind of a nuclear power plant," Slick said. "Psychological and physical problems caused by a nuclear plant don't count with the government though. They aren't Big Business, they don't make money."
Demonstrators also expressed concern over Senate Bill 180, a bill that they said could allow rural electric cooperatives to buy into the Wolf Creek plant, exempt from regulation by the Kansas Corporation Commission.
A ruling by the KCC last year limited the amount the cooperative could spend for purchasing shares, in effect reducing the value of high construction costs of the plant.
Last week, the bill was amended to allow the cooperative to buy into Wolf Creek but to continue under regulation by the KCC. The bill is expected to come before the House in the next few weeks.
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By TIM SHARP Staff Reporter
The man who claimed to be the heir to the French's Mustard fortune was sentenced Friday in Douglas County District Court despite his request for mental treatment rather than imprisonment.
Douglas District Judge Ralph King sentenced Rodney R. Moinin, 32, to two concurrent 3-10-year counts on two terms of possession and to three consecutive 1-4-3-year terms for writing bad checks.
Moquin came to Lawrence last year claiming that he had inherited the fortune of R.T. French, of mustard fame.
He talked merchants in Douglas,
Franklin, and Osage counties out of
$25,000 worth of property. He told
merchants that he would have the
money as soon as he transferred funds to a Lawrence bank.
He received, on credit, a pickup truck, two trailers, horses, a television set and electronic equipment. All the property was recovered when Moquin was arrested in Texas in December for trying to set up a similar scam there.
Moquin must serve at least six years in prison before becoming eligible for parole, Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone said. Moquin still faces similar charges in Franklin and Osage counties.
Moquin had requested mental treatment rather than incarceration. He claimed to suffer from psychological problems arising from the time he said he spent as a prisoner of war in Vietnam.
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Thursday, April 2, 1981
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Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats re- Public and S8. Students with ID S5 and S4. Special ticket rates for patrons of the Concert and Chamber Music营 巡馆; call 913/864 3982
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-
University Daily Kansan, March 30, 1981
Page 3
Mayor impressed with proposal
By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter
It's a simple oversized piece of paper etched with red-and-blue pencil, the lettering so informally drawn as to be barely readable.
Yet, according to Lawrence Mayor Ed Carter, it contains the most promising downtown retail proposal has received from a national retailer.
"However, it eliminates some of the most distasteful things about the original JVJ downtown mall proposal," Carter said.
Carter, just back from a Dallas meeting with officials from J.C. Penney Co. Inc., emphasized yesterday that the deal was 'rough and preliminary.'
THAT ORIGINAL PROPOSAL, put forth in September 1979 by the Cleveland developer Jacobs, Visconi and Jacobs, called for the tearing out and rebuilding of four square blocks of downtown Lawrence.
The area, bordered by Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Ninth and Seventh streets, would have then been a $35,000-square-foot enclosed mall.
"This new proposal reduces the size of that project considerably, by about one-third," Carter said. "It incorporates the existing buildings we have in that area, rather than tearing them down."
Carter mentioned Sgt. Preston's and the marketplace, two New Hampshire Street businesses, as possibilities for incorporation into the proposed mall.
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"The plan attempts to leave the basic integrity of the city, which is the downtown, intact," Carrier said. "It's progress at this point. It is progress."
CARTER SAID he "certainly hoped" that JVJ would be interested in developing the project.
"J.C. Penney that they would work only with a top-fight developer." Carter said. "This plan has the backing of us, and I certainly think it has possibilities."
Commissioner Barkley Clark, after a cursory review of the plans, agreed with Carter.
"It it's certainly worlds better than the original VJP plan," Clark said. "I really like the fact that it leaves Massachusetts totally intact. Buildings like the flea market and Sgt. Preston could be incorporated into the mail."
CLARK ALSO COMMENTED favorably on the mall's "broken-up" parking scheme, which incorporates a streetcar system in Rhode Island and Vermont streets.
"I think that broken-up parking is essential to any new downtown plan," Clark said, "nice to see some homes in the crop on earth. It definitely encourages us."
"However, I still prefer the free-
standing approach to downtown
department store development. The
company have to study this plan a lot more."
Carter, too, said he preferred the free-standing approach, which calls for in-place development of major retail stores, with little disruption of the surrounding retail district. However, he said, "we can't force the retailers and developers to go along with what we want."
"We can negotiate with them, try to reach a compromise, and that's what we've been doing." Carter said with a chuckle. "But, at this time, the major retailers don't seem to be interested in a free-standing approach.
"I would love a free-standing approach, and I think everyone would. But to the retailers, that's just not acceptable at this time. This plan is an attempt to bring together the different factions in city, to reconcile their differences."
CARTER SAID that he, City Manager Buford Watson and other city officials had been talking to J.C. Penney for some time now."
"They've gotten their own proposal together, and they called us at the first of last week," he said. "Buford and I spoke a little to meet with them last Thursday."
Carter said copies of the Penney proposal were being sent to JVJ and Robert Teska and Associates of Evanston, Il., the city's consultant.
"This proposal is definitely progress," he said. "I'm anxious to see what he have to say."
7m N 80m CLOSED 9m
RHODE ISLAND
NEW HAMPSHIRE
CLOSED
J.G. PENNEY
A A
MASSACHUSETTS
A A
F D
VERMONT
This ISC Penney's tentative proposal for a downtown enclosed Lawrence mall. The shaded portion represents shops that will be inside the enclosed mall. The "C" portions are possible sites for major department store "anchor's," with JIC Penney on the far right; "B" sections will be newly built retail shops, and "E" sections will consist of existing retail outlets that could be incorporated into the mall virtually intact. "A" sections represent current retail locations that would be unaffected by the mall; the "F" sections is a possible high-rise office site. The dotted lines indicate pedestrian access points from Massachusetts Street, which would remain open under the plan. Only Eighth and New Hampshire streets would be closed.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, March 30, 1981
Opinion
Science, not theology
If God indeed created the world in seven days, perhaps he should have added an eighth day—one in which people could argue over what happened on the previous seven days.
Years ago, people argued when a spanking-new theory called evolution began raising eyebrows. And they're arguing still, now about whether evolution should be taught as gospel truth (so to speak) or whether the biblical account of creationism should be taught in public schools, too.
At issue are some such time-honored concepts as the separation of church and state; freedom of religion; the progress of science; and who should set the standards for public education. Touching on these issues at a recent trial, creationists asked for equal time in science classes.
In answer to those who'd like to see textbooks detailing fig leaves alongside
Darwin: Yes, creationism is merely an explanation for how man can come about—just as evolutionism is an explanation. But as an explanation, creationism is religion, and the courts have said on a number of occasions that religion belongs in the church and in the home, not in the curriculum of public schools.
Science classes are, after all, for the teaching of science, not theology.
And even if creationism were taught in public schools, just whose version of the Bible would prevel? And why would the creation stories of other major world religions be excluded—after all, they're just as scientific. And why wouldn't the ancient creationist mythology be taught—Prometheus, Cronus, Zeus and the rest?
Science classes aren't trying to destroy religion. They're simply trying to educate students in modern science, just as students can be educated in religion elsewhere.
Creationism's a fine theory but not right for classrooms
Redford and Hoffman are cruising through Georgetown as woodward and Bernstein. Redford thinks he's cracked the case. Hoffman needs more evidence.
"Look," says Redford in exasperation, "if you go to bed and then isn't snow on the ground, and when you wake up the next morning, there is snow on the ground, you can
AMY HOLLOWELL
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safely say it snowed during the night, even though you didn't actually see it snow,
Hoffman besithetly agrees, and a little scientific assuming takes the reporters a long way—all the way, in fact, to the President of the United States. All of the right pieces fell into the right places and the mystery was solved, thanks to the Redford snowfall theory
If only these guys would make a tab at the origin of our species; the Great Unsolved Mystery could use some Redfordian theorizing.
Not that this, man's greatest enigma, has anything at all to do with snowfall or corrupt politics or that movie stars and journalists all in all where we came from. Surely this is jist.
But what isn't just is that no one knows for sure where we're coming from or how we got here. No one, it seems, was awake during the night when it happened.
Everyone has a theory, though. There are big bans and apes and dinosaurs and supernatural forces, depending on which book one reads, and for every convinced author, there is a convinced following. Everybody's got the answer, or so they think.
So then the question is, what do teachers teach? What should they answer when the kids start asking about origins? There isn't, of course, a simple answer.
However, in America, we have a very basic principle in our Constitution that makes a teacher's job perhaps a bit easier. That is, in America, we have a firm dedication to the church and state. We believe in the individual's freedom to believe what he wants to believe.
We do not, therefore, teach religion in our public schools. We should not, therefore, teach religion.
as creatismism, in our public schools. Such theories have no place in science class, any more than evolution theory has a place in Sunday school.
Not that creationism may not be a valid theory, but it is one based on religious beliefs, beliefs which are not necessarily embraced by every student in a public classroom. If it is included in public curriculum, it should be offered as religious theory, along with the theories of other religions. If we teach the Bible, so we should teach the Koran.
Likewise, theories of evolution, of apes, of big bangs, should be offered as scientific theory. As are Einstein, Newton, Pasteur, da Vinci, Vinci, so should be taught Darwin.
Proponents of creationist teaching, though, claim that evolution relies as much on beliefs as creationism does. They are partially correct. Evolution is based on fact, and accepting the theory depends on believing the classic Redfordian snowfall manner.
There is also the creationist claim that evolution leaves no room for God. This couldn't be further from what; evolution doesn't exist because of a superior being. What it does say is that man has not always existed in his present state, and that he and present day apes have common ancestors. The significant point is that evolution is not, like creationism,
We know, for example, that there are remains of apes and of dinosaurs and of various other ancient, or prehistoric, creatures; one has only to visit a natural museum in order to deny that we are presently here? What happened before us, even before them, we don't know, but on the basis of fact and some scientific assumption, we can make an educated guess. Such scientific theorizing is difficult, and of religious beliefs; it merely requires logic.
And while within the context of a certain religious code, a theory may make sense, outside of that context it may not. Given the context of public education, there is simply no room for religion. After all, rabbis don't teach algebra.
At best, evolution is still only a guess, but it's a scientific guess, which is perhaps the most secure guess one can make. Unscientific water, like leaky buckets, don't hold much water.
SCHOOL
Ste/Baylor 201
Creationists asking for fair chance
The creationist assault
In the U.S. courts, the debate on evolution seems to have come full circle.
Almost 60 years ago, a radical, young atheist went to trial to challenge a ban on teaching evolution. And last month, a radical, middle-aged Christian went to court to challenge a similar ban on teaching the biblical version of creation.
The two trials seem to be poles apart, but actually the same basic right was at stake in 1925 and in 1861—the right to speak of unpopular ideas in public schools.
It probably was exciting to witness the
world's greatest two great men, but ultimately,
the little girl did it best.
In the early '20s, a young school teacher named John Scopes taught to teach evolution a new way of thinking.
Scopes was violating state law, and he knew it. But he probably didn't know that his case would receive national attention and that it would become known as "The Monkey Trial."
The Scopes trial pitted two celebrated antagonists against each other: Clarence Darrow, who argued for science, and William Jennings Bryan, who argued for religion. The case also involved a group of teachers, souvenir salesmen, hack reporters, the seedy camp followers of controversy.
In that case, Kelly Segraves, a Christian fundamentalist, argued that the state of California had violated his son's right to education by teaching evolution as truth—the only truth.
During the trial, Segrave's son, Kasey, testified in a poing voice that his teacher had instructed him to "think beyond the facts."
To many, the answer to Segrave's request would have seemed obvious: We can't teach the Bible's creation in public schools—that's religion.
Scopes was convicted and fined $100, and the state law stood.
At that point they also would drag out an all-purpose catch phrase: The Separation of Church and State.
The recent California trial also was surrounded by publicity. It was even nicknamed "the biggest scandal in history."
Segreva, who helped found a Creation Science Research Center, requested that all California school books also explain the biblical version of creation.
--AND SO GOD CREATED MOSS.
--WHICH WASHED ASHORE, MIXED WITH OXYGEN AND BECAME LICHEN.
IN 400,000 YEARS LICHENS GREW EYES.
--AND A LITTLE BODY AND BECAME A WORM.
42 MILLION YEARS LATER IT HAD GROWN LEGS AND ARMS WITH WHICH IT LEARNED TO HANDLE IMPLEMENTS.
TIME PASSED, LIMBS GREW LONGER AND MORE DEXTEROUS AND THE HEAD CHANGED SHAPE. THE LICHENWORM LOOKED LIKE THIS:
AND IT WAS CALLED MAN AND MAN MONKEYED AROUND WITH ALL KINDS OF THINGS.
--FOR USE AGAINST THE GODDESS!
--AND SO GOD CREATED MOSS.
GED
"AND SO GOD
CREATED MOSS.
However, some people, especially those who believe in creationism, did not think the God of creation was the first and most
Creationists believe in the Bible's version of the creation. The world was created in seven days, they say, and God created man in his own image.
Although many creationists are born-again Christians, most of them do not threaten unbelievers with the eternal flames of hell. But they do challenge the theory of evolution, which
VANESSA HERRON
About 20 years ago, creationists began to compile the arguments against evolution theory that began to surface almost as soon as Darwin proposed his theory.
seems to have been transformed into an unimpeachable fact.
First, they point out that evolution is a theory, and not a well-documented one. Usually, scientific phenomena can be observed, tested and duplicated in laboratories. Evolution cannot
Many creationists also think that the evolution theory that is taught in public schools leaves no room for God. Evolution sets man at the pinnacle of the universe, they charge.
Creationists are also suspicious of the con-
servative nature of evolutionary chain. Variations within the species have been observed, they say, but there is no evidence of the transitions between invertebrate and vertebrate, or between reptile and bird. Most importantly, no scientist has found the link
Because that evidence does not seem to exist, creationists say, evolutionists merely believe that the transitions must have occurred. Most scientists have faith in evolution.
Creationists also say that evolutionists actively try to refute God's existence, and that they try to seal the empirical leaks in their theory with blind faith.
For those reasons, creationists charge that evolution is as much a religion as Christianity.
In their view both evolution and creationion seem to be hybrids of science and religion. They both have some scientific basis, but ultimately both theories are based on faith.
It wasn't exactly a dramatic conclusion for a trial that was billed as the "Second Scopes Trial." And there probably weren't many souvenirs sold this time around.
So for many creationists, it is merely a question of semantics: The two creation theories can be called scientific, or they can be called practical. But they should both be taught in schools.
Any time that scientists, or governments, or sixth-grade teachers present their beliefs as evidence, they are subject to attack.
And last month, the state of California made that change, even though neither side of the controversy was very happy with it. California textbooks don't have to be rewritten, but students can continue to pronouncements on evolution by saying, "most scientists believe" or, "scientists hypothesize."
All at once, "Separation of Church and State"
isn't as safe an argument as it used to be.
Creationism is an interesting alternative to the theory of evolution, and it raises some important questions. However, the creationists' arguments are not flawless.
According to nuclear physicists and most scientists, the world is much older than the 10,000 years that creationists estimate from biblical accounts.
and one creationist claim—that human and dinosaur footprints were found in the same Tertiary Period.
The conflict between creatorsists and evolutionists may never be resolved—at least not in this millennium. So at the moment, the impulse toward a future that would restore the ape. It is the issue of freedom of speech and thought in public school classrooms—the same issue that was raised in both the Scopes and the Snowden cases.
However, an American tradition, the freedom to challenge dogmatic pronouncements, was upheld.
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University Daily Kansan, March 30, 1981
Page 5
Bosket
From page 1
some circles around here as 'that smart- nigered.'.
"I don't let it make me negative. I'm so much richer from the people I've met because of school. Really, it's difficult for me to say what is going on around here without sounding negative, but I'm a totally positive person."
EXCEPT FOR a few select prisoners and staff, Bosket is an isolated man. A man who studies, and practices yoga alone in his cell at night. He explains himself as a man of very high discipline, a man who possesses internalized discipline to survive.
"From a young man of very little discipline, I have become a very disciplined man."
Basket is still paying for the late discipline in his youth. In 1962, at 22, two years out of Elmira, he was tried and convicted of first-degree murder in Wisconsin. He was in the prison in Wisconsin for 10 years, then he escaped.
He is in Leavenworth for two bank robberies he committed while he was a fugitive from New York.
BOSKET CAME out of Elmira a street huster. He had learned to play stud pot, how to街战-fight and buy and sell contraband, and he discovered that without job skills, he could make more money on the streets than he could working.
For a while he made the poker circuit—New york, St. Louis, Chicago, Evansville, Im. He played in NYC and New York.
Twenty years later, at 39, Bosket is still lean at 6-2 and 200 pounds, but he looks more like he is in his late 20s, despite spending almost 20 years in prison.
and he street-fought for money, finding someone who thought he was good and betting that he would succeed.
It is difficult to imagine anyone who would bet against Bosket in a street fight. And it was just such a fight that got him a life sentence in Wisconsin.
BOSKET HAD just been married, and he said the street life had begun to wear on him.
"I had decided somewhere along the line to put the streets away," he said. "I thought that if I moved away from New York I might be able to do that. We went to Milwaukee looked for work, but there wasn't any. I was broke, so I went back to Chicago and made a connection for some pornographic materials on consignment.
""The guy I got from them said not to move them in Chicago and gave me the name of a hotel. It was called Hotel McGregor."
Basket passed the materials on to the man in Milwaukee, a man he didn't know. When he came to get his money, the man put him off. He caught back the next day and there was a fight.
"It was fast," Boket explained, "no organized order to it. A knife came into play, and a big pair of cutting shears; it was in a cave, where violence a-falling out among thieves."
ACCORDING TO BOSKET, 1962 was not a good year for a black man to face an all-white board.
"It was a fight. The state never disputed that the murder weapon belonged to one of the
men who was killed," Bosket said. "Just the same I was convicted of murder one and sentenced to life in prison."
Basket entered the Wisconsin prison with the idea of "stopping this madness that had bad consequences."
It takes 11 years and three months to be eligible for parole in Wisconsin. Basket said.
"There was no educational opportunity in the Wisconsin system," Bosket said, "so I literally lived in the prison library. I became very well-read. I spent six years reading through the institution's library and the lending library at Madison.
"After I had been there six or seven years, they started a college program. I took an SAT test and score higher than anyone who had taken it. There were blacks and blacks were. It was that kind of institution."
ACCORDING TO BOSKET, he became vocal about the situation. About the same time, his boss asked John Anderson's vice-presidential running mate, was organizing a task force to investigate the corrections system in Wisconsin. Bosket was elected as a convict for the crime.
"I had been vocal about the ethnic situation so some efforts were made to instill empathy."
When the task force had made its report, the booklet said that the administration came after.
"A few weeks after the task force hearings they scooped me up, three me in segregation, put me in chains and sent me to a maximum room, put a dark cell with a mattress on the floor."
Sometime after his 14 months in solitary,
"There is a possibility of a lawsuit against that institution for conspiracy to violate my consent."
Basket escaped. He won't talk about the escape.
BOSKET HAD ESCAPED but he still had to face the realities of being an escaped prisoner, the bad Social Security card that meant he would have to leave a job after three months, when Social Security was turned in by his employer.
He couldn't go back to the streets because he was too well known, and, by that time, he was psychologically incapable of it. He had chosen a bad time to escape from prison 1972-74 were hard times economically for everyone, let alone an escaped convict.
The choice that Basket made was to rob banks. He describes it as a rational decision, once he convinced himself it was necessary to break the law.
"I chose banks because I knew that the teller in New York had orders not to resist—to hand over the money," he said. It was the工资 committee来填 where I knew no one would be hurt."
Bosket doesn't want to minimize what he did and said repeatedly that he did not really have to rob a bank, that he rationalized the need. But he also said there had been three bank robberies, even thought he was only charged with two.
"I passed a note to this woman in a bank on the lower east side of New York and she looked me dead in the eye and said that she wouldn't give me the money," he said. "She flat out-nutted me. I left rather than hurt someone."
ACCORDING TO BOSKET, the judge who sentenced him for bank robbery thought that he could be rehabilitated.
"He gave me 15 years when he could have given me 50," he said.
Booket was eligible for parole in the summer of 1808 but he was turned down by the authorities.
"They can keep me here another 32 months," Bokset said. "But why? I can't be rehabilitated any further. I have job skills as computer programmer and I have been offered a job at $20,000 to $22,000 a year on the outside. It will cost the taxpayer some $48,000 plus to keep me in here until my mandatory release date."
Basket is appealing his parole decision and the National Association for the Ad- vocation has attached a legal team to both his parole decision and the murder conviction in Wisconsin.
BOSKET HAS his doubts whether the murder conviction would be overturned. He does not dispute what happened, only the degree of murder that he was charged with.
But for Willie Basket an escape into books and into scholarship is no longer possible.
Basket would like to get out of prison. He would like to become a scholar, an academic.
"The attitudes of the administration—the atmosphere here—has made me spend most of my time researching prisoners' rights law." he said.
"I have acquired a very high level of education and analytical skills in an environment that is not used to that. I'm a stranger in a strange land."
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, March 30, 198
Conservative values dominate Oscar awards
By MIKE GEBERT Contributing Reviewer
Ronald Reagan may have left Hollywood, but he left a little of his homespun philosophy behind.
That's likely to be the lesson tonight when the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences hands out its 53rd annual Oscars before a worldwide television audience. Clearly, from the film industry, the down-home appeal are in and trendy violence and New York intellectualism are out. Traditional values are on the rise everywhere and the Oscars should reflect that by favoring concerned craftsmanship over intellectual flash fiction. Values at the expense of cinematic diltumfantasy.
Both can be seen by the films Oscar favors and the ones he ignores. The principal nouniness are the five Best Picture nounies, "Coal Miner's Daughter," "The Elephant Man," "Ordinary
People," Raging Bull, "and "Tess," along with major nominees in other categories like "Fame," "Melvin and Howard," "Resurrecer," "The Great Saintini," "Private Benjamin" and "The Great Santini."
Consider the films Oscar deliberately passed by: "Altered States" (two minor nominations), "Dressed to Kill," "Stardust Memories," "The Shining." Among them they represent the New York intellectual elite and, mostly, the state of New York's criminal underworld connotations. Further, they are the products of star directors—Russell, DePalma, Allen, Kubrick—a breed generally disliked by Oscar.
THE BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR AND ACTRESS nominations have gone after newcomers with a vengeance. None of the Actress
Unlike last year, when "Kramer vs. Kramer" mopped up, there should be a fair amount of suspense tonight. Still, there are fairly clear-cut winners in each category . . . or so one might
EXHIBIT OPENING of the KU Design
Exhibition at 9:30am in Galloway Galler
Exhibition at 10:45am in April 13.
On Campus
FACULTY RECITAL by the Oread String Trio at 8 p.m. in the Swartooth Recital Hall in Murphy RI.
UNIVERSITY LECTURE SERIES presents Robert White, former U.S. ambassador to El Salvador, on "U.S. Policy in Central America" at 1:30 p.m. in woodruff Auditorium in the University
TOMORROW
TODAY
WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will show "Hiroshima, Mon Armour" at 7 p.m. in the basement of Lippincott Hall.
THE TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson
STUDENTS' ANI-NUCLEAR ALLIANCE
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union.
ASIAN SECURITY POLICIES COLLOQUIUM will present Martin Weinstein on "Japan's Security Policy" at 8 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union.
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT COLLOQUIUM will host Helen Vendier on "True is Best Music: Structure in 'To Autumn'" at 8 p.m. in the Big Fight Room of the Union
nominees has ever been nominated and three—Cathy Moriarty of "Bull Rag," Diana Scarwid of "Inside Moves," and 82-year-old "residence"—are making their thimble debut.
Eileen Brennan of "Private Benjamin" and Mary Steenburgen of "Melvin and Howard" are likewise hardy household names, but that could change tonight for Steenburgen or Moriarty, the two leading contenders. I'd say that Steenburger's koooky, yet realistic performance should give her the award and on her her way to stardom.
**STUDENT RECITAL** by Don Wampler, contoh, and John Prescott, trumpet, at p.10 in *The Oxford Dictionary*.
Perhaps the toughest competition of the night is in the Best Supporting Actor category. Four newcomers are up against Jason Robards, whose portrayal of Howard Hughes in "Melvin and Howard" could make him the second man ever to win three acting Oscars.
the competition is heavy--young Michael O'Keefe of "The Great Santini," Joe Pesci of "Raging Bull," and two from "Ordinary People"; Judd Hirsut's portrayal of the psychiatrist makes him a worthy contender, but the smart money is on Timothy Hutton, whose impressive debut in film history, and should give him the award.
THE OTHER MAJOR AWARDS provide a modicum of suspense. There were hardly any original screenplays this year—none among the Best Picture nominees, "Fame," "Private Benjamin," "Mon Oncle d'Amérique" and "Brubaker" should provide little competition for Bo Goldman's screenplay for "Melvin and Howard."
are aki Kurosawa's "Kagemusha" and francois Traffault's 'The last Mastor.' Both directors have won numerous times before; and both directed Kurosawa but Traffault film is the better-tiked.
In the Screenplay Adaptation category, "Breaker Morrow," "The Elephant Man," "Cool Miner's Daughter" and "The Stunt Man" should still win for "Orphard People."
THE BEST FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM competition is interesting mainly because it covers a wide range of the world leading directors, like Bernard Lepartin, Resnais, Fellini, etc. the leaders in this category.
THE BEST DIRECTOR OSCAR will be one of the most interesting awards. Each of the nominees is worthy, but there are reasons why each might not win. Richard Rush of "The Stunt Man" is considered an outster; in Hollywood's eyes, his nomination is reward enough.
Oddly enough, Roman Polanski's conviction for statutory rape and his subsequent flight to France could his chances of winning for the state have been reduced by the trial-by-headline and has some sympathy.
The front runner has been considered Martin Scorsese, whose long overdue first nomination was for "Raging Bull"; "Burk Redford's debut with" Ordinary People" was the main competitor. The idea was that Redford was considered a director, and that he directed the directors. But that all changed when the Directors Guild of America—a group believed to think a lot like the Academy—gave Redford their award for Best Director, much to the surprise of everyone, including Redford. It seems that Redford's clean image and his tremendous skill with actors, in what is adored as an excellent film should give him the nod over the sordid, obsessive (and rather brilliant) Scorsese.
THE BIG QUESTION IN THE BEST ACTOR CATEGORY is not who will win but why Donald Sutherland's portrayal of the father in "Ordinary People" was passed over for Jack Lemmon's one-not, pathetic performance in *Hillary*, nominee and two-time winner. Lemmon wouldn't need another nomination for this latest rehash of his "Days of Wine and Roses" performance.
Sutherland, a much underrated actor, deserved it and should have had it. The rest of the three-time nominee (not to mention one of the greatest living American actors) Robert Duvall
of "The Great Santini," and second-time
murderer John hurt of "The Elephant Man." But
"The Great Santini" is not a murder.
He will probably join Lemonm as the only man to win an Oscar in both the Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor categories for his ex-honorary portrayal of Jake LaMotta in "Raging Bull."
THE BEST ACTRESS CATEGORY is filled surprisingly these days, with strong competitors. Usually, the few female stars have trouble finding enough work to stay busy. But Ellen Burstyn of "Resurrection," Goldie Hawn of "Ordinary Benjamin," Mary Tey Moore of "Ordinary Benjamin," Rowdies of "Gloria" and Sissy Spacek of "Coal Miner's Daughter" all gave fine performances.
The major competition is between Moore and Spacec: the rest were big actresses in small pictures. Popular sentiment would give it to Moore and her performance is certainly worthy of an Oscar. But Hollywood has a soft spot in its heart for trouppers, who people, though they are not as well-known, give accomplished performances. That's why Sissy Spacec, the extraordinarily fine and versatile star of "Coal Miner's Daughter," will get the recognition she deserves tonight.
AND THEN THERE'S BEST PICTURE. There's a belief in Hollywood that Oscar picks a different kind of film each year. That's why the tough war movie "The Deer Hunter" was followed by the personal, warm drama of "Kramer vs. Kramer."
This would tend to preclude "Ordinary People," but don't count it out yet. "Cool Miner's Daughter" is acclaimed mainly for Sissy Spacek's performance, and that will be rewarded elsewhere tonight. "Tess" is too wonderful, but "Ragged Man" and "Ragging Bail" are too specialized in appeal and not that likable. The clear leader is "Ordinary People" after all—but with a crazy and wonderful a thing as the Oscars, nothing's certain until they open the envelope.
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Managers meeting and entry deadline: Wednesday, April 1 7:00 pm 201 Robinson
Play starting date will be determined at the meeting FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT RECREATIONAL SERVICES AT 864-3546
MERCHANTS
.. You can see almost ANYTHING at The Harbour Lites
. . . Now you might even see THEM!
Celebrate the ARTESIAN NEW YEAR at The Harbour Lites
Monday, March 30 7:00 p.m.-Midnight
Cans & Bottles of OLYMPIA only 50c
(35c and free prizes if you wear an ARTESIAN costume)
Just think, even YOU might be able to say:
"I SEEN 'EM"
The Harbour Lites
1031 Massachusetts
Maupintour travel service
AIRLINE TICKETS
HOTELRESERVATIONS
CARRENTAL
FURIAL PASSEN
TRAVEL INSURANCE
USCORELEUROWS
900 MASS
KANSAS UNION
843-1211
TODAY!
UNDERCOVER
MAINLINE PRINTING, INC.
mp
Right here in Lawrence.
8th and Vermont
Lower Level
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Phone 843-1833
Where can you get a high quality resume printed the way YOU want it,when you need it?
Ask anyone in foundations and they'll agree . . .
everyone is taking a shine to Warner's
Warner's
Buy 2
Get
1 Free
8 styles on sale
Bras/Matching Pantie
SPIRIT SQUAD TRYOUTS-1981
Be a part of a great tradition!
Dates for tryouts for the K.U. Spirit Squad have been set.
ll students interested in trying out should meet in Allen Field House at 5:00 p.m. on March 26th for an informational meeting. The first clinic will be held after the meeting.
No previous experience is required to trvout.
Requirements
Enrolled in at least 12 hours Weight in proportion to Height A genuine interest in K.U. athletics
CLINICS:
March 26-27-30-31
PRELIMINARIES:
April 4th
April 1-2
5:30-7:00 p.m.
FINALS:
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
April 11th
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
WINDSHIELD CENTER
KU Sailing Club
BREEZE THROUGH EXAMS WITH THE KU SAILING CLUB
- LEARN TO SAIL CLASSES
- FLEET OF 10 BOATS FOR MEMBER USE
- PERRY YACHT CLUB FACILITIES
- INTER-COLLEGIATE RACING TEAM
SPRINTS
- SPECIAL FILMS AND LECTURES
- PARTIES • CRUISES
SPRING ORIENTATION MEETING;
WED. APRIL 1, 7 PM, KANSAS UNION PARLOURS
University Daily Kansan, March 30, 1981
Page 7
KANU listeners pledge $36,000
Radio station KAUN received $30,000 in pledges during its most successful Campaign for Excellence, station director Howard T. Hill said yesterday.
The goal for the 1981 campaign, which ran Feb. 28 to March 7, had been $30,000. Hill said he expected the onboard cost of additional mail from mail-in donations.
The Campaign for Excellence fund represented about 13 per cent of the station's total income last year, and the campaign expected that figure to rise this year.
The station receives the largest portion of its income from the state and Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which is funded by Congress, Hill said.
"We also rely on listeners and
program underwriters from area businesses," Hill said.
"I find it very encouraging that we received $4,000 more in donations this year than last," he said, "especially when his going to be a budget crunch.
"People are realizing that their support is more important than it ever has been. Also we have had an increase in audience."
Hill said the money from the drive would be used to pay student-staff salaries and to purchase new records and syndicated programming. He also said the FM 92 station hoped to set aside $5,000 for new program development to allow KANU's staff to create projects and projects.
The burglary happened sometime last week. Police have no leads and are still investigating.
Lawrence police said yesterday that burglarks took a color television set, valued at $300, and a video recorder, valued at $250. The officer onattv-Stronic-71 W 31.28 St.
THE STOKELY WAREHOUSE, 10th and Delaware streets, was robbed rofied or Friday at $1,500 of assorted tools, police said. The tools were in two tool boxes. A flourescent light with a 50-foot extension cord also was taken.
Illinois Street Wednesday, unlocked the car and removed $610 of property, including a set of golf clubs, valued at $128. The other property taken was a down check, valued at $180, and a wallet, checked and passport, valued at $30.
TWO OTHER CARS were burglarized Friday night in a parking lot in the 1600 block of Tennessee Street, police said. The thief unlocked the cars using a coat hanger, which was found in one of the cars, and took two speakers, one for the first car, and two tickets to the Karaoke room valued at $18, from the other. The thefts happened within a half hour of each other, police said.
On the Record
The national conference on business and the humanities last week at the University of Kansas was profitable to the School of Business and the School of Medicine.
The 120 business executives and business and humanities faculty from across the nation who attended the conference left with a renewed interest in the University and its business school, John Toilefson, dean of the school and conference coordinator, said yesterday.
A THIEF POPPED open the wing vent of a car parked in the 1600 block of
Meanwhile, the School of Medicine received a $50,000 grant Friday from the university for honor of former KC Enchallor W. Chancellor spoke at the conference, Wesco was
Med, business schools benefit from conference
chancellor from 1900 to 1909 and is now chairman and chief executive of the
The grant will be used to pay travel expenses and living costs for a visiting professor of pharmacology at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The two-day conference, which began Thursday, marked the end of a three-year project to develop a closer relationship between the school of engineering and the University humanities departments. The conference and the program were supported by a $300,000 grant from the National Endowment for theses.
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
one tree one time one time four four four six six seven eight nine ten twelve 10 words each two words each 15 words each 20 words each 40 words each other word of additional word
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
The Kanansa will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Pound items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can placed in person or online by calling the Reward business office at 843-959.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4258
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Employment Opportunities
Condos, Snowy and Sunshine SKI KEY
12 days skiing (April 18, 15, 20), rental,
3 days skiing (April 18, 15, 20), rental,
expense $200.00 Contact: Darryl O'
Lawrence w/ski e-klc 1497 Kentt Lawrence
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUNG MARRIED COUPY. Suffer, no children. Must own a car. Work with children. Plain. Work: Housework, moving carpentry skills; general maintenance. Salary: $250 per week. Provided your own completely furnished house, having cabin (cub). Later preferred by employer. Apply in writing, including local reference to SUMMER JOB 6404.
ENTERTAINMENT
TRAVEL CENTER
TRAVEL CENTER
TAKING A TRIP?
Travel is Our Business.
The LOWEST FARES available!
As close as your phone . . .
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W. 23rd St. (by Perkins)
9:00-5:30 M.F. 9:35-2:00 Sat.
1 or 2 rooms for rent in a House close to
1 or 2 rooms, 1019 Illinois. Call 841-2209. 3-31
FOR RENT
Cape Capi Apt1. Ufurafured station, 1 & 2 bldm. apts. available. Central air wall, wall-to-wall Quiet location, 2bcks south of Frazer Hairy, 842-7930 after 1:30 o'clock weekend weekends.
For spring and summer, Naismin Hall offers a variety of an apartment. Good food and plant-based cooking are mandatory services to clean room and bath and bedroom activities and much more. If you're looking for a place with large windows you want, stop in or give us a call: NAIL HALL, HALL 1800, 1800 Mauthin Street, B33-859
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5, 843-3228.
PRESHMEN and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house next year! Apply now. 842-6592.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect for a family or couple. place, 2 car garage with electric organ, washer/dryer hooks, fully-equipped kitchen, quiet surround. Open house 15-30pm Saturday and Sunday, 2575 for additional information. tf
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 814-5500. tf
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 205
and Kaskoil. If you were tired of apartments
in the city, consider a feature 3 br., 1½ bath, all appliances,
at least 6 beds, a balcony, have openings for summer and fall. Call Craig Lea or Jim Bong at 749-1697 for more information on our modestly priced home.
3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. if
2. bedroom duplex Air Cond., W/D Hookups,
W/W Carpet, Carport, Central location, very clean. $250./mo. Call 843-2774.
Sublease for, Summer; 4 bedroom town-house; 2 baths, carpeted, patio, dwarf-window; 3 pools, tennis court. Trailridge Apartments. Call 841-1869. 4-3
Country Cottage located on one acre of land
in the western corner of St. Francis, is
loaded with special ceramics; the floors,
furnishings and appliances are in a
patio with hot tub $200. me, includes use.
Kitchen with dishwasher $145, April
April 11 for call: for appt. 845-300-2911.
NOW RENTING for fall semester—near new
2 bedroom apartments just north of the
stadium—live closer than you can park. Call
433-4798.
Applications are now being received for the Living Experiment for the summer and the Living Experiment for the winter may be obtained at the Ecotourism Christian Education Center 2042 Oral or Call 849-4933.
AVAILABLE JUNE 1st. Efficiency Apt.
Nicely Pursued, C.A. 2½ inches from Union
$100. $4 + 1/3 utilities. 841-8599. 3-31
Sublease for summer 3-bedroom furnished apartment, air conditioned, dishwasher, close to campus. Call 841-6360. 3-31
Subleasing 1 bedroom room available June 1 with option of renting the room with own parking, close to campus, on KU bus route, study area, aa,洗衣器 and dryer in kit room. Sublease for summer 3-bedroom furnished apartment, air conditioned, dishwasher.
Sublease room for summer. Ideal for summer school; close to campus, inexpensive, kitchen facilities 841-6402 evenings 4-1
2. Bdrm Apt. for Rent. Available May 15.
$265/month, A/C, Dishwasher, Water/Trash
Paid. Call 841-8541.
4-1
Summer sublease - Trailtrail 3 BDRM
Summer furnished - plush 2 bedroom fully furnished apartment, 5 minutes from campground
Tom's Inn or Suit 842-214-7211
Subsumer Sublease: plush 2 bedroom fully furnished apartment, 5 minutes from campground
2 bdm. Townhouse for sublease June and July. $320/mo. + utilities. In Traitridge Call 841-5714. 4-9
Available May 1st Large, 2 bedrm. apt., 1 block from Union $179.00 + utilities. Call 843-6536. 4-9
br. apartment for summer sublease, 13th
full room incl. two bathrooms, laundry, cer-
tainry will include a e. d. diwali room,
tuition will be $250 per week.
Summer sub lease - 2. BDDM - Meadowbrook
June & July. Nice location Call 843-956-
5780
**Want to sublease 1 bedroom unfurnished**
**apartment starting June 1. $215/month +**
**utilities. Close to campus, on bus route.**
749-0685 after 5. . . . .
Wanted: 2-Christian girls to sublease a
BR Duplex across street from campus for
summer. Total rent in $20/mo. + utilities.
849 - 6328. 4-2
Sublease, beautiful furnished apartment for summer, near campus. Call 841-9214. - 4-13
Summer subleasing 1 bedroom furnished at. Haven Place. Available May 15.
FOR SALE
Meadowbrook, 2 bedroom for summer submure
Nice view, near pool and tennis court
Rent negotiate with fall for Pause
to let it go! Call Carol, 841-9368. 4-6
08 Dodge Van, V-8 318 motor, excellent condition, moving—must sell, call evenings -843-7859. 4-3
+ electricity
Summer Sublease: Spacious 2 bedroom—1;
Heather Heathered Apartment. Rent + electric.
Call 841-7077 after $5. 4-1
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale! Makes sense to use them! As study makes sense to use them! As study makes sense to use them! Analyze an exam preparation, new and old. Analyze an exam preparation, new and old. The Bookmark, the Gread Book.
4 bdm. house 1 block north of KU. Hot
water, heat. Air conditioned. 749-0166 3-31
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3800
W. 6th.
Camera-35 mm Minohite SRT120. Vivatar
cameras. DSLR. Pentax K-50.
tripod; lena f $220.000-$300.000-
$350.000
Home Woodhead- two bookcases. $825.000-$925.000
and $1,025.000-$1,225.000
ordered filled on stereo cabinets. $645.000-$725.000
4 x 100 watt Manzell Receiver Dual-Polyally Automatic Turntable, 2 Foneer Speakers w/o cabinets. Price negotiable. 641-4588 after 5 p.m. 3-31
Mopeds a great way to save gas. Spring selection now. Dealeravers available. Bill Kismit, Box 62, Awatowite, Ks. (913) 755-658.
Camara for Sale. 1967. Good condition, new paint job, nice interior plus other extras.
$1500. Call Rob after 6:34-831-751. 3-30
Raleigh bicycle. Excellent condition, super light. Tubular tires with pump. $180.00 or best offer. 842-6276. 3-31
Z28 Camaro loaded, 26,000 miles, red, in super condition. Asking $5,500. Call 842-9360. 4-3
6-string acoustic guitar, looks good, sounds
good. Call Sieve 842-7688. 4-2
GRETSCM 88 KEY PIANO for direct use
with a keyboard. Buy the string top cello. Eightguitar new this summer, used in concert. EXCELENT
quality string top cello. Bought at 1/3 the price of Helpispil and of the price of Yamaha Electric Grand. Must sell it (or my firstborn) immediately. 748-801-781
68 Mustang. Low miles. Excellent shape.
21 mpg. No rust. Sterre. Call 814-1600-41
Why have a high school typewriter at KU1?
Buy a $13" Corrective Elemnt Business machine for $755.50. Office Equipment Inc.
841-0020
10 spd. men's PUX puchnther, like new $180 call 789-1951 MWF after 5 p.m. TR weekends all day. 3-31
Lawrence advertising medium for sale. Well known, high profit, good opportunity. Call 1-341-1292 4-1
Guitar amp. Holmes 200 watt Head with 610" cabinet. Like new, 749-5269 3-31
Great condition. $100 o b o. 79-8487-3-31
Pioneer A-LP50 (A-450) 78 mm recording studio, used bookstore contents, an
Phone Rick B42-8376 leave message. 3-31
Craig Powerplay FM-8 7-track stereo underdial slidk mount slkm04 "Negotiate for Jensen compatible model." 1995 2000 2000
Ventura acoustic guitar $125, 1980 LES
PAUL STYLE Electric $175, w/cases, Torn
886-1114 3-11 p.m.
Hondamatte 400 motorcycle. Under 90 miles and in excellent shape. $1250, need to sell immediately. 749-344. 4-3
1976 Honda CB 750F, new tires, excellent condition. 7,900 miles. Call 749-0754 ask for Mike. 4-5
FOUND
Bus pass & temporary id of Robert Arrocha
Please bring id to prove. Being held at
Kanan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall, 3-30
Set of key in front of Alain Field House with u of U K key ring. Call 864-851. 3-31 Found—Mens windbreaker in 3rd floor of Learnd. Identify at 8018 Learnd. 4-1
HELP WANTED
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES,
you will be able to you share your work
experience with students nursing home residents? Our consumer or-
mer improvement of Nursing Home KINI! We improve
and input on nursing home conditions and
input on nursing home care for the residents. All names and correspondence
913-842-3088 or 943-7107, or write us
913-842-3088 or Mass St. 45, Lawrence, KA
CRUISERS CLUB MEDITERIANEAN, SAILOR
structures, Office Personnel, Counselors,
Directors and $800 PM handling for AP-
teryx training. $150 PM training for AP-
teryx training. 150 PM box 60129
CLUB WORKSHOP 150 PM box 60129
"Mother's helper" room/board; board salary in exchange for children (1 infant 2 toddlers);
will accept cash only. Move in by four flexible hours with student. Move in by six. Must like kids & animals. Room 1-441-498-3601
Travel from Oklahoma to Montana with a wheat harvesting crew. Call collect on weekdays, 913-781-4945; on weekends 913-567-4649.
4-2
Attention: Business Students—Nationally known company interviewing students for summer work program. High profit and sales experience, call 843-8711 3-31
Teachers Wanted Elementary and Secondary. West and other states, $15 Registration费. West is Refundable. Pt. ii (055) 877-7602 South Teachers' Agency, Boq. Abm. NM 8796
Need good paying summer work? Lookin
for hard workers. Must relocate. Have entire
summer free. Make $253 a week. Call
for appointment 843-8711. 4-7
STUDENT ASSISTANT WANTED for gen-
eral meeting, meeting students, office proje-
cts, general office duties. This position will
be held in the student's home or work-
study eligibility and 10-20 hours per
week Apply to Barbara Ballard or Nancy
Ballard, 218 strong Lung, 864-3552.
Closing date for application is 9:00 p.m.
with a one-hour opportunity /Affirmative Action Employer; 3-30
**WORLD'S LARGEST BUSINESS needs you!**
Stay home -paid weekly. Free details.
close stamped envelopes. Peggy Jones. 3229
Glacier Dr., Lawrence. Ks 60044.
WANTED Artist to design souvenir envelopes for stamp collectors. Piece work. Simple cartoons, caricatures. 864-3718, 814-8288
Now hiring for Spring & Summer cacher positions. Must be able to work 20 hrs a week. Apply in person during the day. Henry's restaurant, bldg. & 4th Avenue. H-129, 304-786-8500.
Wanted immediately: Monday clerk at Skillit's Retail Liquor. Also wanted: summer and fall clerks. Call 843-838-4-3
Student Computer Operator Available-
ly to the following Office of Information Systems, is working a full-time job providing computer availability to work Saturday and Sunday, depending on class schedule and computer proficiency. Students must be currently appointed a data processing course in high school or have been currently enrolled as a student at KU in Comp Sci. 864-4232 Office of Information Systems, 864-4232 Office of Information Systems, Kansas Lawyer, Kansas Academy of Law, start date is 04/20/19, and tentative start date is 04/20/19. Student information systems is anEqual Opportunity
Someone to translate two Japanese scientific articles, Call Mark 841-4775 after 5. 3-20
LOOKING FOR A HIGH PAYMENT SINGLE
FORMATION. get it for you--no
matter where you live or work.
formation, send $1.00 and addressed-stamped
signed form, 325 Floor 22, Lawn 22, Rw. 64049
My friends whites Peugeot 10-series but been misapplied. distinctive Featuret: fendless, handsome, manly. It was last seen attiring behind Woecon about this bicycle, please call 748-3923/about this bicycle. please call 748-3923/about this bicycle. please call 748-3923/about this bicycle. please call 748-3923/about this bicycle. please call 748-3923/about this bicycle. please call 748-3923/about this bicycle.
LOST
MISCELLANEOUS
8 month Female Irish Sett, lost near campus. Call 841-6230 at 6 p.m. Restock. 3-10
PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS. For details, laminated in hard plastic. For applications and application soft self addressed Dept. K, Box 252, Tennessee, Amityville. K Box 252, Tennessee, Amityville.
Consumer Affairs Association
for problems with lesions, buildup
matter, or other issues
call or ship by
819 Veterans
843-408-9600
LIVE FROM NEW YORK! I am *Phylla Fabulous Franks* Delicious all-beef frankies from Franks, an authentic New York brand. Seen on an authentic New York brand. Cauterkruit and onions at no extra charge. Great eats for pocket change during the holidays. Saturday—weather permitting. 4-24
NOTICE
GAY AND LESBIAN PEER COUNSELING
A friend is ready to listen. Referrals through K.U. Information, 840-3566, or Headquarters, 841-2345.
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821.
Engagement portraits of quality only a professional studio can give, at prices students can afford. Swells Studio. 749-1611. 4.1
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports. Custom made portraits. color. B/W. Swells Studio 749-161. 4-1
NEED EXTRA CASH? Sell your old Gold &
Diamonds. Top price for class rings,
gold chains, etc. 841-6409, 841-6377, 841-
7476.
HEADACHE, BACKACHIE, STIFFEN NECK,
LEG PAIN: Quality Chiropractic Care & its benefit Dr. Mark, Johnson 843-9388 for chiropractic care in Black Brow and Star Insurance plans.
There is an extension of the deadline for acceptance of nominations for Women's Recognition till April 1. 4-1
Get the FISHING REPORT and top quality live bait and fishing tackle at Anglers Unlimited, 1449 W. 23rd. 3-30
DO IT AT GREEN'S 'The big yellow liquor store.' The selection of fine wines, imported beers, and exotic liquors. 802 West 23rd St.
The Kavanau apologizes for an incorrect ad that ran for The Clean from March 9 to 14. The Clean is presently auditing for a local nonprofit called 81-956-8400 for additional information.
The Harbour bartenders see Artisans every Thursday after bowing • now you can see *EEM' EM* • tonight, at the ARTESAN NEW YEARS’ NART AT the Harbour Life.
Attractive male 25 is looking for a sincere female, for a close relationship. 842-9967 4-1
FREE VEGETARIAN JARDIN a few minutes walk from the Union! Mon-Fri. 11:38-20:04 934 Illinois, Apt. D. Ph. 749-5999. All you can no, string attached!
BOOK LOVERS The Spencer Museum Book Store offers the best book, for yourself or a friend—a wishlist of unique, beautiful books, cards, and magazines covering Kansas at the Museum Collections, and the Art World at the University of Kansas. Female student wards reliable female roommate to share interests in room陪伴4 / 82.
Are you a compulsive eater? Do you binge
& then feel guilty? Wish not give Overeaters
Anonymous a tvy Meetings Monday
through Christ of Christ (bust of Christ)
Kentucky
3-30
The deadline for acceptance of nominations for Women's Recognition will be extended until April 1st. 4-2
The KU Sailing Club would like to thank everyone who submitted entries for the logo contest. Your art can be picked up at SUA Congratulations to Laura Murray. 4-1
Hanny Birthday Pumpkinhead! I love you,
cutt! Love, D.D. Sly, P.S. Sprocket not
Sockt! 3-33
Senior portrait special, studio taken with a large selection of scenic background available. Swells Studio. 749-1611. 4-8
Sailing, racing, rigging, repairing, camping.
Taking a boat, exploring.
Learning it all! Learn it all! do it all!
it all in the KU School Club. Orientation
taught Wed, April 1. 7 p.m. Union Park
Fri.
Tonight's the night! it the ARTESIAN
Tonight's the night! it the ARTESIAN
Cheap cans and bottles of OLYMPIA
free prizes if you wear an ARTESIAN costume.
EM - you get to eat the EM -
EM - you get to treat them - 3-30
Th- KU Sailing Club will hold informal rush Wed. April 1, 7 p.m. in the Union Parliers. Bring yourself. 4-1
The Harbour Lites is happy to host the tour for the North Carolina Association's 2014 petition. Thursday April 21, $1.50. Saturday April 23, $1.50. Superstar cherry beer and support the Douglas County brewery. Come watch the tourney. Visit www.douglascountybreweries.com
Sir Tom's Taxi and TV Service is a reliable source of information to eliminate their problems of baiting the elements physical failures, and blinding them with flashing lights. Who could ask for more? Blue boys好 Boy, who could ask for more? Blue girls好 Girl, who could ask for more?
LMD II. I'll bet you never thought you'd have your very own wallflower. Kisses, Z.
SERVICES. OFFERED
3¢
self service
copies
now at
ENCORE COPY
CORPS
Sustainable Care Center
Nurture Life Together
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Tutoring 000-800, Phxx 100-600, Busx
380, 804, Math. 843, 843-906, 11
wheel
wheel We Do!
Do you have a Sports :
Car Mechanic that has
been named Kansas :
Mechanic of the Year? :
2015.07.14
843-7095
--maintenance help wanted
part-time job
appointed on Saturday,
Saturdays, Sundays. Must be experienced.
Call 842-4444 for an interview before
and 4:30. 521-
Family.
843-7095
GARDEN TILLING, chain sawing, mowing
Jim 841-2379. 4-1
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476.
I can still handle two or three additional threes before April deadline. tt
Experienced typist-term papers, thesis, mire, electric IBM Selectric Proreadring, spelling corrected. 843-8554 Mrs. Wright
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectite.
Barb. after 5 p.m. p.84-2310.
if
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate, IBM plea elite. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. tf
Experienced K.U. typist, IMC Correcting
Selective. Quality work. References available.
Sandy, evening and weekends. 748-
9818
tf
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myca,
841-4980. If
Experienced typist—books, thesis, term papers, disarratives, etc. IBM correcting Selective. Terry evenings and weekends. 482-4754 or 843-2671. tt
Experienced typist would like to type thesis, dissertations, etc. Call 842-3203 3-30
Fast and clear typing Call anytime 841-
6846. 3-31
RESUME - RESUME - RESUME - Professional
Resume Preparation and Printing Encrest
Copy Corps, 25th and Iowa. 842-2001.
1 specialize in what you need type.
Corrective Selecting 3. Debby 841-1924 1034
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal formn
graphics, editin, self-correct Selectir
Call Ellen or Jeannan 81-2172
Dipl 842-2001
For Your Typing Odyssey
ENCORE COPY CORPS
25th and Iowa - Holiday Places 842-2002
Dial
25th and
Typing Wanted Experienced technical twostan can and will type anything Call Laurel Moyer 842-8560 4-1
Exoriention typist would like to do dissertations, thesis, etc. Call 842-3203. 4-17
WANTED
ATTENTION PSYCHILOGISTS. Psychology
needs summer employment, working
to gain experience in the field. Call 841-
6632
3-31
Responsible woman to share very nice 2
BR duplex, now or summer. $132.50 +
utilities & deposit, 749-2618 3-31
Want to Buy Car: Would consider older
Corvette, Pontiac T.A. FI器, Z-28, Z-18
67 Chevrolet S.S. or G.T.O any condition
No dealers. Call 1-573-9780 or 1-573-9781
Female roommates wanted. Share 5 bed-
room house. 12 month lease beginning June
1. Call 841-2686 3-31
2 KU girls want 2 more to share house neat campus in June.Call 841-4407. 4-7
Part time labor shop store clerk. Must be able to work in a retail environment, 4-1 or two lines, a week or weekend for part-time employment. Please present pleasant personality. Must guarantee at least 50 percent of sales. Must be very responsible and willing to do it when necessary. Must be able to follow instructions properly and
Female: roommate wanted for Jayhawk
Tower Apt $98.50/month—utilities paid.
Call 749-2489 3-31
Male roommate to share two bedroom furniture. Roommate will pay for deposit. Rent paid, share electric and water. Roommate interested in learning Fearrington or majoring in education. Call Jun 842-7667 or 842-4423 after 1:30 PM.
ORDER FORM
Female roommate for summer, $265 month
Deosets and utilities paid on bus route
and walking distance to campus GASLIGHT
APARTMENTS 749-1287 4-2
Studies, non-smoking to share mice two bedroom apartment next school year. Bus to campus. $90 + 1/4 utilities. 864-2523-43
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, March 30, 1981
KC earns playoff berth against Blazers
Kings
11
BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff
Otis Birdsdash searches for an open man in last night's Kansas City-Dallas contest in Kemper Arena. The Kings won and advanced into Western Conference playoff games on Saturday.
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The Kings, who took an 18-11 lead less than halfway through the first quarter, maintained a 10-14 point lead through most of the second quarter and threatened to bury the Mavicks, holders of the worst record in the NBA, early in the third quarter after taking a 56-46 halftime lead.
The Mavs, however, did not let the Kings off that easily.
THE VICYORY earned the Kings the fifth playoff position in the Western Conference of the NBA ahead of the Houston Rockets. Both the Kings and the Rockets finished with 40-42 records, but the Kings gained the fifth spot because of their 4-2 season record against the Rockets.
After a Dallas timeout, the Mavericks forced the Kings into several turnovers and scored baskets almost at will, both inside and outside. Behind Olive Mack and Brad Davis, the Kings outscored the third quarter, the Mavericks pulled to within two, 71-49, before the Kings finally realized what was happening.
Compensation Compensation
The Kings, who needed a victory over Dallas at Kemper Arena last night to mail down a playoff berth, burned back and defeated the Mavicks, 113-94.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The Kansas City Kings seemed to deal in suspense. Not only do the majority of the Kings games go down to the wire, but the team's playoff status wasn't known until the last game of the season.
The Kings face Fortland in the first game of a best-of-three miniseries Wednesday night in Portland. The Kings played Friday night at Kemper Arena.
"It's been a tough season," Kansas City Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said. "I've been extremely proud of this
The Kings scored 12 of the game's next 16 points and held an 83-73 lead in three quarters, thanks to Sam Lacy's 20-for-60 bobble but that sent the crowd of 7,171 wild.
"I was a bit off. I said it before that 41-41 would get us in and it took 40-42. It been a good team. I'm really proud of them."
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The way the University of Arizona's track meet against KU was progressing Saturday night, it appeared that the team had been able to capture their fifth consecutive victory.
Compensation Compensation Compens
Track team beats ASU
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The Wildcats, who finished 11th nationally last year, were literally running away with the meet. They won seven of nine running events. But the Wildcats 'joy subsided when the field events' results started to come in.
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team with the adversity they have had. They haven't complained about it. They just come out and play.
Of the six field events KU won, the Jayhawks swept two of them—the pole vault and the triple jump.
210 McCollum
cations
THE JAYHAWKS, who were compet in their first outdoor meet of the season, won every field event except one, and beat the Wildcats. 79-75.
Sanya Owolabi, who won the triple jump with a leap of 50-14, became the first Jayhawk to qualify for the OWCAI championships at the meet. The OWCAI was followed by Kevin Graham and Paul Titus.
In the pole vault, George Buckingham won with a vault of 15-8'4" and was followed by Randy Howard and Owen Buckley.
The Jahways also swept the 800 meter race. Van Schafer, whose status was listed as doubtful before the meet, won the race with a time of 1:52.7. He beat teammate Leonard Martin and Mike Ricks.
ALTHOUGH OWOLABI, the second-best triple jumper in the nation last year, was the only KU athlete to qualify for the Olympics proper deprenon Deon Hosan came close.
Hogan won the 400 with a time of 46.61, missing the national qualifying standard by one-1/100th of a second. Hogan is the defending Big Eight champion in the 400, and finished fourth at the NCAA championships.
The meet marked the first time KU and Arizona met in a dual.
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Baseball team splits two with Oklahoma State
By ARNE GREEN
Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team opened its conference season Saturday by hosting pre-season favorite Oklahoma State, the state's top-ranked opponent with his best outing of the year.
A second doubleheader with Oklahoma State yesterday was rained out, but the Jayhawks return to action today with a non-conference twinnil against South Dakota State. The game will start at 1 p.m. at Quail Field.
Clinton, a right-hander who got off a shaky start this year, scattered eight hits and struck out seven Cowboys by the Jayhawks took the first game of a doubleheader, 6-1. Oklahoma State won the night cap, 4-2.
The only run off Clinton, 2-1, came in the seventh inning on a groundball after the first two batters had sinched.
“IT WAS gratifying to come out and get a fine pitching performance from Kevin Clinton and some clutch hits,” Coach Foyd Temple said. “Kevin used baseball and fastball very effectively, and could easily have had a shutout.”
"I got a little tired toward the end," Clinton said. "I just had to settle down and get it over with.
"I told the guys to get me two runs, and that's all Loevered."
Oklahoma state stacked its lineup with lefthanded hitters, but that didn't bother Clinton, who kept them off balance with his screwball.
"IT WAS GOOD for me, because I knew I had the screwball, which breaks away from lefthanders." Clinton said.
In the second game, Oklahoma State jumped on KU starter Jim Phillips for three runs in the fourth inning.
The KU offense supported Clinton with two runs each in the first, third and sixth innings, and third baseman Russ Blaylock continued to spark the game with a long run and a walk. He added two singles in the nightcap to 4-for-5 on the day.
TEMPLE SAID he was quite happy with the split.
Left fielder Tim Heinemann accounted for both of KU's runs with a two-run homer in the bottom of the fifth.
"The thing I'm pleased with is that our young ballclub found it could go out and beat a team like Oklahoma State."
Woodard named All-American
"When you go into a series with a team that has probably the best talent in the conference, and come away with a split, you have to be happy," he said.
Lynette Woodard's playing career at KU has ended, but she still isn't through with putting her name in the record books.
Woodard received her award Saturday in Eugene, Ore., the site of the
AIAW national basketball championship tournament.
For the fourth year in a row, Woodard has been named to the 1881 AIAW-Kodak Women's All-American basketball team. Woodward shares that she is one of only four American with only one other player, ex-UCLA great Ann Mewers.
Others maned to the team were: Ann Donovan, Old Dominion; Denise Curry, UCLA; Beryl Smith, Oregon; Pam Kelly, Louisiana Tech; Carol Tennessee, State; Andy Holbeck, Tennessee; State; LaTaunya Pollard, California State at Long Beach; and Kris Kirchner, Rutgers.
The team was selected by the coaches of AIAW Division I teams.
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KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, March 31, 1981
No. 91, No. 122 USPS 650-640
Reagan assassination attempt fails
President's operation successful
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - A young gunman ambushed President Reagan at close range yesterday and fired six shots—one of them piercing the president's left lung just inches from his heart. Doctors removed the bullet during a two-hour operation and said Reagan would fully recover.
The would-be assassin, identified as John Warnock Hincindle Jr., 25, of Evergreen, Colo., was tackled and pinned to the pavement before being whisked away in a police squad car. He was later charged with the attempted assassination.
Officials said that last fall during the presidential campaign Hutley had been arrested.
The six shots were fired outside a Washington hotel and crackled from a dismal rainfall before wounding presidential press secretary Hillary Clinton. Service agent and a Washington police officer.
THE SHOOTING STUNNED the world and a nation whose citizens seem unable to shake the stigma of seemingly mindless murder of public figures.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who buried two assassinated brothers, including former President John F. Kennedy, the last president shot, deplored the incident: "Violence and hatred are alien to everything this country is made of." He attributed to rid our society of violence and its cause."
Doctors at George Washington University Hospital said the 70-year-old Reagan was an excellent physical specimen with the body of a former president, said the president 'sailed through' surgery.
But Reagan himself took the event in stride, joking with bystanders as he walked into the downtown hospital under his own power. At 8:50 p.m., he handed doctors in the recovery room a handwritten note paraphrasing W.C. Fields: "All in all, I'd rather be in Philadelphia."
The prognosis for complete recovery is "excellent," and Reagan should be able to resume presidential duties this morning from his hospital bed.
Vice President George Bush, who returned to Washington from Texas, said: "I can reassure this nation and a watching world that this nation is functioning fully and normally."
THE STUNNING MURDER attempt occurred outside the Washington Hilton Hotel, located about one mile from the White House. Reagan covered a speech to a union convention at the hotel.
Waving and smiling, Reagan neared his bulletproof presidential limousine when the gunfire erupted. The grin on Reagan's face turned to frozen horror as a Secret Service agent shoved him into the car after one of six shots hit the president.
Pandemonium erupted. Bystanders screamed in horror. Automatic weapons were instantly drawn. The alleged assassin was buried immediately by a mass of agents.
The bloody bodies of Brady, Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy and District of Columbia police officer Thomas Delahanty were swerailed on the rain-swept pavement.
An attorney for his family said Hinckley had a history of psychiatric care. Federal law enforcement officials said he was arrested last fall in Nashville, Ntl., for carrying firearms on the day then-President Carter made a campaign appearance in the city.
A. M. A.
[Name]
President Reagan
James Brady
Reagan's shooting startles Capitol Hill
WASHINGTON—The mood was as gray as the stormy weather as news of the assassination attempt on President Reagan swept through the halls on Canitol Hill.
The House and Senate went into recess immediately after hearing the news of the shooting. By 3:30 p.m., the halls of the Capitol, normally
IN OFFICES throughout the three-building House office complex, staff members left their
See related stories page 2,5,6
work to huddle anxiously around their television sets and to field the torrent constituents' phone
"We're not going to move from the TV set 'till we get final word on what's happened to Reagan and Brady," said a legislative assistant in the office of Rep. Douw Walgreen, D-Penn.
"We've got to have something to tell our constituents," he said.
One caller screamed over the phone to the office of Les AuCoine, D-Doregon, "Now that the President has been shot, what are you planning to do about gun control?"
OTHER CALLERS were more subdued, but equally upset.
"First John Lennon, now the president," another man said sadly.
District offices, where many congressmen remained over the weekend, took the brunt of the attack.
An AuCone district staff member said that the incoming phone lines had been busy since the story broke and that staff members could hardly keep up with requests for statements.
Confusion was rampant and rumors spread from mouth to mouth over Capitol Hill. No one seemed sure of the president's condition, or whether he'd been shot at all.
"It must have been a ricochet bullet,"
speculated one man. "How else could he have
fired that bullet?"
JMICHIEY, a high school student from Jay, Okla., was in the Capitol this week for Washington Workshop, a program for high school students.
"We were in the Senate gallery, when Howard Baker came in and told us everything was fine.
but that the President had been hurt, and people were pretty quiet, but everyone was relieved.
"Then when we got out, they told us that the President had been shot. I couldn't believe it. No phone call."
Underlying the speculation was an undercurrent of fear and anxiety.
"At 70 he is a little harm for that trauma, isn't he?" coed repetitive to the chant.
"1863 all over again," said her husband. "It's not safe to be president."
ALTOUGH REAGAN is politically an antigun regulation president, a spokesman for a gun lobby group said there would probably be increased lobbying efforts for tighter gun control.
Rep. Peter Rodino, D-N.J., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said he would push for a ban on "Saturday Night Specials" and require more detailed reporting of run sales.
"I hasten to point out that it (the shooting) occurred in the jurisdiction which has the most restrictive handgun control laws in the United States," he said.
See CAPITOL page 5
'Quiet, friendly' Texan charged in shooting
By United Press International
WASHINGTON-John W. "Jack" Hinkley Jr., 25, a college dropout and driver who has been under psychiatric care, was formally convicted with trying to assassinate President Reagan.
Authorities also disclosed that the husky, blond-haired suspect, who has been wandering around the country for the past several months, was arrested last fall for trying to board an airliner while carrying three handguns in a vehicle, Teen, when President Carter was in town.
Court, where Hinkley appeared at a preliminary examination and was ordered held for the trial.
Hinckley, wearing a navy shirt and pants,
sad little more than "Yes sir" during the
game.
He sat with his head propped in his hands and he interrupted him, for the right of his right, by D. Matthias Barrett, a former attorney.
The court hearing opened when court-appointed defense attorneys Stuart Johnson and Ed Wilkie asked that the press be excluded from the trial, but with the prosecution which pressed the mediation.
FBI director William Webster worked
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Johnson declined to comment on his client's state of mind. "We don't want to do anything to him."
It was not known how long Hickley had been in Washington. He was registered at the Park Central Hotel, opposite the Secret Service and about two blocks from the White House.
An FBI spokesman said Hinckley was interviewed at the FBI's Washington field office late yesterday afternoon. "All the information we received about that he was the only one," the spokesman said.
n W.
ed a
"had
the
the
ions
"his
FIVE OR SIX shots were fired at Reagan as he walked out of the Washington Hilton Hotel, authorities said. The assailant hit Reagan in the chest and White House press secretary James Brady in the head. He also wounded a Secret Service agent and a police officer.
A man later identified as Hinkley was wrestled to the ground by Secret Service agents and police officers and taken to metropolitan police headquarters for questioning.
The assailant's weapon was a 22-caliber
torpedo and it came in scene and
turned over to the F.B. authorities said.
Secret Service agents and local law officers
Brady alive still listed as 'critical'
By United Press International
Brady, who had worked for John Connally's presidential campaign, joined Reagan's press staff, headed by Nofziger, after Connally's compagn folded. He was Reagan's chief spokesman during the transition after Nofziger resigned.
WASHINGTON—White House press secretary James Brady, shot through the brain in a presidential assassination attempt yesterday, said his comments "certainly better," outlook with believers earlier.
Lyn Nofziger, presidential assistant for political affairs, returned to the White House from the hospital to brief reporters on his discussion with Brady's surgeon, Arthur Kobrine, professor of neurosurgery at George Washington University Medical Center.
"The prognosis is certainly better at this moment than it was earlier this afternoon," Nimor said.
A veteran of Washington government service and politics, he spent the first two months of the new administration successfully walking the streets of the city as president and apparent openness with reporters.
"Jim came out of surgery at about 8:15 p.m. His vital signs are stable. He pumps his reflexes—those are the reflexes of his pupils in his eyes—are normal. Dr. Kobrine thinks there may be some impairment, but he doesn't know what will he be able to know for quite some time."
He said Brady's condition remained critical, but the doctor "feels better about" his chances. Dennis O'Leary, dean of clinical affairs at the George Washington University Hospital, had said at a news conference while the surgery still was under way that the bullet had gone through Brady's brain and "obviously (caused) a significant brain injury."
"Permanent damage is likely," O'Leary said. He said Brady was undergoing a craniotomy, a procedure in which surgeons open the skull and attempt to remove brain tissue that is irreparably damaged while trying to "solvage as much as you can."
The president, O'Leary said, was not told of Brady's very critical condition. Reagan had emerged from surgery to remove a bullet from his lung only minutes before.
Nofziger he took the opportunity to speak because of a lot of bad runners going around "the track."
BRADY AND HIS wife have a 2-year-old son,
BRADY and HIS wife have a daughter, Melissa, 18.
above a previous marry child.
Earlier, the three television networks quoted White House official David Prosperi as saying Brady was dead. Short thereafter, spokesman Larry Speakes told reporters that report was
It was an irreverent reference to candidate remarks that trees can cause air pollution.
The 40-year-old Brady was standing at the president's side when the shots rang out. He fell immediately and lay face down on the sidewalk in a cool, light rain until the ambulance arrived.
BRADY WAS standing beside President Reagan when he would-be assassin John Wanock Hinckley Jr. opened fire and wounded the U.S. Marine Corps Secret Service agent and a Washington policeman.
A week ago, Reagan attended a roast for Brady, hosted by old friends at the George Town Club. Between the jokes, Reagan had some kind words for his press secretary.
Brady's amiability and wit wri eneared him to reporters. It was he who, during the last days of the Reagan campaign, quipped "killers tree, plants plane flew over a burning forest in Louisiana."
Taking note of the myriad of friends honoring Brady, Reagan said, "I think this is born out of a respect and affection that is widespread among these people and which you have earned."
to the of the the of the en we valals on ns ext
ecoming serious, profs say
Senate Library Committee and professor of systems and ecology, also expands concern in the area of computer science.
"Funds for acquisitions are not adequate," Coil said, "and the stage is being set for a loss of resources so essential for the productivity of the University community.
"The plight of the library, then, should be the concern of all scholars. Neglect now by the state or by University administrators will result in irrevariable harm to KI collections.
"Historically, such neglect in the past resulted in blank snots which have never been filled."
'Certainly acquisition of equipment for graduate and undergraduate instruction and
JERRY HUTCHISON, Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, agreed with the professors and librarians. But, he said, the diversity also had other areas of financial need
library materials are the high priorities as far as I'm concerned," Hutchison said.
"Everybody else is faced with the same inflation the libraries are talking about," Hein said. "KU can cut back on other things. They may buy a cheaper brand of toilet paper."
"I'm just not convinced that there isn't still some fat in the KU budget. To raise it just to buy some books for KU doesn't strike me as a reasonable request."
Hein said that because KU was a non-profit organization, there were other options to raise the money. "I suggest that all 41 of those professors sign a fund-raising petition to be sent to all alumni. I'm sure they could raise a substantial sum that way," he said.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, March 30, 1981
KC earns playoff berth against Blazers
King 1
BEN BIGLERIKansan staff
Otis Birdsong searches for an open man in last night's Kansas City-Dallas contest in Kemper Arena. The Kings won and advanced into Western Conference playoff action this week against the Portland Trailblazers.
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AURH COMMITTEE CHAIR OPENINGS Fall '81 Spring'82
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Compei
Compensation Compensation
By PAULD. BOWKER Sports Writer
A private room at the double occupancy rate
Must be a returning resident
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The Kansas City Kings seemed to deal in suspense. Not only do the majority of the Kings games go down to the wire, but the team's playoff status wasn't known until the last game of the season.
Applications Applications
THE VICTORY earned the Kings the fifth playoff position in the Western Conference of the NBA ahead of the Houston Rockets. Both the Kings and the Rockets finished with 40-42 records, but the Kings gained the fifth spot because of their 4-2 season record against the Rockets.
The Kings face Portland in the first game of a best-of- three miniseries Wednesday night in Portland. The game was played Friday night at Kemper Arena.
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210 McCollum
The Kings, who needed a victory over Dallas at Kemper Arena last night to down a playoff baton, burned back a fierce attack and defeated the Mavricks. 113-104
After a Dallas timeout, the Mavericks forced the Kings into several turnovers and scored baskets almost at all, both inside and outside. Behind Olive Mack and Brad Davis, the Mavericks pulled in third quarter, the Mavericks pulled to within two, 71-49, before the Kings finally realized what was happening.
"It's been a tough season," Kansas City Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said. "I've been extremely proud of this
The Mavs, however, did not let the Kings off that easily.
"I was a bit off. I said it before that 41-41 would get us in and it took 40-42. It been a good team. I'm really proud of them."
The Kings, who took an 10-11 lead less than halfway through the first quarter, maintained a 10-14 point lead through most of the second quarter and threatened to bury the Mavericks, holders of the worst record in the NBA, early in the third quarter after taking a 58-46 halftime lead.
The Kings scored 12 of the game's next 16 points and held an 83-73 lead over the quarterers, thanks to Sam Lacy's 20-foot bounce that buzzed that the crowd of 7,171 wolf.
team with the adversity they have had.
They haven't complained about it. They
come out and play.
The way the University of Arizona's track meet against KU was progressing Saturday night, it appeared that the team had not yet captured their fifth consecutive victory.
Track team beats ASU
The Wildcats, who finished 11th nationally last year, were literally running away with the meet. They won seven of nine running events. But the Wildcats' joy subsided when the field events' results started to come in.
THE JAYHAWKS, who were competing in their first outdoor meet of the season, won every event except one, and beat the Wildcats. 79-75.
Of the six field events KU won, the Jayhawks swept two of them—the pole vault and the triple jump.
Sanya Owolabi, who won the triple jump with a leap of 52-14, became the first Jayhawk to qualify for the NCAA championships at the meet. Owolabi was followed by Kevin Graham and Paul Titus.
In the pole vault, George Buckingham won with a vault of 15-8⁴ and was followed by Randy Howard and Owen Buckley.
The Jayhawks also swept the 800 meter race. Van Schaffer, whose status was listed as doubtful before the meet, won the race with a time of 1:52.7. He beat teammate Leonard Martin and Mike Ricks.
ALTHOUGH WOLOLABI, the second-best triple jumper in the nation last year, was the only KU athlete to qualify for a World Championship deer Deen Hogan came close.
Hogan won the 400 with a time of 46.61, missing the national qualifying standard by one/L/100 of a second. Hogan is the defending Big Eight champion in the 400, and finished fourth event at the NCAA championships.
The meet marked the first time KU and Arizona met in a dual.
PUBLISHER NEEDS
PUBLIISHER NEEDS
ON-CAMPUS CONSULTANT
We are looking for a faculty member or spouse, graduate student or administrative person who would like to supplement present income with a second career in college textbook publishing. The role is one of public relations. The prerequisites are familiarity with the academic community. We will provide you with the skills and knowledge about textbook publishing.
We are a 63 year-old publishing house with many authors already on campus. The person filling this position would consult with on campus faculty members about the unique aspects of our NEW DIMENSION Group as well as provide a liaison with our traditional publishing groups. Your inquiry is completely confidential so send a letter and resume . . . to . . .
100 Howe Avenue
Sacramento, CA 95825 (916) 927-2852
Use Kansan Classified
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Well established, international Chicago based Corporation seeks Full Time Sales Representative to sell mineral absorbents to new and existing accounts in a protected territory which includes portions of Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa.
Position involves travel throughout the territory contacting industrial distributors, feed ingredient manufacturers and environmental industries. Excellent promotional possibilities, salary $15,000 plus expenses and a benefit package. For confidential consideration, please submit resume to:
Sales Manager
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Baseball team splits two with Oklahoma State
By ARNE GREEN Sports Writer
The Kansas baseball team opened its conference season Saturday by hosting pre-season favorite Oklahoma State, responds with his best outing of the year.
A second doubleheader with Oklahoma State yesterday was rained out, but the Jayhawks return to action today with a non-conference (twinkl) against South Dakota State. The game will start at 1 p.m. at Quizlev Field.
Clinton, a right-hander who got off to a shaky start this year, scattered eight hits and struck out seven Cowboys at the Jayhawks took the first game of a doubleheader, 6-1. Oklahoma State won the nightcap, 4-2.
The only run off Clinton, 2-1, came in the seventh inning on a groundball after hitting an outfield shot.
"TT WAS gratifying to come out and get a fine pitching performance from Kevin Clinton and some clutch hits," Coach FloydTpledman said. "Kevin used his screwball and fastball very effec- tively, and could easily have had a shutout."
"I got a little tired toward the end."
Cai said. I just had to settle down
and wait for it.
"IT WAS GOOD for me, because I knew I had the screwball, which breaks away from lefthanders." Clinton said.
Oklahoma State stacked its lineup with lefthanded hitters, but that didn't bother Clinton, who kept them off balance with his screwball.
In the second game, Oklahoma State jumped on KU starter Jim Phillips for three runs in the fourth inning.
The KU offense supported Clinton with two runs each in the first, third and sixth innings, and third baseman Russ Blaylock continued to spark the ball down the left walk. He added two singles in the nightcap to go 4-for-5 on the day.
TEMPLE SAID he was quite happy with the split.
Left fielder Tim Heinemann accounted for both of KU's runs with a two-run home in the bottom of the fifth.
"The thing I'm pleased with is that our young balliculat found it could go out. I don't know if it's right."
"I told the guys to get me two runs, and that's all I needed."
"When you go into a series with a team that has probably the best talent in the conference, and come away with a split, you have to be happy," he said.
Woodard named All-American
Lynette Woodard's playing career at KU has ended, but she still isn't through with putting her name in the record books.
Woodard received her award Saturday in Eugene, Ore., the site of the
For the fourth year in a row, Woodward has been named to the 1881 AIAW-Kodak Women's All-American basketball team. Woodward shares that he was a "pro" player in all-American with only one other player, ex-UCLA great Ann Mews.
AIAW national basketball championship tournament.
Others maned to the team were: Ann Donova, Old Dominion; Denise Curry, UCLA; Beverly Smith, Oregon; Pam Kelly, Louisiana Tech; Carol Menken, Oregon State; Cindy Noble, Oregon State; LaTauneya Pollard, California State at Long Beach; and Kris Kirchner, Rutgers.
The team was selected by the coacnes of AIAW Division I teams.
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KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
The University Daily
Tuesday, March 31, 1981 No. 91, No. 122 USPS 650-640
Reagan assassination attempt fails
President's operation successful
WASHINGTON - A young gunman ambushed President Reagan at close range yesterday and fired six shots—of them piercing the president's left lung just inches from his heart. Doctors removed the bullet during a two-hour operation and said Reagan would fully recover.
By United Press International
The would-be assassin, identified as John Warnock Hickley Jr., 25, of Evergreen, Colo., was tackled and pinned to the pavement before being whisked away in a police squad car. He was later charged with the attempted assassination.
THE SHOOTING STUNNED the world and a nation whose citizens seem unable to shake the stigma of seemingly mindless murder of public figures.
The six shots were fired outside a Washington hotel and crackled through a dismal rainfall before wounding presidential press secretary Robert F. Kennedy. Service agent and a Washington police officer.
Officials said that last fall during the presidential campaign Hincley had been fired.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who buried two assassinated brothers, including former President John F. Kennedy, the last president shot, deplored the incident: "Violence and the arrest of our country is about with our presidents must go our country to rid our society of violence and its cause."
But Reagan himself took the event in stride, joking with bystanders as he walked into the downtown hospital under his own power. At 8:50 p.m., he handed doctors in the recovery room a handwritten note paraphrasing W.C. Fields: "All in all, I'd rather be in Philadelphia."
Doctors at George Washington University Hospital said the 70-year-old Reagan was an excellent physical specimen with the body of a 54-year-old woman who said the patient "sailed through" surgery.
The prognosis for complete recovery is "excellent," and Reagan should be able to resume presidential duties this morning from his hospital bed.
Vice President George Bush, who returned to Washington from Texas, said: "I can reassure this nation and a watching world that this nation is functioning fully and normally."
THE STUNNING MURDER attempt occurred outside the Washington Hilton Hotel, located about one mile from the White House. Reagan delivered a speech to a union convention at the hotel.
Waving and smiling, Reagan neared his bulletproof presidential limousine when the gunfire erupted. The grin on Reagan's face turned to frozen horror as a Secret Service agent shoved him into the car after one of six shots hit the president.
Pandemonium erupted. Bystanders screamed in horror. Automatic weapons were instantly drawn. The alleged assassin was buried immediately by a mass of agents.
The bloody bodies of Brady, Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy and District of Columbia police officer Delahanty were swabbed on the rain-stain pavement.
An attorney for his family said Hinkley had a history of psychiatric care. Federal law enforcement officials said he was arrested last fall in Nashville, Tenn., for carrying firearms on the day then-President Carter made a campaign appearance in the city.
There was no immediate indication how a person once detained by authorities for such violations could have placed himself—without knowledge—into 22-caller handgun—about 10 feet from Reagan.
BRADY'S PROGNOSIS WAS grim. Doctors said a single bullet had entered his skull just over his right eye and passed through his brain. Hospital spokesman Dennis O'Leary said even if the 40-year-old press secretary lived, permanent brain damage was likely.
See REAGAN page 5
---
M. A. M. S.
President Reagan
James Brady
Reagan's shooting startles Capitol Hill
Today will be slightly cooler with a high near 68 degrees, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will remain mostly cloudy in the morning with a 30 percent chance for showers or thunder-showers.
Winds will be strong out of the south while shifting to the west and northward by afternoon.
WASHINGTON—The mood was as gray as the stormy weather as news of the assassination attempt on President Reagan swept through the halls on Capitol Hill.
Tomorrow will be clear with westerly winds and a high around 70 degrees.
The House and Senate went into recess immediately after hearing the news of the shooting. By 3:30 p.m., the halls of the Capitol, normally bustling at that hour, were nearly deserted
sunny day
Weather
IN OFFICES throughout the three-building House office complex, staff members left their
See related stories page 2,5,6
"We've got to have something to tell our constituents," he said.
"We're not going to move from the TV set 'till we get final word on what happens to Reagan and Brady," said a legislative assistant in the office of Paul, Doug Walgreen, D-Penn.
work to huddle anxiously around their television and to field the torrent constituents' phone calls.
One caller screamed over the phone to the office of Les AuCoine, D-Doregon. "Now that the President has been shot, what are you planning to do about gun control?"
OTHER CALLERS were more subdued, but
equally upset.
"First John Lennon, now the president," another man said sadly.
District offices, where many congressmen remained over the weekend, took the brunt of the attack.
An AuCone district staff member said that the incoming phone lines had been busy since the story broke and that staff members could hardly keep up with requests for statements.
Confusion was rampant and rumors spread from mouth to mouth over Capitol Hill. No one seemed sure of the president's condition, or whether he'd been shot at all.
JIM RICHIE, a high school student from Jay, Okla., was in the Capitol this week for Washington Workshop, a program for high school students.
"We were in the Senate gallery, when Howard Baker came in and told us everything was fine.
"It must have been a roichet bullet," speculated one man. "How else could he have done it?"
but that the President had been hurt, and people were pretty quiet, but everyone was relieved.
"Then when we got out, they told us that the President had been shot. I could not believe it. No president was shot."
"At 70 he is a little old for that trauma, isn't
by 21°24' minutes to his marriage."
Underlying the speculation was an undercurrent of fear and anxiety.
ALTHOUGH REAGAN is politically an antigun regulation president, a spokesman for a pro-gun lobby group said there would probably be additional lobbying efforts for tighter gun control laws.
Rep. Peter Rodino, D-N.J., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said he would press for a ban on "Saturday Night Specials" and require more detailed reporting of gun sales.
"1963 all over again," said her husband. "It's not safe to be president."
"I hasten to point out that it (the shooting) occurred in the jurisdiction which has the most restrictive handgun control laws in the United States," he said.
See CAPITOL page 5
'Quiet, friendly' Texan charged in shooting
By United Press International
WASHINGTON-John W. "Jack" Hinckley Jr., 25, a college dropout and drifter who has been under psychiatric care, was formally sent back into work with trying to assassinate President Reagan.
Authorities also disclosed that the husky, blind-brained suspect, who has been wandering around the country for the past several months, was arrested last fall for trying to board an airliner while carrying three handguns in a white, Teen, when President Carter was in town.
Hinckley, a native Texan described by acquaintances as "quiet and friendly", could be sentenced to life in prison if convicted. He also received a $10 million federal agent Timothy McCarthy with a pistol.
The son of a wealthy Evergreen, Col. owl, Hinkley spent most of his life in Texas and, acquaintances said, became a looner in college. The leader of a neo-Nazi group in Chicago described Hinkley as an ex-member who was forced to "hear" he wanted to shoot people and blow things up.
SECURITY WAS heavy at the U.S. District
Court, where Hincley appeared at a preliminary hearing, ordered held until his conviction.
Hirickey, wearing a navy shirt and pants,
little认识男士。Yes 'er" during the
music was blushed himself.
JIM ROBINSON, an attorney for John W. Hinkley Stickle of Evergreen, Colo., issued a statement saying the younger Hinkley "had been under psychiatric care. However, the evaluations did not alert anyone to the seriousness of his condition."
The court hearing opened when court-appointed defense attorneys Stuart Johnson and Ed Wilde asked that the press be excluded from the proceedings with the prosecution, which opposed the motion.
FBI director William Webster, who attended the hearing, said Hincock was still in the FIB's custody and would be held in a "safe place" where he will remain for a psychiatric exam.
Robinson refused to answer any questions about the nature of Hickley's condition or his
Johnson declined to comment on his client's state of mind. "We don't want to do anything to you."
An FBI spokesman said Hinkley was interviewed at the FBI's Washington field office late yesterday afternoon. "All the information I received was that he was the only one," the spokeswoman said.
It was not known how long Hinkley had been in Washington. He was registered at the Park Central Hotel, opposite the Secret Service and about two blocks from the White House.
FIVE OR SIX shots were fired at Reagan as he walked out of the Washington Hilton Hotel, authorities said. The assault hit Reagan in the chest and White House press secretary James Brady in the head. He also wounded a Secret Service agent and a police officer.
A man later identified as Hinkley was wrestled to the ground by Secret Service agents and police officers and taken to metropolitan police headquarters for questioning
The assailant's weapon was a 22-caliber recoil-controlled pistol mounted at the scene and turned over to the FB1 authority.
Service agents and local law officers
See HINCKLEY page 5.
See HINCKLEY page 5
Brady alive still listed as 'critical'
By United Press International
WASHINGTON- White House press secretary James Brady, shot through the brain in a presidential assassination attempt yesterday, said of the attack: "certainly better," outlook with beliered earlier.
"The prognosis is 'certainly better at this moment than it was earlier this afternoon,'"
Lyn Nofziger, presidential assistant for political affairs, returned to the White House from the hospital to brief reporters on his discussion with Brady's surgeon, Arthur Kobrine, professor of neurosurgery at George Washington University Medical Center.
"Jim came out of surgery at about 8:15 p.m. His vital signs are stable. His pupillary reflexes—those are the reflexes of his pupils in his eyes—are normal. Dr. Kobrane thinks there may be some impairment, but he doesn't know what is going on, nor will he be able to know for sure sometime."
Nofzaker had he took the opportunity to speak with Brady and rumors running around" about Brady's outlook.
He said Brady's condition remained critical, but the doctor "feels better about" his chances. Dennis O'Leary, dean of clinical affairs at the George Washington University Hospital, had said at a news conference while the surgery still was under way that the bullet had gone through Brady's brain and "obviously (caused) a significant brain injury."
"Permanent damage is likely," O'Leary said. He said Brady was undergoing a craniotomy, a procedure in which surgeons open the skull and attempt to remove brain tissue that is irreparably damaged while trying to "salvage as much as you can."
The president, O'Leary said, was not told of Brady's very critical condition. Reagan had emerged from surgery to remove a bullet from his lany only minutes before.
BRADY WAS standing beside President Reagan when he would-be assassin John Wanock Hinckley Jr, opened fire and wounded the police officer in a secret Service agent and a Washington policeman.
Earlier, the three television networks quoted
White House official David Prosperi as saying
Brady was dead. Shortly thereafter, spokesman
Speaks told reporters that report was
wrote
The 40-year-old Brady was standing at the president's side when the shots rang out. He fell immediately and lay face down on the sidewalk in a cool, light rain until the ambulance arrived.
Brady's amiability and wry wit endeared him to reporters. It was he who, during the last days of the Reagan campaign, quipped "killer trees, the burning plane flow over a burning forest in Louisiana.
BRADY AND HIS wife have a 2-year-old son, scotty. Brady also has a daughter, Miley. 18, brady is a graduate of the university.
Brady, who had worked for John Connally's presidential campaign, joined Reagan's press staff, headed by Nofziger, after Connally's campfolded. He was Reagan's chief spokesman during the transition after Nofziger resigned.
A veteran of Washington government service and politics, he spent the first two months of the new administration successfully walking the streets to meet President and apparent openness with reporters.
It was an irreverent reference to candidate
teagan's remark that trees can cause air
pollution.
A week ago, Reagan attended a roast for Brady, hosted by old friends at the George Town Club. Between the jokes, Reagan had some kind words for his press secretary.
Taking note of the myriad of friends honoring Brady, Reagan said, "I think this is born out of a respect and affection that is widespread among these people and which you have earned."
Lack of library funds becoming serious, profs say
By CINDY CAMPBELL
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas Library is "on the brink of a major crisis" in its funding for book and journal purchases—a crisis that will hurt KU research and instruction, 41 distinguished KU
In a resolution to the Faculty Council and the University administration, the professors said
See related story page 6
that the library budget of $1,719,387 was insufficient. They also expressed concern over the 5.5 percent increase now under consideration by the Kansas legislature.
"Clearly," the resolution read, "the University library is facing a crisis which, if not its ability to support research and instruction.
IN THE LAST DECADE, the average price of U.S. journal subscriptions has tripped and the average price of newspapers has fallen.
For the highly specialized mixture of scholarly, technical and foreign publications the KU library purchases, the increase has been even greater, the professors say.
Rampant inflation and lack of funds have already forced the library to cancel 800 journal subscriptions and to buy nearly 1,500 fewer books. Todd Sheldon, collection development librarian.
If acquisitions fund increase by 5.5 percent, Sheldon said, 1,900 more journal subscriptions and 2,000 fewer books will be purchased next year.
WILLIAM COIL, chairman of the University
Senate Library Committee and professor of systems and engineers, with concern in concern to the University of Kangasai.
"Funds for acquisitions are not adequate." Coil said, "and the stage is being set for a loss of resources so essential for the productivity of the University community.
"Historically, such neglect in the past resulted in blank spots which have never been filled."
- Certainly acquisition of equipment for graduate and undergraduate instruction
"The plight of the library, then, should be the concern of all scholars. Neglect now by the state or by University administrators will result in irreparable harm to KU collections."
JERRY HUTCHISON, Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, agreed with the professors and librarians. But, he said, the University also had other areas of financial
library materials are the high priorities as far as I'm concerned." Hutchison said.
"Everybody else is faced with the same inflation the libraries are talking about," Hein said. "KU can cut back on other things. They may have to buy a cheaper brand of toilet paper."
"I'm just not convinced that there isn't still some fat in the KU budget. To raise it just to buy some books for KU doesn't strike me as a reasonable request."
Hein said that because KU was a non-profit organization, there were other options to raise the money. "I suggest that all 41 of those professors sign a fund-raising petition to be sent to all alumni. I'm sure they could raise a substantial sum that way," he said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, March 31, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Atlanta police find another body
ATLANTA—Fishermen found the body of a black youth in the Chattahoochee River yesterday, apparently the 15t victim of Atlanta's child rape.
Sgt. D.L. Hendrix of the Fulton County Police confirmed the body that was of a black male child. He said residents of the sparsely populated area of southwest Fulton County were fishing from a boat when they discovered the body hung up by the bank.
On the 22 children on the list being handled by the task force, 20 have been found dead, and two are listed as missing.
Assistant Medical Examiner John Feegel said, "I think it's been in the river for a long time."
W. R. Beddenfield, a farmer who lives near the spot where the body was found yesterday, said the corpse was clothed only in jockey shorts and appeared to be 5-foot-5 or 5-foot-6 tall and weighed about 120 pounds. He said the hair appeared to be that of a black.
Yesterday's discovery was the first since March 6, when the body of Curtis Walker, 13, was found in the South River in DeKalb County, on the opposite side of the metropolitan area. Walker, who vanished Feb. 19, had been suffocated.
Walker, too, was clad only in his undershorts. Most of the children's bodies have been fully clothed when found.
Walker's was the third body to be found in a river.
Solidarity suspends general strike
WARSAW, Poland—Solidarity union leaders yesterday suspended today's nationwide general strike after reaching a wide-ranging compromise agreement.
But it appeared government negotiators, led by Deputy Premier Mieczyslaw Rakowski, gave up more than the union to achieve the settlement and avert the strike that threatened to paralyze Poland and provoke Soviet intervention.
In the agreement hammered out under intense internal and international pressure, the government admitted the police attack in Bydgoszcz on March 19 "was clearly against the rule of solving all conflicts through political means."
Solidarity also accepted part of the blame, saying the incident possibly could have been avoided if there were no tensions surrounding a Solidarity-related activity.
The government apologized for the beating of three Solidarity unionists who had to be hospitalized for injuries suffered in the attack and ordered an investigation.
As Solidarity had demanded, full details of the attack, including pictures and film, will be presented in the mass media.
In a major change of policy, the government agreed the rural Solidarity organization until the fate of that organization decided.
The government has opposed such a move since the supreme court rejected rural Solidarity's bid for recognition in February.
Commandos storm jetliner; 4 killed
BANGKOK, Thailand—Scores of commanders stormed a hijacked Indonesian jetliner yesterday, liberated 50 hostages and killed three of five Moslem air pirates in a dramatic shootout. The commander of the raid also was killed.
The 50 hostages held since Saturday at Bangkok's Don Muang Airport jumped from their seats and screamed in terror as the soldiers crashed into the plane and gunfire erupted.
The pilot of the Garuda Airways DC-9, who was shot in the forehead, was the only hostage seriously wounded.
Two Americans on board were unhurt in the operation, which took eigh minutes.
The 89-man commando force, a joint Thai-Indonesian operation, struck in pre-dawn darkness. One group of soldiers climbed aboard the wings with aluminium ladders, blasted out the emergency windows and dove inside the fuselage with guns blazing. A second commando rushed the doors.
The hijackers, armed with grenades, dynamite and submachine guns,
returned the fire. One of them was killed on board the plane.
The four other hijackers fled to the runway, where two were shot by the commandos. One died immediately and the other died in the hospital. The other two were captured by soldiers who pointed rifles at their backs and forced them to lie on the tarmac.
The hijackers has escalated their terms earlier in the day, demanding a $1.5 million ransom in addition to the release of about 80 Indonesian political prisoners and a flight to freedom in a third country.
Afghan diplomats defect in India
NEW DELHI, India—Four of the seven Afghan diplomats in their emissaries today and asked officials for permission to emigrate to America.
"The Afghanans from New Delhi's Afghan embassy went to the U.S. Embassy and asked to be refugees to America because they didn't like the Saswati."
American officials were not immediately available for comment, and it was not clear where the Afghan officials went after visiting the U.S. Embassy.
The group defection came one day after Afghan Minister Shah Qurzab indicated that an effort to supply Foreign-Soviet Moslem insurgents with water and weapons was underway.
In another development, Moslem rebels in Islamabad, Pakistan, said they had defeated Afghan government soldiers deserted and joined the guerrillas (two week
The defection occurred after a clash between rebels and government troops in the northwest province of Fariab, which borders the Soviet Union, said a spokesman for Jamiate Islami, one of the major Afghan rebel organizations.
Continued Polish aid terms settled
WASHINGTON—The United States and West Germany agreed westerly, after a summit telephone call between President Reagan and Chancellor Helm Schmidt, to halt economic aid to Poland if there was any attempt to suppress the Polish people.
The measure was announced amid signs the Warsaw Pact forces were stepping up their military preparations around Poland.
The White House statement about economic aid was issued one hour before the public news agency announced Solidarity's decision to suspend a general strike.
The discussions were the first indication that Western democracies are prepared to coordinate their actions if Communist authorities in Warsaw or Soviet troops use military force to deal with the labor unrest in the East European country.
West Germany is Poland's largest creditor, with a current outstanding account of about $4.5 billion. In recent months, Bonn has underwritten $110 million in loans to help Polish service its $27 billion foreign debt.
Space shuttle date tentatively set
CNNAVERAL, Fla. — The April 10 launch date for the space shuttle Columbia was planned yesterday after a review confirmed that all spacecraft preparations were ready.
"We are prepared and ready to commence a launch countdown this week," Robert Gray, the Kennedy Space Center's manager of the shuttle project.
Gray said he would recommend to the Space Agency's acting administrator today that April 10 be the official target for the maiden flight of the winged ship that Commander John Young said America needed "very badly."
At the launch pad, technicians fell several hours behind in hazardous hydrazine turbine fuel loading operations late yesterday, but a Space Agency spokesman said the delay was not expected to affect the start of the countdown.
Shooting details given bv hypnotized witnesses
Police have refined the description of a gunman who killed two people in the emergency room of the University of Kansas Medical Center March 20 with additional information provided by 12 witnesses.
Dave Johnson, Kansas Bureau of Investigation spokesman, said yesterday that the witnesses who were shotized recall them recall the specifics of the shooting.
The suspect was described as a 150-pound white male, 6-feet tall, to 25 years old, with a stainer build and a short haircut. He had dark brown, shoulder-length hair.
Using the new information, police have also released two composite sketches of the suspect. Johnson said.
A $2,500 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killer has been established. Associations at the Med Center anonymously provided the reward money, Johnson said.
Johnson said police still had no
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation has released this composite sketch on the alleged killer of two people at the Med Center last week. The Bureau also released a second sketch of the killer with a mustache.
suspect in the case and no new leads,
although they received 16 calls yesterday after the new description was released.
On the Record
Lawrence police are holding a Lawrence man on charges of aggravate burglary after two men were in the same block were reported Friday.
Donald E. Mzhickten, 19, hit a picture window and a screen door with his hands at 603 W 7th Terrace, Police said. He was arrested after entering another residence a few doors down from the first house.
in Douglas County District Court today, Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone said.
Mzhickteno will be formally charged
Mzhickteno is being held on $6,500 bond.
BURGLARS TOOK $1,200 worth of tools Saturday from a house in the 500 block of Boulder Street, police said. In addition, the thieves stole a stereo, valued at $693, and two hydraulic jacks, valued at $400.
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"Feud of the Century" Black Student Union Sponsors a Family Feud.
Date: April 2,1981
Place: Kansas Union, Big Eight Room
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Sport vs. Sport
Sorority vs. Fraternity
Black Panhellenic vs. Black Caucus
DON'T MISS IT!
Black Faculty and Staff vs. Black Organizations
Admission price:
75'
NOW'S THE TIME
LET'S GET SERIOUS!
Funded by Student Senate
HOLLYWOOD—A shocked Hollywood yesterday postponed for 24 hours its biggest party, the annual Academy Awards, because of the cancellation of the event. Ronald Reagan, who had been scheduled to help open the show.
Shooting postpones Oscars
It was only the third postponement in Academy Awards' history but the second time in 13 years that political drama had canceled the Oscar ceremony.
Setting aside the tradition of "the show must go on," the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced the postponement of the $3rd annual show because of the attempted assassination of Reagan, an actor turned president and one of the industry's own.
In inference to the tragedy in Washington," the ceremony was rescheduled from last night to p.m. 8 p.m. on Tuesday, she's show's producer. Norman Jewison.
THE CEREMONY was postponed a week in 1938 because of disastrous conditions and two days in 1968 because of the assassination rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
The ceremony was to begin with a speech by Reagan videotaped in house more than three weeks ago, and the worldwide impact of the Oscars.
Jewish said there was still a possibility Reagan's remarks would be part of the postponed ceremony.
"The decision whether to use the
videotape will be made today by the White House." Jewison said.
REAGAN HAD been invited to take part in the ceremony as "a former member of the industry," the first participation by a U.S. president in the Oscar awards since Franklin D. Roosevelt joined in by Margaret's address was to set the themes of the film, "Film is Forever."
Although he never was nominated, it would have been Reagan's fourth appearance at the Academy Awards.
He first participated in 1947 when he appeared as president of the Screen Actors' Guild. He was a commentator when the ceremony honored the 1933 and appeared when he presented the technical awards in 1958.
IN SPORTS, the National Collegiate Athletic Association decided its basketball championship game between North Carolina and Indiana would be played last night, and NBC television said it would televise the competition as scheduled.
NCA officials first considered postponement of the game. However, when it was announced that Reagan's condition after surgery was "rock stable," the NCAA announced the game would be played.
Indiana defeated North Carolina, 63-50, for the basketball crown.
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University Daily Kansan, March 31, 1981
Page 3
Coalition accused of forgery
By MARK ZIEMAN Staff Reporter
Only two coalitions and one independent candidate have filed for the April 14-15 elections of next year's Board of Class Officers, but for some involved, that's still one coalition too many.
Chris Mehl, co-organizer of the Advance Coalition, and Phil Knisley, student senator, yesterday accused the Party Coalition for forging six signatures to meet the March 27 filing deadline.
Gib Kurschner, organizer of the Party Coalition, filed the coalition's applications Friday. He signed the agreement with members because of deadline restrictions.
"I came in and made it perfectly clear what I was doing," Kurschner said. "Those forms were accepted as being valid."
GAIL ABBOTT, Student Senate elections co-chairman, said that she had accepted the coalition's forms.
"As far as I'm concerned, they (the forms) are valid until found invalid," she said.
Abbott said yesterday that she had given the Party Coalition 24 hours to get original signatures on all the applications. She said that she did not see that as an extension of the deadline.
"I don't feel that I extended the deadline another day," she said. "I feel that my word is an elections cochairman is valid, and if I said that these petitions were OK on Friday then that's what I meant."
Mehl,however,disagreed.
"She (Abbott) is saying that she's accepting the forms, but the elections committee has to say that," he said.
AFTER MEETING with both Mehl and Kurchers yesterday in the Senate office, Abbott could for an elections campaign at 4 p.m. tomorrow to decide the issue.
Kurschner said he thought the Advance Coalition just didn't want competition.
"They're trying to get us on a technicality," he said.
THE ONLY INDEPENDENT candidate to file was Dale Morrison, Prairie Village freshman. Morrison is for sophomore class vice president.
Advance's candidates for senior class officers are Mheil, Overland Park, president; Maureen Regan, Wichita junior vice president; John Best, president; Kathy Gibson, Prairie Village teacher; and Kathy Gibbs, Prairie Village junior, secretary.
THE COALITION'S CANDIDATES for junior class officers are Gerry McNearney, St. Louis sophomore, president; Anne Cottapass, St. Louis sophomore, vice president; Fred Barton, Chesterfield, Mo., sophomore, treasurer; and Jane Rasmussen, Leawood sophomore. secretary.
The coalition's candidates for sophomore class officers are Mark McKee, Overland Park freshman, president; Blair Tinkle, Winnetka, III freshman, vice president; GIGI Gutekunet, Overland Park freshman, treasurer; and Shari Ashner, Overland Park freshman, secretary.
The coalition's candidates for junior class officers, who have named themselves the Alternative Coalition, will announce their names to the sophomore, president; Beau Peters, Overland Park sophomore, vice president; Erice Erzinger, Winnetka, Ili, sophomore, treasurer; and Mary Giennie, Gienview, Ili, sophomore, secretary.
The Party Coalition is the candidates for senior class officers are Randy Knotts, Leawood junior, president; Buffy Dodson, Wichita minor, vice president; Jim Benson, Overland Park junior, treasurer; and Kurch者, secretary.
Senate ignores self-help amendment
The Party Coalition did not file candidates for sophomore class officers.
By GENE GEORGE
Staff Reporter
A proposed self-help amendment to the Kansas Landlord Tenant Act is dead.
The amendment has laid in a Senate committee since February, and in the waning days of the 1981 Legislative session, has been ignored.
However, a Lawrence lawmaker who has led the fight to get the amendment passed prefers to think of it as merely asleep.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Dawrence, said yesterday that lawmakers had been pushing for the change for 10 years 'and they will probably be pushing for it a long time to come."
SOLBACH SAID he was not disappointed with the failure of the amendment to succeed this year because he made the handling of how government functioned.
"You can't get everything you want all the time," he said. "In the Legislature, one must have a tolerance for ambivalence. You have a high tolerance for ambivalence."
The amendment would have allowed tenants of rental property to make minor repairs to their homes if the landlord did not make them after 10 days. It would also have allowed the cost of the repairs from the rent.
Sobach said 32 states had similar laws in effect, 26 by statute, six by court rulings.
amendment was drafted by State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence. It was being considered by the Senate of which Eldredge is a member.
THIS YEAR'S VERSION of the
"It will sit there (in committee) for a year," Solbach said. "The bill is safe where it is."
The bill, along with others not passed this session, may be referred to an interim committee for consideration during the summer.
SOLBACH HAD NOT heard of any attempts to get the amendment passed next session.
The proposed change is opposed by landlords who think the change would lead to unneeded repairs.
Each time it was proposed, Solbach said, the amendment did not get very far.
BLACK STUDENT UNION
presents
a Debate
between candidates for the offices of President, Vice-president, & Treasurer
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Place: Templin Hall Cafeteria
Date: Tuesday, March 31, 1981
Hear the important issues concerning you and the Black Student Union
DON'T MISS IT!
NOW'S THE TIME
LET'S GET SERIOUS!
On Campus
LA MESA ESPANOLA (SPAINSH TABLE) will meet at 11:30 a.m. in 3659 Wescow Hall.
TODAY
CONSTANCE BERNSTEIN, INVESTMENT COUNSELOR FOR THE E. F. HUTTON, CO., will be the featured speaker in the Women-at-workunchon series at noon in Alcove R in the Kansas Union.
ROBERT WHT, FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR TO EL SALVADOR, AMBASSADOR OF THE AFRICAN America and El Salvador *at* 1:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium of the Union.
THE WESTERN CIVILEATION FILM SERIES will present "Hirohina Mon Amor" at 7 p.m. in the basement of Lippincott Hall.
TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson.
THE DEATH AND DYING SUPPORT GROUP will meet at 7 p.m. in the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd.
THE BIBLICAL SEMINAR ON ROMANS will meet at 7 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
THE SALT BLOCK BIBLE STUDY will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlors A and B in the Union.
THE STUDENTS ANTINUCLEAR ALLIANCE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor C in the Union.
THE CAMPUS CHRISTIAN HOUSE
BIBLE STUDY will meet at 7:30 p.m.
at 1116 Indiana St.
MARTIN WEINSTEIN OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILINOS will speak on Japan's Security Policy" at 8 p.m. in the Room Council in the Union.
HELEN VENDLER, PRESIDENT OF THE MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION, will present an English Department Colloquium entitled *Biennale Basique: Structure in Autumn*, "at 8 noon, in the Big Eight Room in the Room."
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Take a snapshot of a rationality setting. You may object any event of the set to be rational, or just use it as a reference point. A picture may be taken from a context that may be treated as a type of acquaintance. You may be cue on a grungy noise given a rough texture. The natural property of concrete forms is CORMORANT and MORE WHILE WE BE RELIABLE. The natural property of concrete forms is CORMORANT and MORE WHILE WE BE RELIABLE. The natural property of concrete forms is CORMORANT and MORE WHILE WE BE RELIABLE. The natural property of concrete forms is CORMORANT and MORE WHILE WE BE RELIABLE. The natural property of concrete forms is CORMORANT and MORE WHILE WE BE RELIABLE.
1. On the campus planet of *9.6*. build a board for your name, address, and email with your favorite beverage to @GOTHAMSTER.com. Create a logo (see FIGURE 10.4). Send it to the Gothamster office at gothamster@gothamster.com.
2. Create a board for your name, address, and email with your favorite beverage to @STETTMAN.com. Create a logo (see FIGURE 10.5). Send it to the Stettman office at stettman@stettman.com.
3. Create a board for your name, address, and email with your favorite beverage to @THEATRE.COM. This contest can come to you online or in person at Theatre.com. You must have an account on the Gothamster website. Karynne Santiago, Karynne M. Wrighting. You must be a resident of the state where your name is located.
These responses will be aggregated after the assessment of the L. E. Mice Behavior (L.E.M.B). Behavioral measures may include the following: 1) response to visual stimuli, 2) reaction time, 3) memory recall, 4) learning, 5) agitation, 6) self-reaction, 7) aggression, 8) fear, and 9) stress. These metrics have been used previously in 90% of experiments - 70% of these metrics must be assessed before the experiment is started.
4- All assistants must be reviewed by June 15, 1987. All assistants and grand prize winner (children) must have received their gifts by June 15, 1987. All assistants and grand prize winner (children) required. There are four grand prize winners (for each team). Teams on each team will be given the grand prize winner (one for each team). Teams on each team will be given the grand prize winner (one for each team). Teams on each team will be given the grand prize winner (one for each team). Teams on each team will be given the grand prize winner (one for each team). Teams on each team will be given the grand prize winner (one for each team). Teams on each team will be given the grand prize winner (one for each team). Teams on each team will be given the grand prize winner (one for each team). Teams on each team will be given the grand prize winner (one for each team).
This is a letter which was published by the National Photographic Society, acknowledging the assistance of the Marianne Schuster Photography Center in preparing this letter. The Marianne Schuster Photography Center and its staff are registered with the American Geographical Society, and their names are listed on the letter. The American Geographical Society is an organization that promotes geographic education and awareness.
Hakeaton is co-sponsored by the American Haven Society and the Department of the Interior.
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Page 4 University Dally Kansan, March 31, 1981
Opinion
One long afternoon
The bliss of a balmy spring day was shattered yesterday afternoon as word spread out across campus and across the nation: "They've shot Reagan."
Instantly, political affiliations and party rivalries and former divisions dissolved, and faces all of races, creeds and parties, wrought with anxiety, stared motionless at television screens and queried: "How is he?"
America was shocked at still another assassination attempt upon the life of a president. Part of the surprise came because although he's been in office more than two months, to many he's still politician Ronald Reagan instead of President Ronald Reagan. Even as late as yesterday morning, many newscasters still referred to him as "Mr. Reagan," not "The President."
Suddenly, yesterday afternoon, he was "The President."
It takes time for any new president to truly become the president, and not be just the man who won the election. The assassination attempt yesterday suddenly made all America aware that the nation does indeed have a leader—someone to rally around, someone to look up to and, ultimately, someone to respect and say silent prayers for.
For several agonizing hours, news was sketchy coming out of George Washington University Hospital. The president was conscious and in fact had walked into the
hospital, as TV newsmen reported over and over, but fleet rumor traveled faster than the plodding medical reports. And then there was the footage of the shooting, done in slow motion over and over again: The screams. The confusion.
Finally, by the time the continuous afternoon coverage merged into the regularly scheduled evening news, hospital spokesmen spread the word: The worst was over. The president was awake and in good condition after surgery. Only several inches had separated the bullet from the heart. America's president had come within inches of his death.
Three others—a policeman, a Secret Service agent and Press Secretary James Brady—were, however, hovering near death as night enveloped the drizzle in Washington.
March 30, 1981, almost became one of those tragic days Americans remember for a lifetime. It was a near-tragic day for a country that likes to pretend its 224 million residents are all individuals, united only by citizenship, and then scarcely even eupped by that.
But as worried faces throughout the day and night showed, as the viewers and listeners from coast to coast proved, collectively those 224 million make up a heart for the nation.
It was one of those rare days when America dropped its mask, if even for a few hours, and let its heart shine through.
Once a soldier, always a soldier. Case in point: Secretary of State Alexa Haig, principal macho man of America's new get-tough foreign policy.
Haig setting tone for Soviet confrontation
It seems Haig's trigger finger is itching. Recently he's been grumbling about a Soviet "hit list" designed for the takeover of Central America. First came Nicaragua, Haig says, and now there's El Salvador. And next? Well, unless you dislike the domino theory, the people of Honduras and Guatemala should start saving their prayers.
Poland, too, has given Haig the chance to assail Soviet operations. Any Soviet military intervention there, would have "grave and lasting" consequences, he said, adding that peace is at a "rather precarious level" thanks to Moscow. Recent Warsaw Pact military maneuvers in Eastern Europe prompted his outburst, despite the fact that such maneuvers are an annual event.
Haig's underlings have joined the fray, painting the world red with alleged Soviet intentions. Richard Pipes, a member of the National Security Council, declared that the Soviets have embarked on "the most brazen imperial drive in modern history", and that war might be inevitable. Undersecretary of Defense Robert McCain said military measures may be taken unless Cuba quits supplying Soviet-shipped arms to El Salvador guerrillas.
Of course, no military strategist in his right mind could buy Haig's simplistic assessment of the turmoil brewing in Central America. At best, the Soviets can only foster already established alliances with Russia and Salvador. And the Soviet threat to Poland, deplorable as it is, means world war only if we
concur. The point is, Haig is gunning for a confrontation and he just may have found one.
Haig's better-dead-than-Red ideology has already committed the United States to yet another no-win situation. Despite his public expression of concern for the El Salvadorans, and his hope that a political resolution will prevent him from returning as secretary of state to finding such a solution. Instead, as General Haig, he has sent 54 military advisers, in the guise of Green Berets,
SALMAN ALI
KEVIN MILLS
to bail out the faltering regime in El Salvador. This, despite Pentagon reckonings that the United States is not a major ally of Honduras,
Why are American troops in El Salvador? What can they accomplish other than to prolong a hopeless situation and contribute to needless bloodshed? Obviously Haig wants the United States to stand up to the Soviet Union, no matter how shacky the footing. Haig feels it is time to say, "Take that!" although the gesture is so feeble as to be laughed at in the Kremlin.
The ramifications of such posturing are more frightening. Recent flashing of American military hardware in Western Europe has the Soviets crying foul. If American troops are to be defeated, as is proposed, Soviets may feel pressure imprinted on more aggressive advances. And Haig have even hinted that the United States may provide weapons to Afghanistan, the so-called pipeline
to the Persian Gulf. If push comes to shove, how far off, World War III?
Disregard for a moment the nightmarish nuclear implications of a U.S.V. sowbowl. Consider Haig's role as secretary of state. Besides being the principal architect of our foreign policy, he is the ambassador of goodwill to other nations. How can other nations feel that they are being taken seriously as sovereign states when Haig keeps imposing sanctions on other nations and these nations continue to seek American aid, knowing full well that such solicitation entails being drawn into the superpower conflict, even to the point of military response?
Perhaps Haig's hardline proclamations are merely trial balloons, designed to elicit domestic and international response. Maybe his bad guy posing will be finely counterbalanced by Mr. Nice Guy himself, President Reagan. But there are American troops in El Salvador. And the American public is rejecting their presence there. Already, confusion is rampant among the U.S. foreign policy press. State Joe Bushnell chastises the press for blowing El Salvador saga out of proportion "five times over." Then White House press secretary James Brady announces that, yes, the story in El Salvador is as big as ever.
Such gaffes of inconsistency are reminiscent of the same wishy-washy foreign policy of President Carter, which Reagan so effectively denounced during the election campaign. One is only left to wonder, "Who's in charge here?" But one facet of American foreign policy remains unambiguous: Alexander Haig has thrown down the gauntlet.
Society's push for success resulting in increased stress
An article in last week's Kansan recommended exercise as a possible method for defeating the blues. It defined the blues as depression caused by stress, an affliction students are supposed to be particularly susceptible to.
I keep reading about stress. A thousand bad
tries are usually cited, and a
thousand cures offered.
Don't be a "type A" person, we are warned, who can't wait in a supermarket line without an alarm.
JANE
NEUFELD
Be a 'type B' and smile pliably in supermarket lines. Don't worry about success. Take life as it comes, always remaining calm, pleasant and relaxed.
need to succeed. Type A people all end up on morgue slabs at 25, dead of heart attack.
"I'd like to know what kind of drugs type B patients I suspected that were calm and pleasant, but also possibly lethal."
Telling us to relax, to exercise, to clear our minds and enjoy life's little pleasures is like trying to help a decapitated person by giving him a bandage. We have ways to alleviate some of the symptoms of stress, but we seldom if ever attack its root.
The source of the problem, at least in America today, is often called the drive to succeed. I think succeed is too mild a word. It seems more like the desire to be a star, or the absolute torrent of being ordinary. There seems to be a compelling pressure to excel at everything.
For students, academic success and grades are usually the way to reach stardom. Students often try to be outstanding or even perfect in every class and every activity.
This desire is part of being what professors are found of calling "the well-rounded student." I always think of little beach balls rolling around at cocktail parties and discussing differences between Rousseau and Montesquieu, but part of real, masculinity success is wanting to be able to hold intelligent conversations on topics from aardvarks to zygotes.
You can't possibly relax long enough to enjoy a class. God forbid! No, you have to make sure you absorb and organize all the information so you will excel.
The attempt to excel in everything, all the time, makes classes more a test of mental and physical stamina than a learning experience, which firmly kills any possible pleasure in learning.
Success is a drug. It must be taken over and over again. You can't waste time tasking in past activities.
This standard is exacting enough for the sternest masochist, because sooner or later everyone is bound to fail in something. The knowledge of impending doom shines in student faces, as the lost, wandering souls fuffle along mumbling, "I don't care about grades. I do not care. There are better things in life. I have to go home and study."
last paper, your last test, your last semester's GPA. One slip-up negates every achievement.
They sit in the bars, morally sipping their beers and worrying about their tests the next day. "I've got to get home, sober up and study," they inform the crowd, thus reminding everybody around them of classes and evening, filling everyone's evening. Then they order more and drink completely without enjoyment, a living advertisement for guilt without sex.
"I feel the need to have the feeling that it's good to be alive," some graffiti reads. Or, translated, life stinks. And virtually everyone has an awful sense of what the bell with it and slashed its wrist or hand did.
At some point, the mental or physical stamina necessary for non-stop studying breaks down, and students seek recreation. These sessions of relaxation are noteworthy for the absolute inability of the people who are getting away from their books to forget about their books.
It seems a fairly stupid reason to end it all. Classwork classwork just doesn't stack up against the death scenes in "Homo and Juliet," and the book is one of the most victorious victims as cowards, retracts and loses.
But I think we are past the days where we believe if we kill ourselves will be really sorry and come to our funeral and cry, and we'll show them.
Of course, few people really kill themselves because they don't stack up to some set of expectations they impose on themselves, or their peers, parents or society impose on them. But many people end up with uicers, or drinking problems, or no self-esteem. They seem almost to think, "If I am not perfect at everything, I am not acceptable at anything."
No, if it seems to me that people aren't trying for sympathy; they just cannot take the constant pressure for perfection and the constant failing of others. They may well be searching for some peace and quiet.
We will not really reduce stress until we come to terms with the drive for success. It is not that we should be content with mediocrity. Excellence should be more real. But at the same time, we should be realistic.
If there's one thing we should soon learn from college, it's that people have tests to take and they don't have a lot of time to spend sobbing them. It is still the era of looking out for Number 1.
No one can be flawless. A few areas of averageness should not destroy our self-esteem. You cannot learn to accept some failures. I seriously enjoy being able to live enough long enough to enjoy successs.
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High can come from relishing reality
Then, to my surprise and relief, the other trip leader got up from his position of command at the front of the bus, looking ready to lay down the law, and ambled toward the marjuana smokers behind me, who were shrieking even louder than their radio was playing.
I wouldn't have done anything about it, except for the ironic fact that the mind-altering effects of that toxic haze soon instilled in me courage where there wasn't any before, thus enabling me to be a monster. It was that my sense of me a pride. But alas, not unexpectedly, my outcry was to no avail, and I returned to my seat.
When I got on the SUA-chartered bus to take me skiing in Colorado over spring break, I made a naive blunder. I sat near the back. Thus, I stepped in and I was engulfed by a cloud of smanki smoke.
He then proceeded to join them in their revelry.
I laughed. the edge of insanity creeping into my voice.
I should have saved my laughter for my arrival at the condominium that my friend and I were to share with four other people who had driven separately and whom we had never met. Then they began翻页 up reefers and smoking them literally the minute they walked in the front door.
The reasons that finally I had to laugh are: I was tired of being peeled. But more importantly, it was downright laughable for those people to be smoking marijuana, considering the non-chemical alternatives to it that were easily at the time. Let me explain what I mean.
The key question that needs to be raised is: What are people after they light up? It would be cliche to say that smoking marijuana- or imbibing in any drug for the purpose of intoxication—is a way of escaping reality for such people. It would also be highly accurate. The only way someone can escape reality is to die, and even here there is much room for doubt.
By smoking pot people aren't escaping reality; they are merely altering the way they experience it. They don't seek suicide; they seek a novel experience, one different from hum-drum
That is, it won't change for them unless they transport themselves to a different reality—a different set of givens, a different set of contexts, the word "Colorado" somehow comes to mind.)
day-to-day life. And changing the way they experience reality is the only viable course open to them because reality itself won't change for them.
Thus, presumably, people who smoke marijuana or use other drugs could achieve the same end they are after through different means—namely, by moving to a different
ERIC
BRENDE
1960
Laboratory rats that have been made to be adducted to ampetamines can easily get rid of their addictions if they are moved to a different set of surroundings. The change of environment fills the need that the drug once did. If, however, rats are kept in the place where they become adducted, then the drug is taken away, they suffer pain and protected withdrawal symptoms.
location. Indeed, this principle has proved itself to be useful in both under laboratory conditions and in real life.
The following is a more striking example. During the Vietnam War hundreds of thousands of servicemen became addicted (in morphologically to marijuana while they were in combat). Those addictions would remain with them when they returned home, thus making the war and its effects an even worse tragedy than they already were. But no such calamity took place. When the servicemen returned home, the refreshing remedy they needed in cases completely removed any need for the drug.
Thus, on my skiing trip, all that those people in the back of the bus needed to do to experience
the novelty they desired was to turn their heads, look out the window and take a gander at the scenery. The sight would not only have been different from what they had been used to, it would have been beautifully and refreshingly different.
Or, on arriving in Colorado, our roommates could have gone to the minimal exertion of parting the curtains of our picture window and orienting their bodies in such a way as not to avoid facing it. They would have then seen a remarkable beautiful panorama of forests and covered mountains and thus would have experienced a more natural "Rocky Mountain High."
In short, these people had a rare opportunity to enjoy an altered reality with a minimum of effort and without expensive chemicals (expensive in terms of not only their monetary costs, but also their long term physical and emotional costs.) And they blew it royally, as the saving goes.
I call my technique the "Mount Oread High." Whenever I get depressed about something, I make my way toward an exceptionally scenic part of campus that I usually take for granted, or I go there to attend Strong Hall and Spencer Art Museum. I then find a nice secluded spot with a good view.
But moving to another location, such as Colorado, is not the only way to experience reality in a new and uplifting way, without using chemicals. You can stay right here on the KU campus and do the same thing. All that is required is a set of five senses and a brain—and a pinch of motivation, such as that which the people on the trip lacked.
The roar of the sensations and images that follow is deafening. It's as if I am experiencing reality—with all its intricately engineered machines and man-made wonders—for the very first time.
The experience is very surrealistic and mind-blowing, as it were. It is also exhilarating and uplifting, and can bring me to the doldrums in a snap. It is also a lot cheaper than marrijuana.
It is downward inapplicable to smoke marjuriana or really itself—whether it be in Kansas or Colorado.
22
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University Daily Kansan, March 31, 1981
Page 5
Reagan
From nage 1
Reagan, who never lost consciousness, walked into the hospital's emergency room leaning on the wall.
Even with blood sleeps from his chest wound and soaking his shirt, even with his left lung collapsed, even with what doctors later called a heart attack, the blood comes from his heart, his chin and spirits were high.
"Don't worry," he reassured worried onlookers.
"Honey, I forgot to duck," he joked to his wife,
Nancy, who had been rushed to the hospital in a stint.
And as he was wheeled into the operating room for almost two hours of "painful surgery," Reagan looked up at his doctors and prayed they were "good Republican's."
O'Leary said the bullet was lodged "several inches" from Reagan's heart and had it not hit one of the president's ribs, it might not even have entered his lung.
O'LEARY SAID: "He at no time was in any serious danger," adding that removing the bullet that entered Reagan's chest and "riocheted" it. The airless left lung was a 'relatively simple procedure.'
"The heart was not involved at all. There were no major bleeding points in the lungs. And there was no involvement of the aorta, the major vessel running through the chest," he said. "The President's vital signs were absolutely rock stable throughout the whole thing."
Asked when Reagan would be able to go back to his duties at the White House, he said: "It is always hard to be precise as to how long he will be hospitalized, but he is clear of head and should be able to make decisions by tomorrow, certainly."
But he said it probably would be "two to three months" before Reagan could resume his full career.
O'Leary said Reagan's doctors "believe that he will probably be in moderate pain. That will probably be worse."
WHEN THE PRESIDENT saw his top White
hair he stared at the hospital, he cracked: "Who's
mindling the story?"
George Bush was minding the store, and while Bush was en route to Washington, Secretary of State Alexander Haig declared at a news conference of now, I am in control here at the White House.
McCarthy, 32, the wounded Secret Service agent, was shot in the back—the bullet also lodging in his lung. He was reported in serious condition after undergoing surgery.
Delahanty, the 45-year-old District police officer shot in the neck, attempted to tackle Hickman.
The presidential limousine, a veritable fortress on wheels, had bullet dents and a cracked and pockmarked windshield apparently caused by the two stray bullets.
Eight hours after the shooting, there were words of slight encouragement on Brady's
Lyn Nofster, presidential assistant for political affairs, said doctors had completed more than five hours of surgery, and that "the prognosis is now as it was moment after it was earlier this afternoon."
THE WHITE HOUSE expects to conduct official business as normally as possible in Reagan's absence, a snokeman said vexterly.
Bush will preside at meetings that Reagan normally would conduct.
"The White House will operate as it would if the president were here," said deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes. He said aides expected that Reagan would be able to communicate on policy and official matters starting today.
An aide said the vice president's attitude was that "things should proceed as normally as possible." Bush said he believed that would be Reagan's attitude.
The aide said that starting today the president was expected to be able to make any decision that comes before him. When necessary, such matters would be brought to his hospital bed.
Bush also will greet the visiting Dutch foreign minister who had been scheduled to see Reagan today, and if possible will drop by a reception at the International Club honoring former Treasury
Speaks said it would be business as usual for top presidential aides, including counselor Edwin Mees, chief of staff James Baker and deputy chief of staff Michael Deaver.
Despite the shocking events of the day, Speaks said the White House operation did not miss a beat and "we continue to function normally."
As soon as assistant press secretary David Prosperi informed the White House press office that Reagan had been shot, Baker, Meese, and others responded to George Washington University Hospital.
Asked if Reagan had delegated presidential authority to Bush, Speakes said:
"There has been no cause for that. There is, for your information, an automatic assumption of command authority which requires that no steps be taken."
ALTOHUG THERE there was little they could do, the Cabinet members gathered at the White House emergency situation room and assured them that all functions were operating without interruption.
Haig said he had called the nation's allies to inform them of the shooting and to assure them of Reagan's recovery and that the assassination attempt was not linked to any international conspiracy. He also said there was no special alert for the U.S. military.
There had been no significant security threats during Reagan's campaign, and the only time he received a scare was on the first day of the 1976 election. A gun at him in a Florida audience was arrested.
The assassination attempt upset financial markets yesterday and brought trading on Wall Street to an abrupt, early close—the first time a U.S. president had been closed since President Kennedy's death in 1963.
THE ALERT STATUS of U.S. armed forces world-wide remained at normal peacetime readiness yesterday despite the shooting, the Pentagon said.
Prices turned down with the initial news of the shooting, then dropped drastically in heavy trading in the minutes after news the president had been wounded.
quickly sealed off the plush home of Hickley's parents in Evergreen, a well-to-do community in the pine-covered foothills of the Rocky Mountains about 25 miles southwest of Denver,
The Hinckleys, described by friends as religious and conservative Republicans, are "grieved and heartbroken by this tragedy," the family's attorney said.
From page 1
Hinckley
HINCLEK'S FATHER, who is president of Vanderbilt Energy C.O. OF Denver, closed his office shortly after he learned his son had been arrested in Washington. He went immediately to his split-level home, where he and his wife were interviewed by Secret Service agents.
William Brisney, captain of the Nashville airport security police, said Hincock had been arrested in Nashville on Oct. 9, the same day Carter was in town, for trying to board an American Airlines plane with three handguns and 50 rounds of ammunition in a suitcase.
A SOURCE CLOSE to the Reagan shooting investigation said Hinckley had been in Nashville a couple of days before his arrest and was charged with assaulting him but had not campaign appearance there scheduled for Oct. 6.
Federal law enforcement said the guns included two, 22-caliber revolvers and a 38-caliber revolver.
The president-elect of the National Socialist Party of America said yesterday that Hincock was expelled from the party more than a year ago.
Michael C. Allen said Hinckley was expelled in November 1979 because he "wanted to shoot people and blow things up." Allen described Hinckley as "a nut."
weapon on city property, a middemean. His guns were corded, and he had fills $00, plus the ammunition.
Hinckley joined the Nazi-style party in 1978, Allen said, and they first met during a neo-Nazi meeting in London.
Secret Service spokesman John Warner said the service had no previous knowledge of Hitchcock.
Hinckley purchased the revolver used in the assassination attempt and another 22-caliber skid revolver for $4 each at Rocky's Pawn Mall October 13, a Dallas television station reported.
RECORDS SHOWED Hinkley was born at Hardy Santarium on May 29, 1955, in Ardmore, Okla., and he grew up in the affluent Dallas suburb of Highland Park.
"He seemed very cordial, not too outgoing or too overboard," said Bill Liernan, sponsor of the rodeo club at Highland Park High School. "He was friendly to everyone."
Capitol
From page 1
A press aide from the office of Rep. Jim Jefferson is pushing for gun control legislation was very likened.
JEFFRIES WAS on his way to Washington from a Public Works Committee meeting in Philadelphia when he heard news of the attack. The aldea said Jeffries was shocked and very upset.
Nen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan. refused to comment on the situation, but expressed concern for the families of Reagan and press secretary James Brady.
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., said he would issue a statement on the situation early today.
OPENING WITH A PRAYER, the Kansas Senate convened on hour after the shooting with a news conference.
Across the nation state legislatures observed moments of silence to pray for the survival of Reagan, Brady, Secret Service Agent Timothy J. Thomas, Clinton, Washington, D.C., police officer Thomas J. Delahanty
"Just an hour ago an attempt was made on the life of President Reagan," Hollomon said. "Pray for him as he lies in George Washington University Hospital with a gunshot wound."
Haig mistaken about succession policy
This report was compiled by Amy S. Collins, staff reporter, and Tammy Tierney, legislative partner.
By CORAL BEACH Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. in-correctly stated that he was the third in line of presidential secession yesterday afternoon as the governor shot and wounded outside a Washington hotel.
Several KU political science professors last night attributed Haig's mistake to the panic atmosphere in Washington and said that Haig probably had wanted to make sure the rest of the world understood that someone was indeed in control of the U.S. government.
At the time Haig made his statement from the White House, Vice President George Bush, who is second in the line of succession, was in Texas on a speaking tour.
RUSSELL GETTER, associate professor of political science, explained that Haug was actually fifth in line after Speaker of the House, Senator Schmidt, and President Pro Tem, Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C.
That authority, according to Larry Speakes,
deputy white house press secretary, starts with
the vice president and then goes to the secretary
of defense.
Getter said that he thought Haig took command in an attempt to lessen the feelings of panic that were instantaneous in Washington and that he was assassination attempt was made on the president.
Another political science faculty member was not as sure of his motivation as Getter.
But Haig may have been referring to the automatic assumption of command authority, as well.
Burdett Loomis, assistant professor of political science, said that the mistake revealed a problem in the way he taught.
"Obviously he wanted to reassure everyone, but he was wrong when he said he was third." Loomis said. "Haig would probably like to see himself as third, but he's not."
EARL H. NEHRING, political science
direktor, humanist, his colleague,
understanding of DHKM's mission in collec-
"Hai's statement was consistent with several other erroneous statements he has made in the course of his career."
Nehring said that the possibility that Haija was genuinely mistaken was irrelevant and that the evidence for this was not strong.
"Although gun control laws might not be perfect," Loomis said, with the increase of violent crimes it is becoming clear that something must be done."
The KU professors said they were less concerned with Haig's blunder than they were with the possible political implications connected with the assassination attempt. Questions of gun control and "dangerous social trends towards violence" were foremost in their concerns.
GETTER AGREED with Loomis's appraisal of the situation.
“At the very minimum,” Getter said, “there will probably be a nationwide registration of hand-guns and an attempt to stop the marketing of 'Saturday-night-specials.'”
"If something positive can come out of this,
gun control will probably be helped, if you consider gun control positive."
Nehring also agreed that gun control would receive positive publicity after the shooting.
"Most of Reagan's supporters are against gun control, but that won't matter now," Nehring said. "Those in favor of gun control will get more support now."
BOTH NEHRING AND FRANCIS HELLER, professor of political science and law, were concerned with what they said seemed to be a lack of imagination attempts over the past several decades.
Nehring compared yesterday's attempt on Reagan's life with those directed at President George W. Bush.
Getter said that he doubted the shooting was a purposefully political act.
"This fits closely with the attempts on President Ford," Nehring said. "There doesn't seem to be any evidence of it."
These attempts over the past years may be connected with the political climate in the country today," he said. "In the 'mass society' that is present today, individuals are robbed of their private lives. This type of society is a good backdrop for random acts of violence."
LOOMIS ALSO STRESSED the danger of what he said was the increasing use of violence to demonstrate displeasure, and compared with the attempt with the pardure of John Lehnon.
"This seems very much like the John Lennon shootin'," Loomis said. "Whether it's a president or a rock star you still get a good job," Loomis added. "Don't see it as a political assassination attempt."
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Macrobiotic Community Health Center of Lawrence, Kansas in Association with the East-West Foundation
Cooking For Cancer Patients will demonstrate the preparation of whole natural foods and their importance as preventive medicine in
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APRIL 25 & 26,1981
relieving cancer, heart disease, arthritis and other degenerative illnesses.
CANCER & DIET The Macrobiotic Nutritional Approach To Cancer & Other Degenerative Diseases
External Applications—will demonstrate simple remedies which can be prepared at home, illustrating their use in relieving symptoms of illness while harmonizing the internal organs.
Question and Answer Sessions covering diet, healing and personal problems.
Program to Include:
Murray Bender — Director, East West Foundation, Md. for the past eight years he has taught courses and has given workshops and seminars throughout the United States, Europe and Brazil through his book *The Revision of America* Review Quarterly, as well as the Chairman of the Eastern Committee of North American Education.
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Date & Time - Saturday, April 25th an
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SPIRIT SQUAD TRYOUTS-1981
Be a part of a great tradition!
Dates for tryouts for the K.U. Spirit Squad have been set.
All students interested in trying out should meet in Allen Field House at 5:00 p.m.on March 26th for an informational meeting. The first clinic will be held after the meeting.
No previous experience is required to trout.
Requirements
2. 0 Overall GPA
Enrolled in at least 12 hours Weight in proportion to Height A genuine interest in K.U. athletics
March 26-27-30-31
CLINICS:
April 1-2
5:30-7:00 p.m.
PRELIMINARIES:
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
April 4th
FINALS:
April 11th
MINORITY STUDENTS ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, March 31, 1981
Reactions mixed over shooting
By BOB MOEN Staff Reporter
Mount Oread rejection to yesterday's assassination attempt on President Reagan ranged from hate and anger to indifference.
"I was real shocked, not ready for it at all," Leije Grichaud, senior, who was working at the concessions booth in the Kansas Union, said. "A lot of people coming up to the counter and they just couldn't believe it.
"One minute everybody was just saying, 'What a nice day,' and then it changed instantly. The TV room has been packed."
CAROLINE GROOTES, Amsterdam, Netherlands, graduate student, said, "It's quite unbelievable that things like this happen in the States. I'm just really disappointed because the States has always been held up as the greatest democratic country in the world."
When told of the shooting, Steve Brinker, Tupa junior, said, "Are you serious? Are you serious? I can't believe it. I don't understand why he would want to have not been in charge long enough to do anything to cause to kill him."
Some students, however, were not surprised.
"In hearing about it I would have normally been disturbed. But when I
heard about it I was not a bit disturbed," Annette Riley, Kansas City, Mo., senior, said.
Margaret Justice, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, said, "I was surprised it didn't happen sooner. I was not shocked."
STILL OTHER REASONS for the shooting were given.
"That is what he deserves because of what he is doing to minorities." Kansas City, Mo., senior, Jim Gravely, said.
Michelle Stadler, Westwood freshman, said that John W. Hinckley Jr., the man charged with stealing Reagan, must have been angry.
"Maybe he was trying to save the rest of the people from Reagan," she said.
Sitting among 25 other silent students watching the television screen in McColum Hall, Javad Keyhan, Tehran, Iran senior, said, "I heard about it from an American student. He said, 'Did you hear the good news. Our president got shot,'"
"They don't seem to care. No matter what your political affiliation, someone was shot."
Jane Perkins, Florissant, Mo., senior, said, "I'm shocked by the attitudes of others. They are not that upset.
some students don't like Reagan.
But to hate Reagan and to kill Reagan are totally different feelings."
Yasutaka Liu said, "This is such a terrible thing. I have heard that
LIU, NISHINOMIYA. Republic of China senior, said he was certain foreign citizens would be concerned and saddened.
The assassination attempt created talk about the so-called Zero Factor, the belief that a president elected in 2016 would die in office, and about gun control.
"My first thought was the 20-year factor and, well, here it is." Karen Bullmer, Des Plaines, Ill., junior, said.
Doug Drew, Overland Park freshman, said the attempt showed how vulnerable Reagan is for somebody to shoot him.
"God. That machine gun," he quietly said about the weapon a Secret Service man brandished on the Oliver Hall television screen.
THE WEAPON USED in the shooting, a .22 caliber handgun, raised debate about gun control.
"I just gave a speech on gun control in my class speech," David Seitz, Lee's Summit, Mo., junior. said. "This reinforces my philosophy. Gun control might have helped prevent the shooting."
Other reporters working on this story were: Annika Nilsson, Rebecca Chaney, Tim Sharp, Brian Levinson and Chris Cobler.
Today is the deadline for action on a bill to create a Kansas library network board, but the lack of Board of Regents support for the bill has House committee members uncertain about its fate.
By CHRIS COBLER Staff Reporter
Fate of library bill uncertain
The board would recommend priorities for interlibrary cooperation and resource sharing among all Kansas libraries. The bill has been approved by the Senate and is now in the House Local Government Committee.
Unless the committee acts today on the bill, it will remain in committee until next year.
State Rep. Ivan Sand, R-Riley, chairman of the Local Government Committee, declined comment on possible action that the committee might take and on his position on the bill.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said the committee was confused by the Regents request last week that their institutions, which include the University of Kansas, be excluded from the board.
HE SAID that the committee was split, but that some type of action probably would be taken.
The Regants and the Associate Students of Kansas had proposed a series of amendments to the bill that would give power from mandatory to advisory.
mittee members to make a decision because of the switch of the Regents," Branson said. "I'm disappointed to have to be in a state of indecision."
"It's rather difficult now for com-
Branson said that she favored the bill because it would help cut down on library duplication, but that he wanted a good reason for not supporting it.
JOHN CONARD, executive director of the Regents, said the Regents were not trying to kill the bill.
"We're not really supporting it or trying to kill it," Conard said. "We don't see any need for the Regents libraries to be involved. We feel that our existing system of interlibrary cooperation is excellent."
The other libraries in Kansas might need the board, but there are no substantial savings to be gained from the program for the Regents libraries, Conard said. Other types of Kansas libraries are: school, community college, public, private college, regional and special libraries.
The Regents libraries already have access to several hundred libraries through OCLC, a nationwide computer system for libraries, and all citizens of Kansas already have access to the entire Regents system, he said.
"The last version of the bill I saw was not terribly objectionable." Conard said, "but I don't think it's terribly necessary either."
THE AMENDED VERSION passed by the Senate now has support from 4C, although it is not a top priority.
Robert Bingaman, ASK executive director, said.
"We like it a lot better now that it has an advisory status as opposed to the power of mandate." "Bingaman said."
Bingaman said he was concerned that without the amendments the board would have the power to determine budgets and dictate future purchases.
State Sen. Jan Meyers, co-sponsor of the bill with State Sen. Nancy Parrish, D-Topeka, said the board was not designed to dictate library policy, but to "help keep everybody going down to the same path."
"We decided we needed a simple, coordinating mechanism, not one that would be a heavy, bureaucraft hand on these libraries, most of which already have a governing board," Meyers. "ROverland Park, "With all of the new technical advancements, you can spend a great deal bad money."
THE ADVANTAGES to having compatible computer systems throughout the state libraries include easier statewide access to library databases and offer duplicate purchases and more joint storage by libraries. Meyers said.
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SUA FILMS
Tuesday, Mar. 31
Funny Face
(1957)
Stanley Donner's chic, charming story of a model (Audrey Hepburn) and a fashion photographer (Fred Astarie) in Paris. Donner and Astarie, with Paris stars, ... it adds up to top-notch music entertainment. (103 mln.) Color: 7.30.
(1933)
Wednesday, April 1
Broken Blossoms
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Two very different films on similar themes, D. W. Griffith's Blossoms is an extraordinarily beautiful story of a young man with an intense rivalry with a kind, adoring Chinese (Richard Barthelness). A marvelous tragedy. Yen was directed by Frank Capra — any of his other films. Barbara Sarmiento directed by a Chinese warlord (Nils Aslater). At first repiled, she slowly begins to love not only Chinese culture but the cultural sensibilities of her sophisticate, sensitively performed film. Leonard Matzin (8:39 min) 9:W. 7:30.
Unless otherwise noted; all times will be shown at Woodburn Auditorium in the Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday Events, Saturday. Popular and Sunday Tickets available at the SUA office, Kansas Union, 4th level, information 864-4500 to smoking or refreshments.
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WOODRUFF AUD.
21
University Daily Kansan, March 31, 1981
Page 7
A career in law. Denver Paralegal Institute will be on campus on April 1st
Contact your placement office to arrange a personal interview. For further information, call collect at (303) 623-0237 and ask for Jeff Johnson Director of Admissions.
Entry
Entry Deadline: Tuesday, March 31
5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson
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Robinson Tennis Courts
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL
REGREATION SERVICES AT 864-3546
PUBLISHER NEEDS ON-CAMPUS CONSULTANT
We are looking for a faculty member or opus, graduate student or administrative person who would lie to supplement present experience. Please visit www.johnson.edu/admissions.
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15 words or fewer
each additional word
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AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run
Monday Thursday p 9 p.m.
Tuesday Friday p 9 p.m.
Wednesday Monday p 10 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday p 10 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be viewed in person or by phone at the Knight business office at 841-350
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Hillel Lunch
with
Rabbi Balser
of Beth Shalom, K.C.
Wednesday, April 1
12:00-1:30
Cork 1
Employment Opportunities
Candids, Sunshe and Sunshine SKI KEY-
1 day skiing, 3 days swimming, (April 18, 19, 20), ski rental,
3 days skiing, (April 18, 19, 20), ski rental, immortal expere-
nence only $2500 Contact: JAMIE
841-8360 or write s.c. 167 Kentucky
ENTERTAINMENT
SUMMER JOB FOR YOUng MARRIED COUPLE Sorry, no children. Must own a vehicle. Please call plain Work: Housework, moving, carpentry, painting, general maintenance. Salary: $350 per hour. Towers provided; your own completely furnished house (can be rented or later your choice). Later preferred by employer. Apply in writing, including local office address. Lawyers 654-6900.
TRAVEL CENTER
Domestic & International Reservations
• Airline
• Hotel/Resort
• Car Rental
• International Student Specialists
Free services to students and faculty.
841-7117
Southern Hills Shopping Center
1601 W. 23rd St. (by Perkins)
9:00-5:30 M.P. * 9:30-2 Sat.
TRAVEL CENTER
FRESHIMEN and SOPHOMORES. Live in the Christian Campus house next year! Apply now. 842-6592. tf
SPRING WALTZ. Saturday, April 4, 8:12 p.m. 1st Christian Church, 1000 Kentucky. $1.50. Sponsored by IVCF. 4-3
FOR RENT
or 1 or 2 rooms for rent in a House close to campus, 1019 Illinois Call 841-2301. 3-31 For spring and summer. Nismith Hall off campus. Visit our campus at the advantage of an apartment. Good food and plenty of it. Weekly must service to clean activities and much more. If you're looking for more information, you want, stop in or give us a call: NSMITH HALL, 1900 Nalmuth Drive, 843-2301.
Capi Capt Iris. Unfirmed student, 1 & 2 bdm; apts. available. Central air, wall-to-wall windows. 2 blocks south of Fraser Hall. Call 842-7935 after 5:30 a.m. anytime weekend.
Single rooms for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5. 843-3228. tf
PRINCETON PLACE PATO APARTMENTS.
for roommates, features wood burning fireplace,
wocker/dryer, hookups, fully equipped
kitchen, bedding, kitchen phone 812-
647 for additional information.
Newly-remodeled rooms and apartments near University and downtown. Off street parking and no pets. Phone 841-5500. if
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES 202
their bedrooms, and dorms, you like us. Our
dormitory feature 3 bdr., 1½ baths, all appliances,
attached garages, and lots of privacy. We are
one of the most affordable Craig Lea or Jim Bong at 749-1607 for
adults about our modestly private townhouses.
3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-733. tf
2 bedroom duplex Air Cond. W/D Hookups,
W/W Carpet, Carport, Central location, very clean, $25/mo. Call 893-2774. 4-3
Sublease for Summer; 4 bedroom town-house, 2 baths, carpeted, patio, dwidowshar, 3 pools, tennis court. Trailridge Apartments Call 841-1899. 4-3
Country Cottage located on one acre of Irid
land in Montana. This property is loaded with special ceramic tile floors, and has a spacious patio with hot tub $20/mo, includes use of refrigerator, furniture, or Available. A spacious kitchen (500 sq. ft.) available.
NOW RENTING for fall semester—near new
2 bedroom apartments just north of the
studio; live closer than you can park. Call
843-4798.
4-7
Applications are now being received for the Junior Living Experiment for the summer and the Junior Living Experiment for the winter that may be obtained at the Educational Christmas Center, 8124 Oread Church of 843-803-6833.
AVAILABLE JUNE 1st. Efficiency Apt.
Nicely Furnished, A/C, $2\%$ blocks from Union. $170 + 3/1$ utilities. 841-8598. 3-31
Sublease for summer 3-bedroom furnished apartment, air conditioned, dishwasher, close to campus. Call 841-6360. 3-31
Sublease room for summer. Ideal for summer school; close to campus, inexpensive. 2 Bdrm Apt. for rent. Available 15/26$ monthly, A/C, Dishwasher, Water 15/37$
Summer sublease — Trailridge 3 BDRM
Townhouse. June & July. Great Summer
Living! Tom or Scott 842-2714. 4-2
Summer Sublease: plush 2 bedroom fully furnished apartment, $ minutes from campus 841-0469. 4-1
**Want to sublease 1 bedroom unfurnished**
**apartment starting June 1. $215/month +**
**utilities. Close to campus, on bus route.**
749-068 after 5. 4-3
Wanted: 2-Christian girls to sublease a
BR Duplex across street from campus for
summer. Total rent is $220/mo. + utilities.
Call 842-8328. 4-2
Available May 1st Large, 2 bedrm. apt., 1 block from Union $179.00 + utilities. Call 843-6536. 4-9
Summer Sublease: Spacious 2 bedroom—1½
bath Heatherwood Apartment. Rent + electric. Call 841-7077 after 5. 4-1
Meadowbrook, 2 bedroom for summer subur-
lease. Nice view, near pool and tennis court.
Rent negotiable with option for Hale Hail
to let it go! Call Carol, 841-836-56
2 br. apartment for summer sublease, 18th and La. behind Smith Hall. $30/month + util. includes a.c. dishwasher, laundry, cos-
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Balte
Makes sure to use them! As a study
material, Makes sure to use them!
exam preparation . . . available. Analyze
ofer. The Bookmark, and Good Book
Ofer. The Bookmark, and Good Book
Immediate occupancy, nice 2 bedroom apartment, kitchen, living room, bath, 1011 Tennessee St. $30/month, deposit required. All utilities paid. Phone: 824-7820. 4-7
Summer subleasing 1 bedroom furnished
apt. at Hanover Place. Available May 15.
$275 + electricity. 749-8196. 4-3
Partially furnished apartment, close to campus. $145 and share of utilities. Call 862-8540. 4-3
Summer sublease—2 DBRM—Meadowbrook Apts. June & July. Nice location. Call 841-8638
4-3
Sublease, beautiful furnished apartment for summer, near campus. Call 841-9214. 4-3
4 bdrm. house 1 block north of K.U. Hot water, heat. Air conditioned. 749-0166. 3-31
ROOM FOR MALE STUDENT available now. Share a refrigerator, bath. Walk to KU. 14th and Kentucky. $80 plus 841-2105 or 841-3138.
large room for rent close to campus. Excellent kitchen facilities. Call 841-9536 anytime or 844-5152 after 7:00 p.m. 4-6
1 x 100 watt Mainsore. Receive Dual-Poly-
Automatic Turntable. 2 Pioneer Speakers.
w: wood cabinets. Price negotiable. 841-4088
after 3 p.m. 3-31
Alternator, starter and generator specialties.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9609, 3900
W. 6th. tf
Raleigh bicycle. Excellent condition, upper light. Tubular tires with pump. $180.00 or best offer. 842-6278. 3-31
FOR SALE
'88 Dodge Van, V-8 318 motor, excellent condition, moving—must sell, call evenings -843-7959. 4-3
6-string acoustic, guitar, looks good, sounds
cord. Call Steve 842-7688.
4-2
Z28 Camaro loaded, 26,000 miles, red, in superb condition. Asking $5,500. Call 842-
9300. 4-3
GRETCH 88 KEY PIANO for direct use through PA system. a string per note, a volume used in concert. EXCELLENT user made in concert. EXCELLENT price at 1/3 the price of Helpstand! 1.6 the price of Yamaha Electric Grand. Must sell it (for any born first婴!) 148-769-01
Lawrence advertising medium for sale. Well known, high profit, good opportunity. Call 1-341-1292. 4-1
68 Mustang Low miles Excellent shape.
21 mpg No rust. Stereo: Call 118-140- 1-41
10 spd. Men's PUCH pathfinder, like new,
$180 call 749-1915 MWF after 5 p.m. THM
weekends all day.
3-31
Guitar amp. Holmes 200 watt Head with
110" cabinet. Like, new 749-5269 3-31
Buy have a high school typewriter at KUJI
Why buy a 12" i3; Corrective, Elemnt Business
machine for $755.00, Office Equipment Inc.
41-9020
4-8
Samsi AU1-217, Amp 30, watts per side.
Great condition. b0 a to b 749-0847-31
Pioneer PL-A56 (Top Model), 78 rpm recording studio. Buy best offer here.
PlayStation Rkck 821-376-144
PlayStation Rkck 821-376-144
Caption PowerPlay FM-8 track stored under dash diskremount $45. Negotiate for driver爽 and speakers. John 821-347-143
1980 200 CC Honda motorcycle. New condition.
Only 170 miles, many extras. Asking
$1095.00, $427.305.
4-2
Ventura acoustic sequestre $125, 1900 LES
Ventura acoustic sequestre $175, w cases,
864-116-31 p.11.
***
*
cording studio, used bookstore contents, antiques and furniture. All priced to sell Phone Rick 842-3176 leave message. 3-31
Hardamatic 400 motorcycle. Under 900 miles and in excellent shape. $1250, need to sell immediately. 743-3444. 4-3
1976 Honda CB 750F, new tires, excellent condition, 7,900 miles. Call 749-0754 ask for Mike. 4-3
GREAT FOR CAMPING! 1970 Kingswood Estate Wagon. Cheap, cheap! Great for the handyman. 841-1425. 4-6
CATCH THE WAVES! King size designer
waterbed has wicker and oak headboard.
841-1425 Price negotiable. 4-6
73 Hornet, 4-door, low mileage, good tires,
good student, Call after 81-491-743. 4-13
1978 Sunitki GS 750, 6,000 miles, bought
new May 1979 Mint condition, $2200.00 or
best offer 749-0174 4-3
Triumph TR7 Excellent condition. Stereo, radials, etc. Must saacrifice. $2885—offer 843-9334. 4-6
Set of keys in front of Alen Field House with u of K in key ring. Call 844-8651. 3-21 Found—Men's windbreak in 3rd floor hall of Learning. Identify at 8108 Learned. 4-1
FOUND
CRUERES CUBID MEDITERANEAN, SAIL-
MEDICAL STRUCTURES Office Personnel, Counselus
structures Office Personnel, Counselus
Epoxy Coating PENNIS handling for APC-
TROLBROAD 152 PENNIS handling for APC-
TROLBROAD 152 152 60129
HELP WANTED
To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES
expenses with us, as a public service to nursing home residents? Our consumer or guardian needs help in Nursing Home (KRN) needs your help and input on nursing home conditions and needs of the resident. All names and correspondence for the resident. All names and correspondence for the resident. All names and correspondence for the resident. All names and correspondence for the resident. All names and correspondence for the resident.
915-842-3608 943-7107, or write us at Nursing Home, Mass. St., Lawrence, KOHN 86048
Attention. Business Students-Nationally known company interviewing students for summer jobs. High profit and experience examinations, call 843-8711. 5-31
Travel from Oklahoma to Montana with a wheat harvesting crew. Call collect on weekdays, 913-781-4945; on weekdays 913-547-4645.
4-2
Teachers Wanted Elementary and Secondary. West and other states, $15 Registration费. West and other states, Ruteburg PH. zj 26051 877-782 8702 Southern Teachers Agency, Bomber Al. NB. 87964 AB. NM 87964
Need good paying summer work? Looking for hard workers. Must relocate. Have entire summer free. Make $23 a week. Call for appointment 843-8711. 4-7
WANTED Artist to design cartoon envir-
nature for stamp collectors. Price work. Simpli-
cartoon caricatures. 864-3718, 814-8288.
WORLD'S LARGEST BUSINESS needs you!
Suy stay home - paid weekly. Fine details.
stamped stamped. Peggy Jones. 3229
Glacier Dr., Lawrence, Ks 60644.
Now hire for Spring & Summer cashier positions. Must be able to work 20 hrs a week. Apply in person during the day. 1-8 Hairy's Restaurant, 6th & Missouri. Day 4-11
Student Computer Operator - Available-
Office of Information Systems, is seeking a
Office of Information Systems, is seeking a
available to work Saturdays and Sundays
depending on class schedule and computer
planned a data processing course in high
quality training, be currently enrolled as a student at KU,
Wolfe, 14-6238 Information System
Wolfe, 14-6238 Information System
Kansas, Lawyers, Application for
Kansas, Lawyers, Application for
application start date is 09/25 1:00 p.m. and lentative
start date is 09/27 1:00 p.m.
Student Computer Operator is an Equal Opportunity
Job.
Wanted immidiate-ly: Monday clerk at Skillet's Retail Liquor. Also wanted: summer and fall clerks. Call 843-8186. 4-3
LOOKING FOR A HIGH PAYING SUMMER
job where you live in the U.S.A.
For information, send $1.00 and addressed-stamped
envelope to J.T. Tech Associates, 252 Fifth
Avenue, New York, NY 10036.
LOST
My friends white Peugeot 18-speed been misplaced. Distinctive features fend her away from the road, but it was last seen sitting behind Wesco on 3/13 at 9 a.m. if she have informed me of her whereabouts.
I'm missing one green Iowa license plate labeled GJ1-400, please call Tom at 842-2061.
MISCELLANEOUS
PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS. Proofs,
identified in hard plastic. For details
and application send self addressed
DEK. Department of Health. DEK.
K. Box 525, Tampa, Arizona 82518.
LIVE FROM NEW YORK! I've Phyllis Polishu polite and D'Howen's candy soda polite. Polishu and D'Howen's candy soda d'ver cart. Starkward and onsite at no excedent. Starkward and onsite at 24-hour Saturday—warming for Friday—24-hour Sunday
NOTICE
Urban Plunge: inter-community experience of economic looseness and survival. To apply call KU-Y 864-3761. 4-6
GAY AND LEISHBAN PEER COUNSELING:
A friend is ready to listen. Referrals through K.U. Information, 864-3506, or Headquarters,
841-2345.
PERSONAL
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
ftH 843-4821.
Resume & Portfolio Photographs, Instant Color Passports Custom made portraits, color, B/W, Swells Studio 749-1611, 4-1
NEED EXTRA CHAIR Sell your old Gold &
Diamonds. Top prices for class rings,
gold chains, etc. 841-609, 841-6377, 841-
7476.
Engagement portraits of quality only professional studio can give, at prices students can afford. Swela Studio 749-1611
There is an extension of the deadline for acceptance of nominations for Women's Recognition till April 1. 4-1
Hillel פלט
presents
"One Woman's Fight Against Nazism"
Sunday, April 15, 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 5 8:00 p.m.
3140 Westside University of Kansas
Admission Free
Beate Klarsfeld
The Kanan apologizes for the incorrect anad run that ran for The Clean from March 9 to 11. The Clean is presently auditioning for the "River Run" season at 814-9546 for additional information.
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, STEIF NECK,
LEG PAIN? *Quality Chirurgical Care* &
ISEM. Mark Johnson 845-9368 for
collection, and Mark Johnson 845-9368
for insurance plans.
Attractive male 25 is looking for a sincere female, for a close relationship 842-986-4-1
Th- KU Sailing Club will hold informal rush Wed. April 1, 7 p.m. in the Union Parlors. Bring yourself. 4-1
**FREE VEGETARIAN LUNCH a few minutes**
walk from the Union! Mon-Fri. 11:30-3:00
924 Illinois, Apt. D. Ph. 749-5890. All you can
not eat, no strings attached!
The Harbor Lifes is happy to host the annual charity dinner for the petition. Thursday, April 2, 8-12 p.m. $150 per person. The event will be held on charity. Come watch the tournaments, bank chever and support the Douglas County Bank charity.
The KU Sailing Club would like to thank everyone who submitted entries for the log contist. Your art can be picked up at SUA. Congratulations to Laura Murray. 4-1
BOOK LOVERS. The Survener Museum Book Shop is a wonderful place where browns for your book are sold on 100 art titles, posters, postcards, notices and more over 1000 museum collections. Collection and the Art World at Museum Collections, and the Art World at Museum Collections.
Lynch, Schmitz, and Jordan. We're still drumming off about *Mickey Mount* in our first series, *enlarging the cruising Japan and breaking the law our way*. We're now at 4-1, I'm turning Japan!) the "Beach" (battle) ice cream and more ice cream—exactly what it means for us! This year California—next year!! Still grazing, Genti and Talia
4-1 courses are an anomaly. But they are a success.
Still greasin, Geni and Tana. 4-1
Jane-you are so nice. But three is a crowd.
What can I do? 8W 4-1
Annowe ever been harassed by a stray dog?
Fell me your story. Call Liz B42-4456. 4-56
Senior portrait special, studio taken with a large selection of scenic background avail-
sle. Swells Studio 749-1611 4-8
Female student wants reliable female roommate to share nice 2 bedroom apartment for next year. Call 842-5085. 4-2
MARTIN GUITARS 20%, OFE The best for
less at PRAIRIE MUSIC. 727 New Hamps-
hire 841-0817.
4-6
Urgent: Vampire Needed. If you know the whereabouts of a True Vampire, please contact m; Damien—841-1544 4-9
LMD II 'I'll bet you never thought you'd have your very own wallflower, Kisses, Z.
The deadline for acceptance of nominations for Women's Reception will be extended until April 1st. 4-2
3¢
SERVICES OFFERED
Sailing, racing, rigging, repairing, camping, creating, harnessing, commodities. All teams will all-day! all it in the KU Sailings Club! Orientation Wed, April 1, 1 p.m. Union P-41s
self service
copies
now at
ENCORE COPY
CORPS
Southern College of Art
www.southerncollegeofart.com
25th and Iowa 842-2001
Do you have a mechanic that races as well as
--that races as well as
repairs Sports Cars?
For fifteen years?
Do you have a mechanic
Tutoring Math 000-800. Phxx 100-600, Busx 368, 804, 806. Call 843-9036. If
or racing and reps
012 7905
wheel
wheel
843-7095
26th and Iowa
GARDEN TILLING, chain sawing, mowing
Jim 841-2379 4-1
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476.
I can still handle two or three additional
theses before April deadline. tf
Fast and clear typing. Call anytime 841-
6846. 3-31
842-2001
For Your Typing Odyssey
ENCORE COPY CORPS
No. 1018-Plane Phone: 442-3000
Dial
ENCORE COPY CORPS
25th and Iowa - Holiday Plaza 842-200
1234567890
Experienced typist-thesis, dissertations,
term papers, misc. IBM selective selectric.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call My...
841-4980. tt
Experienced typelist term papers, thesis
mise, electric IBM Selectric Proofreading
spelling corrected. 843-0554. Mrs Wright
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate, IBM plca elite. 842-2507 evenings at 11:00 and weekends. tt
Report, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
ranches, edition, self-correct Selective.
Call Ellen or Jeannann 841-2172. if
RESUME—RESUME—RESUME—Professional
Resume - Preparation and Printing. Entr-
copy Corp. Schools and Iowa. 842-2011. 1f
-typed wanted? Experienced technical typist can and will type anything. Call Laurel Moyer 842-8500. 4-1
Experienced typist—books, thesas, term
papers, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting
Selective. Terry evenings and weekends.
842-4754 or 843-2671. **tf**
Experienced K.U. typist IMC Correcting
S electric. Quality work. References available- Sandy, evening and weekends. 748-
9818. ff
WANTED
Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience.
Fast. Bmpr. Before 9月, p. 164-267. Ann. 5-4
Expertized typewriter to do in discussion,
thesis, etc. Call: 842-3203. 4-17
1 specialize in what you need typed! IBM Correcting Selectric 3 Debby 841-1924 5-4
GOLD, SILVER- DIAMONDS. Clam rings,
Wedding Bands, Silver Coins, Sterling, etc.
We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or
842-2686
ORDER FORM
Part time lime store clerk Must be able to work 4-7 hours a week, a week or weekend, on either two or three days of your choice Please please personality. Must guarantee at least 80% accuracy in your duties Must be very responsible and willing to do work when necessary. Must be able to follow inquiries and requests that is more than just a job Call us at (312) 686-9999 or Just a Job Call us at (312) 686-9999
2 KU girls want 2 more to share house near campus in June. Call 841-4407. 4-7
Responsible woman to share very nice 2 BR duplex, now or summer. $132.50 + ½ utilities & deposit. 749-2618. 3-31
*Toward
Corporation to Buoy Car.* Would consider
contact to Buoy Car. T.A. Will consider
8:28-12:46. 76 Chevellers S.C. or G.T.O. York by
cumulative calls to 9:30-17:30. 9:30-17:30.
Female roommates wanted. Share 5 bedroom house. 12 month lease beginning June 1. Call 841-2686 3-31
ATTENTION PSYCHOLOGISTS. Psychology
senior needs summer employment working
to gain experience in the field. Call 841-
6632
Female: roommate wanted for Jayhawk Tower Apt. $98.50/month—utilities paid.
Call 749-2489. 3-31
Male roommate to take two bed furniture home. Room is $1,500 per month post-doc. Rent paid, share electrically and/or rentals. Increased in learning Karmen or majoiting Suit Call 824-7677 or 824-4423 after 3:30 p.m. Call 824-7677 or 824-4423 after 3:30 p.m.
Part time maintenance help wanted; part time painter and odd job person. Job Applications: Saturdays, Sundays. Must be experienced for an interview between 2:30 and 4:30. 3-31
The University Daily
Female roommate for summer. $130 month.
Downtown and utilities paid, on bus route and walking distance to campus. GASLIGHT APARTMENTS 749-1287. 4-2
Roommate wanted, female immed. and/or
through summer. Nice 2 bbm. Meadow-
brook apt. on bus route. Natalie 749-2482
after 5:00.
Studios, non-smoking female to share two bedroom apartment next school year Bus to campus $90 - 1 utilities $86-2533
Responsible male roommate to share half utilities and rent of extra nice farm. 2 bdrm. One suite, bedroom with off street parking. Call 842-7488 between 2-9:00 p.m. Avail. immediately.
KANSAN
Female Roommate wanted. Two bedroom,
two floor apartment behind stadium. Call
842-6133 evenings. 4-3
SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T!
ORDER FORM
If you've got it, Kansas classified 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 cost. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write Ad Here:
Dates to Run:
RATES:
15 words or less 1 2 3 4 9
time times times times times $2.75 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25
word's .02 .03 .04 .05 .06
-
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col x 1 inch- $3.75
NAME:
NAME: ___
ADDRESS: ___
PHONE: ___
V
Page 8 University Daily Kansan, March 31, 1961
Pitching not enough as KU drops two
By ARNE GREEN Sports Writer
Kansas' baseball team got its best pitching of the season but could not overcome a weak hitting attack and some shaky late-inning fielding plays. The pair of extra-inning games to Oklahoma State.
The losses, 3-2 in nine innings and 3-0 in eight,
coupled with a split against the Cowboys
Saturday, leave the Jayhawks with a 1-3 Big
Eight record. 13-8 overall.
THE DOUBLE HEADER against the Cowbys was a make up for Sunday's games, which were rained out. A winibill with South Dakota State, where he would play, could be played so that the conference game could be played.
"The bad thing about it is to have the pitching and only win one game in the series," KU Coach Floyd Temple said. "Their pitchers put our bats to sleep and we put our bats to sleep."
KU battles managed only two hits off Cowboy pitcher Mitch Cipon in the second game, and struck out 14.
Junior lefthander Randy McIntosh, who shut
out the Cowboys on three bits through the first bit to come into some had luck in the eighth and took the loss.
"Randy had good control and he did what he had to do. 'Temple said.' He shouted out. Sullivan was quiet.
THE COWBOYS scored the game's only three runs on a single, a fielder's choice and a throwing error as they batted on the order against four Jawhawk nitchers in the eighth.
The Jayhawks gave up three hits in the inning and made two throwing errors, but it was n't all bad. The Hawks had a 3-1 win.
With a runner on first and no outs, Cowboy shortstop Bruce Kastelic tried a sacrifice bunt. McIntosh fielded it and threw to shortstop Jeff Nezuil for the force play at second. Nezuil then threw wildly to first and Kastelic went to second on the error.
Temple was upset that KU catcher Dennis Wagner didn't back up first base on the play.
"I WAS VERY disappointed in the outcome because they didn't win it, we gave it to them," he said. "If we made the backup play like we should, they would have had a runner on first
In the first game, freshman Dennis Copen, 4-0,
holds the Cowboys scoreless for five innings,
and they fell to Texas 12-6.
with one out and we would still have the force at second."
Matt Gibson came on in relief in the sixth and out汁down Oklahoma State, but the Bajawicks hit 17.
Third baseman Russ Blaylock evoked the game for KU in the bottom of the seventh with his eight home run of the season, however, and sent the game into extra innings. Blaylock added a double in the game, as he collected half of the Jaywhaws four hits in the game.
THE GAME-WINNER for Oklahoma State came in the ninth innning when designated hitter Mark Poole leed off with a double. George Chadwick then pinch ran for Poole, and scored on consecutive fly balls by Glenn Edwards and Daren Diks.
The Jayhawks host Colorado in a nonconference doubleheader at 1 p.m. tomorrow, then travel to Manhattan for conference and against Kansas State Saturday and Sunday.
Thomas leads Hoosiers to NCAA championship
Because of their patient style of play, few teams come from behind to beat the Indiana Hoosiers. One quick lead is often all the Hoosiers need to win a basketball game.
North Carolina made the fatal mistake of falling behind Indiana early in the second half of the NCAA championship last night. The result was a 63-50 Indiana victory, giving the Hoosiers the second NCAA championship in five years.
Indiana outscored North Carolina 10-2 early in the second half, including three baskets by All-American Isiah Thomas. After that, the Hoosiers played the patient passing game of Coach Bobby Knight, and added a delay game late in the game to seal the victory.
THOMAS SCORED 23 points in the game, 19 in the first half, and 22 was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.
'Thomas' second-half performance was
just too much," North Carolina Coach Dean Smith said. "Indiana's defense was very active. I don't think we played as well as we did in the previous year this year's team. Indiana was better tonight."
North Carolina was leading in the first half until Indiana's Randy Wittman hit a shot with one second left to give the Hoosiers a 27-28 halftime lead. Wittman kept Indiana in the first half, scoring eight points and forcing North Carolina out of its 13-1 zone defense.
THE HOOSIERS have now won two titles in six years. They won the championship in 1976, in a game played in Philadelphia's Spectrum, the site of last night's game.
In the consolation game, Jeff Lamp scored 25 points and Lee Raker added 21 to lead Virginia to a 78-74 victory over Louisiana State.
Back by Popular Demand at THE HAWK . . .
Natural Light
FLAIR PILSNER
A 12oz. Flair-top glass with 2 color Natural Light Label.
Nation
Light
TONIGHT ONLY
TUESDAY, MARCH 31
"FLAIR"
REFILLS:
Bud, Busch or
Natural Light
40*
abel.
LY
CH 31
of
for $1.25
to Keep!
at . . .
K
- Order a "Fairl-full" of Your Favorite Brew for $1.25
- The Glass is Yours to Keep!
- Starts at 2 p.m.
It Could Only Happen at . . .
5
THE HAWK
1340 Ohio
ELECTIONS
are being held for
BLACK STUDENT UNION offices
Date: April 1 & 2
Place: Kansas Union, Booth No.2, 4th floor
Time: 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
GET OUT AND VOTE!!!
For more information, call the BSU office 864-3984
NOW'S THE TIME
LET'S GET SERIOUS!
Funded by the Student Senate NOW'S THE TIME
Maggie's Pantry
7:30 A.M. to 8:00 P.M.
Thursdays! 8:00 P.M.
1000 Massachusetts
841-5404
BUY OR SELL
SILVER, GOLD & COINS
Class Rings
Antiques-Furniture
Boyds Coin
& Antiques
Monday-Saturday
New Hemingway
731 New Hampshire Monday-Saturday
9 am-5 pm
CASBAH DELI
Features
Submarine
Sandwich
$3.00
reg. $3.50
includes chips
& dill pickle
Thursday Night Special
5:00 - 7:30
Bring this coupon in for 1 Sub. Sand.
803 Mass.
841-0485
Cassah
Deli
Call
Call the classified department at 864-4358.
Bill Keith
SPECTRUM
Gerry Riley
Announce their GRAND OPENING.
SPECTRUM OPTICAL
Lawrence's Newest
Optical Boutique
4 E. 7th 841-1113
Buy 1 pair of eye glasses at regular price, then choose from a second frame
from special selections during our GRAND OPENING SALE. expires May 1.
OPTICAL
REMEMBER! We'll Service Your Car For Less!
National Institute for AUTOMotive
SERVICE EXCELLENCE
Ron Griffin
Service Manager
Jerry Sinovic Service Adviser
All Japanese Imports
Coupons must be presented at time of write-up.
AIR CONDITIONING TUNE-UP
TOYOTA
LAWRENCE
MAZDA
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191
$24^{95}
master change
VISA
We'll:
- check belts and hoses
- check fan clutch
- check a/c condenser
- leak test a/c system
- install (if needed) up to two (2) pts. of refrigerant
TOYOTA
LAWRENCE
MAZDA
LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842-2191
TUNE-UP SPECIAL
with coupon Includes all parts and labor — (6 cyl. engines and rotary slightly higher)
$3695 4cyl.
We'll:
We II:
• install new spark plugs
• replace points and cond. (if appl.)
• set engine to recommended manufacturer's specifications
• adjust carburetor
• inspect operation of choke
• install new fuel filter
• check all underhood fluid levels
---
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