CM 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
1 CENTIMETER = 0.3937 INCHES - 1 METER = 39.37 INCHES OR 3 2808.3 FEE T OR 1 0936 YDS - 1 INCH = 2.54 CENTIMETERS - 1 DECIMETER = 3.937 IN OR 0.328 FOOT 1 FOOT = 3.048 DECIMETERS - 1 YARD = 0.9144 METER MAYES BR
Back-to-school issue
Univeri
Kansas
Law
Kansas
The University Daily KANSAN
Thursday, August 20,1981 Vol.92,No.1 USPS 650-640
KU chancellors review past, peer into future Budig promises receptive KU administration
By PENNICRABTREE
Staff Writer
Gene A. Budig, the new KU chancellor, says his administration will avoid the criticisms of inaccessibility and aloofness that have been leveled at past KU administrations.
At his home Sunday evening, Budig outlined
for making the KU chancellorship a
highly visible
Budig, who was appointed in March by the Kansas Board of Regents, replaced Acting Chancellor Del Shankel Aug. 1. Budig will be inaugurated at Monday's 9:30 a.m. convocation in Killeen and served as acting chancellor after former Chancellor Arkhe D'yksign resigned last summer.
Dykes resigned to join a Topeka insurance firm.
"I'm not in a position to critique what's happen here in recent years, but I do know that we understand the situation."
"I've learned that faculty, staff and students are anxious to work with me. Several have told me that they've been underutilized in the past. That will change."
Budig, a 42-year-old Nebraska native, spoke confidently about his plans for the University of Kansas. A careful, methodical man, Budig spoke easily, emphasizing each idea with a precise word.
TO IMPROVE COMMUNICATION between faculty, students and the administration, Budig plans to incorporate elected faculty and student leaders into a special academic-administrative council. Budig said he would meet weekly with the council.
"This sort of thing is a new concept here, and I'm confident that it will work well," Buid said. "The council will give everyone an opportunity to become involved in the security and guarantee regular access to the chancellor."
Budget said that during the coming months he would work with the council and with his staff on budget concerns, particularly in the area of salary compensation.
"Last year, KU lost more than 55 faculty members, many of them outstanding teachers and researchers," he said. "Most left because of economic concerns. It's clear that we're losing our competitive edge because of inadequate salary compensation."
In an effort to halt the exodus of faculty, Budig said he would work to persuade the 1822 Kansas Legislature to grant a 13 percent faculty raise and to hire an additional 40 faculty members.
BUDIG, MOH MET with Gov. John Carlin and several members of the Legislature during the summer, said he was optimistic about gaining additional money for the University's faculty.
"I've worked well with legislatures in the past, and I intend to be successful here," Budig
said, "I've talked with the governor and I believe he will be helpful."
While president of West Virginia University last year, Baldogic was a 12.5 percent increase for the university's budget.
Buddy said the governor was concerned about the economy and the impact of federal reductions, and be said the state was committed to advancing higher education.
Budd said he also hoped to increase the operational fund budget to gain more money for the department and improve services.
"We have a strong academic program, but I see erosion," he said. "Our position of leadership in libraries is being challenged and our scientific community is being blunt in depicting the needs to the Legislature."
BUDIG WAS HESITANT to speak about the possible impact recent skirmishes between the Legislature and KU might have on future budget appropriations.
These skirmishes include legislative hearings concerning the controversial trip to Iran two years ago made by Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare, and recent allegations of mismanagement at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
"I prefer to look forward," Budig said, his firm. "I feel good about the University's success."
JEAN-MICHEL DERMANN
See BUDIG page 4
Gene Budig
BENNIE WILLIAMS
Shankel finds one-year chancellorship rewarding
Del Shankel
By JANE NEUFELD
Staff Writer
Staff Writer
After a year as acting chancellor, Del Shankel said that despite the time and diplomacy the job demanded, he didn't reretreat taking the position.
"Sure, I'd do it again under the same conditions," he said.
"There are some compensations in being chancellor that don't apply if you are executive vice chancellor. When you're executive vice chancellor, you own a lawn. When you're chancellor, you don't."
Shankel was named acting chancellor in August 1980 when former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes resigned to go to work for a Topek insurance firm. Gene Gudwig, former president of West Virginia University, replaced Shankel Aug. 1.
Shankel, who also is a professor of biochemistry and microbiology, had been KU's executive vice chancellor for seven years when Dykes resigned. He had planned to take a sabbatical but did not. He learned that the Kansas Board of Regents had appointed him acting chancellor. He accepted.
ALTHOUGH SHANKEL found the job rewarding, he said that acting chancellor sometimes had difficulty implementing policies and making sense of the nature because he only had temporary authority.
"I think it's always a factor, sure," he said.
"An acting position is always more difficult than if people know you're going to be there for more than one year."
"The role of acting chancellor is a little bit difficult because don't want to do things that will tie the hands of your successor in the future," Shankel said. "At the same time, you want to try to maintain the momentum of the University and not allow the feeling that the University is just
Shankel said that he tried to make decisions necessary to run the University without making decisions that his successor would disagree with and not be able to reverse.
He was satisfied that he had prevented the University from drifting this year, Shankel said.
"I feel that the University did maintain its momentum during the year," he said. "Our students are very interested in doing well. I was pleased that we established the University Festival of the Arts to demonstrate again the University's real commitment to but may be wasn't as important for a while there."
One of the things he is proudest of, Shanker said, is calming the vigorous debate over KU's decision.
DURING SHANKEL'S term, the Regents struck a controversial clause from the Regents policy on the use of campus facilities that prohibited the display of political signs at public gatherings. The Regents then allowed Regents schools to form their own policies.
The Lawrence city prosecutor dropped charges last Aug. 29 against 13 students arrested for displaying political signs at the 1980 Commencement because protesters who displayed a similar sign at Shankel's Convocation were not arrested.
Shankel refused to say whether he thought changes in the free speech policy could have been avoided.
He tried to resolve the problems that occurred during his term even though he only served for a year.
I don't think there are many unresolved
See SHAKEL use 4
Tornado, Regents vacancy top KU summer happenings
Staff Reporter
By LILLIAN DAVIS Staff Reporter
Well, everyone is back in good, old Lawrence and it is just the same as when they left last spring. Wrong. Things have changed both on campus and in Lawrence.
For instance, the K-Mart and Gaslight Village mobile home park at 31st and Iowa streets are undergoing some repairs. Both were heavily damaged when a tornado dopped down June 19, killing a KU graduate student and causing $10 million damage. Killed was Stanley Pittman, 30, a computer science graduate student from Dodge City.
five days earlier in Great Bend, 15 inches of rain fell in eight hours and caused a flash flood that covered 75 percent of the city with water and damaged over 1,000 houses and 150 businesses. Both Great Bend and Lawrence were declared disaster areas and received federal aid.
The Board of Regents, meanwhile, has undergone changes. Regents President Bernard Franklin resigned this summer to pursue career opportunities in Texas.
Franklin, 28, was the only black on the board and had been a Regent for four years. He said he did not want to spend the best years of his life as a Regent.
The Regents vacancy has not yet been filled.
MEANWHILE, the crime rate in Lawrence was only up 6.6 percent, the lowest increase of any state since 1980 at the University, in an effort to help student tensions down, the student bookstore has been remodeled. Now, buying books should be easier, cooler and
However, because of a policy change made in College Assembly last fall, some students will not be buying books at all this semester. Under the new policies, all cumulative grade point average, as well as sophomores who go below a 1.5 and upper-classmen who go below a 2.0, face a year's probation and possible dismissal. Last spring 680 students were out of, 2,200 that were originally on probation.
faster, said Steve Word, general manager of the bookstore.
Those of you who were not dismissed must pay an extra $3 fee that has been tacked on for the 1981-82 school year. Phyllis Howlett, assistant director, gives her salary and the extra funds would go to non-revenue taxes.
"We don't plan to add to any other sports." Howlett said. "The money will only help keep us
See SUMMER page 6
IN OTHER MONEY matters, the Board of Regents formulated a policy for collecting overdue fines from faculty and other university employees. The policy states that a university has the right to withhold an employee's paycheck at least year overdue employee fines totaled $88,000.
A side note to the out-of-staters: A new law in
America that is illegal to sell par-
liamentary and Kansas.
Progress is slow on the enclosed mall issue and if anyone had hopes of bringing their favorite cereal malt beverage to the first home football game, guess again. The issue of beer in Memorial Stadium has been temporarily dismissed.
SANDY WATSON AND MARY BARNARD
Moving in
Tuesday was the official moving-in day for students in KU residence halls. Rhonda Dillon, left, Kansas City, Kan., junior, gets some assistance from Tammy Stephens of Kansas City, Kan., with moving some of her clothes into a room in Lewis Hall.
JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staf
Inside Back-to-school
?
This back-to-school issue was produced by the summer and fall staffs of the Kansan. Regular publication will resume Monday, Aug. 24.
Campus
Section 2
- Four renovation projects may be done by spring 1982. . page 1
* Student fees include on-campus legal services. . page 4
* Winds of change carried athletic director. . . page 8
* KU police offer crime prevention advice. . . page 9
City
Section 3
- The Lawrence Arts Center offers workshops . . . page 6
* Federal cutbacks slow bikepaths' progress . . . page 9
* A complete guide to Lawrence bars . . . page 10
* Local retailers reap riches from annual migration . . page 12
Section 4
County
- Club provides smooth sailing for KU nautical buffs . . . page 1
* Eudora couple a bluegrass, gospel duo . . . page 4
* Burlington businessman glad to have nuclear plant . . . page 7
* The John Birch Society has a member nearby . . . page 11
Sports
Section 5
- Fambrough brimming with optimism on season ... page 1
* WSU added to 1981 football schedule ... page 3
* Gary Kempf to coach men's, women's swimming ... page 9
* Lady Jayhawks face rebuilding year ... page 11
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
On Campus
THURSDAY
A RETROSPECTIVE OF WORKS BY MIRIAM SHAPIRO: PAINTINGS FROM 1953 to 1980 will be on display from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Kress Museum of Art. The collection will be on display through Sept. 30.
KANSAN
JOSEPH PENNBELL PHOTOGRAPHS OF JUNCTION CITY, a collection of prints from the Spencer Research Library, will be on display from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the White gallery of the Spencer Museum of Art. The collection will be on display through Sept. 20.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom-684-4310
Business Office-684-4358
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 68045
USPS (865-440) Published at the University of Maryland daily August through May and Monday
Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holiday. Second-class postage paid at
Lawrence, Kansas 86545. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 an uu in Douglas County
and $15 for six months or $4 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester,
paid by mail.
Editor Summer staff Business Manager Judah Galas Marcee Jacobsen
Managing Editors Gilhassan Ed Hidock Camp Editor Gail Hidaskan Associate Editors Jane Newell Coral Beach, Jane Newell Wire Editor Marta Brink Copy Chiefs Katie Noble Brand Photographers Staff Photographers Marti Frumboff, Wendy Nagel Editorial Columnist Jawad Cawley Staff Writer Acki Mebra Staff Instr. Acta Pte. Staff Reporters Martha Brink, Tim Eliner, Marc Herfeld, Connie Shallau, Jill M. Yates, Lassor Procter, McDonald Jones, Joe Birney, Brenda Durr, Julia Sanders, Charly Todd
Retail Sales/Teamsheets Manager Natie Judd Caseman/Classified/National Sales Natiude Judd Back-to-School Coordinator Amanda Harrison Staff Artist Pam Rife Photographer Savanna Yoyokuhilai Retail Sales Representatives Sharon Bodin, David Giant, Ann Harroyd, Kate Kenwry, Mike Payne, Brett Russell, Kim Weyand Sales and Marketing Adviser John Ojewan
Editor Business Manager
Larry Faust Larry Lebergood
Managing Editor Nouveau J. Schaud
Campaign Editor Tanny Terney Katy Brussel
Editorial Editor Katy Brussel
Editorial Editor Patryk Pillay
Assistant Campus Editors Kate Pound, Gene George
Assignment Editor Cynthia L. Curie
Art Director Scott Hauler
Head Coach Chief Dunley
Wire Editors Pam Howard, Havas Herron
Entertainment Editor Rana Muller Trace Hannell
Sports Editor Rana Muller Haggettmon
Associate Sports Editor Cindy Campbell, Collisa
Makeup Editors Dan Fortel, Katy Maigh
Cygnet Bod Greenman, John Beack
Photographers Karl Jackson, Kibbary Joel Julle
Staff Artist Katy Maigh
Electrical Columnists Coral Beach, Craud Campbell, Rebecca Chance Kearl Elliot,
Vasasera Herron, Don Munady, David Henry, Brian Levenson
Kevin Heliker, Katy Maige Brad Sturt
Editorial Cartoonists Joe Bartos, John Sahlfield
Entertainment Writers Suit Lifebird
Sports Writers Jenna Stripelli, Jim Small
Staff Writers Penna Cratchree, Bob Moore, Sandra Rose
Staff Reporters Penna Alloway, Sharon Appleburn, Milda刘文燕, Jamine Gum, Liz Hope, Cynthia Henrich, Diane Makeova
Elenem Lancar, Liza Mahan, Terrace Rourton
Mike Robinson, Sara Heatherman, Diana Sheinberger, Jolye Waltz
Retail Sales Manager Terry Knoebler
Campaign Sales Manager Amy Keilall
National Sales Manager Marie Jacobs
Classified Manager Laura Menezes
Production Manager Anne Mendez
Towered Managers Elogan Egan
Staff Artist John Kang
Cartoon Photographer Melissa Rader Jake Johnson, Kelly McGarth
Retail Sales Representatives Beth Staie, Leslie Harris, Katie McGarth
Diane Thompson, Howard Shanklin, Perry Bard, Brad Lang, Jane Wendover, Sharon Boden
Campus Sales Representatives Marsha Kobe, Luc Mahnach
Sales and Marketing Adviser Trace Campbell, Lars Thewker John Obernan
Sales and Marketing Adviser... General Manager and News Adviser
A DELIGHTFUL VIEW: PICTURES AS MAPS will be on display from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the main gallery of the Kenneth Spencer Research Library. The collection will be on display through Aug. 30.
AUDITIONS for the University Theatre production of "Dracula" will begin at 7 p.m., Aug. 20-22, in the University Theater, Murphy Hall.
THE NEON MAN, an exhibit by William Shipman, will be on display from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. in the SUA Gallery of the Kansas Union. The collection will be on display through Sept. 7.
THE HILT TOP TWIRLERS SQUARE DANCE CLUB will hold an introductory square dance class at 8 Christian Ministries Center, 3240 Oread.
THE INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will sponsor a picnic beginning at 5 p.m. at Potter Lake.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE RALLY for anyone interested in the KU theatre program, will begin at 7 p.m. in the University Theatre.
A MASTER'S THESIS EXHIBIT OF FIBERS by Kate Woolstenhulme will open at 4 p.m. in the art and design gallery of the Visual Arts Building. The exhibit will be on display through Sept. 5.
Increases hit students from all sides
Students will be digging deeper into their pockets this year to enter classrooms, sleep in residence halls, and watch football games.
By SHARON APPELBAUM Staff Reporter
According to University officials, inflation and decreased state revenues are to blame.
The largest chunk taken from students' pocketbooks this year is a 22 percent increase in tuition. In-state fees are $459, an increase of $74 from last year's fees. This year's out-of-state fees add up to $1.117.
The Board of Regents, which determines student fees, approved the increase in the spring to offset a loss of $48 million in Marvin Burris. Regents budget offered.
RICHARD VON ENDE, executive secretary to the chancellor, said, "The Legislature agreed to raise the general fees by 22 percent, but it reduced the tax money by an amount equivalent to fund-a-half percent of the tuition bike."
Following Reagan's budget-cutting lead, the Kansas Legislature reduced its budget for Regents institutions, including the University of Kansas.
Although tuition went up 22 percent, schools received only an 18.5 percent increase in their general budgets.
The tuition increase is reflected in the per semester operating fund of $843 per student. Last year, students paid $280 toward that fund.
The remaining $117 of fees pay for such special programs as the bus service and $110 Hospital. This fund was raised $11.40 from last year's.
Funds raised to pay off bonds for the Satellite Union, Wesco Hall, the hospital and additions to the Kansas state where remained the same or decreased.
The price of bus passes, which was increased to $30 last year, will not be raised this year. Individual rides will still cost 35 cents.
Inflation is behind the increased cost of operating the hospital and running the Kansas Union, according to Martin Ginsburg, director of business and fiscal affairs.
A $ fee was added this year to help finance non-revenue sports such as golf and tennis.
Also included in the special funds is the student activity fee, raised from $11.10 to $14.90 University Theatre, legal services, KU Bands, the University Daily Kansan and other organizations receive funds from this fee.
Bren Abbott, student body vice president, said of the activity fee. There hasn't been an increase for services, but services have increased."
The Kansan received a $1 increase, the largest increase received by any of the organizations. Abbott said the Kansan equipment was outdated, and funds were needed to be raised over several years to buy modern facilities.
INFLATION ALSO HAS contributed to a 10 percent across-the-board increase in residence hall rates.
Mark Denke, assistant director for the office of residential programs, said rising costs in utilities, food and energy contributed to the increase.
STUDENTS ALSO WILL pay more for leisure. Season football tickets now cost $25.50. Last year's ticket cost was $19.
Residence hall costs range from
$1,162 to $1,737 for double occupancy
rooms and from $2,502 to $2,613 for
single occupancy rooms.
Susan Wachter, athletics business manager, attributed much of that increase to this year's two additional home games. She said, however, that rising prices of equipment and transportation also had boosted costs.
The cost of parking permits has increased, with student prices, amounting to $36 for green zone permits and $42 for yellow zone.
Even the price of books has risen. Steve Jewett, textbook coordinator for the Kansas Union Bookstore, said that most textbooks had increased about $1.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Shankel
From Page 1
issues left that are going to be major problems for the new chancellor," he said. "We tried to resolve as many of them as we could. We left a few so that his life wouldn't be totally dull."
However, Shankel warned that most problems would happen unexpectedly.
"Most of the major issues are not predictable until they arrive," he said.
SHANKEL HAD his share of predictable and unpredictable problems. Some of the more notable ones were allegations from several legislators that the Kansas University Medical Center was being mismanaged and had poor housekeeping; allegations from State Rep. Joseph Hoagland, R-Overland Park, that the tenure process protected two KU instructors who went to Iran during the hostage crisis while the academic semester was in progress; stories in the Kansas City Times charging that advisers at some grades for athletes were fixed; and a Kansas Legislature that allocated less money for KU than officials expected.
Of the problems he dealt with, Shankel picked
the allegations of Med Center mismanagement
in the program.
Legislators threatened to cut the Med Center budget unless administrative improvements were made. However, in April the KU Budget Subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee inspected and approved the Med Center facilities.
Shankel said that the other problems during the year didn't concern him as much because he was not a student.
FOR EXAMPLE, he said that he thought the student athlete problem had been exaggerated.
"I didn't view that as a major crisis kind of problem that we couldn't deal with." Shankel
"I think that those problems were somewhat overblood and got much more attention than they probably deserved. Every major university that I know about has some problems in the area of athletes and academics. What was perhaps overblood was to suggest that our problems were unique or greater than anybody else's concern."
Shankel did not deny that the allegations were partially true.
"There were some problems," he said. "When we discovered problems we tried very hard to correct them."
Shankel said he would report the findings of a committee that studied that problem and the action taken to solve the problems before the University Senate "sometime soon."
Shankel also said he thought the KU budget could be improved in the future.
Lower budgets are not necessarily a national trend for universities, Shankel said, citing universities in Oklahoma, Texas and Louisiana that are successful in getting the funds they requested.
"West Virginia did very well. I'm hoping that she'll bring to something here in the future," Samples told me.
Although he said retaining adequate funding for the University would be the major problem in the next few years, Shankel was optimistic about the future of higher education.
ENROLLMENT INCREASES should level off, he said, and KU could stop expanding the campus and concentrate on improving the quality of education.
"It's not a time of great growth but it is a time
that can have an opportunity to improve and
emphasize its mission."
Shankel conceded that low salaries for KU professors might have caused some damage to their careers.
However, he said he was confident that the Legislature can Kansas had supported higher education help.
"I'm optimistic. I think the Kansas economy is sound," Shankel said. "I think the state can do what it needs to do if it can be persuaded that higher education is really important."
SHANKEL PLANS to be a part of those
years as a professor, but he did not rule out the possibility of taking another administrative job.
"I haven't really decided" he said. "I think it
might be that you want to look at my life
and the impact it would have on my family."
But for the present, Shankel plans to take the sabbatical that was postponed by his appointment as acting chancellor and then return to teaching and research in the spring semester.
"I haven't ruled it out. But I'm not out looking for a job, either."
Shankel will spend six weeks in Japan starting in late September. He will present a research paper at the Third International Conference on Environmental Mutagens in Tokyo and spend a month working in a laboratory at the National Institute of Genetics in Mishima.
Budig
From Page 1
"I think the problems that were cited by the legislators last session have been resolved."
He said that the Med Center was an important part of KU and that he had an obligation to stay with the medical school.
Bud plans to spend one day a week on the Mo Center campus to work directly with the staff.
His main objectives for the medical center are to strengthen the facility's nursing program.
IN ADDITION, Budig said he would devote
much of his time to seeking new sources of money for student scholarships. He has talked to several businesses about increased support for the program.
To win support for the University's 1982 budget proposal and to reaffirm KU's position as a major state asset, Budg plans to tour all 185 counties in the year in office. so far, he has visited 68 counties.
BUDIG MADE A similar tour in West Virginia, explaining that it gave him an opportunity to meet the public.
"The public looks to the University for leadership, and we need to find out how we can better serve the public." he said.
Budid said he hoped to make at least 12 additional appearances in areas throughout the state with administrators from Kansas State University and Wichita State University.
"I'm convinced that we must be mutually supportive," he said. "Universities can be competitive, but at the same time, we must be supportive in areas like faculty compensation. That is a statewide concern in higher education, and one that we can work together on."
Budig said he was confident the University could eventually become one of the top institutions in the United States if given the proper support from lawmakers and the public.
"The chancellor can't do the job alone, but with strong assistance, I believe KU can become one of the 10 finest universities in America," he said in his goal, and I believe "it's a realistic one."
"I plan on being here for quite a while, as long as it takes to achieve my goals. I've stated the issues and the needs. Now I just need to be allowed to do my job."
Utility charges holding steady
Students returning for fall semester face increased tuition fees and housing costs, but Lawrence utility companies do the same as last year for their services.
The Kansas Power and Light Company, Ninth and Tennessee streets, requires a deposit of about $40, accruing for the next six months as director. The deposit is determined by taking twice an average monthly bill of $20.
The Lawrence public works department, Sixth and Massachusetts streets, requires a water deposit of $35, which is set by city ordinance, said Debbie VanSon of the billing department.
The deposit for gas service is based on a dwelling's past record at the Gas Depot.
Southwestern Bell, B116 W. 24th St.
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| 8 x 12 | Chocolate hi-ho | $107 | $ 85 |
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| 12 x 17.1 | Cream shag | $227 | $109 |
| 12 x 16.4 | Gold shag | $218 | $125 |
| 12 x 15.1 | Red shag | $228 | $125 |
| 12 x 16.6 | Lime plush | $274 | $125 |
| 12 x 15 | Harvest tweed | $180 | $109 |
| 12 x 12.2 | Mocha plush | $275 | $175 |
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| 12 x 14 | Blue hi-ho | $331 | $115 |
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| 12 x 10.2 | Rum hi-ho | $212 | $120 |
| 12 x 14 | Teak plush | $206 | $110 |
| 12 x 9.3 | Brown hi-ho | $163 | $85 |
| 12 x 11 | Blue plush | $174 | $110 |
| 12 x 14.4 | Camel plush | $225 | $125 |
| 12 x 10.9 | Teak plush | $193 | $95 |
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981 Page 5
Get the Lowest Prices on your Most Favorite Jeans & Tops
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Summer
And then there is yet another student favorite, the Lawrence Opera House, that will not be a part of local color for a while. The Opera house is being sold.
But, don't worry, because according to Travel and Leisure magazine, a group of small towns that has "mystery, tradition, beard and a sense of limitless possibilities."
IN ACADEMICS, the Gourman report, a privately owned university rating service, rated KU fairly high KU's undergraduate curriculum and programs were ranked 40th out of 1,744 institutions surveyed and the graduate programs were ranked 40th out of 562. Data for the survey was gathered by the institutions themselves and through private investigation.
The undergraduate architecture program in the School of Architecture and Urban Design bettered its 1977 ranking of 32 by jumping to a seven. However, the business administration program in the School of Business fell from the 10-18 range in 1977 to the 22-58 range of any program surveyed.
New additions to Lawrence include two women first flighters at 600 Mass and two women first pilots.
KU was sorry to lose one of its professors this summer. James "Tony" Gowen, director of the freshmenphomore English department, died at the age of 52. His colleagues said he would be greatly missed.
With the majority of students gone during the summer, Lawrence might have been relatively quiet. However, from mid-June to July 1, the city was invaded by noisy cicadas. The inch-long insects appear only once every 17 years to eat ravenously, lay eggs and die. This process produced an intense buzzing and roaring as the insects are and beat their wings.
Insects were not the only thing causing a flurry, however. Two high school girls attending KU's summer fine arts camp in June called their parents from Des Moines, claiming they had been kidnapped by a religious cult in Minsky's parking lot at 23rd and Iowa Streets.
They said the cult members had surrounded them, forced them into a van and taken them to Des Moines. The girls to go to Des Moines. The girls to convert them. They dumped them.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Des Moines police department and the Lawrence police department are charged in a case, but no arrests have been made.
And now one more reassuring thought for the start of the 1981 school year. This summer Lawrence, as a U.S. city with over 50,000 people, was only in the third-highest risk category in the event of a nuclear attack.
IDs to be issued next month
By JO LYNNE WALZ Staff Reporter
It has been a year since Gill Dyk,
dean of admissions and records, announced that the University of Kansas would start issuing photo identification cards. Now he says the equipment to manufacture the cards finally is here.
Plans are being made to distribute the cards sometime in September, Dock said.
Students will be charged $1.50 for a new card and $5 to replace a lost or stolen card. Dyck said that those charges would cover only the costs of the equipment, materials such as film, and worker wages.
At enrollment, new students will receive temporary white paper IDs, which will be replaced by the photo IDs in September. Duck said.
He said that the exact time and location of the card distribution had not yet been decided.
**WHEN THE CARDS are issued in September, however, a student who wants a photo ID will sign a blank card and have his picture taken. The picture and the card will then be laminated ready for immediate use by the student.**
The new IDs will be the fifth KU identification card in 15 years.
AFTER THE NEW photo IDs are issued, the old plastic IDs will still be
valid, and students will not be required to replace them. Dyck said.
However, if a student does decide to replace an old ID with a new photo ID, he will have a more positive identification card for check cashing, according to Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas Union.
"I haven't seen the new IDs," Ferguson said, "but any ID that has a photo on it is a bigger help than one that doesn't."
Ferguson said that those with temporary DIs had been asked to provide additional identification when cashing checks at the Kansas University but that they were not required to present only temporary DIs until the photo cards were distributed.
ANOTHER BENEFIT of the new cards is that they will be delivered to students faster than the old IDs were, Dyck said.
Like the old plastic IDs, the new cards will have numbered magnetic strips on the backs that will be scanned by electronic equipment and entered into the Watson Library computer every time students check out books.
Clifford H. Haka, director of circulation at Watson Library, said that if one of the credit card-type IDs were stolen, the magnetic number on that card would not go from the computer's memory so that one could check out books with it.
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THE NIN
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University Dally Kansan, August 20, 1981 Page 7
Country Club week shortened
By JANICE GUNN Staff Reporter
If KU administrators have their way, students living in residence halls at the University of Kansas can say好bye to the seven-day Country Club week.
Traditionally, Country Club week has been a full week when students flock to swimming pools during the day and to swim in the water, that week was shortened by two days.
Instead of opening on the Sunday before enrollment week like fraternities, sororites and Naisim Hall did, the on-campus halls opened Tuesday.
FRED MCELHENIE, director of residential programs, said, "I've been here since 1962, and in the fall opening has been almost always on a Sunday."
The delay was an effort on the part of administrators to shorten the time
students have to be on campus, cut operating costs and keep students from having too much free time, McElhenie said.
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"We are trying to change tradition and traditions die hard," he said. "We are trying to focus on the academic aspects, the self-development kinds of things that go along with the institution. According to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, the delay in opening the residence halls would not only cut operating costs in the halls, but also would let students make more money by working longer on their summer jobs.
"It is counterproductive for students with nothing to do," Amber said with nothing to do. "Amber said with nothing to do."
McEllenie said that some of his office's major problems, such as van- dunken and drunken and disorderly conditions, occurred during Country Club week.
IN THE PAST, most new students went through orientation in the summer when they came to pre-employ, while in the fall they completed the program was register and pay fees, Amber said.
“There has not been much of a formal orientation plan for new students in the said. “Now we are attempting to do better job in orienting new students.”
WEST ELESE/EXAMINER SHIFT
E.K. Ebienker, WAYFARHEN,
injose his daughter Linton, in Lewis
Hall Tuesday, the first day of a shortened
Council Club week.
Caryl Smith, dean of student life, said that Country Club week was an unfortunate event for the Lawrence campus.
"It gives KU a bad reputation with the Kansas Legislature, with the public, and some students don't like it if partying isn't their thing," Smith said.
But a shortening of the week created other problems for students in addition to cutting out two days to bet acquainted.
THE CHANGE from a Sunday to a Tuesday made moving for some students more difficult.
Alison Rice, Belleville, III., freshman, said she came on Sunday night and was transferred to McCollum Hall for the next two nights.
"A friend told me that all the dorms always opened on the Sunday before enrollment," she said. "It was the only one." "Well, I don't have a car and my perk work."
McEllenbie said that no matter what, the residence halls opened, it was always inconvenient for some students to move in on the opening day.
AREA BUSINESSES were less busy
students coming back two
days later.
"We had definitely less business," said Bob Timmer, manager of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. "We usually have lines at the door and Monday night we only run at full capacity for an hour," he said.
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When you open an interest-bearing checking account at LSA, you benefit two ways. For starters, the moment you open your account we'll start a complimentary savings account in your name. Number two, our interest-bearing checking accounts pay you 51% interest, compounded daily to 5.39%. We also offer two different checking account plans, including one that requires only a $300.00 minimum balance. (That's lower than any bank in Lawrence.) Only LSA offers you a free $5.00 savings account and a choice of two interest-bearing checking accounts. Come in or call us today and find out more. You'll see why it pays to check with LSA, the Spirit of Lawrence.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
QUALITY·SERVICE·DISCOUNTS
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
QUALITY·SERVICE·DISCOUNTS
Page 9
the GRAMOPHONE shop
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan; August 20, 1981
Commission approves study to consider opera house uses
By MICHAEI ROBINSON Staff Reporter
For nearly 100 years, the Lawrence Opera House has been a center for Lawrence entertainment.
since 1882, the building has provided local residents with plays, musicals, films, dance contests and, more recently, live music.
The yellow brick, four-columned building was burned and rebuilt twice, once in 1911 and again in 1930. And in the past several years, it has hosted such acts as the Police, Maynard Ferrusson and Muddy Waters.
But now, the historic building is on the auction block, and one of the area's bases of popular music for the last four years may be turned into office buildings.
TUESDAY NIGHT, the Lawrence City Commission approved the recommendation of City Manager Buford Watson and hired Design Build Massachusetts Sk., to do a financial and structural study of the Opera House.
The study will determine if the building meets city codes and will offer an estimate of the renovation costs for turning the theatre into a community
Watson said the study would cost the city from $500 to $7,500.
Mayor Marci Francisco said the money for the study was a "commitment that we think it (the theater) is a worthwhile project."
Leading the city's efforts to acquire the building and possibly renovate it for use as a community center are city candidates Barkey Clark and Gleason.
On June 16, the commission unanimously adopted a motion by Gleason to purchase a nine-month option to buy the opera house. The theater was authorized an appraisal and feasibility study on the cost of renovation.
THE MOTION was adopted after several civic groups said the former theater would make a good civic center as well as a meeting ball.
Despite the city's interest in the building, Curtis Reinhardt, general manager of the opera house, said that he has seen a marked position among prospective buyers.
He said that owner H. Skip Moon had received several offers for the opera house, which as been on sale since the beginning of the year.
However, Reinhardt said that none of the offers so far had been close to the $200,000 Moon was reportedly asked for the building and additional property.
"The owner and I are tired of being broke," Reinhardt said. "Whoever comes up with the bucks first, that's who gets it."
Moon is selling the building, Reinhardt said, because he is not making as much money as he had hoped and be- made has lost interest in the music business.
"Skip's head is not in bars and music," Reinhardt said.
Reinhardt said that he was also ready to move on.
"Personally, I'm ready to get into the music profession somewhere," he said.
The sale of the center, whenever it occurs, will be another chapter in the story.
It was originally known as the Bowersock Opera House, named after Lawrence businessman Justin D. Bower. The property is the site of a burned-down meeting hall.
Films, plays and community events were held in the building, which later
AFTER A FIRE in 1830, the building was rebuilt and renamed the Dickinson Theater.
became known as Bowersock Theater. Radio station WRGN of Topeka held a series of radio broadcasts.
In 1940, the name of the opera house again changed, this time to the Jayhawk Theater. The theater flourished until lack of parking, combined with competition with other movie houses, forced the Jayhawk to close in 1959.
But in 1960, entertainment at 645 Massachusetts was resurrected in the name of the Red Dog Inn. For the first time, the building featured live bands.
From January 1976 to January 1977, a disco named Bugsy's occupied the building. Then the present Lawrence Onera House opened.
In the early 1970s, the Ibm became the house and later the Lawrens Opera House.
Despite the fact that the building is for sale, the opera house will continue to be the opera house for at least a while longer, Reinhardt said.
Reinhardt stressed that acts had been backed for the opera house into October.
"Unit! the building is sold," he said. "It'll be business as usual."
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
SenEx examines two versions of sexual harassment policy
By LIZ HOPPE Staff Reporter
Reports of sexual harassment at universities across the country have sparked a campaign for the adoption of a sexual harassment policy affecting student-teacher relationships at the University of Kansas.
According to the Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Guidelines, unlawful sexual harassment occurs when sexual conduct affects the seeking, obtaining or keeping of a job or when sexual conduct interferes with promotions, raises or satisfactory working conditions.
KU is required by law to develop a policy on sexual fairness as it applies to employer-employee relationships.
At a University Senate Executive Committee meeting Monday, Ernest Angino, chairman, said that out of fairness to students, the University sexual harassment policy also should be reviewed. The most recent draft of KU sexual harassment policy was submitted to SenEx at the Monday meeting.
Universities that have led the way in such policy adoption include Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Rutgers University and Stanford University.
COMPLAINTS OF sexual harassment are on the rise in the nation's universities. The dismissal of one faculty member at San Jose State University in California, the suspension of another at the University of California-Berkley and the suspension of an associate professor at San Francisco university were all the result of sexual harassment cases.
The sudden publicity sexual harassment has received in recent years has been largely because of the sudden awareness that sexual abuse exists, said Joan Sherwood, assistant vice-chancellor for student affairs.
"It was a situation that wasn't addressed before because there was no label for it. It was kind of a hidden issue," Sherwood said.
Sherwood attended a Denver convention on sexual harassment that examined university sexual harassment policies, the law concerning sexual harassment and grievance procedures.
FROM THE INFORMATION
Sherwood received at the March convention and contributions from other agencies on campus, an initial draft of KU's policy was formulated. The policy was through numerous changes since then and now is being examined by SenEx.
"I think they're moving in the right direction, and I think they'll end up with a good policy." Sherwood said. "I have been pleased with the process."
The most recent draft of the proposed policy defines sexual harassment of students as "the use of the authority vested in an employee of the University by virtue of his or her position to compel a student to engage in sexual relations as a necessary condition of continued advancement, proper evaluation or other services and benefits to which the student is held in the workplace, in the employee of the University by virtue of his or her position to retaliate against a student for refusing to engage in sexual relations of said employee."
Students who have been sexually harassed according to these guidelines are advised to follow the Affirmative Action grievance procedure and to seek the services of the office of academic affairs, the office of research, graduate
students and public service and the office of student affairs.
The policy also provides that "the solicitation of sexual relations by a student at the University for the purpose of influencing an individual's performance in his or her official duties, to give them the harassment." Students engaging in such actions will be disciplined accordingly, the draft states.
PERCEIVED INFRACTIONS of sexual conduct because of social or cultural differences can be dealt with by an open, direct discussion with the person involved, according to the draft. If the situation remains unresolved, the should be brought to the attention of the person's chairperson dean, it said.
The office of Affirmative Action will investigate complaints and provide counseling for those who have been sexually harassed.
The University director of facility operations, the University director of institutional research, information systems and personnel services and the University ombudsman can also counsel those who believe they have been harassed, the proposed policy said.
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SAVE CASH ON TEXTBOOKS
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Here is an Example of the Possible Savings:
Book Purchased Jan. 1, 1981 $16.95 Less Student Dividend of 6% $ 1.01
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The Student Dividend Program enables you to receive a rebate on all your cash purchases. The current rebate for period 69 (starting Sept.1) equals 6% of your total cash purchases. Be sure to keep the envelope the cashier gives you for more details!
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University Daily Kansan; August 20, 1981
Page 13
Tuition, aid cuts deplete students' funds
By MIKE ARDIS Staff Reporter
Bill Griffith was just one of a crowd of students looking for job leads on the job
service board posted outside the office of financial aid in Strong Hall last week
The Omaha, Neb., senior wants to work 20 hours a week. This year's tuition increases, coupled with the loss of aid and the rise in other school costs,
KU named in two civil suits
By EILEEN MARKEY Staff Reporter
Two University of Kansas employees dealt KU simultaneous legal blows this summer when they filed separate lawsuits against the University.
Ed Julian, the 50-year-old director of special programs in the office of university relations, filed an age discrimination suit on July 7 in U.S. District Court in Topeka, Julian is seeking $150,000 in damages.
Two days later, John L. Weltmatter, former KU women's sports information director, filed suit in Douglas County to block the payment and reinstatement to his position.
Weltner said he was dismissed from his position without explanation in June 1980.
The University said budget cuts were the reason for the dismissal, but Weltner said he did not believe that explanation.
"We can get copies of the budget to be necessary." he said.
"Number don't lie."
Robert Fillmore, KU associate general counsel, received a 30-day extension period in which to respond to request by the University must respond by September 7.
Fillmore has until September 1 to respond to Julian's charges alleging that age was a factor in appointing 33-year-old Bob Burdick to the newly created associate director's position in the office of university relations.
According to the complaint, the creation of the position violated affirmative action guidelines because it was created without notifying employees in the university relations office.
Julian was absent on long-term sick leave between August and October 1978. The position was created in September 1982, but he never changed the change until September 1980, he said.
"It really kills," he said, shaking his head.
have made a big dent in his budget, he said.
Budget cuts, along with increases in tuition and room and board, are forcing more and more students on financial aid into the job market, said Jerry Rogerr, director of the office of student financial aid.
Students will also find themselves more dependent on sources of money from the rest of the country.
"I TOOK LIKE the student will be more dependent on himself or his parents," Rogers said. "There's going to be money, just not enough."
Cuts in the Pell Grant program, previously the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant, have sent many students to the job board.
Those most in need of jobs would have received the minimum amount, according to Donna Kempin, assistant director of student financial aid.
The grant is awarded by the federal government and is based on the student's or parent's income, the value of the parent's house, the number of housing units in the student's investments. These are fed into a formula and an index value is figured.
Students with an index value from 0 to 1,550 are awarded a grant. Those with the 0 index value get the top amount of around $2,000.
RECENT FEDERAL BUDGET legislation lowered the top index value from 1,600 to 1,550.
"Those students who have received awards should not have to worry about them."
"We're hoping that all the checks will be in, if the student turned in their Student Eligibility Report by the 13th of August." Kempiin said.
Changes in the loan programs will have the greatest effect on those students whose parents make over $30,000, as they will have to qualify for a loan. The bank also said. Before the changes, income was not a determining factor for the loans.
Other changes in the loan program involve the advantages of the program, such as the nine-month repayment grace period.
Students will have to pay a small insurance and processing fee, and the grace period before the start of repayment of the loan may range from two months to ten months, based on reduction to six months. The lowest monthly payment will change from $30 to $50.
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Those students without aid will find it difficult to get any before school starts because the financial aid office is busy checking checks to students, Rogers
"Students need to make preparations before enrollment," Rogers said. "We must make sure that our students are ready."
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Thursday, August 20, 1981
Vol. 92, No. 1 USPS 650-640
THE University Daily KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Section 2 Campus lifestyle
Renovations to be completed by Spring in four buildings
By JOE BIRNEY Staff Reporter
By the end of the 1982 spring semester, the renovation of four buildings on the Lawrence campus of the University of Kansas should be completed at a total cost of $14 million, according to Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning.
Federal and state budget cuts could delay new construction and renovation projects that are being built.
"Most projects are pretty much on schedule." Wiechert said, "and there have been no major delays or weather problems since the renovation projects take place inside the buildings."
The absence of labor strikes also helped in the construction being completed on time. Wiechcik said the only strike delay occurred when striking carpenters were unable to time the insulation of pipe in Watson Library.
THE $6.2 MILLION renovation of Watson Library is nearing its scheduled completion date of January 1982.
Work began over a year ago, and the noticeable changes include the circulation desk being moved to the third floor near the entrance, easier access to the stacks and moving the library Copying Service, along with the periodicals and microforms, to the second floor.
RENOVATION OF Flint Hall began the first week in July, and the construction work on the $49,000 project is scheduled to take 300 days, according to Wiechert.
The renovation will consist primarily of remodeling the space that was left vacant when the visual arts department moved out. The office is equipped with a personal journalism with more room and better facilities.
MARVIN HALL is the biggest question mark concerning dates of completion, according to Wiechert. He said the contractors told him that work would be completed by the time school starts, but their construction contract runs until October.
Weichert said he was hopeful that the Marvin renovation would be completed in time for architecture students to use the building this fall semester. The renovation consists mainly of areas that were used by the engineering department before it moved to Learned Hall.
A new roof has been added to Marvin along with better accessibility for handicapped people. The total cost of the Marvin Hall renovation is estimated at $2.8 million.
Non-traditional student group plugs age gap
By CONNIE SCHALLAU
However, the Non-Traditional Student Organization is not. The Non-Traditional Student Organization is open to any student who did not enroll immediately after high school graduation.
Staff Reporter
She returned to college after a 20-year absence and wanted to join a social group. Unless she wants to be a housemother, a sorority is probably out of the question.
"Anyone who had a break between college and high school, whether it was because they were married, worked, had children or were in the service, is a non-traditional student and is welcome to join our group," Carien Jupe, past NTSO president, said.
People turn to the group mainly because they feel alienated from the 18- to 22-year-olds who
"The AGE GAP is the thing that bothers most non-traditional students at first." Jupe said. "People turn to us for counseling—not professional counseling. It's just talking to people that have gone through similar experiences. That helps."
Time management is another problem that some non-traditional students face, Lora Zimmer, director of the Student Assistance Center, said.
"Being married can make time management difficult," Zimmer said. "Having children while attending school is another problem some people face."
For those students with children, the Student Assistance Center has a list of licensed day care providers.
In 1978, about 4,000 KU students were nontraditional students, or about one-sixth the total
It was in that year that the Non-Traditional Student Organization began. NTSO prints a newsletter and provides social activities for non-traditional students, for $1 a year dues.
EVERY TUESDAY AND Thursday in fall and spring, the group meets for luncheon. Sometimes they have brown bag lunch and sometimes they meet in the Kansas Union deli, Julie said.
The group can be contacted through the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, or by calling (708) 467-3535.
PARTIAL RENOVATION is being done in Lindley Hall, which houses the geology and geography-meteorology department. A new air conditioning system is part of the project.
Like Flint and Marvin, part of the work in Lindley is being done in areas where another department has moved out. The chemical engineering department moved from Lindley to Learned Hall in 1976, and the Kansas Geological Survey moved to Moore Hall in 1973.
Additional renovation projects that are being planned or proposed include a new science library, an addition to Haworth Hall, and further renovation of Spooner Hall.
RENOVATION IS BEING done to preserve Spooner Hall, the oldest building on campus. The building, built in 1894 and listed in the National Register for Historic Places, was vacated by the art museum in 1978 and now houses the Anthropology Museum.
The problem with the Spooner renovation is that the funds provided for the project came from the federal government, Wiechert said. These funds were matched with funds from the state or from private donations. The Reagan administration's budget cuts will most likely be the end of federal money for the Spooner renovation, Wiechert said.
Further funds will have to come from the state
donate donors. Thus for $222,000 has been
spent with donors in the past year.
The renovation process would include replacing a leaky roof, replacing windows and reconditioning of the exterior red Dakota sandstone that has weathered badly.
Wiechert said plans for a new science library were stalled by the 1981 Kansas Legislature. The building, to be located on West Campus, would be dormitory that is temporarily located in Malott Hall.
The library project has received no money but construction plans are already being made.
The project would create offices and laboratories for the Geological Survey and its energy-related programs.
Money was appropriated for Haworth Hall that would cover the planning expenses but the construction funds for the $14 million has not yet been received. The addition would provide for a division of the biological science department that is now in Snow Hall.
WIECHERT SAID the preliminary plans for Moore Hall, which houses the Kansas Geological Survey, are virtually completed and constructing this spring if the legislature provides the funds.
A new broadcast facility to house both KANU and JKHK on West Campus should be completed sometime in 1983 if a construction bid is made this winter. Wiechert said.
The facility would also house the Audio Reader Network radio station for visually impaired people.
The broadcast facility will cover 28,000 square feet and the estimated cost is $3.5 million.
A large building with scaffolding on its side. A person is standing on the top of the scaffold. The background is filled with trees and foliage.
A workman dumps rubble down a chute on the cast side of Watson Library, which is currently being renovated. Renovation is scheduled for completion in 1882. For more renovation photos see page 12.
WENDY NUGENT/Kansan Staff
KU CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS
1 Watson Library
2 Lindley Hall
3 Spooner Hall
4 Flint Hall
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
MISSION BUILDING
MARTI FRUMHOFF/Kansan Staff
Nichols Hall (Space Technology Center)
West Campus is a center of research for University, state and professions
By JULIA SANDERS Staff Reporter
There is more to the KU campus than meets the eye on either side of Jayhawk Boulevard.
Just west of the main campus across Iowa Street and between 15th and 23rd streets lies the appropriately named West Campus.
It is here in 10 main buildings, a greenhouse and numerous lab buildings that professionals from chemists to space engineers work in their fields.
UNLKE THE MAIN campus, little classroom instruction takes place on West Campus, which is more of a research center.
However many KU students gain practical experience in their fields as laboratory and research assistants, according to Rex C. Buchanan, director of information and education at the Kansas Geological Survey.
At the Foley Geohydrology Center, hydrologists create mathematical models of underground water-bearing localities and localities manage their water supply.
In addition, the Water Resources Division in Gleem L. Parker Hall works to collect data on surface and underground water* resources.
Energy research at the Survey is maintained for, and in cooperation with, the Kanass oil and gas industry, according to Buchanan.
Information such as maps, drillers' logs and data on wells and fields is made available on request.
"This is especially helpful for smaller companies lacking the equipment and expertise to gather necessary information," Buchanan said.
OTHER ENERGY RESEARCH involves studying mineral deposits and the possibility of economic exploitation, the possibility of new uses of common Kansas rangelands.
General land use research deals mostly with hazards created by subsurface structures, such as sinkholes. More recently, scientists have begun monitoring earthquake activity in Kansas, Buchanan said.
Even though most Kansans are unaware of any runnings beneath them, the studies began at the request of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The request was made by the NRC as an aid in avoiding possible hazards at the Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant project, Buchanan said.
In the last research category, computer geology, modern computers are used to draw detailed geological maps. According to Buchanan, the Survey is well known for its advances in computerized map making.
ANOTHER FEATURE of the West Campus area is the Space Technology Center in Nichols Hall.
The center was established in 1972 as part of a National Aeronautics and Space Administration plan to establish a research facility at the University ofarch facilities across the United States.
The KU center is the last of 27 centers built as part of NASA's $44 million investment program, according to the organization's A Space Technology Center brochure.
In the Center's lobby, the Larry Winn Jr. Congressional Space Exhibit has been on display for visitors since 1977. The exhibit includes such things as a NASA space suit, pre-packaged food used on space flights and pictures of
crews and equipment in the U.S. space orogram since 1960.
Nine separate research programs within the Center conduct studies ranging from energy research to designing a radar system to be used aboard the space shuttle during the mid-1980s.
The Center is open to the public to view its scientific and engineering equipment and the space exhibit. From 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on weekdays.
ALSO LOCATED ON West Campus are the McColum Laboratories, where pharmaceutical, physiology and cell biology research is conducted and the University Electron Microscope is housed.
In addition, fisheries labs, botanical research labs and a thermodynamics lab.
Although not affiliated with KU, the privately owned pharmaceutical corporation Interx is also located on West Campus.
President of Interx is Takeru Higuchi, KU professor and chairman of pharmaceutical chemistry.
Interex leases its property from the KU Endowment Association, which has its office building on West Campus
THE ENDOWMENT Association owns both the main and West campuses, covering more than 1,000 acres of land.
According to Jim Mathes, Facility Maintenance engineer, the main campus is about 600 acres, and West campus covers nearly 480 acres.
On the outer edges of West Campus she the Shenks Sports Complex playing fields, a reservoir used by the fisheries and the KU Printing Services building.
Campus liberalism
By TIM ELMER Staff Reporter
Liberal, leftist, civil rights and college campus crusades of the early '70s have given way to the conservative, rightist, Moral Majority and Reagan majority campaigns that advocate the political mood of today.
The consensus seems to be that liberalism is out and conservatism is in.
However, there are signs of a resurgence of interest in liberal, leftist causes on college campuses and among minorities.
"I think the issue of racism is going to become more much of a conscious issue again because people are realizing that we are taking some giant steps backward in the fight against racism," she said.
BECAUSE REAGAN's budget cuts in social services have hit minorities the hardest, the cuts represent a return to racist policies that are attracting increasing public attention, Jane Dugge, chairperson of the International Committee of the International Committee Against Racism, said recently.
One indication of increased interest in racism is an increase of ICAR's membership on college campuses where organization has been active, she said.
A couple of months ago, InCA-
staged a demonstration against the Ku Klux Klan in Meriden, Conn., said. About 123 people at a housing project in Meriden joined the demonstration. After the demon-
stration, two people at the AR in one day. That happens a lot where INCAR has been active, she said.
INCAR HAS A special connection with college campuses because it was originally founded in 1973 by college of Compass in St. Louis. Compass is compartmentalized in St. Louis.
InCAR has about 2,000 members and is striving to increase its membership to 5,000 in a couple years, she said.
"On campuses where we have faculty and students who are experienced in leadership, INCAR has grown substantially," she said.
InCAR has been active on the KU campus at different times, she said. Last winter inCAR passed out leaflets about Iranian students to deport Iranian students, she said.
IN THE SPRING of 1980, InCAR registered with the KU office of student organizations and activities. It did not renew its registration because of the absence of INCAR leadership on campus, Dugan said.
"If we could send someone to KU on a regular basis for a semester to provide the necessary leadership, I am sure you will very quickly on campus," she said.
INCAR WELCOMES members of any group, organization or political party as long as they believe in the values and work ethic to effort wipe out racism, she said.
InCAR is a multi-racial organization dedicated to fighting racism in all its economic, social, and cultural forms, Duangan said.
"We think that the unity of blacks, whites, Latinas, Asians, Mexican Americans and people or all ages are part of us," she said to the fighter against racism." she said.
"The only point of unity between INCAR and the Democratic Party or PLP is our fight against racism," she said.
However, InCAR has no political affiliation with the Democratic Party or the PLP. she said.
"We have members from the Democratic Party who vote a straight Democratic ticket," she said. "We vote for a candidate. We labor Party, which is a leftist party."
Jane Martin, Kansas City, Mo,
PLP and InCAR member, said some
members of PLP were members of
growing
"Anyone who ever attended any kind of INCAR function whether it was a dance, a party, a major demonstration or our meetings has always been pressed by our multi-racial unity," she said. "They judge us on our merits."
"That is ridiculous," Martin said. "If the Nazis heard that, they would laugh because we marched against them for party in Chicago about three years ago."
InCAR because they believed in the fight against racism.
InCAR has been the target of criticism that characterized it as a violent organization committed to the destruction of life, liberty and property, and likened it to Hitler's brown shirts.
Even though inCAR members have been threatened with death, Martin said, they continue their fight against racism.
"InCAR is the only anti-racist on the left that really believes in multi-racialism in not only defeating racism but also unifying the working class, which we also believe in." Martin said.
People who had been around left-wing parties and some members of the old Communist Party U.S.A. eliminated PLP in the early 80s, she said.
PLP IS A revolutionary communist party having the goal of establishing socialism in the United States and abroad. Martin said.
However, she said, "PLP is not affiliated with the Chinese Communist Party or any other communist party politically. We are our own party and we are not affiliated with any foreign power."
PLP is a Marxist-Leninist party which has conversations with other communist parties around the world. Discuss political theory, Martin said.
Martin said PLP did not give out information on the number of members who belonged to the party.
See related story section 4.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Page 3
Stable enrollment projected
By MARTHA BRINK
Staff Reporter
In 1965, when Beattemania was rampant and the Vietnam War raged, 13,565 students enrolled at the University of Kansas.
By the fall of 1980 enrollment had reached 24,466.
LIKE KU, most other U.S. colleges and universities have had steady enrollment increases for the past 20 years
However, many education experts nationwide declining enrollment nations
Ira Jay Winn, professor of education at California State University, Northridge, cited several reasons for the enrollment decline in the June 1980 issue of Phi Delta Kappa. These reasons included: a slowed birthrate, sharply increased costs for higher education and the absence of a draft.
Since the 1970s, education researchers have predicted this decline, but so far KU, like many universities, has continued to grow.
DAVID AMBLER, Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs, said he was not too worried about the possibility of a decline in enrollment.
"The overall quality and reputation of KU makes me fairly optimistic that KU will not have serious problems," he said.
Ambler also said KU's location near urban centers and its diverse set of academic programs were favorable factors for a stable enrollment.
Because the predictions of decline are based only on the decreasing difference between 18 and 24, Amber said he thought they might not tell the whole story.
"People who predict the decline fail to realize that since World War II a higher emphasis has been placed on higher education," he said.
Therefore, a greater percentage of the population attended college. Now they are parents and want their children to go too, he said.
THE PREDICTIONS also do not consider the larger number of women and minorities attending college,
Ambler said. This increase could offset declines in the birthrate.
One fact is certain: because of the declining birthrate, fewer students graduate from Kansas high schools.
According to Ambler, the number of high school graduates peaked in 1977 and the number has been dropping by a few thousand each year.
FACED WITH THIS decline, KU
can now be fully installed in the
kup KU is enrolled within this
department.
Linda Thompson, director of the office of admissions, said her office was focusing on recruiting in more states, and helping students already at the University.
This year KU will expand its recruitment program to include Colorado and Washington, D.C. KU chose these areas because of a large number of alumni and because many students from the out-of-state college, Thompson said.
Ambler agreed that it was important to retain the students already enrolled in (3)
The University has a responsibility to help a student attain his academic goals, he said. But he added that enrollees must be put in KU also helped keep enrollment high.
One way to remedy the attrition problem is to talk with the student who is about to leave and find out why he is dissatisfied. Often the student only needs additional financial aid, Ambler said.
KU officials are also studying what indirect factors affect whether a student stays at KU, such as the atmosphere in the residence halls, the school calendar, and more academically challenging programs.
Following the national trend, KU enrollment in the technical fields has increased significantly, Thompson said.
Business and engineering are two of the fastest growing schools.
Enrollment in the School of Business increased by 6.2 percent from fall 1979 to fall 1980, and 9.6 percent in the School of Engineering over the same period.
Enrollment in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences increased in that time 45 percent.
But the School of Business is feeling
the strain of more students, said Peter Lorenzi, director of the undergraduate program.
DURING ENROLLMENT several courses were filled quickly and had to be closed, he said. Therefore, business students are encouraged to prioritize during enrolment to business skills.
Because of growing enrollment, the School of Engineering has begun an informal policy of stricter requirements for transfer students.
The number of faculty has not increased in proportion to the increase of students, said Robert Zerkwek, assistant man of the School of Engineering.
The Engineering School plans to require a B level in math and science course.
Many state universities already have enrollment limits for Engineering School, Zerkwek said. KU is not at that point yet, but if enrollment continues to increase and funding is not increased, limits might have to be contemplated, he said.
The Engineering School's enrollment in fall is expected to increase by 5 to 10 per class.
Despite fears about declining enrollment, several schools within KU have tightened their academic standards.
THE COLLEGE OF Liberal Arts and Sciences has a probation and dismissal policy that went into effect last year. So far 569 students have been dismissed.
The School of Business has also
implemented mission requirements
and a probation policy.
Now students must have a 2.0 GPA
have completed 88 college
classes in the school.
Once admitted, a student must maintain a 2.0 GPA, or be placed on probation for the following semester. Must not raise his GPA nor raise his GPA the next semester.
"I think this will send a clear message to students about what they are expected to do." Lorenzi said.
The new policy should initially cause a decrease in the number of Business Institutions, Lorenzi said. However, in the long run applications should increase
Improvements with buildings on campus provide physically handicapped with better accessibility
By CONNIE SCHALLAU Staff Reporter
Accessible but not perfect is how Bob Turvey, associate director of the Student Assistance Center, 21 Strong Hall, described the University of Kansas' accessibility to handicapped students.
In the past few years, KU has remodeled many of its buildings to provide easier access for those students and teachers are restricted by physical handicaps.
PHYSICAL HANDICAPS are defined as interrupted or impaired major life functions, Turvey said. These include the inability to speak, write or see. It also includes people who have to use a cane, walker or wheelchair.
Turvey said that last year more than 100 students with disabilities had identified themselves to his office. He said that usually 12 to 20 students who had mobility problems attended KU each semester.
For those students who cannot easily get into a bus or a car, the University has two special lift-vans. They are part of the KU on Wheels program and are offered to students in spring 1981 semester, 15 people a day usually raned in the vans, Turvey said.
If a student has a handicap and has his own car, he can receive a handicap permit that will allow him to drive on the road or park in a special handicap parking spot.
"The KU Parking Services does one
of the best jobs for handicapped students," Turvey said. "Where there's a need for a handicap parking space, they put one right away."
TO RECEIVE A handicap parking permit, the student must first go to Watkins Hospital to have a doctor verify the need for the request. If the request is not valid, the Student Assistance Center then contacts KU Parking Services.
"If there is a reason to have a hand-dicapped permit, the Parking Services usually has one ready within 24 hours," Turvey said.
Once the student has gotten onto campus, most of the major buildings are accessible. The Kansas Union and most of the main classroom buildings have ground-level entrances, elevators and accessible restrooms.
If a student is scheduled to have a class in a building that is inaccessible, the class meeting place can be changed, Turvey said.
He said the buildings that have elevator problems are Snow Hall, the elevators in those buildings are older and have manually operated doors.
If a student finds himself unable to operate an elevator, he should contact the Student Assistance Center. An elevator operator can be assigned to that building for as long as the student needs help.
He also said that a student may be able to get into a building but find that it is not suitable.
"It is the University's responsibility to make itself accessible to all students," Tuvey said.
BESIDES CLASSROOM buildings.
three of KU's residence halls are equipped for handicapped residents. They are Joseph R. Pearson, Oliver and Ellsworth halls.
Last year, JRP had five residents confined to wheelchairs. Turvey said.
Christopher Curtis, Irving, Texas graduate study in JR, handicapped school.
"JRP worked out pretty well," Curtis said.
However, Curtis said that he has had some problems getting around campus.
It's really a problem getting from the campus to the upper part of the campus," he said.
"Going from Robinson to Strong is difficult."
He said that in some buildings he has had to go through the back door. However, a few times he has found the doors locked.
Curtis also said that some of the elevators were difficult to operate from a building.
"I HAD AN elevator assistant for a while is Strong Hall," he said. "The problem with that, however, is that you have to stick to a schedule exactly. You must be in the class to teach a teacher because then you can't keep your assistant waiting."
Duane Wenzel, professor of pharmacy, said that since he was confined to a wheelchair 10 years ago, KU had responded quickly to his needs.
One handcapped faculty member said that KU had been very responsive to the need.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
129
Legal aid comes with student fees
By JILL M. YATES Staff Reporter
A large number of KU students are unaware of the legal services available to them through the payment of student fees, according to Steve Bennett, newly elected chairman of Student Legal Services.
Bennett said that because students were not well-informed, Student Legal Services was not used as much as it could be.
“A lack of information is the main problem,” he said. “It’s not through it, but because we just aren't enough students reacher. They don't know the service exists.”
STUDENTS CAN receive legal advice once they've paid their student
fees, and are not required to pay any more money unless a lawyer represents them in court, which costs $15, Bennett said.
Student Legal Services, which is located in the Satellite Union, has two full-time attorneys who are registered and licensed members of the Kansas Bar Association, and four student interns, Bennett said.
The interns are supervised and work under the auspices of the attorneys, and therefore, all legal problems are handled by a licensed bar member, he said.
"We really have a two-fold mission," Bennett said.
The first purpose of the service is to educate students as to the preventative measures they can take to avoid legal problems, he said.
"We want students to learn the proper way to deal with legal problems in the real world. They should know the law, the pattern and also the liabilities," he said.
THE SECOND PURPOSE of the service is to correct legal problems once they have materialized and moved out of the realm of prevention, Bennett
There are limitations to the jurisdiction of the services, however.
Student Legal Services cannot assist a student in suing another student, BRIAN.
"If a legal dispute occurs between two students, we cannot defend one of them or press a claim, but we can act as an investigator if it is possible," he said.
Bennett said the negotiating was
binding only if the two parties were unaware of any negotiation, with no legal bindings to the negotiations.
STUDENT LEGAL SERVICES cannot be used to bring suit against the University or to advise in a dispute about parking problems, he said.
Bennett said that traditionally Legal Services did not handle divorce cases either, but that it would counsel on problems and their legal aspects.
*Other than those restrictions, we offer advice and consultation on any legal issues.*
The limitations of the jurisdiction of Legal Services are contained within the lawsuys of Student Legal Services, which are addressed by the Student Senate, Bennett said.
"Policy recommendations are made by the Student Legal Services board, but they are ultimately scrutinized by the Senate," he said.
STUDENT LEGAL SERVICES will draft legal documents, except for tax returns and wills, notarize documents and do legal research, he said.
Service contracts often involve auto repair cases.
Bennett said the most common problems Legal Services dealt with were landlord-tenant problems and service contracts.
For example, if a student takes his car into the shop to be fixed and is charged $100 for the work, but later discovers the car was not properly fixed, he can take the problem to Legal Services for help.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20.1981
Page 5
Outlook offers gracious setting for KU functions
By LISA PROCTOR Staff Reporter
The residence of the KU's chief administrator is aptly called the Outlook.
The roof-top walk of the chancellor's residence overlooks both the campus and the city. Much of the Kansas and valley valleys can also be seen from the main, which is located east of Blake Hal on the southeast edge of Mount Oread.
The Outlook was a private home built by J.B. and Elizabeth Watkins in 1912. Even as it was being constructed, the couple reportedly intended to be the home of KU cancellors.
J. B. Watkins, an industrialist and one of the richest men west of the Mississippi River at the turn of the century, purchased the land for the
home from Charles Robinson, Kanaa" of the leaders who helped establish KKU.
Watkins died in 1919 and Mrs. Watkins lived in the home until her death in 1939. It was bequeathed to KU and Chancellor and Mrs. Deane W. Malott were the first KU officials to move into the 26-room home the same year.
KU CHANCELLORS PREVIOUSLY lived in a wood and brick-weneer house at 14th and Louisiana streets, built in 1843. That house was demolished in 1853 so Douthart Scholarship Hall could be built.
The original chancellor's residence cost $12,000, financed by part of a $81,000 bequest in 1893 to then-chancellor William B. Spooner, a uncle-crown, Bigtoon merchant William B. Spooner. The remainder of that bequeath built the University's first
library, the present Spooner Hall Museum of Anthropology.
Mrs. Malott had little to work with to transform the Outlook into a chancellor's residence. No drapes or curtains were left in the home. A rug, a hall mirror and one couch were the only furnishings left.
The state of Kansas provided no furnishings for the home then, as it does now. Mrs. Malott had no help and no budget for entertaining, according to Carol Shankel, former Acting Chancellor Del Shankel's wife.
Mrs. Malott solved her problem, however. She let students live in the residence's basement apartment in trade for their services as gardeners, cooks, meal servers and drivers, Mrs. Shankel said.
It was during the Malotts' stay that much of the landscaping was done at
the residence and on campus, Shankei added.
Residents of the Outlook have always had a busy social calendar.
MANY UNIVERSITY functions are held at the residence, including receptions for graduates and their parents during commencement and other events, as well as members. Official University guests live hospitality at the chancellor's home.
Mortar Board initiation ceremonies and capping ceremonies for other scholarship societies are also held there. Breakfasts, lunches, brunches, teas, dinners and tours are also held in the home.
Sixty events were held at the residence during the last academic year, according to Mrs. Shankel.
Although she has not had time to finalize her social calendar Gretchen
Budig, wife of Chancellor-designate Gene Budig said she planned to hold all the traditional events.
The first floor of the Outlook is used mostly for official University entertaining. The chancellor's family lives on the second and third floors.
She will certainly have room for entertaining in the residence, which has 6,179 square feet of living area, not including the basement.
THE FIRST FLOOR consists of a dining room with a fireplace, an enclosed sun porch, a kitchen and breakfast areas. At the rear of the central hall are two powder rooms. An open stairway leads to the upper floors.
The second floor has three bedrooms, two with fireplaces, two baths, a living room with a fireplace, a study and a sun porch.
Furnishings on the second floor belong to the chancellor's family. First floor furnishings belong to the University.
The third floor has another living room, two bedrooms, two baths and a storage room. The entrance to an open air widow's walk is also located on this floor.
The basement includes a three-room apartment, storage and laundry rooms and a room for mechanical equipment.
Few changes have been made to the home, Mrs. Shankel said. The heating systems have been modernized, as have the kitchen, pantry and baths.
The sun porch was enclosed by Laurence Chalmers' stay. Powder rooms and closets were added at the rear of the main entrance hall in 1973.
CARL J. BROWN'S HOUSE, JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA.
1912 The Outlook, once the private home of J.B. and Elizabeth Watkins, is now the residence of KU's chancellors and their families. Chancellor and Mrs. Deane W. Malott were the first KU officials to move into the 26-room home in 1939. It was during the Malott's stay that the home's barren surroundings were landscaped. Photo courtesy of the University Archives.
[Image of a large white house with a flat roof, tall windows, and a covered porch surrounded by trees. The house is set against a backdrop of a curved road and streetlights.]
1981 Sixty-nine years and many chancellors later, The Outlook's lines have been softened by lush landscaping, awnings and a circular drive. A warm and inviting setting for many KU functions, the home has undergone few structural changes since its construction. The heating and cooling systems, as well as the kitchen and baths have been modernized.
MARTI FRUMHOFFIKansan Staff
Copyright 1977
The Kroger Co.
KROGER MEANS
kroger
BETTER MEAT
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DELICATESSEN
For the taste of Old Fashioned Hot Foods, a variety of meals are cooked daily and Golden Brown Fried Chicken is cooked seven days a week, for eat in or carry out. A complete line of cold salads and desserts is also available. You will find an exciting line of Gourmet Cheese both international and Domestic. For your parties we have a variety of Cheese Balls and Party Trays.
FRESH BAKERY
in our bakery we have the finest oven, imported from Sweden. We offer a large variety of fresh, oven baked bread, hard rots, sweet rolls and cookies. Beautiful cakes are decorated, just the way you like, for any special occasion.
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We have an outstanding selection of health foods, processed without preservatives. Among our selection you will find Hodgeson Mill flour and mixes, Health Valley Crackers, Westbreea Natural Wheat Spaghetti, R&F Spinach Noodles and Natural Baby Food. In our delicatessen you will find fresh ground peanut butter and Natural Snacks in the produce department.
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With over 150 varieties of fresh bulk produce, you can select the exact fruits and vegetables you want—as many or as few as you need. We receive six produce deliveries a week, as a guarantee to you that freshness and variety are No. 1 at Kroger. Our variety includes many exotic foods for your dining pleasure.
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Be sure to visit our plant and flower shoppe, choose from a wide selection of Hanging Foliage Plants, Potted Plants, Cactus, Blooming Flowers and Tropical Plants. To care for your plants we have a complete line of plant food, potting soil, flower pots and plant books.
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For your shopping convenience, we accept local, out of town, and student checks, with an approved Kroger Card 24 hours a day! Take a few minutes this week to renew or apply for your Kroger Check Cashing Card at our courtesy booth. Office hours are 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. daily. Check cashing privileges is one of the many extras for our customers.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Strong Hall offers much
By LAURA DODGE Staff Reporter
Unknown to many students, Strong Hall houses several offices that provide a variety of services for KU students.
"I think of Strong Hall as consisting of mainly math and computer science classes," Tina M. Marsden, Chesterfield. Mo. senior, said.
Like Marsden, some students may not know that offices in Strong Hall can help them in such areas as financial aid, fact-finding, study skills improvement and a number of other areas.
ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS: 128 Strong Hall, 864-9311. The major responsibility of the office of admissions and records is the admission of undergraduates to the University. The office also gives assistance with fees, identification cards, drop/add procedures and class withdrawals.
EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE AND CAREER CENTER:
218 Strong Hall, 864-3522; This center is concerned with ensuring equal treatment for KU women. Assistance for and the development of programs for the equal treatment of people are provided by the center's staff.
"We would like for the center to be a place for both men and women to learn about the concerns of women. Women especially use our resources to enhance their opportunities, politically socially, Barbara Ballard, the center's director," said.
FOREIGN STUDENT SERVICE; 125
Strong Hall Halls; 60 Education
halls; 30 Maternity halls.
social opportunities for foreign students.
MATHEMATICS CONSULTING ROOMS: 217 Strong Hall, 864-8651; Students enrolled in some basic mathematics courses can receive help for these courses from the department of mathematics consultants.
MINORITY AFFAIRS: 324 Strong Hall, 864-4351; Programs and services are offered to minority students through the office of minority affairs. Some of the services offered are counseling of academic and financial problems and help with admissions and employment applications.
RESIDENTIAL PROGRAMS: 123
Strong Hall, 864-3611; If a student is looking for a place to live, the office of residential programs is a good place to start. It offers on-campus living in residence halls or scholarship halls and has a rental listing for off-campus housing.
STUDENT ASSISTANCE CENTER:
121 Strong Hall, 844-604-6. In addition to providing information for a variety of questions, the student assistance center offers programs in such areas asademershipinorganicchemistryandalcohol use. The staff at the center listens to students' problems and gives advice or suggests another agency that can help the student. If a student needs to know how the University system can work for them, has a complaint against the institution's assistance center is available.
**STUDENT FINANCIAL AID:** 26 Strong Hall, 864-700; This office administers financial assistance to students through loans, grants,ships and help students work-study programs and helps students with their personal budgeting.
Lorna Zimmer, director of the center, described the student assistance center as a place for students to go when they had a problem they couldn't
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES: 229 Strong Hall, 864-481; the office offers information on fraternities and sororities at the University and gives information about more than 300 student organizations. It also gives assistance to established student organizations and helps newly established organizations to become established.
solve, or when their own solution didn't work.
UNITED STATES POST OFFICE:
An official U.S. post office is in the basement of Strong Hall. The post-office is open to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Additional information on the opportunities offered KU students can be found in a variety of pamphlets in the different offices in Strong Hall. The Student Handbook, which is a guide to services at KU, is given to students at summer and fall orientation. The handbook can also be obtained from the office of the vice-chancellor for student affairs, 214 Strong Hall, according to Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records.
Students can find job opportunities through the STUDENT EM-PLOMYMENT CENTER, which is also in the financial aid office. Outside the office are bulletin boards that list job opportunities both on and off campus and information about the work-study program.
MARTI FRUMHOFF/Kansan Staf
Schedule for fall semester set
BARRON
AUGUST
20 • Auditions for University Theatre fall productions.
21 * Sigma Alpha Epsilon all-campus party, S-Zone, 6-11 p.m.
- AURH all-hall party, Templin Hall, 8.p.m.-midnight.
- Auditions for University Theatre fall productions
Books are piling up in front of Joe McKown, 125 S. Park St., floor supervisor at the University Bookstore. McKown and other employees at area bookstores are ready and waiting for the arrival of KU students.
- First day of fall classes.
SEPTEMBER
24 * University Convocation and inauguration of Chancellor-designate Gene Budg, Allen Field House, 9:45 a.m.
28 • KU German Club Kaffeestunde, fourth floor, Wescoe Hall.
- First day of tall classes.
26 * Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Open House, 210 Strong Hall,
1-5 p.m.
SEE TEMBER
1 • Mini Film Festival, 300 Strong.
10 * SUA Reggae Concert, Hoch Auditorium, 8 p.m.-midnight.
12 * Minnesota Symphony, Hoch Auditorium.
- KU vs. Oregon—football.
12 * 13 * KU-Kansas State Canoe Race.
26 * KU vs. Kentucky—football (Band Day)
OCTOBER
3 • KU vs. Arkansas State—football (Parents Day).
4 * Fall Concert, University Symphony Orchestra, University Theatre.
10 * KU vs. Oklahoma State—football (Homecoming)
15-18 · "Dracula," University Theatre production, 8 p.m., Murphy Hall.
20 * Mount Oread Bicycle Club races
7:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
24 * KLUYe Kangseo football
24 • KU vs. Kansas State—football.
NOVEMBER
7 *4 • “Brigadoon,” University Theatre production, Murphy Hall.
13 • “Brigadoon,” University Theatre production, Murphy Hall.
14 • KUVs. Colorado–football
19-23 • “The Madman and the Nun,” University Theatre production, Murphy Hall.
DECEMBER
6 • Vespers, Hoch Auditorium.
Choices available to students in Lawrence for school books
By JILL M. YATES Staff Reporter
Several local bookstores carry many of the textbooks required for KU courses and will buy used texts back from students.
Every semester, KU students flock to the Kansas Union Bookstore to purchase their textbooks. There are, as well as alternatives to this traditional method.
J. Hood Bookseller, 1401 Massachusetts St., often carries books for Western Civilization and English classes, John Hood, owner, said.
Hood's has a limited selection.
HOOD SAID THE selection depended on how many books were sold back to him.
Adventure A Bookstore, 1010 Massachusetts St., can make special orders for students in addition to off-road tours. Mary Williams, store employee, said.
however, and all of the books are used. Hood said.
Williams said Adventure A Bookstore did not sell used textbooks but they would buy back used texts, depending on their condition.
The Jayhawk Book Store also buys
use texts from students, according
to his website.
ANOTHER SOURCE of new and used textbooks is the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1428 Crescent Road.
The Town Crier, 930 Massachusetts St., carries some of the required paperback books, such as classics and also has notes for Western Civilization classes, but it does not really deal in them, said Betsy Williams, store employee.
Although there are alternatives to the Kansas Union Bookstore, that store is the only one that operates on a nonprofit basis. The Union sells texts at the publishers suggested retail price and pays a 5 percent dividend at the end of each semester on all items bought there.
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ROUND CORNER DRUGS Come In- You Won't Believe It.
Round Corner is your One Stop Full Line Drug Store.
-Featuring a full line of quality. name brand natural vitamins and health foods.
-Full service pharmacy accepting student insurance with free delivery. Phone answered 24 hours a day
And at the back of the store a gourmet Cheese & Salami Shoppe featuring a large selection of foreign domestic cheeses and meats.
801 Mass.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Page 7
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Assistant athletic director was ready when challenge came
By CHRIS TODD Staff Reporter
If there is one word that describes the past nine years of Phyllis Howlett's life, it would be "transition."
In 1971, Howlett, KU's assistant athletic director, was married to the owner of a car dealership in Des Moines, Iowa, had two teenaged children and was active in many state agencies and organizations in Iowa.
Just a year later, that seemingly secure foundation slipped tragically when her husband died in an automobile accident.
SINCE THEN IT'S been a series of adjustments and transitions and promotions for her, and now as
SARA ALCANZA
assistant director at KU she is one of in that position at a major college.
The biggest adjustment, Howlett said, occurred in the weeks following her husband's death.
Phyllis Howlett
"My husband's death sort of left me at a crossroads," she said. "I found myself in the situation many housewives have nightmares about. I hadn't worked during the 17 years we were married. I had to determine what my responsibilities were to my children, to myself and to society."
When Howlett hadn't worked for pay during her marriage she had done a lot of volunteer work for the state government and in other cases itines. It proved to be invaluable to her.
"I had an enormous amount of responsibility in some of those volunteer positions," Howlett said. "I had been president of a number of state and national organizations, and it gave me an administrative background. Until I was appointed to the position of treasurer, I didn't realize how valuable the experiences were."
After five successful years at Drake,
she accepted the position she now holds.
CU as assistant athletic director.
Howie is in charge of non-revenue
sports.
THE PERIOD OF serious introspection lasted a year and a half, and in 1974, Howlett was offered the position of assistant men's athletic director at Drake University in Des Moines.
"Phyllis has one of the really difficult jobs in athletic administration," Bob Marcum, KU athletic director said. "She is a professional in every way and does a tremendous job. She is always well-prepared."
While Howlett may be prepared for the demanding activities of her current job, one thing she said she wasn't prepared for when she started her job was that she was the subtle discrimination involved in having a traditionally male-dominated field.
"I was the first woman in the country to occupy a men's athletic administration position when I was at Drake," said Howlett. "People were very guarded, they didn't want to show their shock and terror, so there was a great amount of guffawing and laughter at first."
Howlett said that when she attended her first basketball tournament, she was followed by fellow male administrators that she really did hold a high-level position.
"Everybody thought I was some body's girlfriend or wife," she said. "They had trouble taking me seriously."
THE NET RESULT of her first year of administrative duties was, as she put it, "an understanding of the career and complexities dealt with its complexities successfully."
Shortly after that first year at Drake, Iowa Gov. Robert Ray appointed Howlett to the state's Commission on the Status of Women, which explored women's issues and problems in conjunction with the state legislature.
"At first, I really didn't consider myself a feminist, but as I dealt with the issues, it became clear that I really was. It was simply unconscionable to that women were not being allowed to what their talents allowed them to do."
Although Howlett said she still felt "impassioned" about women's issues and the ERA, she said she still had some family responsibilities.
In 1979, Howlett remarried, and she has one daughter living at home, which is located in west Lawrence on the outskirts of Alvamar golf course.
In her living room, Howlett was relaxed and informal. As she perched on a couch opposite two picture windows, she discussed her relationship with her daughter Jane, a second semester junior at KU.
"One of my worst qualities is that I tend to be compulsive and I can sometimes step on people without realizing it. Because of that trait, our mother-daughter relationship was very strained at one time. Now though, she's realizing her own identity and our relationship is great."
"I get along fantastically with my mother," she said. "I felt she was dominant and stubborn a few years ago, but I've sort of grown out of that. Of her energy and drive of runs into me. It helps push me when I need it."
Jane Howlett, who is planning on a career in athletic training certification, and her staff.
AS FOR THE future, Howlett said she wanted to remain in athletics, but also that she sometimes felt that her career had gone far enough.
"There's still that nagging that says, 'Wouldn't it be fun to be the first woman athletic director of a major institution?' " said Howlett.
Americans are a people on wheels, whether the wheels be on automobiles, motorcycles, bicycles or KU students are no exception.
At the University of Kansas, all of these vehicles fall under the jurisdiction of the University Parking Services, which is located in Hoch Auditorium. Office hours are 6 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Parking Services controls traffic, issues tickets
Justice of the Parking and Traffic Court, all ex officio members. Appointed members include four faculty members from the University Senate, three faculty members and four students. The appointed members serve two and one-half terms.
Members of this board include the director of parking, the director of facilities planning and the Chief
THE PARKING SERVICES is regulated by the KU Senate Parking and Traffic Board. The Board's duties include parking at the University of Kansas Senate Code.
The Board develops policies, procedures and specific regulations for the control and management of vehicles on campus. It reports directly to the University Senate Executive Committee.
Parking Services publishes a booklet with information about parking and traffic on campus. Copies are available at registration and in the Parking Services office at other times.
TICKETS FOR PARKING violations on campus are issued by the Parking Services. City of Lawrence ordinations are in effect for moving and parking violations on city streets within the campus.
Fines for violations vary. They must be paid within 14 days of the ticket being issued or the violator faces an additional charge.
Students with outstanding fines will be unable to enroll, or obtain transcript records.
Appeals may be made for violation notices. Forms for a review are available in the Parking Services office. Requests for a review must be made before the 14th calendar day after the violation notice is issued.
Illegally parked KU students can be appealing
By JANET MURPHY
Staff Reporter
Students who get parking tickets on campus that they think are unfair can demand a review of the violation by the KU court of review.
The waiting period may be as long as eight to 18 months, he said.
THE COURT OF review of composed of law students. First-year law students serve as defense and prosecutive attorneys and second-year law students serve as judges. There are 12 judgments, divided into four panels of three judgements.
"Right now a case will not come up
anny soon than six months," he said.
David VanPansy, a second-year law student who serves as a judge, said the court's biggest problem was the backlog of cases.
The court hears 700-800 cases from September through May. VanParxs estimated that the University issued around 100 tickets each day.
TOGO BEFORE the court a student must fill out a petition with the Parking Services office in Hoch Auditorium.
Before the case is heard, the student meets with a law student who serves as a defense attorney. Together they review the facts of the case. The case is then presented to the panel of judges.
The KU traffic court is a State
court. If a student appears at the review he is sworn in. If a student does not appear, the petition is considered and decided by the three-judge panel. VanParsi said it usually took the court 25 minutes to handle each case.
IF THE STUDENT is unhappy with the court's decision he may appeal. An appeal is handled by all 12 judges. If the student is still not satisfied after the second review he may go before the KU Parking and Traffic Board.
VanParsy emphasized that the court did not make policy. That was the duty of the Parking and Traffic Board. However, the court could influence a change in policy by its authority to review the court continually threw certain kinds of tickets the Board might review that particular policy.
Lineberry calls for strong leadership
By BRENDA DURR Staff Reporter
political science professor at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill.
The office and the territory is unfamiliar, but the new dean of KU's College of Arts and Sciences, Mr. Linbery, already set some of the College's goals.
"I'll try to keep the College fiscally sound and academically solvent," Lineberry said. "It's a hard time for colleges and universities to stay solvent and to provide educational opportunities and teaching ideas."
Besides keeping the College in good financial health, he said, the College must maintain efficient and effective leadership for both the faculty and students. He said these goals could be attained through the help of the Kansas Legislature and with the statewide support of the people.
LINEBERRY BEGAN PURSUING these goals Aug. 10 when he replaced Robert Hoffmann, who had been the acting dean of the College since July 1980. Before accepting the dean's position last March, Lineberry was a
"The University is in shape intellectually and financially," Lineberry added. "I think the opportunities offered at Kansas are bolstered by the nature of the state's commitment to higher education and by the strength of the Kansas economy in this time of generally troubled economies."
Concerning KU's academics, Lineberry said he was impressed by the quality of teaching in the College's undergraduate program, which he
"The University has a strong reputation for its undergraduate programs and real strength in many of its graduate and professional programs. The position provides a unique opportunity for future intellectual growth and development," he said.
called the College's 'bread-and-butter' program.
"The kind of ideas and knowledge in a liberal arts education are extremely important in a rapid transition era like today," Lineberry said. "We're interested in a breadth, not a narrowness, in education."
Lineberry said he hoped to keep in touch with the students by teaching a political science class next spring.
"I plan to get to know as many students in as many different environments as possible." he said.
AYEAR-BY-YEAR LOOK AT WHAT ARMY ROTC ADDS TO YOUR COLLEGE EDUCATION.
ARMY ROTC:ACOLLEGE PROGRAM
THAT TEACHES LEADERSHIP?
Army ROTC is a program that helps you earn a 2nd Lieutenant's commission at the same time you earn your regular college degree.
So regard- less of your chosen major, add Army ROTC, and you'll add leadership and management training to your college education.
Training that develops you into a leader of people as well as a manager of money and resources.
Training that also provides you with up to $1,000 a year for your last two years of ROTC.
The Army ROTC Four Year Program is divided into two two-year courses: the Basic Course and the Advanced Course.
What's more during your first and second year, you incur no military obligation.
So if you're starting college soon (or if you're already enrolled) take a closer look at what Arr
ROTC will add to your college experience.
ARMY ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS.
Each year, Army ROTC awards hundreds of full-tition, four-year scholarships, which can be used at 276 colleges and universities across the country. To win one, you must apply by December of your senior year of high school.
But even after you enroll in college,you can apply for either a three- or two-year Army ROTC scholarship. Just contact the Professor of Military Science on any campus hosting Army ROTC.(Another thing. All ROTC scholarships come with a four-year active duty obligation after graduation.)
EDUCATIONS.
The Army
ROTC
Basic
Course begins
now. During
the week, along
with your
other courses,
you'll attend
Army ROTC
classes.
Your
ROTC
subjects
will
include
military history; management
principles and leadership devel-
military history; management principles and leadership development; and military customs.
courtly, and discipline. Subjects that will lay the foundation for you to become an Army officer.
ing. Like slobbing the rapids. Or rappelling a cliff. Or finding your way through unfamiliar terrain, with nothing but a map and compass to guide you. These are just a few of the challenging field activities you'll enjoy doing in Army ROTC.
ONCE A SEMESTER.
TRY SOMETHING CHALLENGING.
In Army ROTC, not all of your training takes place in the classroom. Some of it takes place in the field, too. Where you'll do something challeng-
YOUR JUNIOR SENIOR YEARS
EARN UP TO $1,000 AYFAR.
In the Advanced Course, which is usually taken in the last two years of college, your studies will include advanced management and leadership techniques. You'll earn while you learn, too. Up to $1,000 a year for your last two years of ROTC
ing
rap-
Or
way
TC.
During the summer between your junior and senior
years, you'll attend our six-week Advanced Camp. Here, you'll practice in the field the leadership principles you've learned in the classroom.
You'll be in command at least once during Advanced Camp. And you'll be responsible for leading other ROTC cadets through a number of challenging situations. The kind that will build your stamina and develop your self-confidence.
And attending our Advanced Camp doesn't cost you anything. In fact, you'll be paid for the six weeks you're away.
TAKE ARMY ROTC AND SERVE
PART TIME WITH
THE ARMY RESERVE OR
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
Now you can choose to serve on part-time duty as a 2nd Lieutenant with your nearest Army Reserve or Army National Guard unit, wherever you plan to locate after college.
It's a good chance to get started on your civilian career while you also enjoy a nice extra income of over $1600 a year for the 16 hours a
month (usually a weekend) and two weeks annual training that you serve with your unit.
GRADUATION: TWO BIG DAYS.
Army ROTC makes graduation day two big days in one. Because it's the day you receive your commission
as a second lieutenant in today's Army which also includes the Army Reserve and Army National Guard. And it's the day you receive a college degree in your chosen major.
ARMY ROTC! IT'S WORTH A LOT TO YOU IN THE MILITARY AND OUT.
More than one national leader or captain of industry started out as an Army ROTC lieutenant. So when we say your ROTC training can help with your career, we mean it. In the military. And out.
Over 70% of the commission ed second lieutenants in the active Army are ROTC graduates.
On the other hand, if you choose a civilian career, your training will
On the other if you choose a civil your training will give you the edge over the competition, because it te an employer you're bringing more than just enthusiasm to the job. You're bringing solid experience in managing people money and supplies. And this will make you a valuable commodity in today's job market.
will
edge
competi-
se it tells
ing
just
to
are
solid
in
ou
com-
That's a brief look at the Army ROTC Four-Year Program. Year by year. Step by step. From beginning to end.
If you'd like an even closer look at what Army ROTC adds.
to your college education,
Visit the Military Science Department or call Captain Claudia Akroyd at 864-3311.
ARMY ROTC. LEARN WHAT IT TAKEST TO LEAD.
SOCIOLOGY
University Daily Kansai, August 20, 1981
Page 9
Information plentiful in Lawrence
By DE DE SHELLENBERGER Staff Reporter
Perhaps one of the most perplexing problems for KU students new to the Lawrence area is deciding where to go to get answers to questions.
The University of Kansas and the city of Lawrence both offer information centers where people can call to find out just about anything.
ONE COMMONLY USED source of information is the University Information Center, 105 Strong Hall. The Information Center is open 24 hours a day to answer questions about events, rumors and schedules, said John Helyar, Lawrence junior and information center employee.
Helyar said the center received about 800 calls a day during the regular semester. He said the figure dropped to about 250 calls a day during the summer session. The calls ranged from questions about enrollment to library
About the only information the center does not give out is phone numbers. The center obtains from the University operator. The center's phone number is 864-3506.
fines to the time zone that Korea is in. Helyar said.
For students who need information about activities and organizations, the office of student organizations and activities, 220 Strong Hall, provides assistance, Art Farmer, assistant美术老师, and We do a lot of advising, assisting and programming for registered student organizations on campus."
Farmer said the office kept information about events, guidelines and rules.
THE UNIVERSITY Counseling Center, 116 Bailey Hall, offers counseling in personal, educational and career development.
"We're a general-purpose counseling center," Richard M. Rundquist, director of the center, said.
For students with legal problems there is Student Legal Services, Room 117, Satellite Union. Cynthia Woelk, supervising attorney for the program, office gave advice on most legal matters and helped students in court in landlord-tenant cases and consumer cases and helped in the preparation of legal documents.
She said Legal Services provided student representation in court cases that affected the student's status in the University.
Perhaps the oldest information source in Lawrence is headquarters, Inc., 620 Massachusetts St. Larry Carter, assistant director, said Headquarters was about 12 years old. He said it was one of the oldest assistance centers of its kind in the United States.
CARTER SAID Headquarters offered emergency short-term counseling to emergency callers or walk-in people on alcohol abuse, sexual abuse, alcohol abuse, rape and suicide.
Carter said confidentiality was important in Headquarters' counseling
"There is no worry that a staffer would go home and talk with their roommate about a call," he said. "We don't ask people to fill out any forms."
Carter said names were never removed before the center keeps. The center's phone number is 856-471-3920.
The services Carter said Headquarters volunteers referred people to were Hape Victim Support Women's Transitional Care Services and the Women's Transitional Care Services.
Carter said RVSS volunteers helped transport victims to hospitals, and police stations, and to take care of other problems the victims might have.
Heidi Stein, advocate for the Women's Transitional Care Services, said the purpose of the WTCS was to help women readjust to society after their experiences in a traumatic living situation.
She said most of the women that WTCS saw had been battered by their
husbands or boyfriends. However, some women with other problems came to this support service for help.
OFFICE HOURS VARY for the information services. Most of the campus services keep regular office hours, 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. The University Information Center and the student Health Service at Watkins Hall will be reached 24 hours a day. All the Law enforcement agencies mentioned above have a telephone that is manned 24 hours.
Office numbers are:
Office of Student Organizations and Activities-864-4861
Student Health Services----843-4455
University Counseling Center-864-
3931
Women's Transitional Care Services-841-6887
Rape Victim Support Service-841-
2345
KU crime prevention stressed
Student Legal Services----864-5665.
By CHRIS TODD Staff Reporter
To many incoming student each fall, the cost of stolen property must be added to the high cost of tuition, books and room and board, according to Jeanne Longaker, a lieutenant with the KU police community services office.
The rate of petty theft—mostly from residence hall rooms left open or from classrooms where items are left unattended—is typically high during weeks of the semester because new students need precautions. Longer said,
"Many new students, especially freshmen, don't realize that their new dorm or fraternity environments are not as safe as their own bedrooms at home," Longaker said. "They get to know people in the dorms and feel secure that nothing will be taken, but there are 400 other people in the dorm who might be interested in stereos, credit cards or cassette players."
TO PROVIDE STUDENTS with information about crime prevention, the KU Police Department will exhibit a crime prevention display at Hoch Auditorium on Aug. 20 and 21 during registration hours, Longaker said.
property students wish to register. Longaker said.
In addition, officers at the display will sell bike registrations and engrave serial numbers on bikes and other
The display, according to Longaker,
will include exhibits featuring apart-
ment computers and various
devices students can purchase. The
ward off would be attacks or rapists.
"It's really important to register bikes," Longaker said. "Since last February, 45 bicycles worth almost $8,000 have been stolen. Even if we get them back, we have no idea who they belong to if they aren't registered."
AN IMPORTANT STEP students can take to prevent crime, Longaker said, was to have their valuable possessions registered.
"If you can't make it down to the crime prevention display during registration," Longaker said, "portable engravers are always available to be borrowed from KU police. Thieves or burglar will be a lot less likely to steal property that has an identification number on it."
Longaker offered additional tips to students on crime prevention.
- Never jog or walk alone on campus during early morning or late night hours if it can be avoided. If you have stairs, curb and avoid sidewalks near shrubbery, dark doorways or other hiding places with dim lighting.
- If you live in a residence hall, always keep your door locked, even if you’re just going down the hall. Most student windows are left open or unlocked.
- Park your car at night in well-ventilated areas and doors locked and the windows closed.
your key in the mailbox or under the doormat.
- If you are just moving into an apartment, have the locks changed because previous tenants or their friends might still have keys. Don't hide
Although the number of crimes committed hadn't increased by an appreciable amount over the last couple of years, Longaker said, the KU police department had improved its crime prevention service in several ways since January.
ONE OF THE improvements, according to Longaker, was an increase in the number of lines in the Emergency Blue Phone system, a network of various locations across campus that can be used by students to report crimes.
"There have been several cases where the Blue Phones have really come in handy for students and the police department," Longaker said.
"In one case last year, a student witnessed several juveniles breaking into a vehicle in a parking lot. He immediately called on one of the Blue Phones, and they responded them and recovered three citizens band radios five minutes after the call."
Another new service that will be provided this fall, according to Longaker, will make available to students a number of Lawrence ministers for counseling during crisis situations.
"The most important thing to know about the program is that students have a mentor in the engraver said. "Then we'll call a chapain and have him or her call the student.
"We hope it will help prevent suicide attempts, and that it will help students who are having problems."
New education curriculum set
By BRENDA DURR Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Fall freshmen planning to major in education would have to spend an extra year at the University of Kansas because of the School of Education's five-year program, Dale P. Scannell, dean of the school, said last week.
The five-year program requires 182 hours to graduate, instead of the original 128 hours in the four-year program, he said. The new program would also give the students 15 hours in graduate credit along with their Bachelor of Science degree in Education, he said.
This fall's sophoromes, junior and seniors would meet the on guidelines of the School of Nursing.
SCANNELL SAID THE change was brought on by a number of factors.
Assistant professor in education.
"In teacher education, you couldn't do everything in 128 hours," he said.
"We thought it was time for a review (of the curriculum)."
He said that new state and federal laws requiring that teachers be able to instruct the handcapped in addition to declining national test scores influenced the school to change to a five-year program.
But Scannell said that the new student would offer many advantages to the program.
"They'll get more of a lot of things" he said. General education will be extensive. They will get more extensive and larger student teaching opportunities."
Noyi Bowman, also agreed that turning out a better teacher was the main advantage of the program.
"They get additional class and additional field experience," he said.
"More (colleges) are considering it all of the time, because it will result in a better product."
THE EXTRA YEAR OF school would also help students when they were looking for jobs, Scannell said.
"They'll be better qualified and highly sought after by prospective employers, but only have higher salaries than students in the four-year programs," he said.
Extra tuition and generally low teaching salaries are the main compra-
sure for many students.
"The most frequent complaint is that 'Teaching salary is so bad, why take an extra year and go into a field that doesn't pay well'" he said.
An average teaching salary is $11,000 a year, he said, but most prospective teachers won't change their major because of the low income.
"Salary doesn't affect teaching," he said. "We encourage them to enjoy that type of life," he said.
Both faculty and student response has been favorable to the program, Scannell said.
Bowman also agreed that, "Thus far,
opinions have been positive."
However, one student majoring in education said that the program would need more teachers.
"I just think the students will have to
more school and pay more." Paula
Trotta said.
She also said that more students
would go to a different school offering a four-year program, dropping the school's enrollment even more. The school's enrollment has dropped from 1,497 students in spring 1980 to 1,065 in the spring of 1981.
PATTY M. BUNKER, Kansas City.
Kan., junior, said that most students seemed divided on the issue.
But a five-year education plan may be used in more education schools in the near future, Scannell said. He said that several states and a national meeting of education teachers would discuss the five-year program this fall.
"I think it's a good idea, if the student is paid a minimum wage for student work," she said. Bunker also said she doubted the degree would give the student a higher salary.
The only other university besides KU to use the five-year program is the University of New Hampshire in Durham, N.H., Scannell said.
"The University of New Hampshire has had the five-year program for four years now, and they've been very pleased with it," he said.
Correction
The Kansan incorrectly attributed a newspaper advertisement that appeared in the Tonganoxie Mirror to Richard Fatherly, a member of the Tonganoxie John Birch Society. The advertisement was paid for by Eugene Keck, the manager of the Tonganoxie, also a member of the Tonganoxie. The error appears in a story on the John Birch Society, in section three of today's paper.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
NAVAL R.O.I.C.
ATTENTION FRESHMEN
It's not too late to apply for the Naval ROTC College Program Students can compete for National Scholarships
The NROTC Program leads to a commission in The United States Navy or Marine Corps
PH: 864-3161
Room 115 Military Science Building
PETER E. BROWN
"The Traditional Women's Clothier"
Mon-Sat 10:00 till 5:30
Thurs 10:00 till 8:30
Saddlebrook
710 Massachusetts 841-7222
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
CHURCH
WORSHIP SERVICES
Area Worship Services con't in Sports Section
F C
First Presbyterian Church
2415 W. 23rd (one block West of Iowa)
Rev. M. Paul Messineo Ph. D.
Assistant Pastor Director of Music
Rev. Benjamin Bentley
Pastor
Diane Almon
Jody Blaine
Director of Christian Education
Church School ... 9:00 & 10:30 a.m.
9. 9:00 & 10:30 a.m.
Semiinars 9:00 & 10:30 a.m.
Worship 9:00 & 10:30
Career Singles Fellowship—Sunday 6:30 p.m
Listen to "Fabric for Living" KLWN (1320 am) 9:30 Sunday A Home Church While Away From Home
College Bible Study
sunfish
2415 W. 23rd St. Lawrence
First Presbyterian Church
843-4171—For Information
Thursday at 9:00 p.m.
Fellowship Hall
A Student Run Fellowship
1631 Crescent Rd.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-0357
counseling leadership activities movies speakers mini classes services
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH, LCA
13th & New Hampshire
Hillel חי
John D. Pfeiffer, Pastor
Rachael Hanson, Associate Director
Martin Kabelle, Assisting Pastor
Special Program for College & Career
Child Care Provide Sunday mornings
Sabbath Services Friday evenings 7:30 p.m. Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Dr.
Jewish Student Organization
B-117 Kansas Union
Ellen Kort, Director
864-3948
Worship- 8:45 & 11:00 a.m.
Adult Classes- 9:50 a.m.
All Ages
KLWN Broadcast- 11:00 a.m.
KLWN Broadcast—11:00 a.m.
ST. LAWRENCE CATHOLIC CAMPUS CENTER
Steve Farney
Associate Campus Minister/
Liturgical Music Director
ST. LAW
4:45 p.m. Saturday - St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road
9:00, 10:30 and 12:00 at Saint John's Hall—across from Kansas Union
The Center is open from 8 a.m. to midnight every day for quiet study. Stop by and get acquainted. We are one block north of 15th Street off Englol Road.
Dan Smith, Minister 842-1571
Sunday Classes 9:30 a.m.
Worship Services 10:30 a.m. & 6:00 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
DAILY MASSES:
Fr. Vince Krische
Director / Campus Minute
Church of Christ 801 Kentucky 841-5040
WEEK END MASS TIMES:
Tuesday/Thursday—Chapel behind St. Lawrence Center—1631 Crescent Park—7:45 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Classes 7:30 p.m.
Monday/Wednesday/Friday—Danforth Chapel—12:30 p.m.
Director/Campus Minister
“... we make it our goal to please Him...” H Cor, 5:9
Monday thursday 7:45 a.m.
1631 Crescent Road - 7:45 a.m.
Campus
日日日
Lawrence First Church of The Nazarene
Christian
CAMPUS CHRISTIANS
CAMPUS CHRISTIANS
BIBLE STUDY AND FELLOWSHIP
Cultural School 2.15
Riley Laymon, Pastor
日日日日
Sunday School
9:45 am
Sunday School 9:45 am
C School 10:30 am
Sunday Morning 10:45 am
Tuesdays 7:30 Kansas Union Everyone welcome!
Worship Service
Fellowship
842-6592
Make this your church home
6:00 pm
for more info.
Sunday Evening
Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm
- Christ and Bible Centered. Christian Fellowship.
- 2 Blocks From Union (III6 Indiana)
- Laundry, Study, Eating, and Rec. Facilities.
CHRISTIAN HOUSING
AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THIS FALL & SUMMER
away from home.
- Separate Men's and Women's Residence.
- Newly Remodeled
CALL 842-6592
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHII
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
LW1
LW2
MUSTARD SEED FELLOWSHIP
Nick Willems, Pastor 843-1185
Worship Services (Sun.)
10:00 am & 7:00 pm
256 North Michigan
For Everyday Meetings 843-1185
Christian Science
The Study of God, and Man's Relationship to Him
The Christian Science organization Invites you to their weekly meetings on Tuesday evening Dantorf Chapel 6:30 pm
You Are Welcome At
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER
15th and Iowa
Pastors: Mark Hoelter (LC/MS) and Don Conrad (LCA, ALC, AELC)
WORSHI
843-6662
WORSHIP SERVICES - 10:30 a.m. BIBLE STUDY - 9:30 a.m.
—Meet us; at the Activities Carnival, Wednesday, August 19, at the Satellite Union
—Join us: for Volleyball and Ice Cream, Thursday, August 20,
at 7:00 p.m., at the chapel
—Worship with us: Sundays at 10:30. This Sunday, the liturgy of the Chicago Folk Service (Bible Studv at 9:30 a.m.)
—Eat with us: This Sunday, at Noon, after worship
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION
DIRECTOR
DONNA LEE
YVONNE KEEFER
ASSOCIATES
RICK CLOCK
TUESDAY-BAPTIST STUDENT
UNION 7 PM
1629 WEST 1STN
MONDAY-OPERATION FRIENDSHIP 7 PM
FRIDAY-BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP 7 PM
841-8001
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981 Page 11
Robinson Center offers fall activities including swimming, weights and gym
By JULIE GARRISON Staff Reporter
With temperatures climbing into the 90s in the summer and dropping below zero in the winter it may be hard to find a way for the indoors and jog those three miles.
KU's Robinson Center, however, owes protection from the elements and man-made weather addition to jogging, which can also be on the Allen Field House indoor track.
IT HAS BEEN one year since the $6.7 million addition to Robinson was dedicated after three years of construction. Tom Wilkerson, director of recreation services, said that KU students and faculty were using the classes to capacity in some areas,particles from the ball and Robinson addition increased the number of racquetball courts from two to 14.
The other new facilities include a swimming pool, 12 racquetball and handball courts, a weight room with Olympic and Universal weights, locker rooms, an exercise room and four new basketball courts.
INCREASED LOCKER SPACE and locker alternatives have also encouraged participation, Wilkerson said. "Prior to now you had to be one of the lucky few to have a locker and rent it all year," he said.
Now there are class lockers, which are small cubicles, and storage lockers for evenings when Robinson is open for exams by students, faculty and their families.
Students and staff are required to bring their own locks for the storage lockers, but Wilkerson said the Center plans to supply locks soon.
"I locks cost us almost $4 apiece and it
"1. we plan on doing it to $3,000, but
we plan on doing it," he said.
The locks will also be color-coded to differentiate those for recreational use from those for class use.
Wilkerson he thought students were proud of the new facilities and amenities.
"I'm extremely appreciative of the fact that they share in the responsibility, security and maintenance of the building," he said.
THEERE IS LESS VANALDISM now than in the past, Wilkerson said, but he
Basketball goals are the equipment that suffer most from the abuse of players, he said.
added that "in every population you'll have a minority who abuse things."
"I'm disappointed in our inability to convince basketball players not to dunk the ball," Wilkerson said.
The cost of replacing a goal is $50. It takes the court out of service, putting the basketball schedule behind eight innings during the basketball season, he said.
In addition to its recreational func-
tion, Robinson is used as an academic
building.
During the day Robinson is used for classes, which Wilkerson said was the building's main purpose, but in the evening the building is open for general use.
THE GYM AND WEIGHT rooms are open to all KU students and staff Monday through Friday 5 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Wednesday 5 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. and Sunday 1 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.
Open hours for the pool are Monday through Friday 6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. and weekends 2 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.
(1)
Concentration is etched on the face of Shyda Akasheh, KU student, as she works out in the weight room of Robinson Center.
WENDY NUGENT/Kansan Staff
ACME CLEANERS
WELCOME BACK JAWHAWKS
We have FREE pick-up & delivery service, no minimum amount required.
Call 843-5155
3 Convenient Locations
Downtown 1109 Mass.
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Malls Shopping Center
Service is an important part of our business.
---
As a Raleigh dealer, we don't just sell bicycles, we service them, too. We think it's important that you stay as happy with your bicycle as you were the day you bought it. And we're in business to make sure you do
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
Franchised Dealer For
FUJI TREK-KHS PUZN
RALPH AUSTER DANIEL
We Service All Bikes
Bicycle
841-6642
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Shape Up With Alvamar Nautilus Club's Back-to-School Offer
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NALVAMAR
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A LUNCH PARK & A CLUB
Alvamar Nautilus Club
4120 Clinton Parkway West of Kasold on 23rd Upper Level Alvamar Racquet and Swim Club
Page 12 University Dally Kansan, August 20, 1981
DANIEL W. LEE
WENDY NUGENT/Kansan Staff
12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
WENDY NUGENT/Kansan Stift
Working behind Lindley Hall, construction workers Gail Sage, left, and Ken Doud, right, load a crane while K.L. Beach, center, operates the controls.
'Tan Man' a familiar sight to students on KU's campus
By JILL M. YATES Staff Reporter
Perched on the cement bench, unshaven and dressed only in a pair of loose, ragged shorts, he whiles away the hours of the day.
His small frame, dark and splotchy from too much time spent in the burning sun, crouches down on the bench.
He fidgets out of nervousness, or perhaps out of boredom, and he is seemingly obvious to the endless flow of students walking to and from Wescoe Hall.
AN OLD, DELAPIDATED bike is parked nearby, with a pair of worn-out leather shoes stuffed with socks set underneath.
KU students from past years stream by him without changing expression. He is merely a part of the scenery.
New students, unfamiliar with the surroundings, stare curiously at the small man and whisper.
John Schneider said he was proud to be the "Tan Man."
Schneider acquired the name "Tan Man," from his regular sunbathing in front of Wescoe Hall.
But he is proud of his popularity, which gives him a place among KU students, even if it is a recognition born out of oddity.
Schneider, 38, speaks rarely, but his
He sits for hours soaking up the rays, whether it is summer or winter. He said he just liked the sun.
voice is gentle and has an obvious Midwestern accent.
SCHNEIDER, ORIGINALLY from Wichita, has lived in Lawrence for 14 years.
He said he had three younger brothers and one younger sister in Wichita.
Schneider went to high school in Augusta but has never attended college, although he said he had considered it.
"I don't really know what I'd study, I never decided." Schneider said.
Students here agreed that the Tan Man does not bother anyone. Some who have talked with him say he is friendly and will talk back to them. Otherwise, he just stood and stared off into space, they said.
"When I ride my bike, I meet a lot of people," Schneider said. "The people on the Hill are friendly, but the others in the area are getting more and more unfriendly."
Schneider, said he, remembered the apple movement," but took no part in it.
ALTHOUGH HE SPENDS a great deal of time just sitting in the sun, Schneider has ambitions of going to California some day.
Schneider said he would like to live in the southern part of the desert, such as Death Valley, because he said people were nicer there.
'The present government is communist, in a way," Schneider said. "I"2 want such freedom as the government claims.
He said he believed the quality of human beings was deteriorating and attributed this to the spread of communism.
But for Schneider, this poses no great threat.
"I don't consider this my home,
be aide, I consider heaven here,"
Schneider said he felt he was a religious man. He said he attended a Catholic church and had strong belief in the Bible.
DURING THE EVENINGS, after the sun has gone down, Schneider works at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
He works in the environmental
urgency areas, said Steve Miller, supervisee.
"John is such a conscientious worker. We never have to worry about whether his work will be done," Miller said.
Schneider works by himself, according to Miller, and takes great pride in the work he does.
"He is always to work on time and leaves on time. We can always count on John, unlike some employees. I don't know if he got if he sick one day," Miller said.
Miller said that everyone at the hospital liked Schneider.
"It's good he works here in the evening, though, and that there are no windows here. Otherwise, all he'd want to do is go out in the sun," Miller said.
Schneider, who admitted he loved the man, said he did not give up his title of a professor. "I was so ashamed," she
"I'tan in the winter, too," he said "I sit behind Robinson Gymnasium in front of the blower. The warm air keeps me from being cold."
Taste the High Country
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Page 14 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Watkins serves health needs
By SUZANNE MATHEY Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas' new student health record program is designed to prepare students for future medical treatment, according to Martin Wolmann, director of health services at Watkins Memorial Hospital.
Wollmann said the health record program which began Aug. 17 and continues through Aug. 21, consists of a three-step process.
A medical record serves as a future reference to a student's medical history and the treatments in memory of them in case of emergency. Wollmann said.
THIS PROCESS INCLUDES establishing a medical record, administering a tuberculosis test and holding a case between the two persons and a physician.
"The TB test is a painless skin test that is given as a preventive public health measure," he said.
Wollmann said that all KU students
were required to have a TB test. However, he said there was no hold on medical care if the student hadn't had the test.
"Our first responsibility is to care for the sick," he said.
BASIC SERVICES at Watkins Hospital are included in the student health fee, which is part of the tuition payment.
Some of the services included in the student health fee are: examinations; chemical, blood and bacteriological lab tests; one-hour physical therapy visits per academic year; four mental therapy visits per lifetime; and routine immunizations.
OTHER SERVICES that are available but are not covered by the fee are: X-rays, hospital rooms, hospitalization of students, lab tests that are sent to other places for evaluation and medications.
If a student is unable to pay at the time or forgets his KU ID, care and support are needed. The students are requested to at least know their KU ID number, Wollmann said.
If a student requires additional care or specialized outside service, consultations and referrals are available upon request, Wollmann sid.
Services of the Watkins pharmacy
include prescription items and a
few orthopedic devices.
*Retailers are more concerned with the turning of the dollar and buy in smaller amounts.*
PRESCRIPTION DRUGS are available to students at a cost lower than retail prices, because the drug is taken slowly and the turnover rate of medication is greater. John M. Baughman, acting director of the Watkins药店, said.
The pharmacy hours are from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
OUTPATIENT CARE at Watkins is available from 8 a.m.-11 a.m. and 2 p.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and 8 a.m.-11 a.m. Saturdays.
Services are available 24 hours a day for people requiring emergency care. There is no extra charge for emergency service.
Landlords, tenants should first read lease to resolve any possible disputes
(This article is one of a semester-long series conceived and prepared by the KU Student Legal Services staff. The series, which will appear weekly, is designed to demonstrate typical legal problems encountered in service and intended to serve as substitutes for individual legal advice applicable to particular similar factual situation. Students with similar problems or in need of specific advice are encouraged to seek assistance from the Legal Aid Service and Satellite Unicef, Legal Aid, 106 Green Hall, or a private attorney of their choice.)
Kingston is the only son of a mythical Kansas family from Overland Park. He is 18 years old and enrolled at the University of Kansas for the first time this year.
KINGSTON DID FIND a one-bedroom duplex at 1818 Tangled, for which he signed a one-year lease. The apartment Quasling, showed him the apartment.
In July, Kingston came to Lawrence to find an apartment to live in during the 1981-82 school year. His older sister had lived in Lawrence for several years and had warned him that locating a place to live was difficult if you waited too long. By July, the market was already tight.
In the apartment, there was moldy carpeting infested with mushrooms. Quisling promised to do something
about the carpeting, and also to repair a loose electrical wire hanging dangerously overhead in the living room.
When Kingston moved his belongings Aug. 15, he discovered 'his carpeting had been ripped out but not replaced. The electrical wire was still not fixed and half of the electrical outlets were not working.
Quisling said that he was not obliged to fix anything in the apartment unless it was written in the lease. He said that Kingston could not repair his apartment and take the cost of repairing it out of his rent because of a Kansas law. Quisling said the lease stated that no oral promises were binding.
WHEN KINGSTON threatened to move out, Quisling told him that he would first have to give him 30 days notice.
Any interpretation of a landlord-tenant dispute involves looking at the lease, which is the agreement between the landlord and the signifying the terms of the rental contract.
AUTHOR'S NOTE:
Unfortunately the bargain between Kingston and Quisling may not have been what the lease reflected. Kingston's preference for dry carpet, while acknowledged by his landlord, was only a preference and not made as a contingency for renting the apartment. Because of the nature of the
exchange between Kingston and Quisling, it would be difficult to later show that Kingston had even expected him to do this. He rely on him to do it prior to the tenancy.
A LANDLORD DOES have to deliver an apartment which is reasonably safe and clean, though Kingston has a legal right to demand and should get the repairs on the electric system. However, once again, the demand for these things must meet severe legal tests.
Briefly, Kingston must give written notice to the landlord to either repair within 14 days or allow the tenant to leave 30 days after the next rent-paying date. Thus, if Kingston gave Quisling the notice before Sept. 1, and Quisling had made no effort to do anything in two weeks, Kingston could move out October 1 since 30 days would have passed from the rent-paying date.
Kingston may not repair or replace anything in the apartment and deduct costs from his rent. If self-help groups are available in Kansas as a matter of law,
This is not an easy question, even with the statutes, since other theories and strategies may actually result in a faster solution. However, under the law, Kingston is bound to allow his lease to remain on the leaves—without the liability or paying rent for the remainder of his lease and losing his security deposit.
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CHAPTER 4
HYPOTHESIS TESTS
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reg. 10.97
• 7 Heat Settings
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Shower Thongs
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DOORBUSTERS
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reg. 10.97
• 7 Heat Settings
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Shower Thongs
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• men's and ladies sizes
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A
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Page 15
Lines of University authority flow from governance system
By MARTHA BRINK Staff Reporter
Students may believe that professors stand at the pinnacle of University authority because they wield the almighty power of the grade.
However, the authority in KU's governance is the ultimate authority in KU's governance.
The Board of Regents consists of eight Kansasans who are appointed by Gov. Carlin and approved by the Kansas Legislature. They have authority for all of the four-year public institutions of higher education in the state.
Next in the line of University authority is the chancellor. Subordinate to the chancellor are the Faculty Senate and the Student Senate. The University Council consists of the chancellor, vice chancellors, vice chancellors, and members of the Faculty and Student Senates.
The Faculty Senate and University Senate each have councils consisting of members elected from the greater governing bodies.
The University, Faculty and Student Senates also have executive committees.
The Faculty Senate is made up of the chancellor, executive vice chancellor, vice chancellors and all faculty members.
The Faculty Senate deals with faculty rights, research, scholarly publications and admission and transfer requirements.
According to Janice Zink, graduate assistant to the executive vice chancellor, the Faculty Senate rarely meets. Most business is conducted by the members elected to the Faculty Council.
Faculty Council consists of 39 members from the Faculty Senate, the chancellor and executive vice chancellor.
The Student Senate is composed of the student body president and vice president, elected representatives from various University living groups and off-campus housing, and representative members of three special Universi- ties, and three special representatives. The special representatives are elected from the previous Senate.
The Student Senate has authority to deal with such issues as student rights, student organizations and activities, student publications and student housing.
Elections for the Student Senate are held on the Wednesday and Thursday before Thanksgiving. The winners take office immediately.
Last November the number of senators was cut from 130 to 65 in order
to make it easier to establish a quorum. Fifty percent of the senators must be present at a meeting for a quorum.
The Student Senate encourages participation from all students, Bren Abbott, Student Senate vice president said.
"We encourage people to sign up one of the eight standing committees."
The Student Senate committees are open to all KU students, but are also composed of student senators. They cover such topics as academic affairs, cultural affairs, sports and student services
The Student Senate is funded entirely from student activity fees. The fees were increased this semester from $11.10 to $14.50.
Groups funded by the student activity fee include various non-political student organizations, the KU bus service and the University Theatre.
Activity fees also cover paid student Senate positions. The president of the student body is paid $250 a month and the vice president receives $200. The Student Senate also has four part-time employees, a secretary, executive secretary, administrative assistant and treasurer.
The Student Senate office is in the
building on the south side of the building
through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
UNIVERSITY GOVERNANCE
Board of Regents
Chancellor
SenEx
FacEx
StudEx
University Council
University Council committees
Faculty Council
University Senate
Student Senate
Faculty Senate
University boards
University Senate committees
Student Senate committees
Faculty Senate committees
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Page 16 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
FOOD BARN
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YOU SAVE! OR WE PAY!!
HOW THE DOUBLE CASH REBATE WORKS
Buy at least 25 different items at Food Barn. Save your cash register tapes, then check the total against the prices you would pay for the same items during the week at any other food store.* If the other store's total is lower, make a list of each item and its price, then return with the price list and your register tape to the Food Barn where you made your purchase. We'll rebate to you, in cash, DOUBLE THE DIFFERENCE. That's the Food Barn Double Cash Rebate. With confidence we say...Shop at Food Barn for a whole lot more for your shopping dollar!
Thursday, August 20, 1981 Vol. 92, No. 1 USPS 650-640
THE University Daily KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Section 3 City lifestyle
Lawrence native recalls past
Editor's note: Mrs. Aldrich's family has informed the Kansan that on July 20 Jeanneette Aldrich suffered a mild stroke and was hospitalized.
Staff Reporter
By MARC HERZFELD Staff Reporter
The books propped up on the couch along the wall show glossy photographs of places Jeanette H. Aldrich has visited: Pormpei, Rome, Cairo and Athens.
But in her hands are reminders that she cannot travel as she once did; a carved bamboo cane from Tokyo in her left hand and a small bottle of nitrogycerin pills in her right.
AFTER TRAVELING three times around the world in the last 28 years, Aldrich had settled in New York.
"I feel that I have traveled full circle now." Aldrich said. "Living in the Eldridge House is some small compensation for not being able to walk very well."
Aldrich's grandfather, Robert Gaston Elliott, lived in the Eldridge House, Seventh and Massachusetts streets, during the 1860s. Elliott was the editor of Lawrence's first newspaper, The Free State, and he selected Mount Oread as the site for the University of Kansas, Aldrich said.
"Grandfather of a philosopher, and he
was a temple to knowledge on a bill," she said.
ALDRICH ATTENDED KU herself during
wife's visit and she said students were differ-
ent when at work.
"Ladies wore hats in class and out," she said.
"Of course, our dresses were much longer and the mud was much deeper."
Blue jeans, now standard campus attire, were seldom use in KU students.
"They were jeans to clean out the stable. Blue jeans were called overalls and they were considered farm clothes," Aldrich said.
Entertainment at KU was different from current student diversions, Aldrich said.
"Some of the students did dance, but it was a little frowned on," she said.
Drinking, at least among the students Aldrich knew, was almost non-existent. Aldrich said that the churches in town formed a large part of most students' social lives.
"Of course, if we had the price, we bought season tickets and attended baseball games," she said.
ALDRICH REMEMBERED the Lawrence
GOLDFIELD musical's main
place for both culture and entertainment.
"I remember going there with my father when I was five or six years old," she said. "When I came home that night, I told my mother I wanted to be an Opera House lady when I grew up.
"There was a vaudeville show, with singing and dancing, although very discreet dance, not too loud."
Aldrich said that the Opera house scared her. "It was a perfect firetrap—just a great big woman."
The Bowersock Theatre, as the Opera House was then called, did burn down in 1911, the same year that a tornado tore through downtown Lawrence, near Aldrich's home.
"It noticed the color of the sky—it was a yellow
no yellow I had ever seen—it looked
poisonous."
"There was an incredible noise, and every wowl in the house was sucked out from the outside."
"If we had been out in the street, the telephone wires would have chosen us to roistermeat.
That 1911 tornado killed three Lawrence residents, and in addition to damage caused to Lawrence buildings, blew out windows and ripped a tradpoor off the roof of Old Haworth Hall, on the site of the present Wescoe Hall, on the KU campus.
ALDRICH LEFT Lawrence after her 1919 graduation to teach English at high schools in Hutchinson, Boise, Idaho and Portland, Ore.
She married a young Portland Lady, Bertin Aldrich, in 1928. Both Aldrich and her husband were members of the NAACP.
"We had always planned to do a little traveling, but then the Depression came along and kept us pretty much tied to Oregon," she said.
Her husband died in 1854, and Aldrich returned to Lawrence to care for her parents. She noticed changes from the town she had left behind 30 years before.
"The greatest change has been the spreading of the stores into outlying areas, and the general deterrence."
After her parents died in 1962, Aldrich started
her career as a world traveler, using Lawrence as her home base.
She had long wanted to sail around the world, but she said she felt a need to look after her parents before she left Lawrence.
ONCE SHE WAS IN EUROPE, Aldrich rekindled her interest in languages, especially German. She studied at the Goethe Institute in Germany and the now tutors friends who want to learn German.
Aldrich fulfilled her dream of visiting Athens, on a hill her grandfather had loved but had new friends.
Her last trip, a Mediterranean cruise she took three years ago, left Aldrich with a bad impression of modern packaged tours.
"I had only half a day to spend on the island of Credit, when 10 days is not really enough," she said.
"I traveled when travel was gracious, and when the waiters had time to pick up a spoon when you dropped it."
NOW, ALDRICH cannot travel because of her health, and because of her falling eyesight, she is unable to write letters to people she met on her travels.
However, she said her main regret was her last of appreciation for her father while he was alive.
Her father, Samuel Elliott, was a Lawrence postman who never made much money but always kept his family of six children well-fed and entertained, she said.
Aldrich received her first taste of travel when her father took the entire family camping. Even the family cow accompanied them to supply fresh milk.
Her father loved giving fireworks shows on the Fourth of July, Aldrich said. She said she still remembered her father saying after a show, "There's 25 cents gone to blazes."
"I was watching the stars and I remember
that she glay they wouldn't go out like the
fingerprints."
Aldrich, now 86 years old, remains independent in spite of her walking difficulty. One friend, Betty Allen, 340 N. Michigan St., said that Aldrich hadt to ask for favors.
Allen said, "I asked her whether she needed any groceries, and she said, 'Just bring me six'."
Philip Bohlander, left, and Robert Pierce, discuss what to do next in the renovation of a house on Ohio Street. The house is one of several older homes being renovated in the Oread Neighborhood. See renovation story on page 4.
Lawrence lifestyle map
A. Lawrence City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets
B. The Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets
C. The Beer Garden, 1344 Tenn. St.
D. Bogart's of Lawrence, 611 Vermont St.
E. Bottoms Up, 715 Massachusetts street.
F. The Congo Bar, 520 N. Third St.
G. The Greek's Sports Desk, 2000 W. 23rd St.
H. Green's Keg Shoppe and Tavern, 810 W. 23rd St.
I. The Harbour Lites, 1031 Massachusetts街.
J. Ichabod's Inc., RFD 3
K. The Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St.
L. Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St.
M. Louise's Bar, 1009 Massachusetts街.
N. Louise's West, 1307 W. Seventh St.
O. Mike's Pub, 1717 W. Sixth St.
P. Mr. Bill's, 201 W. Eighth St.
Q. Suds-N-Duds, 2120 W. 25th St.
R. Van Lee Valken No. 6, 1830 W. Sixth St.
S. The Hawk's Crossing, 12th and Jayhawk Blvd.
T. The Wagon Wheel, 507 W. 14th St.
U. The West Coast Saloon, 2222 Iowa St.
V. Time Out, 2408 Iowa St.
Editor's Note: See related stories on pages, six, eight and 10.
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6th Street
9th St.
12th St.
15th St.
Tenn. St.
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IOWA St.
CLINTON
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Page 2
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Mayor brings new image to job
By TIM ELMER
Staff Reporter
Outside and inside, the white, weather-beaten house of Lawrence Mayor Marci Francisco is a picture of striking contrasts.
Located on the northeast corner of 11th and Ohio streets, the small, two-story Victorian house must have been a source of great pride for its late 1800s owner. Now it seems tired, burdened with countless coats of caked on paint.
THE ROOF ON the west is new and light brown. The screened-in porches on the first and second stories sag with the rooftops. They are covered with an assortment of weeds.
The roof on the east is old and dark green. The open porches on the first and second stories appear to be structurally thin. The grass is green and cleanly cut.
On the inside, new refinished golden oak floors sparkle with a deep richness. The other parts of the interior are deteriorated.
"About two weeks ago I remember being very depressed because of my house," Francisco said. "Look at this sheetrock tape. When they put the tape on, it was torn and shifted down and the paper crinkled in the corners. I just lust it off."
"And like this room, all the plaster came off when it was rewired and insulated. And then I go to the kitchen and there is a crack and I sort of start fearing for my life but I have to do something about it but then I have to do something about it because I have totally destrored it."
Like her house, Francisco is a picture of striking contrasts.
DRESSED IN SOILED blue jeans, a dark orange-colored T-shirt and sandals she sat in an orange director's chair and talked about being the mayor.
She said that although she was the mayor of Lawrence, she wasn't what many people expected a mayor to be.
"For some reason I don't think people expected the mayor to be as young as I am," Francisco said. "They didn't expect the mayor to be a 'her.' They don't expect her to be single, and they don't expect her to have dipsiping on the Fourth of July. I don't think that is what they expected of their mayor."
She really didn't know what people thought about her personally, she said.
"Possibly they think I have a little bit crazy, that I talk too fast. I suppose most of the world thinks that I must do drugs. Most of my friends don't do drugs. That isn't, that I don't, but I think that is part of people's image of me."
Francisco said that she had gotten high one time several years ago.
"THERE WAS THIS concert in Kansas City. Everyone felt you had to get high when you went to a concert. Well, all I can remember are the lights at intermission. I was so mad because that was the only time I had been in Kansas City since we a concert. I missed out on the concert, and I thought, what was the use."
At times she still can't believe she is the mayor, Francisco said.
"I am still surprised when I read that I must be framed" Francisco, I think, that can't be me.
Francisco, 31, is the youngest mayor in the history of Lawrence. She has been a member of the city commission since April 10, 1979 and she was elected mayor last April. Her great-grandmother was mayor of Lawrence from 1914 to 1918.
Francisco - said she _hadn't - ever planned to seek the position of mayor.
"I didn't say, 'here is what I want to do.' I didn't plan to be in politics. I sort of just ended up doing this and here I am. I have enjoyed it."
Francisco said she couldn't say who her supporters really were.
"I think it was a strange coalition of
originally became interested in architecture, she said, because she liked to work with her hands and the cut-and-insert design projects designed for design projects allowed her to do that.
"I have always seen a contrast between teaching and doing, and I still find myself torn between them," she said.
Francisco is a dynamo of activity. She seldom sits doing nothing, she said
She was cutting matting for a picture frame while she was talking and was constantly getting up from her chair to look for the various items she needed.
"I am always active," she said. "I am a little upset with myself now because I knew you were coming so I should have had something here to do while I was talking to you. Friends tell me to 'sit down'!"
She got up and brought back her book of sketches. It was half-filled with sketches of houses, churches and architectural detail.
Francisco said she liked to sew for rentation. She also finds sketching for rentation.
SHE LIKES TO drink beer, she said. She works at the Hawk's Crossing each
' . . . . I don't think people expected the mayor to be as young as I am. They didn't expect the mayor to be a her. . . . to go out skinny-dipping.'
bicycle riding and senior citizens that put me in office. It is really hard to know for sure. Older people were saying 'she is too young, but she comes from such a good family.' I heard that one a few times."
FRANCISCO IS AN avid bicyclist. In 1978 she and a friend cycleled 2,000 miles to California. She rides her bike in the countryside. She has no driver's license.
"Everybody was sort of going to college," she said. "My parents said I didn't like it, I could quit. We had a real fight because I didn't want to go to school in the first place, and I kept trying to and they kept saying, 'oh my gosh.'"
Francisco went to Machelale College in St. Paul, Minn. for two semesters but completed her degree in architectural design at the University of Kansas.
SHE TEACHES IN the School of Architecture and Urban Design. She
She said people thought she shouldn't be working there.
Francisco grew up in Priaire Village. Her father is an orthopedic surgeon. Her mother has a degree in art history. Her father has a brother and a sister. Althanus brought him and go to college. Francisco said his parents encouraged her to do so.
Wednesday night as bartender, which she said she thoroughly enjoyed.
"I got a letter from this one guy signed, 'In Sorrow.' He said I was setting such a bad example for people because I was drinking beer. There are people who do it and of what everyone else is doing and therefore think it is unreasonable."
She said everyone has to deal with the uncertainty that is often involved in making choices in one's life.
THE TIMES SHE has been caught making apparently contradictory statements to different people concluding that she was the most foolish, she said.
Aware of how the public sometimes reacts to her private life, Francisco was somewhat reluctant to answer personal questions.
Being involved with the city commission, however, has made her less irritable.
"I definitely have had these images of myself being foolish," she said.
"You know that whatever you say is going to be repeated," she said. "You sort of watch a little more carefully what you say. You are not so apt to say the first thing that comes to mind because if someone else talks to you about a problem, you may get a different view of the situation. You may have to back off from what you have just said and I try to avoid that."
"We all have to make choices," she said. "I mean, look at this house. You have to make choices whether you want a nice floor or whether the walls should be fixed and about how much you can afford to do. People are always making those choices for themselves. How do you make those choices for the city?"
When asked if she was affectionate,
she instantly said yes. She did not
elicitely.
Because she is the mayor, it is her responsibility to make hard decisions, she said.
"It's having to admit to yourself that you do have a responsibility to make decisions," she said. "So even though it is hard at times, I guess I can accept that."
THE DECISION-MAKING responsibilities concerning city management are shared ones, she said. The mayor has given her more power than the commissioners.
To make herself more accessible to the public, she said, she became the first woman in Manhattan to
“There is nothing you can do by yourself,” she said. “There is very little to do as mayor except to talk to people, and there does tend to get quoted more often.”
Francisco said there were several goals she hoped to achieve as mayor. She would like to see a review of the zoning in town. She would like to get a strong commitment for downtown development and establish a more reasonable procedure for mission meetings as getting the commission agenda published earlier.
SHE IS OPTIMISTIC about the future.
"I think I have an optimistic attitude toward life. I am very scared about some of the things we seem to be getting ourselves into, such as nuclear power, but I haven't given up. I feel changes can be made."
About her own life, she said, "I am lucky. I have a nice life. I have good friends in Lawrence and Lawrence is my favorite person on running into them wherever you so."
She liked being independent, Fran-
cielle said. She could, she could do
whatvghe wanted.
Francisco said she was not against the idea of marriage.
"I don't plan not to get married," she said. "I am not worried about not being married."
However, she said, "my mother, would love it."
C. J. RICHARDSON
MARTI FRUMHOFF/Kansan Staf
Mayor Marci Francisco
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Page 3
Opposition, animosity plague Mayor Marci Francisco's job
By TIM ELMER Staff Reporter
Some commissioners of the previous Lawrence City Commission, Mayor Marci Francisco said, reacted to her opinions with animosity and opposed him as mayor last March because they felt commissioners did not reflect community support.
"I am sure there was animosity directed at me from the commissioners of the old commission," Francisco said. "They treated me as someone who did not have any community support. One thing they kept saying was that there were just a few people who were behind me and not the whole community."
The problem was that the majority of people the commissioners always talked about, she said, never came to the commission meetings.
"WE HAD MEETINGS where everyone who came would speak in agreement with me," she said. "But there was a strong feeling among the commissioners that my supporters were just a few people making noise, and if they would just be quiet, the rest of us could get on with our business."
The firm position she took on the controversial issue about the Bryan Anderson building may have increased her respect to Clark's respect for her opinions, she said.
Bryan Anderson owned a large brick, historic building at 6th and Massachusetts streets, Francisco said. Anderson had a toy factory inside the building. The commissioners decided to make way for parking lots, she said.
Francisco said she had strongly opposed tearing down the building for a number of reasons.
"ONE REASON WAS the price we were paying for the building was ridiculous," she said. "Also, the building was in perfectly good shape. We could have built parking lots in other places, such as putting a second story on city hall. There was definitely a real fight about that building."
Clark later agreed that the decision to down the building has been a mistake.
"Barkely tried to say that the commissioners had made one large mistake that building," she said. "I am not sure that was the only mistake they made."
Another mistake she thought the commissioners had made, she said, was to zone the lot on either side of 23rd Street for residential development.
commercial use," she said. "Now you have lots that are too small for reasonable use as commercial property."
That was a mistake and there have been others, she said.
"No one wanted to live on the highway so all of a sudden it got zoned for
A TIME WHEN the commissioners were happy they had listened to her was when she had strongly favored bringing her to downtown development plans, she said.
The commissioners believed they didn't need a consultant. They thought they could make the decisions without a consultant, they were very pleased, she said.
"I was very supportive of having a consultant come in," Francisco said. "I talked about it for three or four months and had fights with Barkley Clark. He ended up making the suggestion to get a consultant when it was adopted at the commission meeting, but that was due to my saying I was not going to show up
that she is something different than she has been," Binns said.
Francisco carried petitions against the city wanting to teal down the Bryan Airport.
"She signed petitions against the city and I still can't see someone like that being mayor of Lawrence, Kansas," he said.
Also opposing her candidacy as
chairman of the board, Bob
Schumm former commissioner.
"When Bob Schumm was asked, we were true that he didn't want Marci to be mayor, he said, 'I can't deny that,'" Francisco said.
Binns said he also would continue to disfavor having Gleason and Shontz on the commission until they had proved they could make reasonable decisions.
Schumm said he didn't feel that he was in the position to say anything about it. He said the job was one of his duties.
'...Don said that the city was going to fall apart if Tom Gleason and Nancy Shontz were elected...that Tom, Nancy and I were a very unreasonable coalition of people.'
at the commission meetings until they did something about a consultant."
EVEN THOUGH SHE felt that many of the positions she had taken on controversial issues facing the commission eventually proved to be correct, Francisco said, Commissioner Don Binns and former Commissioner Bob Schumm still opposed her candidacy for mover.
"One problem was that Don said the city was going to fall apart if Tom Gleason and Nancy Shontz were elected as commissioners," she said. "Don said that Tom, Nancy and I were a very unreasonable coalition of people. Even after the election, he did not make any conciliatory remarks."
Francisco said that she had been sympathetic to social programs such as supporting Women's Transitional Care Services, a shelter for women who have been injured. She had been perceived by some commissioners as being liberal.
"Tom Gleason, Nancy Shontz and I were all labeled as liberal because we all knew each other and had worked together before." Francisco said.
Binns said he, in fact, had opposed the measure. Shontz and Franchet to the commission.
"I STILL OPPOSE the idea of Marci being mayor and I probably will continue to be opposed to it until she proves
sound like sour grapes because he had lost his bid for re-election.
HOWEVER, CHUMM SAID, "At the time of the election, I had my opinion that I would rather have seen a different person become mayor. But now Marci is mayor, and as far as I am concerned, it is dead issue."
When she was elected mayor in April, Francisco said, she thought Clark may have changed his mind about the community and support she had from the community.
"I think Barkley may have seen a change in the base of my support," she said. "In my selection as mayor, he may have felt that there was a significant group of people who really did support me."
Francisco said, in some ways, it was difficult adjusting to being mayor.
"It is a hard job to find out about," she said. "For example, being mayor is not a full-time job, but people expect you to understand how the sanitation department works and what the names of all the people are who work there."
She spent about 20 hours each week attending to her responsibilities as mayor, she said. The realization that she had always been her by surprise sometimes, she said.
"I am still surprised when I read
the letter from Francisco," he said.
"I think that is the truth."
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Lawrence Parks and Recreation Office. City Hall: 841-7722
Lawrence has three recreation centers to help serve the community's needs. South Park Center, located in South Park, will have two meeting rooms, TV stations, pool and ping pong tables, restrooms and office. A number of Parks and Cenres classes and activities are offered in this center as well as senior adult activities.
The Community Building, 115 West W11th, was renovated in 1974 with revenue sharing money. The air-conditioned center provided meeting rooms, gymnasium, an inward-air-acquaintance court, fitness room, art room, washing room and more facilities. The center also provides scheduled and activities. Please check at the center for time schedules.
RECREATION CENTERS
The East Lawrence Center is located at 15th and Brook Street. A multi-purpose gymnasium is available for a wide variety of activities as well as a fitness center.
All three centers are available for room reservations until 10:00 p.m. by calling the center two weeks in advance.
The registration for fall classes will begin Monday, September 14th
at 8:00 p.m. at the Community Building, 115 West Hill,Registration will
begin on Wednesday, September 22nd.
A complete breakout of class activities with description, tee and meeting materials, and a detailed program for the retreat. These brochures will be available at the retreat centers and CIC Hall.
p.m. Most classes are for eight weeks and start the week of September 21st.
Classroom - Gymnastics + Carreras + Ceramics + Grants
Classroom - Winter Sports + Dance + Boys & Girls
Classroom - Music + Silversmithing + Balllet + Creative Movement + Jazz
Exercise - Modern Dances + Exercise Exercise + Men's Physical Fitness + Bridge
Volleyball—Men and Women
SPORTS LEAGUES
A power baseball organizational meeting will be held at the Community Building Monday, September 7th. 7:00 p.m. Deadlines for entry is September 1st. The play will begin in October and November.
The indoor pool on the high school campus, 1958 and Louisiana, is open for public swim two nights a week as well at Saturday and Sunday afternoon. Learn about the pool in the evening with enrollment at the high school pool. A complete time schedule for all indoor activities will be available in the tail brochure.
MUNICIPAL POOL—8th and Kentucky
Co-ed Volleyball
The Municipal Post will be open daily from 13:00-9:00 until September 7th. Admission is $10 for those 15 and over and $5 for those 14 and under.
The organizational meeting will be held Tuesday, December 1st at the Community Building at 7:00 p.m. Entry deadline will be January 4th with league start in early January.
The Special Populations program of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department provides year-round recreational and leisure activities for development, recreation and sport; begins at age 2 and continues through the senior ault years. A variety of programs cover cultural and performing arts, athletics, day and summer programs.
Special Populations Program
The organizational meeting will be held at the Community Building Wednesday, September 23rd at 7:00 p.m. Lakes play will start in November and continue through February.
Fall Arts and Craft Festival
September 13, 1981 (Rain Day Sept. 20)
SOUTH PARK—LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Basketball—Men and Women
Everyone Invited to Participate Display Your Special Talents Demonstrations Are Encouraged
Parks and Facilities
campst. Programs may be co-sponsored with outside agencies and are set up for special groups upon request.
A sampling of programs would include: bowling league, coffeehouse, piano lessons, art classes, movement exploration, scouts, Jayces, Special Olympics and athletic teams. In total, 50 programs are conducted for the special populations. For further information, one may call the Community Building, 843-7122.
For Information Call:
Community Building
843-7122
East Lawrence Center
841-7758
The Community Building, immediately north of South Park and entered from 11th Street was completely
For More Information Call:
Kathy Fode - South Park Center
841-7777
South Park Center
841-7777
Indoor Pool
841-2091
1) MARTY PARK
2) FROEFE LLEY PARK
3) LUDUUM PARK
4) DUCKPARD PARK
5) PERRY PARK
6) TOWER PARK
7) LOUIE HOLCOME PARK &
8) RAIMINH LEY PARK
9) ROUND PARK
10) WOODY PARK
11) BOWDY PARK
12) LYONNE STREET PARK
13) LYONNE PARK
14) CONVENT PARK
15) ROMINGTON PARK
16) CENTRAL PARK
17) WATKINE PARK
18) WATKINE AREA &
MUNICIPAL BALL DIAMOND
19) MUNICIPAL BALL DIAMOND
COMMUNITY BUILDING
20) PARNELL PARK
21) PARNELL PARK
22) EAST LAWRENCE CENTER
23) PARK HILL PARK
24) BROKEN ARROW PARK
841-7777
Bouffalo Park center, open and staffed year round, has meetings room, TV rooms, staffing pool, ring conference room, laundry facilities, sponsored classes and activities are offered in this center as well as adult activities through the Pleasure Club.
Lawrence's Lawyer Park is located on Massachusetts Street in the heart of Newbury business district and includes a large office complex with lighted home offices on the west side and a courtyard with pool facilities. Full-Floor, bell-fired, pool-facing and South Park office space.
NEIGHBORHOOD PARKS
This 7 acre park at 13th and Brook has play equipment, picnic area, open space and parking.
CENTRAL PARK AND LAWRENCE MUSEUM POOL
Tennessee and Birmingham, both located in
Tennessee and Birmingham, both located in
stored pool which is in operation from Memorial Day to Labor Day. The pool is a 200-gallon pool, and bathhouse equipped with copier operated vacuums.
The park has an original Sac Fein Jacobson as part of the play area, basketball court, volleyball standards, paddle boats, girls and water. During the winter months, the lake is flooded for the park's climate. CLINTON PARK
Adjacent to Penbrook School and entered from 5th Street, this 3 park has a group kitchen and roomspa area, picnic tables, fireplace, and water Park facilities, continue
SOUTH PARK - SOUTH PARK CENTER
This 10 acre school park site at Protection Boulevard andArrowhead Street has 2 high mountains courts and multiple泊面 court, play area, picnic shelter, ball field, pool, swimming and water fountain.
FONDWOOD PARK
Several parks featuring 5 acres are located in this neighborhood. The target area, entered from Uetman State provides a multi-use court, play and gym area. Two additional courts provide open areas and some play equipment.
Entered from Maple Lane north of 19th Street, this eight-acre park has a basketball field, ball field, play area, housekeeping court and grove ground. It is located in 1979 where the new East Lawrence Neighborhood Center opened early in 1978. It houses a small gym, games room and meeting space.
Located at 7th and Lyndsburgh is a 10 arc basketball court, with a grass court, basketball area and principal theater. Future development in 1979 included a second ball diamond, ten courts, restrooms, and other park improvements.
Approximately two acres on Delaware between 10th and 11th streets has a lighted diamond facility and 11th street has a flood-control basement. bequest will improve the area in 1979 with shelter, playground, court, play areas, walkways, and land scaping.
HOBBS RECREATION AREA AND MUNICIPAL STATION
TOMMY CONSTANT PARK
renewed in 1974 with a revenue sharing money. Now the air conditioned room provides meetings rooms, gymnasium and recreational facilities for court courses in the community] formal room, art room, lion ring, waiting room, game room and kitchen for public use.
Admission of land along Bish Street between the new bridge and Trench Street has been made possible by an agreement with the city for further acquisition, and clearing for a new view and connection with connecting Tennant Court and Burdick Park.
The park on Maine Street north of the hospital was in demolition of Elysium Woods in 1973. Facilities include a staged ball field, restrooms and play areas.
PURCHASED in 1947, this 3 acre park provides 2 lighted tennis courts and basketball courts, wollongong play, play area, picnic area and is located at 194th and Louisiana.
TOT LOTS
A one acre area, purchased in 1975 provides play equipment and picnic area for the 27th and Haskell neighborhood.
Located on 6th and Schwerz, this 2 acre area provides play equipment and picnic area.
Located at 15th and Maryland streets, this 3 acre area,
has a play area, basketball goals and picnic area.
RUN TAYLOR BABY
named in honor of John E. Taylor in 1978, this 3 acres at 7th and Walnut streets provides basketball courts, play area, picnic shelter, and picnic area.
This 2 acre area located at Stratford and Sunset Drive has an open area and ball field.
COMMUNITY PARKS
The 20 acre park is unique in that it was donated by the Indianapolis Museum of Art and Indianapolis, township and county by the Department of Interior. It is between Haskell Indian Autumn College and Louisiana State University and between North Park elementary and South Junior High school the距离 is 3 miles.
Fashion includes a group picnic plaza, play area with swings and large playgrounds, courts, courts, tables, benches, golf vehicle stands, restrooms, basketball court, gymnasium. The development as a southwestern extension of the park has been designed by a local architectural plan area including a 20-foot high rocker
Cleveland-based in 1977 with a financial gift from Mrs. and Mr. Mike Burchell, the firm for the 23 more years, owns 18 acres of land with road improvements, play equipment, cabinets with wine storage and preserves the surrounding forest.
In celebration of the Lawrence Centennial in 1964 this 35 acres located between Sixth and Eighth Streets was purchased and donated to the City Towers, which his courts, group shelter, several play areas, park lights for winter sliding, a one-mile baggage path, restrooms, water, picnic tables, grills, fire
LOUIS HOLCOM PARK AND SPORTS COMPLE
ring, small wooded area, and open areas are located here.
LOUIS HOLCOM FARK AND SPORTS COMPLEX
The park was named in remembrance of Louise Holcom, longtime community friend of youth and base ball coach.
The 31 acre school park site 2 blocks west of 27th Street, which offers lighted and darkened balconies, double-height multi-purpose fiddle and ample parking. It was offered decommissioned in 1974 and made possible by a Federal Reserve loan.
Part development completed in 1976 with an additive building permit, and the first installment granted, includes 2 white sports balls, outdoor three-wheel handcart used of all who areigned, golf wall painting, golf wall painting, and handcrafting. The part developed includes walkways, and handcrafting. The part developed includes stairs.
The only city park outside the city limits is the 19
are natural area one mile west of Lawrence on Peterson
Road.
Donated in 1963 by Mr. and Mrs. W.H. Martin facilities including picnic area, grills and fire ring environment, picnic area, grills and fire ring
This 25 are greenhouses stretching from 24th to 29th
street is presently accessible by foot from 24th, 25th,
and 27th street.
was initially purchased with a B.O.R. matching kit in 1972 and an additional five (five) acres added in 1976.
Youth swimming in stream, braided and indigena- tized streets is a staged through a thoughtful Cooperation Corps Program. Youth development will continue and will be so structured to the natural environment of the park for all to enjoy.
We Are Proud to Sponsor This Advertisement
This underfunded 45 acres was purchased in 1987 with HUD matching funds and can be reached on Township Road 190 (Montery Way) west of Sixth Street or West
The park is named in honor of L.R. "Dad" Perry
Lawrence teacher and gymnastics coach
Prepare for the planning stage. The city has been working with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to improve the 984 square within the flood control area and build a new dam south as south as to bridge and east to Mud Creek.
Expected completion by the end of 1981 are boat racks, bridges, hiking trails, primitive camp sites, picnic areas, overlook areas, vault tops, napping area, mazes.
The Hotties Commission of the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission spearheaded the 4-mile Kaw River Trail which is available to the public and is a national Recreation Trail. Further trail work in this area will begin.
HISTORICAL PARKS
The one acre site will be enriched between the two bridge spans at 6th and Massachusetts after bridge construction. It was named in honor of Charles Redmond, first Governor of Kames.
The one acre park, north of Walkin Historical Museum at 11th and Massachusetts is a guest landmark area along a busy main street and is a good spot for a shopping trip or brown bag lunches.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Video games, theatres, food fill Lawrence
By JILL M. YATES Staff Reporter
When the fast pace and pressures of school get to be unbearable, and fast food just doesn't fill the bill, Lawrence also provides quiet restaurants with relaxing atmospheres, escapes into outer space with the latest in video games, and several theatres that offer a variety of films.
LeMans Family Fun Center, 1601 W. 32rd St. features several video games and pinball machines. Bob Hall plays golf, which proximately 45 games, all of which cost
ANOTHER SOURCE of similar games is J. Watson's Amusement Center at Hillcrest Shopping Center, 935 Iowa St.
25 cents. LeMans is open weekdays from 9:30 a.m. to 1 a.m., Fridays and Saturdays 9:30 a.m. to 2 a.m., and Sundays noon to midnight.
Watson's features 22 electronic video games, including eight electronic pinball games; 18 pool tables; Rex Evans, manager, said. Watson's also serves beer, soft drinks and snacks. Evans says you must be 18 years old to enter, and identification is checked.
night Monday through Saturday and noon to midnight on Sundays.
Watson's hours are 10 a.m. to mid-
The New Yorker, 1021 Massachusetts
with an arcade its own,
with video games and
wilderness.
THERE ARE 30 to 35 games available at the New Yorker, according to Chuck Eads, manager. The New Yorker is open 10 a.m. to 11:45 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and noon to 10 p.m. on Sundays.
- Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St.
Lawrence also offers eight theatres, including one drive-in. The following is a list of the theatres and their locations: Twin Taen Theaters, 31st and Iowa streets.
- Varsity Theater, 1015 Massachusetts St.
- St.
· Hillcrest Theaters, Ninth and Iowa
streets
- Sunset Drive-in Theater, RFD 1 (on west Sixth Street).
In addition to many fast food
restaurants, also has
several restaurants for dining
Nabib's, at the Hillcrest Shopping Center, 935 Iowa St. features continental European cuisines.
THE ELDRIDGE HOUSE, 7th and
The Cornucopia, 1801 Massachusetts St., caters to the more health-conscious and has an extensive salad bar. It offers a variety of natural foods.
Massachusetts streets, has specialty and traditional menu items.
Russell's East, 3400 W. 6th St., has a traditional and diverse diet.
An new restaurant at 2220 Iowa St.. All Baba, middle Eastern cuisine in an authentic atmosphere, often including belly dancers.
Most of the restaurants also include clubs or lounges where alcoholic beverages are served.
Memberships are required for patrons to be served alcoholic drinks.
Houses in Oread area distinctive
By CONNIE SCHALLAU Staff Reporter
They were originally built as single family homes for Lawrence's wealthy families. As the houses aged, the homeowners moved in and they were turned into apartments.
Many of these homes in the Oread Neighborhood are now being returned to their original state. Eighty percent of the homes on the 1000 block of Ohio State University, according to Jeff Southard, president of the Oread Neighborhood Association.
THE HOUSES IN THE Oread neighborhood, which is northwest of the KU campus, are architecturally diverse. Gothic windows, front high
porches and gingerbread siding abound.
Some of the homes are also renovated for their historical significance.
The Oread neighborhood has three homes that are on the National Register of Historic Places: the Colonel Blood house, 1015 Tennessee St.; the Ludington House, 1613 Tennessee St.; and the John Palmer Usu House, 1425 Tennessee St., which is now the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house.
"I like older homes because of the quality of the work and the features,"
Mike Fountain, a Lawrence architect, is currently renovating a home at 1408 Kentucky St. that was built in 1870.
These homes were built between 1860 and 1872.
Fountain said. "The house has hardwood floors, wood trim and high ceilings. To reproduce this house would cost a fortune."
Another Oread resident said that she fell in love with the features of her 19th century home.
"I had contractors do the major and I've done things like taking plasterers out."
"I immediately fell in love with the porches, 'Mayer Marci Francisco,' 11th floor," she said.
FRANCISCO SAID THAT her house was built around 1800. She said that it had required renovation of the foundation, walls and stairways when she were there in 1976. She also said that the old writing and plumbing had to be replaced.
Renovating a house involved a lot of dust, plaster and sawdust, she said.
"I don't think my house will be renovated in my lifetime," she laughingly predicted.
Fountain, whose company, Design Build Architects, has renovated several houses, said that there was a lot of work and expense in renovation.
"Foundation cracks are the most expensive repairs," he said. "Other repairs, such as in walls and wiring, are also expensive."
He said that the average renovating cost was between $3,000 and $4,000.
"That's on top of the purchase price of around $50,000." Fountain said.
"Because of the rental potential in this neighborhood, a house in this
neighborhood that would cost much less in another part of town costs $50,000."
THE OREAD neighborhood is the most densely populated neighborhood in Lawrence. About 7,000 people live there, many of whom are students.
Having so many people in the neighborhood has advantages and disadvantages.
"It is a culturally diverse neighborhood," Tim Miller, 936 Ohio St., said. There are students, faculty members, people and old people in the Orland.
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But he also said that the high density contributed to crime and a lot of traffic.
"You have to weigh the good with the bad," Miller said. "The location is overwhelming. You can get anywhere in five to ten minutes on a bike."
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Aerobics, tap dancing, Zen meditation taught
Lawrence Arts Center holds interests for many
By DIANE MAKOVSKY Staff Reporter
The Lawrence Arts Center is a people building, it is not a museum, the center's director Anne P. Evans said.
With a tight $50,000-a-year budget,
only four people on its paid staff and
one more position being added this fall,
the team will be with the help of
"lots of volunteers."
Affection for those volunteers is apparent by the huge smile that spreads over Evans' face as she talks about them.
THE VOLUNTEERS have included members of the University of Kansas graphics department, who created the center's new logo. The graphics department has also made two banners to hang in the front entrance and have helped develop the layout for the center's class brochure.
The KU architecture department and members of the Helen Spencer Art Museum have also aided the center at various times.
There are also "community service volunteers" who are at the center to work off fines levied by the county for their first legal offense.
Some are at the center because they could not afford to pay the fine, Evans said. Some were because their parents thought it would be better if they worked for their reprieve.
'They are real nice young people and they work hard.' Evans said.
The center, which is seven years old,
is housed in the city-owned former
Carnesie Library at Ninth and Vermont
streets. It offers classes, workshops,
two galleries and fine arts events in
the performance hall.
THE ORIENTATION of the center toward people is exemplified by its friendly, non-sterile atmosphere, she said.
According to Evans, 90 percent of the functions are open to the public. The few that are closed are privately arranged affairs.
"The floors are sometimes dirty, and one can find traces of clay dust and make up in some of the rooms," Evans said.
Almost all the rooms in the building are filled each night when the class sessions start.
The base fee for classes this fall will be $20, according to Shelia Bender, the center's class coordinator. The fee pays the instructor, as well as contributing to the center. There are four sessions annually. If a class does not reach an adequate enrollment level, the course is dropped for that session.
Classes for adults in the past have included aerobics, tap dancing, drawing, beginning, intermediate and advanced guitar; yoga, painting; Zen meditation music; bass. Bobin lace teaches a traditional French lace-making technique.
One-day workshops have included "Basic Quilting-making," "Gathering, Drying and Working With Wild Plants" and "An Evening With the Dulcer."
This fall, there will be a class in beginning dulcimer.
"The mountain dulcimer class grew out of a summer workshop," Bender said.
to fill it," said Bender, recalling the large turnout for the workshop presented by two Boulder, Colo. women.
Children's classes have included drawing, folk music, weaving and yoga.
"I saw a community need and I tried
Most of the center's activities, according to Evans, aim to be affordable. However, if there is a problem with fees, people are encouraged to talk to Evans. There are some scholarships available for the center's classes.
Evans tries to show the best of what's available in the center's galleries. The galleries, with shows every month, only emphasize work by local artists.
A committee of community members meets annually in the spring to decide what will be shown the next year.
IN THE SEARCH for variety and the best, many artists are rejected, Evans said. But, she added, many are rejected on the basis of the proposal, not the work. Anyone may submit or re-submit or the committee to review each year.
Showing their work in the galleries in the upcoming season will be KU faculty
members Cima N, Katz, assistant professor of art, Valerie Dearing, assistant professor of design, and David J. Vertacnik, assistant professor of design. They will be displaying prints, fibers and ceramics, respectively.
Evans takes care of the galleries, a hall and call day-to-day activities for the center.
The Seem-To-Be Players use the hall first the three Saturdays of each month from September through December, and February through May, at 1:30 and 4:30 p.m., in the children, and Evans described their work as nice, fun and non-sexist.
THIS FALL, the Lawrence Community Theatre, which also regularly uses the center's performance hall, will present the 'Walsh Bain Winning Street' from Sept. 24 to 27. On Dec. 12, in Golden Pond" will be presented.
On Oct. 3, the Lawrence Potter's
Garden and its annual sale on the
center lawn.
The center is funded by the City of Lawrence, which pays the utilities, the
And on Dec. 6, the Lawrence Art
Guild Holiday Art Fair will be held.
Kansas Arts Commission,
a business/information membership drive
The National Endowment for the Arts has cut $5,000 from its support of the center because of Reagan administration budget cuts. Evans hopes to make up the loss with the center's membership drives.
Evans said that most of the support he received came from customers, so the loss is not a major concern.
A student may be a member of the center for a $5 annual fee. Single adults may join for $15, and families for $25.
MEMBERSHIP SUPPORTS the center. It includes a 10 percent reduction in class fees and exhibit purchases, a reduced rental fee for the performance hall and it places a member on the center's mailing list.
The center is open Tuesday through Friday from 5 p.m. and Saturday 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
Enrollment for fall classes begins on Saturday, Aug. 29, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and will continue until Sept. 8, the day classes begin.
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University Dally Kansan, August 20. 1981
Page 7
on, a tip drive e.
for the support of an ad- des hopes center's
supported lo-
concern.
of the
adults
$25.
'S the
percent
exhibit
for the
d and it
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POWs from Rommel's army at KU in '45
By MARC HERZFELD Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
German soldiers from Field Marshal Erwin Rommel's army invaded the KU campus in the summer of 1945, but fortunately for the University of Kan-
bergen, the soldiers were prisoners of war sent to cut stone for Danforth Chanel.
The 22 German stonemasons, stationed at a camp near 11th and Haskell streets, were part of a contingent of more than 300 World War II businessmen of War who worked for the U.S. local farmers and businessmen.
LAWRENCE WAS suffering from an acute labor shortage in 1945, because most American men were in the military. Farmers were worried that they would be unharmed and businessmen were concerned that they would have to close.
Fred Six, 1001 Avalon Road, whose father located the German POWs with local farmers, remembered the Germans as generous, friendly men.
Six, who was 11 in 1945, said, "We had the propaganda growth about how bad the Germans were, but I remember how pleasant they all were."
C.O. Nauman, 202 Dakota St,
remembered the German POWs with
mixed feelings. Nauman's father,
Clarence, hired the Germans for 80
chop wood and chop wood for
bllr lumber business
"I had the feeling that they were very friendly but you'd better keep your eyes on them," Nauman said. "There was always a distance between us, kind of like having a pet that you think might turn on you."
NAUMAN SAID THAT THE POWs respected his father, partly because of his German ancestry. The Germans had a special shape, although they had opportunities.
"They knew they had a good thing to give us, and we weren't about to give them."
Nauman recalled driving three POWs back to camp in the evening when his car had a flat tire. Nauman, who was 18 and alone in the car, said he could not have stopped the Germans if they had tried to escape.
"I might have had a little fear in the back of my mind, and I thought I would have to change their shoes alone. I am sure that they just went out of our car and changed the tire very quickly."
Nauman said the tire-changing incident was one example of the way he thought the German prisoners tried to superiority over Americans at any task.
"They were always trying to show us how strong they were, and they took a lot of risks that Americans wouldn't."
The accident rate for the German workers was a lot higher than for the Americans," Nauman said.
Nauman said that the Germans considered Americans sloppy and wet.
"THE AMERICAN workers would just throw their shovels in a pile when it was time to eat, but before each noon meal, the Germans would clean all the dishes and then their faces and hands and then comb their hair before eating," he said.
Nauman said that the Germans did not talk about politics.
He said that the "Germans" were usually cheerful and傲慢, while the "Nazis" often caused trouble by refusing to take orders from Americans.
"We always separated between the 'Germans' and the 'Nazis,' "' Nauman said.
Most of the prisoners were, if not anti- Nazi, at least neutral, he said.
"I remember a friend asking one fellow what he thought of Hitler. The soldier just said, 'You have your sevelt, we have our Hitler,'" he said.
He said most of the prisoners were content to live out the war in Kansas, safe from the Soviet and American armies.
However, Nauman said, "Every so often you ran across one that was sort of a bear-cat."
Nauman said that the U.S. Army would discipline the troublemakers among the prisoners, and the Germans punished their own men severely.
One of the 'Nazis' ran afoul of his fellow prisoners, with dire consequences.
"All they ever told me about it was, 'We had a long talk with him, and he fell down the stairs and broke his leg,'" Nauman said.
THE PRISONERS MAINTAINED a measure of autonomy in spite of their situation, teaching classes to each other and ordering from a former German officer.
"The camp was very loosely run," Naunan said. "There were no guys walking around with machine guns guarding them."
Nauman said that most of the prisoners enjoyed their stay near Lawrence and wanted to return after the war.
"They continued to write us for several years after the war, and the ones in East Germany particularly wanted to come back," he said.
Nauman said that his father toyed with the idea of sponsoring the return of some of the workers, but felt an obligation to rehire his American workers when they returned from the war.
Nauman said that none of the prisoners had returned.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, August 20. 1981
Neighborhoods, flood control face commission
By BREN ABBOTT Staff Reporter
The major concerns facing the Lawrence City Commission during the next year are historic preservation, conservation of neighborhoods, strong community city ordinances and flood control, to Mayor Marcel Francisco.
She said that these concerns were much different than those of the last commission, which was oriented more toward business than individuals.
THE CITY COMMISSION meetings, which are every Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Commission Room of the Lawrence City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets, are open to anyone who wishes to attend.
Francisco said that it was important to the commission that students participated in the local government.
However, citizens didn't get involved as much as they could, Francisco said.
"It's not so much being apathetic as it is needing to get involved at the time."
"The only time people really get involved is when something that directly affects them happens."
"We had a Lawrence High student come to a commission meeting recently to testify about keeping the Opera House open. This gave us some additional insight into the question of whether or not to buy the Opera House that we probably wouldn't have had," she said.
BARKLEY CLARK, who was first elected to the commission in 1973 and was re-elected to a four-year-term last year, student participation was important.
"Students got involved quite extensively in the last election," Clark said. "In fact, we had a law student run for a seat in the last election."
Francisco said that Lawrence was governed by a city commission/city manager format, with the city commission hiring the city manager.
A commissioner may seek re-election as many times as he or she wishes.
City Commission elections are held every other year, with three commissioners elected each time. In the citywide, non-partisan election, the two candidates receiving the most votes are elected to a four-year term on the commission. The third place candidate serves for two years.
"The City Commission basically sets and policy, and the city manager implements that policy," she said.
Francisco said her duties as mayor were to preside "over City Commission meetings and serve as the ceremonial head." The mayor is elected from the commissioners by the commission to a one-year term.
If there are more than six candidates in the race, a primary election is scheduled for the second Tuesday in March. After the field has been narrowed to six, a general election is held on the first Tuesday of April.
Other commissioners are:
Donald Binns, who has served eight years on the commission and as mayor 90% His current term ends in 1883, he will be eligible for re-election.
TOM E. GLEASON is currently serving his first term on the commission. He will be eligible for re-election in 1983.
Francisco will also be up for re-election in 1983.
Nancy Shontz is also serving her first term as a city commissioner and will be eligible for re-election in 1985. Shontz has been involved in city government in the past. She has served as president of the League of Women Voters, Community College, and Grant Advisory Board member, Chairperson of Civic Responsibilities Community of the Douglas County Environmental Improvement Council and as a member of the board of directors of the Bert Nash Community Health Center.
Clark's term will also expire in 1985 and he will again be eligible for re-election.
A bird's eye view shows the Massachusetts Street Bridge as it spans the Kansas River.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
A
Page 9
一
Incomplete bike paths frustrate cyclers
[Image of a dense forest with tall trees and a mountain in the background].
I am not a professional cyclist, but I enjoy riding in scenic parks and trails.
By BRENDA DURR Staff Reporter
Mount Oread has challenged many bikers struggling to the top.
But the physical demands of Mount Oread seem insignificant compared with other problems that face Lawrence bikers, including the lack of a comprehensive biking network throughout the city.
In 1976, the Lawrence City Commission approved a system, called Pedalplan, that would build bike paths and lanes across Lawrence with funding from a Federal Highway Department grant.
The grant was to be used to build
music bike programs in cities across
the country.
The plan would have cost $230,920 over the next 20 years. However, the city did not receive the federal funds, and the plan was incorporated into Lawrence's Capital Improvements Plan, which provides funds for city improvement.
"It was done in a piecemeal fashion and never was a comprehensive network," said Lawrence City Commanter Nancy Shontz, who is also a biker.
Instead of an intricate network of bike paths, the city pieced together a series of paths, routes and lanes across the city.
But Shontz said bike paths were being built.
"Sooner or later, we're going to complete this program," Shontz said. "Every year, a section gets added."
"The city has to implement a logical and comprehensive plan," said Michael Almon, a member of the Appropriate Technology Resource Center, 1101 Queensburgh St., which promotes conserving and finding renewable energy.
All future biking plans, he should be based on providing bike paths instead of bike route signs on side streets.
Part of the biking problem centers on the city's structural design, Shonzit
"The problem is that the city's old and there's not much room to put in separate bike paths," she said. "We've parked them with park and development areas."
Two more bike paths opened last year, located along both sides of the Clinton Parkway from 23rd and Iowa Streets to Clinton Lake.
One of the newest bike paths is a 10-mile stretch of crushed limestone on the north bank of the Kansas River levee, and the Rivertower Park development area.
But even though the Clinton paths are face to face, they are already facing some problems.
The $260,000 Riverfront plan, which
will cover several years ago, will be
completed in 2018.
"It's really an expensive white elephant," said Bruce D. Epperson.
He said the conditions of the paths have led some bikers to ride on Clinton Parkway, even though it's illegal to drive street when a bike path is provided.
member of the Mount Oread Bicycling Club. "The paths are covered with dirt and glass and are washed out in some places."
Epperson said the person who had the most information about the poor condition of the Clinton bike paths was Stanley R. Pittman, the Lawrence graduate student who was killed on June 19 in the Lawrence tornado.
Besides the lack of leadership, Epperson said, the prospects of a continued bike network looked dim because of the lack of funding.
"He had a presentation of pictures and slides of poor conditions," Epperson said. "There's a huge void now. I don't know what's in the future or who'll carry on. Any kind of action is doubtful and questionable at best."
"It's pretty bleak without aid," he said. "The city had to scrape the barrel to finish the South Park program. That is too much, but not as gass. I don't see anything in the future."
Shontz agreed that federal money for bicycling facilities was driving up.
"There used to be a fair amount of money for bike paths, but I'm not aware of anything now. I'm expecting it to get worse than better," she said.
Almon said that the city of Lawrence should place more emphasis on biking as a way of commuting rather than as just recreation.
"State and federal government would be wiser to promote transportation that allows travel between cities."
"Areas don't emphasize biking as a means of commuting. Most are in parks and very few serve shoppers," Almon said.
But Shontz was optimistic that bikes booming with new models in many houseboats with two-car gearboxes.
"I'm just amazed at how many people are riding bikes," she said. "It just used to be teen-agers, but now I just use a slew of bikes. I think it's great."
Wee said the club would be celebrating its 10th anniversary by inviting all its past presidents for the October Octakitts, an 80-mile bike ride to the Lawrence area. Last year, he said, 350 people participated in the ride.
M. Otre. Bicycling Club member and SUA programming assistant, Gene Wee, said that the club averaged 150 members a year.
But if more people are participating in biking, some Lawrence bike store owners have not noticed an increase in business. Two bike stores reported that business was down from previous years.
"A certain person can get hooked on an activity, and we get a hard-core one, a member since 1971."
"There's a peak in, a lot of people are actively involved."
"Our business is down a little from
last year," an employee of Mick's bicycles, 1339 Massachusetts St., Kurt Stockhammer, said. "Gas prices are higher, and seems to be as scary as last year."
He said lower gas prices caused the slow sales.
"If the Reagan administration isn't worried about gas prices, then the people aren't worried," Stockhammer said.
George O. Latham, owner of Gran Sport, 1228 W. 7th, st.ated that were down, but he didn't attribute the slow sales to gasoline prices.
"I find no correlation between bike
gifts and gas prices; think that's
wouldful thinking."
Latham said a shortage of money may have lowered his sales.
"I talk to a lot of people, but no one he said." "A lot of lookers and no takers."
The bike shop employees said they try to cater to everybody's needs, but rising prices have forced some buyers to look for a less expensive bike.
"We start at $185 for a decent 10-speed, said Stockhammer, whose prepaid bike in stock costs $450. We try to buy bikes like bikes for persons of average needs."
"A $170 is about as low as you can go for a good 10-speed," he said. "The sort of car that most people like to have and want to have falls in the cost range of $200 to $250."
Latham's bike prices range from $170 to $400 for a 10-speed.
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Local bars offer a cure for whatever ales ya
Whatever a student's mood or budget, there is a local bar to meet the needs.
Most bars feature beer specials and provide a wide variety of munchies, entertainment and music.
Lawrence offers drinking at atmospheres ranging from the sandpit of the West Coast Saloon to the rustic, country music playing at Johnny's.
- THE CONGO BAR, 520 N. 3rd St., is a 'working man's bar,' according to owner Deryl Haas. Several kinds of domestic beers are served. Draws are regular $8 cues and $17 cues during Happy Hour, which is 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. daily.
- During the winter there is frequent live music, usually country-western. The Congo has pool tables, a bowling game and a jukebox that plays country music. Frozen pizzas are also heated and served.
- JOHNNY'S TAVERN, 401 N. 2nd St., opens at 7:30 a.m. Doug Hassig, cowher with Rick Rentro, said that Johnny's served everyone from ages 8 to 80. Grilled hamburgers are the specialty of the house.
- Beer specials include $1 pitchers on Fridays from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Several kinds of domestic beers are available, including beer that is served with three video games are available.
- BOGARTS OF LAWRENCE, 611 Vermont, offers an unusual form of entertainment for its customers- the structure attached to pool tables, two pinball machines, a
Battlezone video machine and a color television.
Busch on tap and a wide variety of other beers and snacks are served. Regular beer prices are: draws, 50 cents; bottles, 70 cents; schooners, $1 and pitchers, $2.00. Happy Hour is 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. daily with 1.50 pitchers and 40 cent draws. Wednesday is $1.50 pitcher night.
Bogarts' jukebox contains a wide variety of songs from Billy Holliday to Patty Kline. Clientele during the fall is usually older students and faculty, accustomed to the modern Englishman. Bogarts of Lawrence is owned by Paula Feruchi and Mike Hughes.
*MR. BILL'S, 201 W. 8th, carries Coors and Coors Light on tap, assorted chips, beer nuts and mozzarella string cheese. Most customers frequent Mr. Bill's are fraternity and sorority members, owner Bill Begin said.
Entertainment includes a pool table, two pinball machines, three video machines, a television and golden old rock 'n' roll on the jukebox.
- VAN VLECK TAVERN No. 6, 1830 W. 6th, generally catches to Haskell students, manager Debbie Turner said. Coors on tap, sausages, a wide selection of chips and five other brands of beer are sold.
Entertainment includes two pool tables, three pinball machines, weekly pool tournaments and a wide selection of games. The gym also gives兑换. Nern No. 6 is owned by Walter Van Yleck
- THE BEER GARDEN, 1344 Tennessee St., is a small bar that attracts a diverse clientele. "We have everyone from professors to local street people here," owner Royce Klewer said.
The Beer Garden features 11 brands of beer and has Budweiser, Miller Lite, Pabst and Busch on tap. Pitchers are regularly $2.00. During Happy Hour, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., pitchers are $1.50. Please pick one or two of these. Customers may amuse themselves with pinball and video games. The jukebox offers a variety of music.
The cafe's jukebox has everything from punk to rock 'n' roll. Peanuts and other snacks are available, along with pool tables, pinball and video games.
- THE JAYHAWK CAFE, 1340 Ohio St., is a KU tradition, featuring scochoners, pitchers, bottles and cans of eight brands of beer. The clientele is varied. Because of the crowds, service is sometimes slow.
- THE CROSSING, 12th Street and Jayhawk Boulevard, is a small neighborhood bar that features 10 brands of beer with Coors on tap. Prices range from $2.25 for pitchers to 85 cents for bottles. Draws are 60 cents. The Crossing has a kitchen and serves sandwiches.
Happy Hour is 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. daily.
According to owner Jeff Morrow, the bar caters to students and neighborhood customers.
W. THE WAGON WHEEL CAFE, 507
W. 14th ST., carries Coors and
Budweiser on tap and a variety of other
brands in cans and bottles.
A back yard allows customers extra space for socializing. Electronic games and a jukebox are also available.
- SUDS-N-DUDS, 2120 W. 25th St., is a combination laundromat and bar with an informal atmosphere. It is divided into two sections. On one side there is a carpeted room with laundry facilities. The other side is a small bar which offers eight kinds of beer, soft drinks, and snacks.
Pitchers are $2.00, and draws are either 35 or 55 cents. Bottled beer is 75 cents. Daily specials include Happy Hour from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, with draws reduced to 40 pitches and pitchers to $1.25.
A unique feature of the bar is a lighted board which indicates when the washers or dryers have finished their cycle. The video games are kids' video games, a TV and a jukebox.
The clientele at Suds-N-Ducks is about 75 percent KU student, according to Bianca Mueller, bartender.
- MIKE'S PUB, 1717 W. 6th St., has the 'atmosphere of a tavern and is dominated by seated pool tables. For game nights or other social events, video games, a lukewarm box, TV and darts.
are $1.00 and draws are 50 cents. Daily and nightly specials include TGF,
when pitchers are $1.50 and draws are 40 cents.
Mike's serves 10 kinds of beer and snacks, including pickled eggs and hot sausages. Pitchers are $2.00, schooners
The patrons are primarily regulars who work in Lawrence. Very few students go to Mike's, Leann Winfrey, bartender, said.
- TIME OUT, 2018 Iowa St., is a "melting-pot" bar, according to manager Lynda DeSelms. It has Budweiser, Coors and Coors Lite on tap. Draws are 55 cents and pitchers at 7 p.m. There is a graduated pitcher night starting at 7 p.m. Pitchers start at $1.25 and increase by a quarter hour.
- Tuesdays also feature a pool tournament that costs $3 to enter. In addition to beer, the bar serves french fries, hamburgers and fried mushrooms. Patrons can entertain themselves by playing pinball, shuffleboard or Asteroids. Jukebox music is old top-40s and country-western.
- THE WEST COAST SAUNA, Iowa St., is a California theme bar. It features a sandpit, ocean murals and California music. The saloon's jukebox features tunes by the Beach Boys and the Doors.
Draws are 50 cents and pitchers are $2.00. Happy Hour is Monday through Thursday from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. and Fri-
day from 8 p.m. to 6 p.m., with pitchers reduced to $1.50.
Patrons can bring food into the bar, which is located behind the door. A big restaurant, Salon
owner Shaun Trenholm said he expects the bar to be a place for good clean fun.
- BOTTOMS UP, 715 Massachusetts St., features the Big-Mo-Mug, which is a 34-liter mug selling for $1.00.
The bar provides an older-type set-
ting which, according to manager Jay
Simpson, gives it a more comfortable
atmosphere.
For those who be born with beer or conversation, Bottoms Up has several video
- HARBOR LITES, 1033 Massachusetts St., is another of the many inexpensive Lawrence balls, features inexpensive leather caps and often has $1.00 specials on pitchers.
In addition, according to owner Charla Jenkins, Harbours Lite is the only bars in Lawrence to have three pool tables. They also feature a variety of pinball machines, video games and a golden oldy jukebox.
*LOUISE'S BAR*, 1009 Massachusetts set. slav advocates patrons to keep away from them in numeric blues with its Monday Schooner Nights and its Thursday night specials.
Manager Dean Troxel said that on Monday nights the bar offers 75 cent schooners.
Bars not listed above will be open time during the school year. They include:
1. Jabab, 810 B 810 W. 23rd;
2. Ichabod's Inc., RFD 9;
3. The Pladium, 90 Mississippi.
1/2 off Hair Design
Editor's Note: Several Kansan reporters collaborated on this story.
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PETER LANE
University Dally Kansan, August 20, 1981 Page 11
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100
THE NEW YORK TIMES
Page 12
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Stores like students' return
By RON JOHNSON Staff Reporter
Most Lawrence businesses are glad to have KU students—and their consumer dollars—back for another academic year.
Nearly every local business surveyed last month rated KU students as important consumers. Moreover, several business owners and managers said their retail stores depended on KU for survival.
Barbara J. Moody, manager of University Sports Shop, 942 Massachusetts St., said KU students were her store's main clientele. She said that 80 percent of her business came from students.
"WITHOUT A DOUBT, students are our main customers." Moody said. "In that respect, we are like a lot of other businesses in this town."
Moody, who said students liked to make group orders in her store, had only one minor complaint about her customers.
"Students like to wait until the last minute to buy what they want," she said, "but we are here to cater to their needs. They are our major source of income."
Another manager of a downtown sporting goods store said his business owed itself to the Lawrence student population.
Mike Howard, manager of First Serve Kliu & Sports Shoppe, 840 Massachusetts St., said KU students and ski equipment from his store.
"I would not be here if it were not for the students," he said. "Most of our sales are geared for young people, teachers, as most business in town to do."
One Lawrence retailer, whose business claims a 30-year-old relationship with KU students is Jim F. Schubert, manager of The Jay Shope, 835 Massachusetts St., a women's store store.
"When the Lawrence population increases 30 percent with the arrival of KU students, that has a definite impact," Schubert said. We are offered for research at Lawrence and we questionably miss students when they leave in the spring."
He estimated that 30 percent of his total sales volume was from students.
"At our store, there has been no problem at all with students," Schubert said. "KU gets the cream of the crop."
manager at Rusty's Hillcrest IGA supermarket, 901 Iowa St., agreed that KU students provided a positive effect on retail sales, he said student customers caused some problems, as well.
Even though Bill Elkins, general
"TT SEEMS THAT our store receives more bad checks from student customers," EIKns said. "We'll be happy that students move around much more."
"Generally speaking, students cause no more problems than the general public does. A lot of people try to blame students for problems, but I don't feel they are more of a problem than anyone else."
Elkins said that student consumers in Lawrence had a greater effect every year.
Another Lawrence supermarket,
Food 4 Less, 2525 Iowa St., adds
employees to handle an increase in
fall sales caused by students.
Heatherman and Leatherman said he
was always glad to see students
in his store.
"We have a nice increase in sales in the fall," he said. "While we do not make as much decrease in the spring, we always add new employees to cover the fall increase."
KU students who want to vote must register at least 20 days before election day, Dorothy Baldwin, Douglas County election denyment said.
By JEFF THOMAS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Voter registration deadlines should be heeded
Students who have just moved to Lawrence and those who have moved in Lawrence since the last election can register for primary and general elections at the county clerk's office, or work as city clerk, the city clerk's office, 8th and Massachusetts streets, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. each weekday.
STUDENTS WHO WERE registered in Douglas County before leaving away may only need to register again if their Lawrence address has changed, she said.
"Whenever you move in Lawrence, even if you just move across the street, that could throw you into a different place. You should register again," Baldwin said.
If a registered voter doesn't vote in two consecutive general elections, the county c'ark's office checks the citizen's 'address to make sure it is still correct. Baldwin said. If the person hasn't moved he remains registered; otherwise, his name is removed from the registration list.
Other than moving, a name change is only reason to register again, she said.
TO REGISTER, a person must sign a form swearing that he is at least 18 years old and has lived in the same city for more than 30 days prior to election day, she said.
Students who want to vote absentee in another county should contact the county clerk's office in that county and an absentee registration form, she said.
The next scheduled elections in Douglas County are the state and county primaries in August of 1982. However, the city and county can still call special elections which could be held this academic year.
"Every year something comes up that could lead to a special election." City Clerk Vera Mercer said. "Right now they're talking about the Lawrence House and a bond for that but that's the only thing being discussed now."
The Lawrence City Commission has voted to purchase and renovate the Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St., if the funds can be raised.
There have been about four special therein in Lawrence in the last 10 years,
Even if KU students are only going to be in Lawrence for another year or two there are good reasons for them to register and vote, according to David Berkowitz, Douglas County Democratic Party chairman.
"They have the opportunity to elect several people to the state legislature
who are not only favorable to the University but also to the student's viewpoint," he said. "Another reason is that the local government here is the one they'd be dealing with more than where their parents live."
While the chairmen of both county party organizations say they plan to court the student vote, they also say that students are a diverse group who scatter their votes across parties and candidates.
"There is a student vote in this town
"But it isn't as cohesive as several other
banks, the voting spectrum,"说
Berkowitz评说, "It's not at all a 100
percent block."
"In the last election," Hank Booth, county Republican chairman, said, "the college vote was split along issues, which makes voting patterns more erratic and capturing the student vote much more difficult."
Neither county party organization sponsored a registration drive on campus last year and none are planned this academic year, the chairmen said.
Booth said he had an idea to have the KU Collegiate Republicans sponsor a drive on campus sometime this year. He also planned to follow last November's elections.
"If 80 or 90 percent voted either Republican or Democrat you'd see a heck of a lot of effort to register them," KU professor of political science, said.
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University Dally Kansan, August 20, 1981 Page 13
to the student's season is the more than
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Dining is memorable at Castle
By LISA PROCTOR Staff Reporter
It is 11 a.m. The sign in the window says "Closed," but a knock on the door brings a response.
Llbase Kriz, a small cheerful woman answers and welcomes her guest.
"There's always something to do, but it keeps me out of trouble." Kriz says mumily.
TAKING TIME OUT from preparation for lunch guests, Kriz offers a tour of the Castle Tea Room, 1307 Massachusetts St., a Lawrence dine tradition.
"Very few get to see a home like this one," she says. "The atmosphere here is very different in any other place in Lawrence. I hope students will try something different."
The Castle is different from most restaurants. The bottom floor features our dining areas. The upper two floors of the building, century home are Kriz's residence.
A mirrored entryway greets visitors. To the right of it is one dining area.
It is a small room with four tables, a fireplace and book shelves displaying memorabilia. Heavy draps are swung over the racks of geraniums brightens the windowwall.
"This was originally the library," Krzz says. "The wood in here is walnut."
ON THE OPPOSITE side of the entryway is the front parlor. It is an air room with large windows that give it a cheerful appearance. A lace tablecloth adorns one of several birch wood tables.
Sliding wooden doors separate the front and back parlor. A collection of plates given to Kriz by friends hang on one wall in the back parlor. Numerous pictures brighten another wall in this room, a furniture in cherry wood. The second wall is found here. Its mantel displays a collection of creamers and ceramic birds.
Kriz said she was pleased with her home and business and had worked diligently to maintain its appearance since she purchased it in 1947.
To the right of the back parlor and through another set of wooden doors is the main dining room, the largest of the dining areas. Its most striking feature is a fireplace mantel done in stained glass and oak. With placemats set carefully on the long table, it appears ready for a banquet.
The small kitchen and a butter's
laboratory were in the basement,
limestone house that was built in 1894.
FOLLOWING THE TOUR, Kriz sits at a table in the back parlor. This room, like the others, has polished wood
floors. Each table has a small candle placed carefully in a silver holder. As Kriz and her guest chat, Kriz adds another plate to her collection.
The Castle's menu includes roast beef, Kansas City strip steak and lobster. All are prepared to Kriz's specifications. Kriz will prepare special dishes for parties or groups. Kriz often opens the restaurant at odd hours for parties. During the visit, a gentleman returned to thank her for the anniversary dinner she had prepared for his family the previous evening.
Although she speaks of lightening her work load, Kriz regularly serves capacity crowds of 90 or more. She has no intention of selling The Castle, she
says, although she received offers continually.
Kriz's easygoing manner is reflected in her aim for a relaxed atmosphere at the Castle. She strives for efficient but unobtrusive service for her guests.
"I BELIEVE PEOPLE are self-sufficient," Kriz said. "If they need something, they can ask. People come here to enjoy the atmosphere and each others' company. I don't enjoy it when a waiter interrupts my conversation, so I make sure I'm not guilty of interrupting."
Lunch hour approaches. Kriz escorts her guest to the door. "Come back for dinner; bring a friend," she said with a smile.
SOMETHING SAVE THE WEEKEND.
TRACY THOMPSON/Kansan alfa!
Libuse Kriz, standing, serves fine food in a warm, relaxed atmosphere at the Castle Tea Room. Lawrence residents Becky Kutchler, 546 E. 19th St., and Larry Havluckel, 2576 Cedarwood Ave., are but two of the many hundreds of customers Kriz has served since she opened the Castle in 1947.
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Page 14 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
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Thursday, August 20, 1981 Vol. 92, No.1 USPS 650-640
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Section 4 County lifestyle
KU Sailing Club offers both lake training experience for novice and advanced sailors
By CHRIS TODD Staff Reporter
The Bounty. The Pequod. The Mayflower
Sound familiar? If they do, you might recognize them as the ships of Captain Bligh,
Captain Ahab and the Pilgrims.
How about the Liberty, the Fido and the HD? If those sound familiar, you're probably a member of the KU Sailing Club, and recognize them as three of the club's vessels. If they aren't familiar, but you're interested in sailing, learning how to sail or just meeting new people, then the KU Sailing Club might warrant further investigation.
The club, which usually has between 85 and 100 student and faculty members, meets every Wednesday night during the semester to discuss topics such as providing instruction on various aspects of sailing.
According to Thomas M. Welsh, club director, the club's fleet consists of 11 vessels. They were formed by the Student Union Activities and are docked at the Perry Lake Club on the northeast corner of Perry Lake.
On weekends, Welsh said, club members organize car pools to Perry Lake, where beginners are taught the elements of sailing. The more-experienced members sail on their own.
"The majority of our members are new to the sport of sailing, so teaching new sailors is one of
Besides offering instruction to beginners, Welsh said, the more experienced members can take advantage of sailing seminars, which are organized and presented by the club's expert sailors. The seminars usually take place after the weekly meeting.
our major concerns," Welsh said. "We offer a beginning course at the start of each semester. We about three weeks and concentrations on possible person out on the water as soon as possible."
"Most of us who instruct or present seminars," welsh said, "have been in the club for at least 10 years, and have had a lot of intensive training experience, so we're well qualified to teach."
Another attraction to more experienced sailors is the club's racing program. The club is a member of the Midwest College Sailing Association, which also includes the University of Wisconsin, Northwestern University, Southern University, University and the Universities of Iowa and Nebraska. In addition, the club holds inter-club regattas, or races, for all members during the semester.
But the KU Sailing Club is not just for sailing, but it offers a variety of social activities not exclusive to sailing.
"Every couple of weeks, we have something going," Welsh said. "During the winter, we have a lot of parties, and we sometimes go to play in Kansas City, or just go roll skating. We also
have potty dinners with some of the non-club members at the Perry Yacht Club. Some of our members get to know the Perry people pretty well and sail with them during the summer months."
In addition, the club sponsors and offers, at a reduced rate, ocean cruises once a year. Last year, the club flew to the Bahamas for the cruise. *attn:*
"We've had pretty good response on the ocean cruises," said Welsh. "The only problem is people don't have enough space in their luggage for all the coconut rum they want to bring."
To its members, the KU Sailing Club offers a variety of attractions and experiences.
Terry Lestovicka, a lab assistant in the botany department, said she enjoyed sharing sailing experiences with others who have similar interests.
Willard Remmers, Lawrence graduate of the University with several positive aspects in the KU Sailing Club.
"The sailing club is a varied experience" "
it can be explained in great depth just lightly.
"There is so much to learn about sailing. Just learning about physical phenomena like wind, weather and hydrodynamics can make sailing a lifelong endeavor."
The KU Sailing Club will hold its first meeting on Wednesday, Aug. 26. The following Saturday, the club will offer sailing and instruction at the Perry Yacht Club.
Flood led to Clinton Lake formation
Fishermen, water skiers and picnickers can be thankful for the 1951 flood of the Wakarau river.
Were it not for that flood, which devastated much of Lawrence and other Kansas cities and caused $1 billion in damages, Clinton Lake might never have been built.
However, the 7,000 acre Clinton Lake is now far more than just a safety valve for the dam.
The lake draws thousands of people to the area, and has increased property values for nearby residents.
although U.S. Army Corp of Engineers project
One problem was that the vast construction project faced long delays.
In 1971, the Corp planned to complete the lake
by 1985, but for completion was 1978,
except in late 1984.
Cost overruns were also a problem. The project was originally planned to cost about $45 million, but Counts said the final cost was $58 million.
However, Counts said that the project 'was one of the smoothest we have done, with a very
orderly transition from private to public property."
Now the lake has drawn more visitors than any lake in the area with the exception of Lake Stockton in Missouri, Counts said.
"We've had half a million visitors this year," he said.
Counts said that the lake was safe, with only the hazard of floating debris posing any problems.
The lake, which started as a simple reservoir for the large floodplain of the Wakarusa River valley, is a major recreational resource for the Lawrence area.
TRACY THOMPSON/Kansan staff
A sailboat is shadowed by its reflection as it crosses the path of sunlight on the water. The KU sailing club, which has 11 vessels in its fleet, sails on weekends at Lake Perry.
TRACEY HOMPANSONKHANSEN
KU land still awaits development
By MARC HERZFELD Staff Reporter
The land is not attractive to a farmer. Less than half of its thin, uneven soil is tillable.
But to a developer, the Kansas University Endowment Association's Adams Campus is beautiful because hide behind the fringe of walls. It's only a quarter of a mile away, is Clinton Lake.
Lester Flory, who has farmed the land for more than 10 years, said. "It's a average land, not a highland." He added that he is "always on the lookout."
However, a farmer's perspective and a developer's view of the land are quite different.
Executive Vice Chancellor Cobb said, "it is a very attractive spot and has a tremendous impact."
The property, leased as farmland, earned about $3,000 in 1978, a fraction of the several hundred thousand dollars Cobb said would be needed to develop the land.
Flory said he had no written lease and paid the Endowment Association on a share-cropping basis with the farmer keeping three-fifths of the return from crop sales.
"It sounds like we do a little development," Flory said, "but for now, the property is open."
The property could be used as a conference center, a faculty-student retreat or an ecological workshop, Cobb said, citing a 1976 study by KU graduate student Sandra Poland.
Martin Henry, property manager for the Endowment Association, said that plans for developing the property should come from the University and not the Endowment Association.
"We would hardy have the chutzpah," Henry said, "to go out there, build something and say, 'OK, University, here it is, we hope you can use it.'"
The property is called the Adams Campus after Kenneth Adams, a 1921 KU graduate and former board chairman of Phillips Petroleum, who died in 1975.
David VanParys, Student Senate treasurer,
said that the Senate had toyed with the idea of
using student fees to build a recreation center on
the property.
However, VanPansy said the idea to use student money to develop the land was rejected because of its distance from the Lawrence University campus. Another solution of already existing facilities at Clinton Lake.
"It would be much wise to spend money on improvements here rather than build a Shangri-La miles off campus, "VanPays said. "There is no real rationale for a private KU playground."
Area Recreation
PERRY LAKE
Oskaloosa
59
24
Perry
40
To Tonganoxie
Lawrence
To Eudora
To Sunflower Ammunitions
CLINTON LAKE
Clinton
1025
1039
458
460
Lone Star
462
1029
LONE STAR LAKE
DOUGLAS STATE FISHING LAKE
POMONA LAKE
Baldwin City
Ottawa
To Wolf Creek
75
68
Page :
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
HARVARD
WENDY NUGENT/Kansan Staff
Business is slow on the main street of Eudora, indicating the deterioration of the town's downtown area. Several Eudoran merchants claim that competition from Lawrence has hurt their business.
Economic deterioration clouds future for downtown Eudora
By MARC HERZFELD
Staff Reporter
Ebihc Scott looked with a touch of sadness in her eyes at the shelves scattered with white plastic tubing and chrome-plated pipes and valves.
Perhaps it seems strange to be nostalgic about the closing of a plumbing supply store, but the store at 729 Main St. in Eudora has been both workplace and home to Scott and her husband, Earl, for 33 years.
"WE RAISED our family right here on Main Street in Eudora." Scott said.
"We decided we wanted to retire to have some time to ourselves, take off in the spring," she said.
The closing of the Scotts' store, and the local bank's purchase of the store because no one came forward to take it, signals that downtown Eudora is ailing.
"The thing I'm concerned about is business hasn't been growing downtown," Scott said. "Small business keeps things going in a community."
ALTHOUGH EUDORA'S population has grown steadily since 1940, the business district—one block on Main Street—has suffered during the last few years.
Two reasons for downtown's problems are high interest rates and competition from stores in Lawrence, seven miles to the west.
The signs of trouble are uncommon. A store allows, siding store fronts and for sale skids.
J. Kurt von Achen, who serves on both the Lawrence and the Eudora planning commissions, said that although the situation downtown had improved, the problems were still there.
Eudora's Long Range Physical Development Plan, revised in 1975, downtown "has been experiencing physical and economic deterioration."
"We've got some deterioration problems no doubt about that," von Achwardi said.
ONE REASON FOR Mills' gloomy
tradition is that she's creating a new business in a troubled economy.
Virgil E. Mills, pastor for the New Life Tabernacle Church in Eudora, said, "I don't see anything but stagnation down town."
"The young people aren't taking over anymore," Scott said. "It's harder for a young person nowadays to start up a business.
"It used to be easy to start with
makes it started with $200 borrowed
from my day."
Al Coleman, former mayor of Eudora who owns the Coast to Coast Hardware store.
"If you tried to open up a store in Eudora today, you'd have to have $100,000." Coleman said.
"It costs just as much to build in a small town as it does in a city. I don't see any sunshine in the west for downtown."
Jay Gary Vernillion, Eudora city councilman who owns the town's only grocery store, said Eudora needed new furniture and has had trouble attracting them.
However, Coleman said, "It takes more than a city council to attract new business. It takes a chamber of commerce."
Mills said, "Our leadership here in the community hasn't done anything for a number of years in trying to generate any kind of growth."
Eudora currently has no chamber of commerce.
Vernierm said that the condition of downtown buildings posed problems for people living there.
"THEOLD BUILDINGS that are left aren't really suitable for anything," he said. "Most people don't want to start a business and want to buy out an existing business."
Another problem Vermilion and modern merchants face is competition.
Vermillion said that retailers from other parts of Kansas didn't understand
why the owner of the only grocery store in a town of 3,000 wasn't “bringing money to the bank in a wheelbarrow.”
"They don't understand that I'm competing with nine grocery stores just seven miles away in Lawrence," Vermillion said.
MANY EUDRORANS SAID the town could not be called independent because of its closeness to Lawrence.
Patricia Snow, who works at Miller and Midyet Realtors & Insurance Company, Tendora, said, "We are not FEATURED on any book but buy shoes or a pair of slacks here."
Eudorans depend on Lawrence for entertainment as well as for clothing and accessories.
Although Eudora has lighted softball fields and a city swimming pool, some younger Eudorans complained there was nothing to do there.
Paula Hopkins, a University of Kansas sophomore in social welfare and a former Euduran, that "kids love" in Little Street looking for something to do.
Barbara Zook, 13, daughter of a Methodist minister in Eudora, agreed with Hopkins and Conner.
"Almost all my friends are in Lawrence," Zoook said. "I'd probably be a maniac right now if I couldn't go to Lawrence."
Hopkins said that a lot of vandalism out of boredom and frustration took place in Eudora. She mentioned an at a meeting place for teenagers, and an at building parking lot as examples of structures that had been vandalized.
Hagar's closed down less than six months after opening because of problems with vandalism, Hopkins said.
"It was a flop. The sterec was stolen after about the first week," Hopkins said.
Even though Hopkins saw many drawbacks to growing up in Eudora, she also saw some advantages.
"I never had to worry about walking home at night from ballgames," she said.
ANOTHER ADVANTAGE to Eudora was a feeling of belonging, Hopkins said.
"You knew everybody. Good Lord, if I ever did anything wrong, my mother would be the first person to know about it," she said.
Von Achen said that because Eudora was between Lawrence and Kansas City, the town had become a bedroom where people worked outside Eudora but lived in a outside Eudora but lived in a
The smallness of Eudora attracts people from the Lawrence and Kansas City areas, Snow said.
"I think we're due to be a bedroom
community, and a very fine bedroom community, for a long time," von
But Mills disagreed with von Achen about the desirability of Eudora being a king.
"Eudora doesn't have the typical small-town personality," Mills said. "We have a lot of people who really hate her, and there's not any real sense of belonging."
However, Vermillion and other Eudorans saw advantages to living in Eurasia.
Kelvin Hoover, president of the Kaw Valley State Bank, agreed with Vermillion that Eudora's location was ideal.
"I'm TRYING TO enjoy the pluses of "TIM TRYING TO enjoy the pluses of" Vermillion said. "We have fishing and hunting nearby, and all the businesses need in Lawrence and Kansas City."
Hoover and his son James, mayor of Eudora, said that the town was in no danger. The city is under attack.
Mayor Hoover said that Lawrence has consistently given warm the southward winds from Puduja.
"All the cities in Kansas generally go southwest," he said.
Von Achen said Eudora would remain a separate community for many years.
"From the planning literature that I read in the read "70s and 70s, it was expected that we would be part of a metropolitan strip from somewhere east of St. Louis to somewhere west of Topeka," von Achen said.
"The major reason we won't be a piece of Lawrence is because with the new flood plain ordinations, it would be impractical to do much with the Kaw River valley between Eudora and Lawrence."
Lawrence recently passed ordinances limiting development in flood plains.
Von Achen said that in spite of problems with the school was este a healthy community.
"I don't see us drying up and evaporating," he said.
City clerk Arlene Lawson agreed that Eudora was healthy, and added that the city was in no financial trouble.
"We're in the black," Lawson said. BCAUSE OF EUDORA's growing population, property taxes have covered city expenses.
Unlike the Lawrence City Commission, the county commission
Lawson said that Eudorans wanted the city to remain the same.
"The people who are here want to be here and they don't want to move," she said.
Von Achen agreed that Eudorans liked the town the way it is now.
"If everyone wanted to live in
Exeter it wouldn't be Eudora,"
Ayochen said.
Commission oversees county
The commission is comprised of three members: Chairman Robert Neis, Vice Chairman Beverly Bradley and Commissioner Walter Cragan.
The Douglas County Commission is a small but mighty group which oversees all money spent in the county.
By JULIA SANDERS
Staff Reporter
According to Bradley, the commission acts as "chief administrator and policy-maker for the county."
Budget regulation allows the commission to control the offices of other elected county officials. Bradley said. The officials are hired by the commission.
Most decisions, Bradley said, are routine administrative ones. The county budget, which supplies funds for all county offices, is subject to compartmentalizing the money is appropriated, all vouchers must be signed by two commissioners.
members receive salaries and meet three times a week. Their jurisdiction includes nineteen townships within Douglas county which have a total population of 65,211.
Each commissioner is elected by districts to serve a four-year term. Neis and Bradley were elected last month the cagan will be up for reelection in 1982.
The commission provides a number of services for the county. Among those services are a county ambulance service, a rest home, law enforcement, county fairgrounds and the upkeep of the county lake. Lone Star.
Last year Lone Star was drained to begin a four year project to repair the hull.
The commission is currently considering plans to construct a building to house county ambulances in compliance with state law.
Recently, legislation was passed stipulating that by January 1982, all ambulance vehicles must be housed. The Fire Dept. No. 1, 745 Vermont St., which provides enough room for only three of the four ambulances.
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WORKING TOGETHER FOR THE FUTURE
LAWRENCE CHAMBER of COMMERCE
Education
Industry
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Together Lawrence and the University of Kansas are working for a better and brighter future. Through the support of the community, the University will continue to grow and produce a workforce for the city that will be stronger for the future. The University of Kansas provides a steady supply of educated men and women who will be the leaders for the future. Therefore, as the University grows the city of Lawrence and state of Kansas will grow also.
The University has grown from 55 students and one building in 1866 to more than 24,000 students and 86 major buildings covering a 1,000 acre campus in 1981. During this time new people, businesses, and industries have located in Lawrence helping the city to become a leading community in the state. Many qualities have been combined that have added to the growth of the University of Kansas and Lawrence. Qualities for the University are outstanding faculty, students and administrators constantly working together to improve the size and stature of the University. For instance, in the 1980 fiscal year the University attracted more than $33 million in external research funds, an increase of $50% since
1973. These research funds have benefited Lawrence and the University.
Qualities that have attracted new businesses to Lawrence are good local government, its central location, transportation facilities and services,a quiet living environment, diversified recreational facilities,and with Clinton Lake, an adequate water supply for the future. These new businesses and industries provide much needed jobs for Lawrence workers and also strengthen our local economy.
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce brings us all together working for a better future. The dedication and hard work among community, University and industrial leaders through the Chamber of Commerce has brought recognition to Lawrence as one of the most future minded communities in the state of Kansas. If Lawrence is to continue its growth and progress, it is the responsibility of citizens, students, and workers to take an active part in the community. The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce encourages all concerned citizens to promote their city, university and businesses.
Together we will prosper!
We Are Proud To Support Our Chamber of Commerce
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Aeroquip Corp. Gustin-Bacon Division LRM Industries, Inc. Quaker Oats Company
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1988
Kansas couple strums bluegrass-gospel for fun
By LINDA LANG Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Leo Hagerman played mandolin at the country gathering, as usual, and his wife, Fern, played the guitar. He then heard a new sound when friends of his began to play an upright bass and a five-string guitar.
"That's the sound I had wanted to hear all my听," Ragerman, a Eudora farmer and bluegoss-gospel musician said. "That's when I realized the music I liked was blueguss. All that time I had just called it music."
Leo and Fern Hagerman play bluegrass and gospel music whenever they have the opportunity.
Hagerman, 65, said that they played at family reunions, schools, churches and even nursing homes. They have also performed at fairs and festivals. The Hagermans were just two of the many attractions in the Kansas Folk Festival last fall.
"We've played every place from Kansas City to Colorado." Hageman said. "When somebody wants to suffer, they must come to us."
The Kansas Folkie Festival, in mid-
September, the Vlnand Fail, August
20-22, and the Baldwin Maple Leaf
Festival, October 17-18, are showcases
for local residents with ability in area
folk art.
Last fall the Kansas Folklife Festival
had exhibitions of quilts, tatting,
whittting and hair weaving. Country,
bluegrass, blues and Polish musicians
performed their particular styles of music.
None of the musicians who perform at these fairs are highly paid. Hagerman explained that he and his wife do it for fun.
"If it's not going to be fun, I don't want to play." Hagerman said.
The Hagermans explained that when they performed at the Kansas Folkie Festival, the only payment they accepted was food coupons worth $24. They were offered a $50 fee, as were all the other musicians and craftsmen, but they refused to take it. They also refused free room and board at a Topeka motel. Instead, they drove back to their farm to sleep.
"Bluegrass is not a money field," Hagerman said.
Hagerman said he got his guitar when he was 17 or 18 years old. It only had three strings on it, so he had to take them three from Montgomery Ward & Co.
"I banged on that thing for a year," Hagerman said.
Then his father bought him a guitar
of $5, and Hagerman said he "decided to
eat it."
Hagerman said his wife played a little bit before they were married. The two of them began to play together at home after they married. They heard
musicians playing bluegrass and gospel
on the dots and decided they wanted
them.
One of the radio programs they listened to was the John Lair Show, an old-time music show broadcast from Renfrove Valley, Ky. They still listen to to Topeka radio station WIBW at 5 a.m. every Sunday.
"He's really done a lot for old-time music." Hagerman said.
Mrs. Hagerman said the two of them
wrote to Mr. Leroy's Lair program
ever since they had met.
They also used to attend live shows put on by WIBW in the 1940s. They saw old-time groups like Roy and Earl, the Oklahoma Outlaws and Roy Faunker, who was known as the "Lonesome Cowboy."
Mrs. Hagerman brought an old paperback songbook from the living room cabinet, yellowed with age, titled "Roy and Earl's Sacred and Sentimental Folk Songs." The book is a household treasure.
She also brought out clippings of articles written about her and her husband, including an excerpt from the program of last year's Kansas Folkie Festival and a feature clipped from the Lawrence Daily Journal-World.
Despite the attention they have received for their music, Hagerman was born and again there were many people who sang bluegrass-pollens musicians than they.
Country Club week provides KU students opportunity to explore area entertainment
A body can take only so many Country Club can week parties. If you find yourself tiring of scheduled residence hall activities or impromptu pool parties, the area surrounding Lawrence off-air variety of entertainment attractions.
By LISA PROCTOR Staff Reporter
Many of these area attractions are free.
*Black Archives of Mid-America, 2033*
Vine St., specializes in documents and exhibits in the archives in black history. Exhibits include artifacts from Kansas, Missouri and Iowa.
Kansas City also boasts theatre and opera productions.
The Kansas City area, 45 miles east on Kansas 10 or the Kansas Turnpike, offers many museums and parks. Located in Kansas City, Mo. are:
Dinner theatre offerings include:
- Kansas City Museum of History and Science, 2118 Gladstone Boulevard, has a planetarium as well as exhibits
St., will present "Fiddler on the Roof" and "Under the Yum Yum Tree" during August and September.
- The Lyric Opera season will open Sept. 19 with "Regina". It will be the second season of Girl in Algeria"; will play Sept. 23, 28 and 28 at the Lyric, 1029 Central St.
featuring turn-of-the-century furniture.
· Harry S. Truman Library and Museum, Highway and Delaware St., documenting the life of Truman's life and presidential years.
Dinner theatre offerings include:
* The Waldo Astoria, 7428 Washington
- Tiffany's Attic, 5028 Main St., will feature "Mama" throughout September.
- Nelson-Atkins Galleries, 45th and Oak Streets, have a large selection of Oriental art. The galleries also feature special exhibits, a cafeteria serving international cuisine and a large gift shop.
- Loose Park, 5200 Pennsylvania St.,
and Swope Park offer picnic and play
areas. Swope Park, Park Wakey
Gregory Boulevard, also feature a
zoo.
- Combat Air Museum at Forbes Field
planes and other flying
machinery.
- Topeka, the state capital, 30 miles
off to U.S. 40 and the Kansas Turpike
offe
- Kansas State Historical Museum, 10th and Jackson Streets, specializes in Kansas artifacts and historical documents.
"It's not how good you are." Hagerman said. "It's your style and how you go about it. They see you having fun and it kind of rubs off."
He also said that in the 1940s, one rarely heard a five-string banjo, the kind often used in bluegrass music today.
- Gage Park, Sixth Street and Gage Boulevard, offers large picnic areas and a zoo.
Also in the area, Baldwin City, 20 miles south of Lawrence on Kansas 59, offers the Old Castle Museum. This attraction features antique furniture, home arts and the Santa Fe Post Office and Grocery.
Bluegrass and gospel are not two entirely different kinds of music, according to Mrs. Hagerman.
"I think one thing that really revived bradges was Earl Scruggs and Lester Flatbread."
"Bluesgrass is a style," she said.
"Gospel is sacred music. Now if you play gospel music in a blaugrass style, that's good music."
Gloria Throne, a local bluegrass buff and folkorist the Hagermans sometimes play with, told them they played old-time music, not bluegrass.
difference between his own style and that of a lot of younger bluegrass artists.
Hagerman said he had noticed a
Hagerman said he had played with accomplished musicians all his life. His grandfather organized a band in Vinland and taught the other band members how to play their instruments.
He said he met Dale McIntosh, a Basehor musician, through a friend in Missouri. They later performed to the cultural Hall of Fame in Bison Inner Springs.
Some of Hagerman's earlier childhood memories were of house dances.
'It's kind of a case of 'birds of a feather flock together,' he said. "If people like the same kind of music, they'll get together someone."
"They'd take a couple rooms and clean them out and throw the kids upstairs," he said. "They'd square dance, sometimes until dawn."
Hagerman also has met musicians at the local festivals. He heard Greg Allen, an area musician he called one of the best, at the Kansas Folk Festival
"A lot of the younger folk don't stick to the melody as well as I do." he said.
and attended a mandolin workshop that Allen conducted.
That is the way they prefer to play today, either by themselves when they have time or with a group of friends who have decided to set together.
Hagerman said there was a loose network of people in the Lawrence area who were actively involved with bluegrass.
"That's the most fun there is." Hagerman said. "If we never play again, we've had a lot of fun at it. We met a lot of good people."
TOMMY AND JUDY
MARTI FRUMHOFF/Kansan Staff
Lee Hagerman plays the mandolin, and his wife, Fern, plays the guitar on the front step of their home southeast of Lawrence. The duo plays bluegrass-gospel music in this area.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Page 5
kshop that
ayed with is life. His band in her band their in-
earlier of house
booms and the kids square
er to play when they of friends er.
nere is," over play at it. We
KU degrees aid officers
By ALICE McCART Staff Reporter
The U.S. Army and several universities are working in an attempt to improve the quality of medical care.
The Army, the students and the cooperating universities all benefit from this program, despite some of its problems, according to program members.
In the mid-1970s, the U.S. Army established cooperative degree programs between the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth and five universities at University of Kansas. The Army began the program to train officers for anticipated vacancies in the military.
Maj. Jim Smith, a public affairs officer who completed the requirements for the master of science degree in journalism at KU in December 1980, said the program his job. His current assignment is in Army's Training with Industry program at the Dallas Morning News.
"Because of the co-op program, I have never been better prepared to do a job," Smith said recently. "When I arrived here, I knew how many points in a pica and picas in an inch. I knew what questions to ask the managers in the different departments of the newspaper about budgets, problems, quality control, and use of statistics and computers."
The student officers enrolled in the program complete part of their course work at Fort Leavenworth and then go to the cooperating university. They finish their degree requirements before they must report for their next Army assignments.
"IT WAS A cram course with a lot of pressure and no slack time," Smith said. "It was very hard to do comps, ora and a thesis all at the same time. I bought it. I wouldn't trade that experience for anything in the world."
Phil Brookes, director of the Cooperative Degree Program at the Command and General Staff College, said about 20 students participated in the program each year at KU, Kansas State University, Kansas City, Missouri at Kansas City, Wichita State University, and Florida Institute of Technology.
"The Command and General Staff College benefits a lot when professors come to he college to teach and bring their expertise—that of a lifelong academician," Brookes said. "The CGCS curriculum is broadened and leavened. The Army cannot duplicate them."
The Cooperative Degree Program
student officers are of an average age of 35. Brookes said the students benefited the most from the program, from having the students in the classes from having the students in the classes.
"Many professors have said that the CGSC students are more worldly, ambitious students," he said. "They have traveled the world and been responsible for large numbers of people and material and have worked under difficult circumstances, sometimes life and death, all of which adds up to more experience than average graduate students have.
ANOTHER OF THE program a benefits that Brookes cited was that the CGSC was improved by contact with universities.
"It means something professionally to the school to be part of the brotherhood of academic institutions," he said. "It would be easy for the CGSC to become insular and restricting and closed off."
KU offers graduate degrees in
history, philosophy, and journalism as part of the program.
Don Jugeheimer, director of graduate studies and research for KU's William Allen White School of Journalism said that the program's graduates were making great contributions to the Army.
"The students are serious," Jugendherm said. "I think they get a lot out of the program. The professors do it well." CGC.SC. There is good camaraderie.
Maj. Dave Hawkins, who is enrolled in the program benefited Army personnel.
When Hawkins finishes his master's degree in history in Middle East area studies at KU in December, he will go to Fort Bliss, Texas, to activate the Army's first Patriot missile battalion. "For the long term, I expect that my assignment following this one will be a foreign area officer assignment as a Middle East area specialist," Hawkins said.
Hawkins used to work for the office of the Cooperative Degree Program.
"THE CO-OP PROGRAM meets the need to train officers against a real fixed-cost budget with additional guidance to reduce that cost wherever possible." Hawkins said. "That is, the least cost to the government and least cost to taxpayers and in the shortest amount of time wherever possible. Cooper students are trained specifically against Army shortages."
A few weeks after Hawkins had finished the 10-month CGSC course and the first nine hours of history courses, he began taking things he did not like about the program.
Administration benefits if they have them, or by paying on their own.
Hawkins said the Army paid for the nine hours of credit taught by university professors at the CGSC, and the students received six hours of credit for work. The students pay for the rest of the hours, either by using Veterans
"My free time was reduced to almost nothing—no traveling, not much time for community activities, not much time with the family," he said. "And I would have liked some language training as an elective at GCSC—Arabic or French for Middle East area studies. But GCSC said no language training, and there is not enough time in the curriculum at KU."
Mike Kautsch, assistant professor of journalism, has taught the Law of Communications class for the co-op program at CGSC the past two years. He said that he found it hard to adequately cover material in one class meeting each week and that CGSC lacked legal research materials.
ONE OF KAUCH'S* students last spring, MaJ. Bob McDonald, an aviación specialist in the secondary career specialty in the Army and said he liked being on the KU campus.
"It's a great opportunity to associate with faculty and students and to share ideas and interests," McDonald said. "I like it all, except that we are forced to concentrate on the print media because the constraints and the requirements of the press, which does not leave much time for public relations or broadcasting."
"But those are insignificant concerns because of all the great people in the program. I really enjoy the co-op program," Kautsch said.
He said that they had moved to Fort Leavenworth in June 1890, to Lawrence in June 1861 and that it was hard on his family to plan on moving again in December. He said he was not sure what his next assignment in the Army would be, perhaps as a public affairs officer in Europe.
"The value of this program is that there is a sort of adversary relationship between the military and the press," McDonald said. "I hope that by learning more about journalism—the requirements of reporters, the press, etc.-that I will be able to improve this relationship.
McDonald said he and his family enjoyed living in Lawrence, although his wife and he missed the Army community. Their son, Rob, 3, was in school on a program at Haworth Hall three days a week and loved it, McDonald said.
"The public will be the real benefactor. Improved relationships will result in better, more balanced reporting of military affairs."
By DAVID McQUEEN Staff Renorter
Area parks offer recreation for getting away from it all
Boating facilities include nine boat ramps and a full-service marina, complete with a restaurant, bait and tackle shop, and storage and repair facilities. Boat rentals offer wilderness hiking and camping areas. basketball diamonds and horseback trails.
Sooner or later, every college student feels the urge to get away from it all. They use the infiltrationary times, escaping the drudgery of academia isn't all that easy.
Camping fees vary. Most of the parks charge $4 per day. In the Longview, Slough Creek and Rock Creek areas, fees are $3 per night. Camping is free in the Paradise Point, Sunset Ridge, Perry and Outlet areas.
For KU students, the area lakes and reservoirs offer an inexpensive way to enjoy a lake.
PERRY LAKE—This 12,200-acre lake is located about 15 miles northwest of Lawrence off of U.S. 24. The lake is surrounded by one state and nine federal camping areas, some of which have electricity.
CLINTON LAKE—The closest lake to the city, this 7,000-acre lake is 4 miles southwest of Lawrence. The lake is surrounded by one state park and five federal parks that comprise over 4,500 acres of land. Camping facilities are available at all the parks, including some water and electric hookups. A fee for camping is charged for camping in the federal park area ($1 per day extra. The state park charges $1 per day user's use. Camping by the outlet, which has no bookings, is free.
These park areas, all less than an hour's drive away from Lawrence, offer everything from wilderness camping to dinner theater.
Clinton has seven shelters, located throughout the parks, available on a first-come first-served basis. Groups of 15 or more can make reservations to the Bloomington West Recreational Area for $5 per day. Picnicking is allowed in all the parks although there are no tables or barbecues available.
Picnicking is allowed in all the park areas. Shelters with grills and fireplaces are available on a first-come, first-served basis in most of the parks. Boat facilities include cabins, cramps and two marinas, both equipped with restaurants and fishing supplies.
The area's major lakes and reservoirs are:
POMONA LAKE—Located 50 miles southwest of Lawrence, Pomona features a 4,000-acre lake surrounded by one state and eight federal parks. All
but one of the parks have camping areas complete with showers, hot water, electric hookups and a dump station.
It costs $4 per day to camp, plus an extra dollar a day for electricity. The state park charges $1.50 per vehicle per day user's fee.
All of Pomona's parks have picnic grounds and shelters, four of which can be reserved. There are 10 boat ramps on the lake, plus two marinas. Other attractions include an amphitheater that features nature programs and a dinner theater about two miles from the lake in the town of Vassar.
LONE STAR LAKE—This 198-acre county lake, located 15 miles southwest of Lawrence, was recently closed and drained for repair work on its edge. Lone Star is open now, but the lake is still down from its normal level.
The lake is surrounded by 422 acres of park land maintained by the county. The park has two camping areas, a playground, a public boat ramp, and a dock. These facilities are used of the park. Rowboats are available for rent. When the lake was drained, all of the fish were removed, and it has not been restocked yet.
See related map on page one.
The river flows through the dense vegetation of a tropical forest, surrounded by lush greenery and scattered trees. The water reflects the surrounding landscape, creating a serene atmosphere.
WENDY NUGENT/Kansan Staff
Lone Star Lake, although still below its normal level after being drained for dam repairs last year, again offers the opportunity for picnicking or boating.
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Page 6 University Daily Karsan, August 20, 1981
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Page 7
Nuclear plant blessing for Burlington businesses
By TIM ELMER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The construction of the plant has helped this town a lot, Burlington Mayor Floyd Lewis said recently.
For many in Burlington, Wolf Creek is not a problem. It is a blessing.
People in the Burlington area seem to be more concerned about how the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant has affected their pocketbooks than with the issues of plant safety, nuclear waste disposal and future electrical rates.
"I favor the nuclear power plant and I would say at least 90 percent of the people in Burlington favor Wolf Creek," Lewis said.
The plant, which is three miles east of the John Redmond Dam and six miles northeast of Burlington, is co-owned by Kansas City Power and Light Co., the Kansas Gas and Electric Co. and the Kansas Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. Because of the tremendous investment in the plant, electrical rates are expected to rise sharply after the plant becomes operable.
Construction of the plant started in 1977. It was scheduled to be finished in mid-1982 at an estimated cost of $500 million.
Plagued by endless problems, the completion date is now projected to be some time in 1984 at an expected cost of $1.7 billion.
Residents of Burlington don't seem to be concerned about those statistics. Are there more inclined to talk about statistics than relate to the growth of their town.
After the project started, Lewis said, the population of Burlington jumped from 2,200 to 3,800 people. Business has been good for many people in the town.
Sadie Settlemeyer, a waitress at the Lake View Cafe in New Straw, which is halfway between Burlington and Wolf Creek, said that before construction of Wolf Creek had started, there were lots of slack periods at the cafe.
"Business here now is pretty good year-round except if you get bad weather," she said. "Otherwise, people come in pretty much all the time."
In Burlington more than the stores and restaurants have prospered. The construction of new housing and the development of numerous mobile home parks and a rise in real estate prices all indicate that times are good.
Roy Bates, manager of Burlington Lumber and Supply Inc., said that although housing starts had slowed, at least 40 new houses had been built in
Burlington in the past three or four years.
Edwin Ware, also a waitress at Lake View Cafe, said two new schools had been built in Burlington in the last two years.
"We got a new elementary school and a new high school," she said. "They might have built them even if there were fewer of them, but they wouldn't have been as big and nice."
Mobile home parks have sprung up all over the place, Ware said. There are about two or three new trailer parks in and around them and three or four in New Strawn.
The demand for new housing has often real estate prices up, Lewis said.
"Real estate is high everywhere but I think it is a little higher here right now because it has a lot of investment."
Because business is booming in Burlington, the residents don't seem to be too concerned about the issues that appear in the newspapers so often, the safety, disposal of nuclear waste and the inevitably higher electrical rates.
Many people in the Burlington area think the plant is safe despite the technical and structural problems that have plagued the plant.
The concrete that formed the basement of the plant was found to be substandard. Cracks were discovered in the walls of the reactor and had to be removed. The cracks were defective and parts of the alarm and sprinkler systems had to be replaced.
Lewis said he felt sure that all those problems had been adequately correct.
"They caught the problems and fixed them," he said. "Just like that concrete deal. I went and saw that myself. It was hard, but I knew there were all in concrete. That all it was."
Ware said she also felt the plant was safe. People who work at the plant eat Lake View Cafe all the time and they don't talk about it being unsafe, she said.
"Not even the people at the hospital talk about it not be safe," she said. "They think it安全. Everyone around them used to it. They all think it is safe."
Lewis said he thought the power companies had learned a lot from the Three Mile Island accident. He said the situation putting in new and improved safety features that would prevent the same kind of thing happening at Wolf Creek.
The only concern he had about the safety of the plant was sabotage. But even that was unlikely because of the fact that they had taken to prevent it, he said.
"There is always a danger that something could happen," Lewis said. "There is a danger even when people cross the street."
The disposal of the spent nuclear fuel is yet another problem that doesn't seem to be of much concern to Burlington residents.
Were said she was not sure what they were going to do with the waste, "but whatever they do with it, I am sure it will be safe," she said.
Lewis said that although the United States had been the first to start using nuclear power, France and Russia had started importing United States in waste disposal methods.
In France, they reuse the spent fuel and don't have any problem with it, Lewis said.
"They send the waste back and get it recomposed into pellets and reuse it," he said. "When they get done with it, they don't have any trouble with nuclear waste because there is nothing left of it," he said.
He said laws in the United States prevented power plants from reprocessing spent nuclear fuel.
Bob Rives, vice president for K&E's systems services, Wichita, said some European countries did reprocess spent nuclear fuel.
"That reprocessing is not currently being done in the United States with commercial reactors but it is being done in military uses," he said.
When spent fuel is reprocessed, plutonium is separated out, he said. The Carter administration felt the proliferation of plutonium, which is used for nuclear weapons, could be better controlled if the reprocessing of nuclear fuel were prohibited, Rives said.
That policy is now being reviewed by the present administration, he said. Until a decision is made, the spent fuel is placed in storage and then disposed at the plant instead of belarus disposed of.
Waste still remains after the fuel is reprocessed, he said.
because it had cost so much to build the plant.
"You hear the expression that the waste from a plant like that of Wolf Creek each year would be a cube the size of a desk. That waste is a by-product of processing and would have to be disposed of in salt mines," Rives said.
Burlington residents agree that once the plant becomes operable, electrical wiring must be changed.
Ware said electrical rates would probably increase after the plant went into operation, but inflation was the reason.
Marilyn Christman, office manager of the Burlington Medical Center, said she was pleased with the care provided.
"Electrical rates will go up but so has the price of everything else in the country."
Rives said rates would likely jump about 15 percent above the cost of current rates in 1984 when the plant is opened. Over the 40 year lifetime of the plant, however, he said he expected that nuclear generated power would be about 10 percent cheaper than coal-generated power.
Tom Taylor, public relations director for the Kansas Corporation Commission said, according to their estimates, the immediate rate increase after the plant becomes operable would be substantial.
"The figures that we have indicate that rates will increase 50 percent above KGAE's present rates," he said.
People do not seem to be concerned about a big jump in electrical rates when the plant goes on the line because
they hear that the power will be cheaper in the long run, Taylor said.
"Our contention has been an alloy that when the plant becomes operable, people aren't going to care so much about how much they are going to save over 40 years," Taylor said. "But they will be awfully concerned if their rates jump up 50 percent or more at the time the plant goes on the line."
Although residents in and around Burlington seem to be happy with the Wolf Creek nuclear plant, some people outside of Burlington are not so happy. They are the people who had to sell their land to make way for the plant.
Florence Edwards, Route 1,
Blingington, definitely
against using the plant built.
"Some of my friends have had their land taken away," she said. "They didn't want to get of it but they had Mo. They have accepted it and have to live with it."
Mrs. Charley Bemis, Route 3, Burlington, said they had to leave their home and sell 800 acres of their land because of the Wolf Creek project.
"There were lots of people who had
their land take away." Bernis said, " lots of them out in their neighborhood."
She also about 54 residential looms. Rives said about 50 landowners had sold their property to make way for the plant.
"Only about 10 percent of the 56 landowners did not want to sell," he said.
He said KG&E had the right to buy the land because of a so-called power of emmine domain. If people elect not to sell their property, there are court rules that they should be given rights to the extent that the land cannot be unfairly taken from them, he said.
"They can condemn anything they want and take it." Bennis said.
Unlike many Burlington residents, Bemis said she didn't think the nuclear plant was safe.
"Even with the safety precautions, they aren't safe," she said. "There are a lot of accidents and things that happened at other places. It can happen here."
Even though they now live only six miles from the plant, Benis said they didn't want to move. When asked why, she laughed and said, "I don't know."
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
LAURENCE
The Kansas Board of Regents and the
Faculty, Staff, and Students of The University of Kansas request the honor of your presence at the Inauguration of Gene A. Budig as Chancellor of the University
Installation Ceremony
during the University Convocation
on Monday morning, August the twenty-fourth
Nineteen hundred and eighty-one
at a quarter before ten o'clock
Allen Field House
The University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Page 9
Army ammo plant lies empty, waiting
By CHRIS TODD Staff Reporter
At first glance, the U.S. Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant looks something like a deserted movie set.
The vastness of the complex is immediately apparent—it encompasses 15 square miles—but its sparse, gray buildings look empty, and except for the chirping of a few birds and the droning of a distant lawnmower, there is silence. The dominant impression is that something should be going on, but isn't.
IN JUNE OF 1945, just three years after its construction, the plant employed 12,067 workers and produced more than 202 million pounds of ammunition powder.
Now the plant, located about 15 miles east of Lawrence in DSeoto, is nonoperational. It remains in a perpetual state of readiness, waiting for the moment when it must again supply tons of ammunition chemicals for the powerful weapons in the U.S. defense arsenal.
"Basically, what we are is a $1.1 billion insurance policy." Tom Stutz, commander's representative at the plant, said. "We hope we never have to go into operation, but if we do, it won't take long to get ready."
Although the plant is not producing what it was designed to produce, which is chemical propellant for small rockets and cannons, it takes a considerable number of jobs that employees just to maintain the plant's facilities and grounds, according to Stucco.
"Right now, we employ around 635 permanent employees," Stutz said. "There are a number of things that need to be done, including maintaining some 100 miles' worth of roads, and of course, the grounds have to be kept up." We are also constantly maintaining and modernizing our equipment. That's probably the most important function of the plant right now."
IN THE PAST, according to Stutz, the plant hired 50 or 60 students every summer to do simple maintenance or clerical work. Because of budget restrictions, however, the plant was not able to do that this year, he said.
"Most of the students we hired did a lot of painting and lawn mowing, but they were paid pretty well, around six
of seven dollars an hour, "he said." A few students were hired to straighten up medical records, and others took office or worked on the railroad crew.
Touring the grounds of the plant by car shows how large and costly a chemical ammunition plant can be. It takes at least an hour to complete the tour.
The most distinguishing characteristic of the physical plant is the miles of pipelines that run parallel to the paved, narrow main road.
At certain points, several pipeline systems converge and pass each other, creating a jumbled look, like freeway junctures in Los Angeles or Chicago.
WENDY NUGENT/Kansan Staff
Occasionally the pipelines change direction and pass in and out of small buildings, which are often surrounded by wooden barricades designed to direct and limit the effects of a nitroglycerin explosion.
"When the plant is producing, there are some hazardous operations that take place," Stutz said. "During certain par's of the production process, nitrogerinein and other chemicals are released." The explosion is always present, although there have been very few in the plant's history."
There are more than 4,000 buildings on the plant grounds, Stutz said. The plant houses its own hospital, living quarters and laundry facilities.
"The complex is actually like a small city," Stutz said. "Our water capacity, for instance, is near 50 million gallons, which is as big or bigger than our local city." The only thing a city might have that we don't have is a shopping district."
10000
IF A FULL-SCALE war broke in the next year, Stutz said the plant would take almost a year to become fully operational.
Besides providing propellant for rockets and cannons in World War II, the plant was operational during the Korean and Vietnam wars.
At the height of the Korean War, the plant employed about 5,300 workers. In 1967, the plant reached its peak Viet- embour employment level of about 4,000 workers.
"It would be a step-by-step process," Stutz said. "Within three to four months, we would be producing at some percentage of our capacity, but it would probably be a full year before we reached our peak capacity. I just hope that possibility doesn't come up in the near future."
U. S. Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan, August 20. 1981
Lawrence
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Dine in the true Mexican Village "Huts"
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Enjoy a Great Steak at Lawrence's Great Steak House
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1
University Dally Kansan, August 20, 1981
Birch activities important work to Tonganoxian
By TIM ELMER Staff Reporter
Presidents Eliseehower, Truman and Franklin Roosevelt were charged in Boli with being conscious agents of the Nazi conspiracy, which, ech, founder of the John Bich Society.
The charges caught the attention of the nation. The public learned that the John Birch Society was an anti-immigrant political organization committed to combating what they saw as the gradual takeover of the United States.
THE AIMS OF the society are to fight communism by organizing study programs to educate the public about communist strategies and purposes, to teach students about how to actively promote the society's views and to get involved in civic affairs.
The most active and well-known member in the society in this area is Herley. He lives in Tonganoxie and carried a chapter of the society there in 1977.
Fatherley has been characterized by her rank in the local Logithmic Society.
"Yes, I would say that is true," he modest rack-style headgear at his modest rack-style headgear.
His ramid promotion of John Birch doctrine is not restricted to Taiwan. He has sponsored five national speakers funded by the society who travel across the nation giving
talks on topics, which the society sponsors.
Fatherley talked about his many accomplishments both nationally and locally. The single endearer he took the most pride in, he said, was his success in defusing what he called a "potentially dangerous protest march" on the Lawrence campus of the University of Kansas.
"WE GOT INVOLVED in Lawrence on Homecoming Day two years ago in which the Birch Society name was not used," he said. "I thought it was too potentially dangerous. We went under the name, TACT, Truth About Civil Turmoll, which is an ad hoc committee of the John Birch Society."
The International Committee Against Racism had planned a march on campus on Homecoming Day in 1979, he said.
INCAR is the Progressive Labor Party's humanitarian-sounding front, he said. The PLP is an adjunct of the Progressive Party in the United States, he said.
InCAR is a violent, strong organization, he said. Its members are really for racism. They use racism to create violence in the streets, he said.
InCAR is committed to the destruction of life, liberty and property using racism as cannot fodder for their cause, like Miller's brown shirts," he said.
"We had two weeks of intensive training," he said.
"I won't tell you what we put together."
our program. This was something that we had never handled before, working with a violent-prone organization. I got help from the Birch Society and they gave me the research information on how to make our tactics work."
THE BIRCH SOCIETY went into Lawrence with 2,000 filers that exposed INCAR, he said. He sent out press releases to the Senate and the House, using FID data on INCAR. They visited the Douglas County sheriff, the local chief of police, the Lawrence fire department and all the local merchants. Because of their efforts, no violence occurred, he said.
"I am grateful for the society's help in showing me how to deal with those people. It was strictly an educational job, and we built sufficient understanding in time to neutralize the movement."
According to newspaper accounts, IncAR did march with the Progressive Labor Party, which is a Marxist-Leninist group.
However, the Encyclopedia of Associations lists InCAR as an independent organization founded in 1973 and a strong advocate to build a multi-racial society.
Lawrence Police Chief Richard Stanwix said he remembered the march, but he remembered nothing unusual about it.
"Whenever we are a protest or march we are always concerned, regardless of who the group is," he said.
Fatherley sees distribution of information as his primary goal.
The Birch Society is not a political organization, but strictly an organization of business organizations.
"OUR OBJECTIVE is totally educational," he said. "We print the facts and the people make their own decisions. All we do is provide literature, books, information, speakers and a complete educational morgasmoad. Everything we print is documented."
Fatherley used his educational methods to oppose some local civic proposals in Tonganoxie. His methods underdear him to many Tonganoxie citizens.
Fatherley is perhaps best known in Tonganoxie for his opposition to a 1978 proposal by local community members to create a bikway along 30 miles of abandoned railway owned by the Union Pacific Railroad. The abandoned line runs from Lawrence through Tonganoxie to Leavenworth.
The O-Keet-Sha Trail Conservation Committee, composed of members from the Tonganoxie community, proposed that the abandoned railway, which follows an old Indian trail, be made into a bikeway. Harriet Hughes, Tonganoxie city clerk, was the corresponding secretary.
Fatherley paid for a $50 advertisement in the Tonganoxie denouncing the proposed bill in the Kansas Senate as a "Marxist-style"
land-grab "camouflaged as a recreation bill."
The proposal was defeated.
Part of the ad said, "WANTED: CITY CLERK WHO RESPECTS PROPERTY RIGHTS. I'm taking this paid advertisement to express my sincerest and strongest objections to the outright misrepresentation and harassment of Clerk and her small cadre of 'bike trail' fronters, dupes and stoares."
Mrs. Hughes declined to comment on the controversy.
Mary Wallace, Rt. 1, Tangonoxie, an active member of the trail committee,
"I JUST DON'T WANT my name connected in a ny way with his operation. It does bother me so much, I don't really even want to be involved in talking about him or giving him any publicity," he said.
"I can understand why they wouldn't want to talk," Fatherley said. "It created such a furor in town that I think they are probably better off saying nothing. It was a real, real hot issue and they were dancing with that thing for a while. But now they're the placement of a newspaper and is why they are close-mouthed because I put the spotlight of attention on the city clerk."
Fatherley also caused a controversy in Tongonkie by opposing city revenue the previous year and denouncing the bike trail, he expressed his opposition to city revenue sharing.
The ad said, "Our Tonganonie City elected officials are determined to surrender our private rights to the Fabian Socialist by applying for Federal Community Development Funds. These officials are lacking in responsibility and leadership. Anyone that will trade their loyalty to their oath of office for a socialist welfare check cannot be trusted."
ONCE AGAIN, THERE was a reluctance on the part of those involved to comment.
Pete Bennett, city councilman, said in reference to a question about Fatherley's opposition, "I can't answer that question. I don't want any personal conflict. This is a small town and I have to do my job."
Darrell Pearce, city councilman, said, "I can't tell you much. I know he is a member of the John Birch Society and he is against revenue sharing funds. I really don't have any information. I just don't."
Some people in Tonganoxie may not have any information to pass on, but Pathey seems to have an endless supply of new things to pass out whenever he beats the chance.
He spent 16 weeks last year on the road giving speeches. In September and October, he is scheduled to go on the road for another five weeks.
Fatherley's parting comment was, "If you are left with the impression that I have made the commitment, you are right."
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Welcome to Lawrence Jayhawks
Store Manager
Bill Frankenberger
Rusty's Hillcrest
9th & Iowa
Store Manager
Bill Frankenberger
Rusty's Hillcrest
9th & Iowa
Store Manager
Bill Frankenberger
Rusty's Hillcrest
9th & Iowa
Store Manager
Delmas Windholz
Rusty's Westridge
6th & Kasold
SHOES 36
SAFETY HONOURS
59
WELCOME TO THE MART
SHOP
DONALD R. BROWN
RUSTY'S IGA RUSTY'S IGA
CONVENIENCE
Rusty's Food Centers have been successfully serving the Lawrence area Jayhawks for over 43 years. We are the only local grocery stores that are home-owned and operated. That makes us proud and important for us to be responsive to our shopper needs. Our four food centers are conveniently located to serve you better: Rusty's Northside is on the way to Perry Lake; Rusty's Westridge is on the way to Clinton Lake; Rusty's Southside is close to major shopping areas and many apartments; and Rusty's Hillcrest is on the hill—right by campus.
PRICE
We know how important price is to budget-minded students. Rusty's offers you a wide variety of items and brand names at competitive prices, including our RAIN-BOW brand—no frills products. Watch for our weekly specials, marked with Thrifty Price signs that mean super savings Tuesday thru Monday. Come in and redeem your inflation Fighter Certificates for even lower priced specials.
PETER HARRIS
Store Manager
Jim Roberts
Rusty's Southside
23rd and Louisiana
6th St.
2nd St.
LINCOLN
9th St.
IOWA
23rd St.
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Your Hometown Grocers. .away from home.
Quality is a word we take seriously. Rusty's works hard to provide you with a large variety of the freshest and highest grade products for your money.
SERVICE
Service is something we stress. When you need an item, ask one of our employees. We're proud of our reputation as friendly, home town grocery stores. We offer quality, a large selection, friendly service in a clean atmosphere, plus party supplies, home cooked food in our delicatessens, with sit-down eating areas at Southside and Westridge, and fresh cakes, cookies, donuts and much more from our bakery. We also have sackers and provide carry out—a lost luxury most places these days.
IN A HURRY?
When you're out for a snack or the complete grocery list, come to Rusty's for fast, friendly service where you don't pay extra for variety and quality. If you're like most students you'll appreciate the four convenient locations and fast service.
RUSTY'S IGA
Store Manager Wayne Pine
Rusty's Northside
2nd & Lincoln
T. S. HARRIS
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KANSAN
Section 5
Sports
Football '81
Thursday, August 20, 1981
Football
Head Coach Don Fambrough enters his third year as KU head coach, and his recruiting and rebuilding of the Jayhawk football program has begun to show.
Recruits, veterans combine for mature, optimistic team
By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Editor
Don Fambrough's hard work has begun to pay off.
Coach Fambrough and his staff have been slowly recruiting a team and salvaging what was left of the squad Fambrough inherited from the squads ago. The results are beginning to surface.
"The carryover is beginning to show up," Fambridge said. "We were just learning to line up last year at this time. We were able to do it and win the first day. It helps the playermers, too."
"if they come back fat and out of shape, they're not thinking about football."
Fambrough also was impressed with the condition of the 110 players and walk-ons who reported to the first day of practice last Thursday.
The Jayhawks return 13 starters and 45 lettermen from last year's 4-5-2 squad, and Fambrough said that the experience wouldn't hurt, either.
"They all came back in excellent physical condition," Fambridge said. "That's the first thing a coach looks for. It's a true indication of how we've been thinking about over the summer."
"I like to think that overall we're bigger, faster and in most areas experienced," he said. "I'll still concern about the line. 'We'll be a big part of it,' he said. 'The will certainly improve as the season goes on.'"
"At the defensive end position, numberwise, we need to be deeper. And we need to be lucky with injuries, especially at positions we're thin under pressure. We have a different type of year as last year as far as injuries."
Fambridge last spring sought to bone up his graduation-depleted offensive line, as well as other positions. He shopping for junior college transfers and signed seven, including three defensive linemen. Fambridge pitched at Paul Faulkner, 64-4, 240-pound guard; and Rob Marshall, 64-5, 240-pound tackle.
"As I've said before, last year we were a
freshman-senior football squad number 85. "Fambrough said. 'We lost a lot of seniors—seven off the offensive line. We had to bring in help immediately.'
"I if I had my preference, I'd rather bring in 'younger players, sort of raise my own. We've made some big strides in recruiting. If your hiring program is not consistent, it'll haunt you."
Last year's recruiting class won't haunt Fambrigh. Among that group were quarterback Frank Seurer, tailback Kerwin Bell and linebacker Mike Arban.
Suerer earned starting signal caller honors and impressed KU coaches with his leadership
"He's an example of what one year's experience will make," Farnbrough said. "What experience he did have is paying off for him. He knows more, and is more sure of himself."
Bell was reinstated to the team this summer after being removed by Fambrough for disciplinary reasons. Both agreed that the rift between problems of spring training were behind them.
This year's recruits have the potential as a group to be just as successful as the last, Foster said.
"As a group, I'm more impressed now than when we signed them," he said. "A lot of times it's the other way around."
The combination of the young recruits and the returning Jayhawks brings optimism to Mount Oread of a third place finish in the Big Eight, no small accomplishment in a conference with perennial powers Oklahoma and Nebraska.
"I sure do think we'll be major contender for third," Baughread said. "I like to be realistic; you have to be about Oklahoma and Nebraska. You have to be about Eight, but two of the top teams in the country.
Incentives
"If you finish in the top four you've got a fine football team."
The Jayhawks will face at least two strong contenders for a third-place finish.
"Iowa state's got everybody back. Missouri lost a lot but the people got. Fambrough lost a lot," she said.
Walker motivates Bell; Seurer likes shotgun
By TRÁCEE HAMILTON
Sports Editor
KU's football success may hinge on Georgia running back Herschel Walker.
No, Walker is not even considering trans-ferring to KU. But it is Walker's shadow that KU tailback Kerwin Killin is chasing, and that KU head Killin lead KU to an even better sophomore season.
BELL's 1,114 yards last season ranked him BELL in the nation among freshmen backs to Walker's 1,616. The Huntington Beach, Calif., native was named the Big Eight's Offensive Player of the Year for yards than any freshman in Big Eight history. He broke Oklahoma Sooner Joe Washington's
"Coach felt the dismissal would make him a better coach and me a better player. I've put it all behind me now."
-Kerwin Bell
Pretty impressive credentials for the abort, stocky 18-year-old. But Bell didn't accomplish something he set out to do—he didn’t catch Walker in the rushing race. Bell missed the Alabama game and virtually all the Missouri contest. After a year he still thinks about it.
record and was an honorable mention Associated Press All-American.
"I think he is one of my main concerns this year," Bell said of Walker. "If I can play every game this year." His voice trails off and he is fighting off the fleet figure of Walker in front of him.
"F I PICK up a paper and see he rushed for me"
"I know I'm 189, I know I've got to run harder the next game."
And to Belt, this personal race with Wallet ties in with his goals for the Jayhawks. He sees his individual competition as beneficial to the team. And he is very optimistic about both.
"I think third place is realistic," he said. "Oklahoma and Nebraska are going to be there at the top of the Big Eight, though."
One reason for Bell's high hopes is the oft-tense line, which he said was much improved over his predecessors.
"Last year we had a good line, but it was made up of seniors," he said. "You kind of got the feeling they wanted to get it over with. There are good transfers and we know we can win now."
Bell threw a scare into Jayawk fans last spring when, after a disagreement with the coaching staff, he was dismissed from the team by Head Coach Don Bambrouz.
PERSONAL PROBLEMS and family troubles were part of the cause of the rift between Bell and the coaches, but he said all that was behind him now. He said he had changed.
He's changed his image to prove it. Gone is the *fingering* afar. Bell has cropped his hair close to his neck.
But he is still close-mouthed about his problems.
"It it wasn't anything serious from the start," he said. "Couch felt it would make him a better coach and me a better player. I've put it all on and me now. My teammates don't remit me of it."
"One of Kerrin's problems was that there was so much pressure on him," he said. "He's certainly in better shape to cope with that now. A lot of times people forget the young men are growing up as well as being football players. They have problems every young person encounters. He's more mature, a year older and in better shape to cone."
"Transferring crossed my mind, but I never put any effort into it. I never look back at it."
KU quarterback Frank Seurer, who played at the University of North Carolina, said that the two of them were still close friends.
Fambrough is equally subdued on the subject.
"WE'VE ALWAYS been good friends," he said. "We don't always go out together, but we tell each other our problems. It's kind of an art that helps because we respect each other so much."
Besides his change in appearance and attitude, Bell came back to Lawrence with some added weight, but he isn't worried about shedding it.
"I'm about halfway in condition now," Bell said after the first day of practice. "I'll be ready to go, especially after a week of two-a-days, especially in pads."
In fact, Bell rates his size as his greatest asset as a runner.
"My quickness and short, stocky build aid me when I'm tackled," he said. "I'm not top-heavy; my weight is even. It's hard to get a good shot at me.
"I have trouble cutting on turf, though. It's different from grass. I wish I could play on it."
Bell and Seurer's summer in California put them on sand rather than grass. Bell helped his high school coach, Bill Workman, run a football camp for kids. Bill spent his free hours relaxing.
"We've always been good friends. . . . It's kind of an unusual relationship because we respect each other so much."
—Frank Seurer
"THE SUMMER WENT fast," he said. "I went to the beach as much as I could. Frank and I had a beachhouse for a week."
But for both Bell and Seurer, the work has begun again.
"I'm approaching the season the same as last year," Seer said. "I've got to work hard and I can't let down. Last year I was working for the company on back position; this year I'm working to keep it.
“I’ve come a long way mentally. But I’ve got a wavs to go.”
Unlike Bell, Seurer doesn't maintain a personal rivalry as an incentive.
"YOU ALWAYS have idols you like to follow, but I don't have any in the Big Eight," he said. "I don't compare myself with other quartebucks. I don't know Haddi and learn, all that other stuff will come."
And Seurer, too, is confident that Bell's earlier problems are behind him now.
"He said he wants to start all over. That made me feel good. I'm sure he will."
ALEXANDER MORRISON AND CHRISTOPHER SCHNEIDER
Kerwin Bell and Frank Seurer came to KU last fall as prep standouts from Huntington Beach, Calif. The two eventually teamed in KU's backfield as they had done at Edison High, and the duo will be back this fall, with Bell starting at tailback and Seurer at quarterback. Despite the pressure of college football, the two have remained friends on and off the football field.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Football
Continued from Page 1
Attained from Page 1 said, "And Oklahoma State has made a strong comeback."
.
Fambridge's quarterback also thinks the Jayhawks have a good chance of finishing the game.
"I don't see any reason why we shouldn't," Seurer said. "We're picked well, and I think we can win eight or nine games if we play well. We got a good chance of going to a bowl game."
Seurer will play a key role in determining KU's post season bowl chances. The Jayhawks will pass more this season, mixing their ground attack, and will use the shotgun formation.
"This year I can envision our offense being balanced between running and passing," Farnham said. "That's what every coach has to do with position. If they don't have to put all our eggs in one basket."
"The combination of the two keeps the defense off balance. That's what we're seeking."
The shotgun idea came up in conversations between Seurer and offensive coordinator John Hadl. Seurer's California high school team used the shotgun, and Seurer said he felt comfortable with it.
"I'm really fired up about it," he said. "It gives the quarterback more control. He can see the secondary better. The defense thinks 'pass' and runs out of it, too. I hope we to get it."
Seurer's wish will come true, according to Fambrough.
"We'll use the shotgun," he said. "After experimenting with it this spring, we are confident we will be well prepared for defender."
Seurer won't have the dependable hands of All-America receiver David Verner to count on, but the receiver position is one that Fambrhough feels has some death.
third and long, but we'll use it more than we thought."
"Bob Johnson, from Independence Junior College, is impressive," he said. "Jim Boushka and Darren Green are both good receivers." Soren also is of whom.
seer it sure is sme of his receivers.
"I think we'll use all the receivers equally," he said. "Daryl Davis, Russ Bastin, Wayne Capers all look good."
Fambrough also has few concerns about depth at running back. Bell will return in the tailback position, with senior Walter Mack and sophomore Garfield Taylor backing him.
"Brad Butts and E.J. Jones will be a brad," Fambridge said, "and Harvey Fitch will be."
Missing from the backfield lineup will be Chris Emerson, a junior college transfer from Scottsdale, Ariz., who missed most of spring training with an old knee injury that required surgery. Emerson will likely be red shirted, Fambrough said, and he and Cedric Alexander, 6-9, 255-pound defensive tackle from Chicago, are two of the Javahinks' few losses this fall.
But Bambrough isn't thinking far ahead. He and his Jayhawks began working on Tulsa during the first practice session. Spirits were high among the coachin' staff and players.
Alexander will be ineligible because of grades, but Fambrough hopes he will remain at KU this year and become eligible for the next season.
"Just looking at them—the difference in looks from two years ago," Fambrough said. "You get a good feeling."
20
Wide recycles Wayne Capers eludes an Oklahoma State defender.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981 Page 3
Football team adds WSU to schedule
By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Editor
The Jayhawks' football motto for the fall is "One Step Closer," but KU really is taking one step closer to home.
Wichita State has become another one of a series of additions to the football schedule designed to regionalize KU's football opponents.
The athletic department announced last weekend that Wichita State would travel to Lawrence in 1982, '83 and '84 to play the Jayhawks in Memorial Stadium. The league stated contests with UCLA in '82 and '84 and with Arkansas State in '83.
TRIMMING THE team's travel budget is one method the department has used to offset the rising cost of equipment and athletics on the schedule is a reflection of that idea.
This year's schedule is partly a result of dissolving a contract with Tennessee," Athletic Director Bob Marcum said. "At that time that made news, but we have been contacted by Stanford, Oregon State and UCLA to dissolve contracts. The West Coast schools are moving in that direction.
"We've done the same in men's
basketball. We've had to say that unless there is an increase in the guarantee we can't participate. We've already moved in that direction. KU going to San Francisco or Miami to play is almost a thing of the past."
Marcum also said his department was considering adding other schools close to Kansas to the schedule.
"WE HAVE BEEN negotiating with the University of Iowa," he said. "We have also talked with the University of Iowa to negotiate, just conversation."
The 'Jayhawk's' more regionalized schedule includes Tulsa and Arkansas but also draws the Pac 10 Oregon Ducks and Kentucky from the East Coast.
The Golden Hurricane of Tulsa is picked to finish first in the Missouri Valley Conference by most preseason polls, and neither Marcum nor Head Pembroke are brushing off the Oklahoma school as an easy opponent.
"We're meeting them at a time when they're at the top," Fambrogio said. "I'T of Oregon the same as the University of Oregon we really feel Oregon is strong team. They best wash Washington last
year and tied Southern California. I really feel we are playing good teams." Marcum said Tulsa was definitely underrated.
"They're a good football team," he said. "They've got fine personnel and a coach and they are a leader in training and they're lightly would be making a mistake."
"We'll practice two or three times under the lights before the game," Fambrigh said. The practices will include one at Kansas City's Stadium.
Fambrough made sure the squad didn't take the Hurricane lightly. The Jayhawks started preparing for Tulsa during their first practice, and they will also prepare for what will be their only night game of the season.
The schedule, though lacking the luster of Pittsburgh and Syracuse, two of KU's opponents last season, pleased sophomore tailback Kervin Bell.
1981 Big Eight Football schedule
"It's not the toughest schedule, but it's not easy either," he said. "Tula won eight games last year. Oregon's won six." And Kentucky will be competitors.
"I think we can go 4-0 in preseason play. But we'll one game at a time. Everyone remembers the Louisville game and what happened there."
UPPER CASE Indicates Conference Games
Lower Case Indicates Non-Conference Games
HI - Indicates Nohit Games
| PLAYING DATES | IOWA STATE | KANSAS STATE | OKLAHOMA ST. | COLORADO | KANSAS | MISSOURI | NEBRASKA | OKLAHOMA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| September 5 | | | | | at Tulsa (N) | | | |
| September 12 | W. Texas St. | South Dakota | | Texas Tech | Oregon | Army | at Iowa | Wyoming |
| September 19 | Iowa | at Washington | Tulsa | Washington St. | | Rice | Florida State | |
| September 26 | Kent State | Drake | San Diego St. | Brigham Young | Kentucky | Louisville | Penn State | at Southern Cal. |
| October 3 | at OKLAHOMA | at Tulsa | at N. Texas St. | at UCLA | Arkansas St. | Miss State at Jackson | Auburn | IOWA STATE |
| October 10 | at San Diego St. (N) | MISSOURI | at KANSAS | at NEBRASKA | OKLA. STATE | KANSAS STATE | COLORADO | Texas at Dallas |
| October 17 | MISSOURI | NEBRASKA | at COLORADO | OKLA. STATE | at OKLAHOMA | IOWA STATE | KANSAS STATE | KANSAS |
| October 24 | COLORADO | at KANSAS | Louisville | IOWA STATE | KANSAS STATE | NEBRASKA | at MISSOURI | Oregon State |
| October 31 | at KANSAS STATE | IOWA STATE | at MISSOURI | at OKLAHOMA | at NEBRASKA | OKLA. STATE | KANSAS | COLORADO |
| November 7 | KANSAS | OKLAHOMA | NEBRASKA | MISSOURI | IOWA STATE | at COLORADO | at OKLA. STATE | KANSAS STATE |
| November 14 | at NEBRASKA | at OKLA. STATE | KANSAS STATE | at KANSAS | COLORADO | OKLAHOMA | IOWA STATE | MISSOURI |
| November 21 | OKLA. STATE | at COLORADO | IOWA STATE | KANSAS STATE | MISSOURI | at KANSAS | at OKLAHOMA | NEBRASKA |
| November 28 | | | OKLAHOMA | | | | | at OKLASTATE |
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1981 Schedule
Sept. 5 at Tulsa
Sept. 12 ...Oregon
Sopt. 26...Kentucky
Oct. 3 ... Arkansas State
Oct. 10...Oklahoma State
Oct. 17 at Oklahoma
(Parents Day)
Oct. 24... Kansas State
Oct. 31 at Nebraska
Nov. 7 at Iowa State
Nov. 21...Missouri
Nov. 14 ... Colorado
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STUDENTS IMPORTANT TICKET INFORMATION
(Guidelines of the Student Senate Seating Committee)
1. Students enrolling for the fall semester as full-time students (minimum of seven hours required) are eligible to purchase a 1981 season football ticket at a discounted student rate of $25.50 for seven hcme games.
Students wishing to purchase a non-student spouse ticket must have proof of marriage (check with both names, bank card, etc.) before tickets can be issued.
PAYING FOR YOUR TICKET DURING ENROLLMENT WILL NOT GUARANTEE YOU ANY BETTER SEATING NOR WILL IT AFFECT GROUP SEATING.
3. Student football tickets may be purchased and picked up in the East Lobby of Allen Field House from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., according to
Aug. 25th (Tues.) . Seniors
Aug. 26th (Wed.) . . Juniors and Graduates
Aug. 28th (Fri.) . . . Freshman
Student seating is assigned on a seniority basis. Students may purchase tickets on the day their respective class is scheduled or any day after that up until the day of the first home football game at the following places:
Athletic Ticket Office, Allen Field House
Student Union Activities Office.
Student Union Activities Office, Kansas Union and Satellite Student Union
Student Union Activities Office, K.U. Medical Center
4. Special arrangements can be made for Group Seating requests. K.U.
I.D.'s with a current fees sticker for each student in the group must be
presented at the same time the tickets are issued.
5. Tickets will not be replaced if lost, stolen or destroyed.
6. Requirements for admission to the stadium are: Everyone regardless of age must have a ticket to enter the stadium. KU I.D.S MUST BE PRESENTED WITH EACH TICKET FOR STUDENT ADMITTANCE.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
KU roster
No. Name Pos- HL Wk 1% Class High School
1 Mike Frederick QB 6* 100 Fresh. Huntington Beach, Calif. (Edison)
2 Bruce Kallmyer KB 9* 100 Fresh. Huntington Beach, Calif. (South)
3 Kewin Bell TB 9* 180 Fresh. Huntington Beach, Calif. (South)
4 Dan Wagoner CB 5* 100 Senior. High Point, N.C. (Andrew)
5 Mike Foote CB 10* 170 Senior. High Point, N.C. (St. Plain)
6 Tim Fries SS 6* 200 Junior. Lyons, Kan.
7 Tim Fries SS 6* 200 Junior. Lyons, Kan.
8 Roger Poole FS 6* 200 Junior. Luton, Kan.
9 Roger Poole FS 6* 200 Junior. Luton, Kan.
10 Frank Seurer QB 6* 128 Soph. Huntington Beach, Calif. (Pebabody-Burns)
11 Steve Davis WB 5* 100 Junior. Greenville, Miss.
12 Jeffrey Brown QB 6* 180 Junior. Greenville, Miss.
13 Jeffrey Brown QB 6* 180 Junior. Greenville, Miss.
14 Mike Phipps QB 6* 200 Junior. Hot Springs, Ark.
15 Mike Phipps QB 6* 200 Junior. Hot Springs, Ark.
16 Mike Bohn QB 6* 128 Juniors. Boulder, Colle (Boulder High)
17 jelly Bean QB 6* 128 Juniors. Boulder, Colle (Boulder High)
18 Jef Hines WR 6* 200 Senior. Littleton, Colo. (Arrapahoe)
19 Wayne Capers FL 5* 100 Junior. Wichita, Kans. (Kapaan-Mt. Carmel)
20 Darren Green WR 5* 100 Juniors. Wichita, Kans. (S. Miami)
21 Darren Green WR 5* 100 Juniors. Wichita, Kans. (S. Miami)
22 Rusty Eldridge SS 182 Juniors. Emery, Kan.
23 J.C. Boher CB 6* 110 Juniors. Hot Springs, Ark.
24 J.C. Boher CB 6* 110 Juniors. Hot Springs, Ark.
25 Tom Davia TB 5* 100 Soph. Aurora, Colle (Hinkley)
26 Tom Davia TB 5* 100 Soph. Aurora, Colle (Hinkley)
27 Rod Demerrith CB 5* 100 Soph. Miami, Fl. (Fla.)
28 Ray Evans CS 6* 110 Juniors. Kansas City, Mo. (Rockhurst)
29 Elmo Madden TB 6* 110 Juniors. Awatowatte, Ky.
30 Elmo Madden TB 6* 110 Juniors. Awatowatte, Ky.
31 Jeff Coller CB 5* 110 Juniors. Houston, Tex. (Jack Yates)
32 Jeff Coller CB 5* 110 Juniors. Houston, Tex. (Jack Yates)
33 Town MNeely TB 5* 100 Senior. San Francisco, Calif. (Lincoln)
34 Harvey Fields RB 6* 128 Preh. Arkansas City, Kan.
35 Harvey Fields RB 6* 128 Preh. Arkansas City, Kan.
36 Cave Alexander DE 6* 210 Soph. Topoka, Kan. (Topoca High)
37 Cave Alexander DE 6* 210 Soph. Topoka, Kan. (Topoca High)
38 E.J. Jones FB 5* 110 Soph. Chicago, Ill. (Vocational)
39 E.J. Jones FB 5* 110 Soph. Chicago, Ill. (Vocational)
40 Brad Butts FB 6* 120 Juniors. Malvern, Va.
41 Marx Messner CB 6* 120 Wischta, Kan. (North)
42 Marx Messner CB 6* 120 Wischta, Kan. (North)
43 Craig Camnors LCB 6* 120 Juniors. Joelino, Parkwood
44 Craig Camnors LCB 6* 120 Juniors. Joelino, Parkwood
45 Marky Alexander SB 6* 120 Seniors. Joelino, Parkwood
46 Marky Alexander SB 6* 120 Seniors. Joelino, Parkwood
47 Mikae Branas LB 6* 220 Soph. Grandview, Va.
48 Mikae Branas LB 6* 220 Soph. Grandview, Va.
49 Dodge Schwarburgberg K 6* 120 Ocala, Fa. (Forest)
50 Dodge Schwarburgberg K 6* 120 Ocala, Fa. (Forest)
51 Kerry Bruno LB 6* 220 Soph. Houston, Tex. (Kashmere)
52 Kerry Bruno LB 6* 220 Soph. Houston, Tex. (Kashmere)
53 Jen Nelson C 6* 120 Juniors. LeJos, Parkwood
54 Jen Nelson C 6* 120 Juniors. LeJos, Parkwood
55 Ed Bruce C 6* 120 Seniors. LeJos, Parkwood
56 Ed Bruce C 6* 120 Seniors. LeJos, Parkwood
57 Simmons LB 6* 220 Soph. Mitrella, Fl. (Mitrella, Fl.)
58 Simmons LB 6* 220 Soph. Mitrella, Fl. (Mitrella, Fl.)
59 Tom Molle OB 6* 220 Soph. Marletta, Ohio
60 Tom Molle OB 6* 220 Soph. Marletta, Ohio
61 John McMaster OB 6* 220 Soph. Chicago, Ill. (Clear North)
62 John McMaster OB 6* 220 Soph. Chicago, Ill. (Clear North)
63 John McMaster OB 6* 220 Soph. Chicago, Ill. (Clear North)
64 Walter Parish OB 6* 220 Soph. Oakland, Pa. (Frankford)
65 Walter Parish OB 6* 220 Soph. Oakland, Pa. (Frankford)
66 David Lawrence OB 6* 240 Soph. Peterson, Kan.
67 David Lawrence OB 6* 240 Soph. Peterson, Kan.
68 Doyle Spear OB 6* 240 Soph. Oberson, Kan.
69 Doyle Spear OB 6* 240 Soph. Oberson, Kan.
70irk Quinton Schoewe OB 6* 200 Soph. Breitbruce, Ne.
71 Anthony Penny OB 6* 200 Soph. Bronx, N.Y. (Dewitt Clinton)
72 Anthony Penny OB 6* 200 Soph. Bronx, N.Y. (Dewitt Clinton)
73 Bob Marshall OB 6* 200 Soph. Covina, Calif.
74 Bob Marshall OB 6* 200 Soph. Covina, Calif.
75 Cedric Alexander OB 6* 200 Soph. Chichelle, Ill. (Sullivan)
76 Cedric Alexander OB 6* 200 Soph. Chichelette, Ill. (Sullivan)
77 David Weasling OB 6* 200 Soph. Wilbanks, Kan. (North)
78 David Weasling OB 6* 200 Soph. Wilbanks, Kan. (North)
79 Paul Swenson OB 6* 200 Soph. Osawamuk, Kan.
80 Paul Swenson OB 6* 200 Soph. Osawamuk, Kan.
81 K.C. Brown OB 6* 200 Soph. Thousand Oaks, Calif.
82 K.C. Brown OB 6* 200 Soph. Thousand Oaks, Calif.
83 Greg Smith OB 6* 240 Soph. Chicago, Ill. (Vocational)
84 Greg Smith OB 6* 240 Soph. Chicago, Ill. (Vocational)
85 Greg Smith OB 6* 240 Soph. Chicago, Ill. (Vocational)
86 Kelly McNorton LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPока, Kan. (Seaman)
87 Kelly McNorton LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPока, Kan. (Seeman)
88 Gary Coleman SS 6* 120 Juniors. Lawrence, Kan.
89 Gary Coleman SS 6* 120 Juniors. Lawrence, Kan.
90 Bryan Harrison DE 6* 200 Soph. Lee's Summit, Ma.
91 Bryan Harrison DE 6* 200 Soph. Lee's Summit, Ma.
92 Chuck Hoag DE 6* 200 Soph. Lawrence, Kan.
93 Chuck Hoag DE 6* 200 Soph. Lawrence, Kan.
94 Bedier Thompson OB 6* 240 Soph. Shawnee Mission, Kan.
95 Bedier Thompson OB 6* 240 Soph. Shawnee Mission, Kan.
96 Gill Mailasi LE 6* 240 Soph. TRAX, Marco Denzaliz
97 Gill Mailasi LE 6* 240 Soph. TRAX, Marco Denzaliz
98 Rainbow Byrd TE 6* 240 Soph. Kansas City, Kan. (Warden)
99 Rainbow Byrd TE 6* 240 Soph. Kansas City, Kan. (Warden)
100 Kyle McNorton LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPока, Kan. (Seeman)
101 Kyle McNorton LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPoka, Kan. (Seeman)
102 Gary Coleman SS 6* 120 Juniors. Lawrence, Kan.
103 Gary Coleman SS 6* 120 Juniors. Lawrence, Kan.
104 Bryan Harrison DE 6* 200 Soph. Lee's Summit, Ma.
105 Bryan Harrison DE 6* 200 Soph. Lee's Summit, Ma.
106 Dodge Schwarburgberg K 6* 120 Ocala, Fa. (Forest)
107 Dodge Schwarburgberg K 6* 120 Ocala, Fa. (Forest)
108 Dodge Schwarburgberg K 6* 120 Ocala, Fa. (Forest)
109 Dodge Schwarburgberg K 6* 120 Ocala, Fa. (Forest)
110 Rockwall Coopers LE 6* 240 Soph. Topoka, Kan. (Topoka High)
111 Rockwall Coopers LE 6* 240 Soph. Topoka, Kan. (Topoka High)
112 Rockwall Coopers LE 6* 240 Soph. Topoka, Kan. (Topoka High)
113 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
114 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
115 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
116 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
117 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
118 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
119 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
120 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
121 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
122 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
123 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
124 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
125 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
126 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
127 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
128 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
129 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
130 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
131 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
132 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
133 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
134 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
135 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
136 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
137 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
138 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
139 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
140 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
141 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
142 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
143 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
144 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
145 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
146 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
147 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
148 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
149 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
150 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
151 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
152 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
153 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
154 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
155 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
156 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
157 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
158 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
159 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
160 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
161 Rockwell Ameca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
162 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
163 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
164 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
165 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
166 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
167 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
168 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
169 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
170 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
171 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
172 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
173 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
174 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
175 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
176 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
177 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
178 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
179 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
180 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
181 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
182 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
183 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
184 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
185 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
186 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
187 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
188 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
189 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
190 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
191 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
192 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
193 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
194 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
195 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
196 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
197 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
198 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
199 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
200 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
201 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
202 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
203 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
204 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
205 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
206 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
207 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
208 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
209 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
210 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
211 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
212 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
213 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
214 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
215 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
216 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
217 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
218 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
219 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
220 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
221 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
222 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
223 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
224 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
225 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
226 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
227 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
228 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
229 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
230 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
231 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
232 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
233 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
234 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
235 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
236 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
237 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
238 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
239 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
240 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
241 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
242 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
243 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
244 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
245 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
246 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
247 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
248 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
249 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
250 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
251 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
252 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
253 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
254 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
255 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
256 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
257 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
258 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
259 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
260 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
261 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
262 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
263 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
264 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
265 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
266 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
267 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
268 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
269 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
270 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
271 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
272 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
273 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
274 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
275 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
276 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
277 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
278 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
279 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
280 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
281 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
282 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
283 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
284 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
285 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
286 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
287 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
288 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
289 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
290 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
291 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
292 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
293 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
294 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
295 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
296 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
297 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
298 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
299 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
300 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
301 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
302 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
303 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
304 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
305 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
306 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
307 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
308 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
309 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
310 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
311 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
312 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
313 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
314 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
315 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
316 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
317 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
318 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
319 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
320 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
321 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
322 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
323 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
324 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
325 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
326 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
327 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
328 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
329 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
330 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
331 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
332 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
333 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
334 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
335 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
336 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
337 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
338 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
339 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
340 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
341 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
342 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
343 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
344 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
345 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
346 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
347 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
348 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
349 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
350 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
351 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
352 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
353 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
354 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
355 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
356 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
357 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
358 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
359 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
360 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
361 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
362 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
363 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
364 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
365 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
366 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
367 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
368 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
369 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
370 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
371 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
372 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
373 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
374 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
375 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
376 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
377 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
378 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
379 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
380 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
381 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
382 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
383 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
384 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
385 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
386 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
387 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
388 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
389 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
390 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
391 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
392 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
393 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
394 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
395 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
396 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
397 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
398 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
399 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
400 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
401 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
402 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
403 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
404 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
405 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
406 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
407 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
408 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
409 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
410 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
411 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
412 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
413 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
414 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
415 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
416 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
417 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
418 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
419 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
420 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
421 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
422 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
423 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
424 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
425 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
426 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
427 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
428 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
429 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
430 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
431 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
432 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
433 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
434 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
435 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
436 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
437 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
438 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
439 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
440 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
441 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
442 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
443 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
444 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
445 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
446 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
447 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
448 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
449 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
450 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
451 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
452 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Calif.
453 Rockwell Amcca LE 6* 240 Soph. TOPICA, Cal
06
Head Coach Don Fambrough is carried off the field after a KU victory.
- SCOTT HOOKER/Kansan Staff
the GRAMOPHONE shop
Because...
YAMAHA
YAMAHA P.350 BELT-DRIVE TURNTABLE
* Semi-automatic operation*
* Wow and flutter 0.04%*
* Offer good thru 9-12-81*
$149 50
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
25TH & IOWA-HOLIDAY PLAZA
Ricvcles are great for...
- Getting around campus & town
- Recreation and physical condition
Why buy from Gran Sport?
why buy from Gran Sport?
1- Good Bikes: Best in price & value,
including Motobecanes and Treks.
2- Experience: We've been here since
1962, when we introduced the lightweight
multi-speed bike to KU & Lawrence.
3- Reliability: We like what we're doing
and we intend to be doing it for a long time
KEEP THIS AD—
It's worth $10
off any bike not already on sale!
GRAN SPORT
843-3328
7th & Arkansas
Just East of Sanctuary
camping bicycling canoeing
843-3328
7th & Arkansas
Introducing the dramatic, new KOH-I-NOOR RAPIDOGRAPH® Technical Pen
KOW
DRAPE
KOH-1-NOOR
RAPIDOGRAPH
STILL THE STANDARD
FOR PRECISION CRAFTS—
MANSHIP AND DESIGN
ALL 3065,3095,3060 RAPIDOGRAPH PENS ARE NOW ON SALE 25% OFF
kansas
union bookstores
KU
main union level 2, satellite shop
MEET THE BIG CARD ON CAMPUS.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAWRENCE
ZIP CARD
000 000 000
JOHN G. PUBLIC
01011 0408710 B7
09/81
The First thing to do when you get to campus is pick up your activity card: a Zip Card from First National Bank. Zip Card gives you 24-hour access to your First National checking and savings accounts. So you can get cash whenever you need it — late at night, weekends, holidays, even between classes — without ever leaving campus. Just use the Zip Machines at the Kansas Union or the Satellite Union.
So open a checking account at First National Bank and get the big card on campus. Then you can just Zip your way through the rest of the school year.
With Zip Card you can also make deposits or loan payments, transfer funds or find out how much money you have in your account. And there are dozens of Zip locations in Lawrence and around Kansas.
TheFirst We want to help.
The First National Bank of Lawrence
Ninth & Massachusetts
(913) 843-0152
Member FD.J.C. Equal Opportunity Lender / Employer
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Page 5
--of Latter Day Saints
222
YELLOW CIRCLE
'Hawk depth chart
LE
LE
47—Marky Alexander
87—Chuck Hoag
60—Todd Bertsch
DEFENSE
NG
LT
91—Guy Neighbors
99—Ken Powers
92—Bennie Simecka
NG
77—Greg Smith
38—Dave Mehrer
61—Walter Parrish
RT
98—Mark Wilbers
95—Broderick Thompson
97—Randall Amerine
RE
94—Bryan Horn
37—Carky Alexander
93—Joe Haus
SLB
64—Chris Toburen
56—Eddie Simmons
51—Kerry Bruno
WLB
WLB
81—Kyle McNorton
86—Mike Arbanas
96—Bill Malavasi
LCB
LCB
28—Rod Demerritte
5—Dan Wagoner
33—Jeff Colter
SE
23—Russ Bastin
24—Darren Green
11—Daryl Davis
LT
SE
RCB
LG
62—Dave Lawrence
69—Paul Fairchild
75—Tom Modie
FS
9—Roger Foote
1—Robert Gentry
29—Gary Luster
C
LT
71—Dave Wessling
76—Reggie Smith
68—Bob Marshall
54—Ed Bruce
53—Grant Thierloff
67—John Prater
ss
30—Ray Evans
84—Gary Coleman
7—Tim Friess
SPECIALISTS
SPECIALISTS
Punter: 8—Bucky Scribner
Place Kicker: 3—Bruce
Kallmeyer
49—Dodge Schwartzburg
RCB
35—Tony McNeely
32—Elvis Patterson
32.J.C. Booker
OFFENSE
LG
RG
75—K.C. Brown
66—Anthony Penny
75—Greg Roach
78—Rennie Atkins
78—Jay McAdam
90—Jeff Schleicher
83—Ernie Wright
85—Mark Paulsen
RT
FL
20—Wayne Capers
19—Jim Boushka
18—Jeff Hines
TE
FL
10—Frank Seurer
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1744 Mass.
WORSHIP SERVICES
EASTERN CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
WELCOME TO LAWRENCE and to
LAWRENCE HEIGHTS
THE AVE. RIVER STREET
LAWRENCE HEIGHTS
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
2321 Peterson Road
Located behind Hallmark, Inc. off of North Iowa Street. A friendly people with a devotion to the Lord Jesus Christ His Word, and His Church. A place to serve, a home away from home. A partner with Campus Christians at 1116 Indiana. Call 843-1729 mornings for information.
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
1900 University Dr.
843-8427
Elder Delbert Dodds - Pastor - 841-7475
Worship Service
3200 Clinton Parkway
9:30 a.m.
Wednesday Fellowship
Morning Worship 10:45
Sunday Services — Sunday School
9:45 a.m
Clinton Parkway Assembly of God
Youth meeting as scheduled
9:45 a.m.
College youth invited to sing in our morning worship choir,
Youth meeting, Wednesday 7:30
11:00 a.m.
7:30 p.m.
Sunday evenings 7:00.
Evening Evangelistic Services Youth and Young people invited.
Transportation provided if needed.
For information call: 843-7189
Rev. Lloyd R. Bilhimer, Pastor
043-UU68
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, ALC 2312 Harvard Road 843-3014
Church School ...9:15
Worship...8:00 & 10:30
Arden G. Dorn, Pastor 842-2602
Coffee & Fellowship following Services
Youth Meeting 2nd & 4th Sundays 6:30 p.m.
APOSTOLIC UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH
12th & Connecticut
L. J. Lewis, Pastor ...
Sunday Worship Wednesday Worship
10:00 a.m. & 7:30 p.m.
Youth Fellowship (Sgt.)
7:30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
Youth Fellowship (Sat.) 7:30 p.m.
Salt Block Bible Study at K.U.
Karen White, Director
Parlor A & B in the Union
PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
PASTORS
Homer D. Henderson Gary D. Bryant
George B. Owens
Chruch School
10:00 a.m.
Worship Celebration 10:00 a.m.
(Broadcast on KLWN 1320)
Adult Seminars, Sunday 9:00 a.m.
(Downtown Lawrence)
843-3220
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
925 Vermont
1300 Kasold Dr.
(American Baptist)
843-0020
Rev. Stephen E. Fletcher - Pastor
Rev. Steven L. Edwards - Minister of Christian Education
SUNDAY SCHEDULE
Church School . . . . . 9:30 a.m.
Morning Worship . . . 11:00 a.m.
Sinales Gathering . . . 4:30 p.m.
B. Y.F. . . 5:00 p.m.
Page 6
University Daily Kansen, August 20, 1961
VALEVIN
Guard Darnell Valentine is tripped up during the Iowa State contest last season. Darnell, who made the All-Big Eight team all four years of his collegiate career, was drafted by the Portland Trail Blazers, but has not yet signed a contract. Valentine guided the Jayhawks to a 23-8 season and a berth in the NCAA regional semi-finals.
Konek, Boyle, others compete for Valentine's guard position
By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Editor
Sports Editor
Head basketball coach Ted Owens probably won't be able to replace guard Darnell Valentine, but he has plenty of candidates for the job.
Valentine, who was drafted by the Portland Trail Blazers but has yet to sign a contract, was KU's 6-foot-2 all-everything guard who resumed his playing career as a Jayhawk, including a spot on the 1980 Olympic basketball team.
Owens said he had several possible replacements for the Wichita native.
"I think it will be a combination on Tad Boyle and Jeon Konek," Owens said. "There will be a real battle for that position." Boyle, a pre recruit from Greeley Central High School in Colorado, led the player to come out of Colorado in five years. The 6-foot-4 Boyle averaged 23.4 points with his high school team.
Konek, saw some playing time behind Valentine and then junior-train Tony Ganso. The 6-2 guard averaged 20 points on Wichita East High School.
Three other recruits, Tyke Peacock, Tom Seall and Jackie Fleier, round out Owens' choices for the vacant guard position. Peacock, 46, 165 pounds, also played with B.J. Dimmons. Peacock recently high jumped 7-3/4 in Switzerland.
Sewall is from Amarillo Texas Junior College, where he was a teammate of Jayhawk center Victor Mitchell.
The 6-3 Fleury, from El Camino Junior College in California, is a New Orleans native who averaged 10 points and seven rebounds a game.
Owens not only has a large group of guards, he also has a new assistant coach who should contribute valuable advice about the position.
Two-time All-America guard Jo Go White, who spent 11 years in the NBA, joined the coaching staff this summer, and stayed at Bayette. Norwood as assistant coach.
Mitchell, Guy and David Magley return from last year's starting lineup, and he knight, who has recovered from knee surgery, also will be back for the Jawhaws.
"His rehabilitation has gone well," Owens said, "and he's been cleared for full duty."
Knight will step in for Art Housey, the 6-10, 214-pound center who was drafted by the Dallas Mavericks. Housey, who showed vast improvement during his rookie season, has not yet signed with the Mavericks and may play basketball in Europe.
The Jayhawks also will miss John Crawford and Booty Neal. Both came off the bench for KU's 23-8 squad, Crawford, 6-7 forward, will try out with the Philadelphia 76ers, and if he doesn't join that club, he too will play ball in Europe or return to Kansas to graduate school.
Neal, 6-5 guard, now home in Washington, D.C., also will try out for a European team.
Two other Jayhawk players will attend law school this fall. Mark Knight will enter KU's School of Law, and George Thompson will go to Washburn.
Replacements for the graduated forwards will come from two recruits. Jeff Dishman, a 6-4 forward from Hutchinson Junior College, average 16 points and nine rebounds for the Blue Dragons.
Mark Ewing, a 6-9 forward from Cloud County Community College, averaged 17 points and 10 rebounds for the Thunderbirds.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981 Page 7
in me for a will
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We have
Juilliard, Guthrie Theatre, Kansas City
SINGING LEAPING STRUMMING ARABESQUES QUARTETS RECITALS JUMPING HARMONY CHOIRS CHORUSES HUM ENERGY TUBAS SURPRISES MOVES VIOLINS APPLAUSE FANTASIES A CAPELLA ZIP VERVE ADAGIC
Ballet, Brigadoon, Rampal, Jim Thorpe,
SWING CELEBRATIONS DREAM PIROUETTES CONCERTOS OVERTURES BOWS GLITTERS FLUTES TRUMPETS SOLOS GRACE JOY TENORS LAUGHS ORIGINALITY MYSTERY SYMPHONY INSPIRATION COMEDY MELODY
Guarneri, The Abdication, Seraphim...
and we entertain you all year long!
79th Year Concert Series
Minnesota Orchestra
Neville Marine, Music Director
Saturday, September 12
8:00 pm Hoch Auditorium
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission
Alvin Alley Reportery Ensemble Friday and Saturday, October 2-3 8:00 pm Hoch Auditorium Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, the Mid-America Arts Alliance and the National Endowment for the Arts
The Gregg Smith Singers
Sunday, November 1
3:30 p.m Central Junior High School
Collegeium
Partly in Kauai the Kansas Arts Commission and the Mid-America Arts Alliance
Jean-Pierre Rampal, Flute
Monday, March 8
8:00 p.m University Theatre
A University Festival of the Arts
presentation, partially funded by
the Kansas Arts Commission
Patricia Wise,Soprano
Sunday, February 21
3:30 pm University Theatre
A University Festival of the Arts
presentation
The Kansas City Ballet
Wednesday, March 10
8:00 p.m University Theatre
A University Festival of the Arts
presentation
The Romeros, Guitar Ensemble Sunday, April 4 3:30 pm University Theatre
Public KU Students with ID Senior Citizens Other Students Group Rate (15 or more)
All seats reserved
Individual Concerts
Main Floor $9.00 $3.00 $8.00 $8.00
Balcony $8.00 $2.00 $7.00 $7.00
35th Year Chamber Music Series
Main Floor $9.00 $3.00 $8.00 $8.00
Balcony $8.00 $2.00 $7.00 $7.00
**Season Tickets**
Option A (Full season/6 events)
Main Floor $45.00* $15.00 $40.00
Balcony $40.00* $10.00 $35.00
Option A+ "Hitchliker" (Full season/6 events, when purchase with full price season ticket)
Main Floor $30.00**
Balcony $32.00**
Option B (3 events: Minnesota Orchestra, Gregg Smith Singers, Jean-Pierre Rampal)
Main Floor $25.00 $22.00
Balcony $22.00 $19.00
Option C (3 events: Alvin Ailey, Patricia Wise, The Romeros)
Main Floor $25.00 $22.00
Balcony $22.00 $19.00
**Six concerts for the price of five, get one event FREE**
**Buy one season ticket at regular price, get second season ticket at 20% savings**
The Guarneri String Quartet
Sunday, September 27
3:30 pm University Theatre
The Vermeer String Quartet
Sunday, October 11; 3:30 pm
Monday, October 12; 8:00 pm
Swarthout Recital Hall
Seraphim Trio
Sunday, November 15
3:30 pm University Theatre
The Jillandi String Quartet Thursday, February 11 8:00 pm Plymouth Congregational Church Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission
The Dorian Wind Quintet
Sunday, March 28, 3:30 pm
Monday, March 29, 8:00 pm
SWarthwout Recital Hall
All seats general admission
Public KU Students with ID Senior Citizens, Other Students Group Rate (15 or more)
Individual Concerts
$7.00 $3.50 $4.50 $6.30
Season Tickets (5 events)
$31.50* $15.00** $20.00
*10% savings over regular price
**Saves $2.50 over regular price
University Theatre Series
Dracula
Bram Stoker's mystery chiller
October 15-17 8:00 pm
October 18 2:30 pm
University Theatre
Brigadoon
Lerner and Loewe's enchanting musical
November 6-7 and 12-14 8:00 pm
November 8 2:30 pm
University Theatre
Graham Gauthier
Olivia Gauthier's music masterpiece
February 19-20 and 25-27 8:00 pm
University Theatre
A University of the Arts Presentation
She Stoops to Conquer
The Rape of Lucretia
Benjamin Britten's Opera in English
April 2-3 and 9-10 8:00 pm
University Theatre
The Rainmaker
Presented by the Tyrone Guthrie
Theatre
Tuesday, February 23 8:00 pm
University Theatre
A University Festival of the Arts
presentation
For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow Is Enuf
Ntozake Shange's compelling spellbinder
April 29-30 and May 1 8:00 pm
May 2 2:30 pm
University Theatre
All seats reserved
Season coupons can be used in exchange for 10 reserved seat tickets: six in any combination for straight plays and the musical/opera on Thursday night or Sunday, and four in any combination for the musical/opera on weekends.
*Up to $17 savings over regular price
**Up to $12 savings over regular price
Season Coupons
Orchestra Front $45.00*
Orchestra Rear $36.00**
and Meezanne
Production Date Orchestra Front Orchestra Rear Mezzanine Balconey
Dracula
October 15 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00
16 $5.00 $4.00 $2.00
17 $5.00 $4.00 $2.00
18 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00
Brigadoon
November 6 $8.00 $6.00 $4.00
7 $8.00 $6.00 $4.00
8 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00
12 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00
13 $8.00 $6.00 $4.00
14 $8.00 $6.00 $4.00
She Stoops to Conquer
February 19 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00
20 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00
25 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00
26 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00
27 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00
The Rape of Lucretia
April 2 $8.00 $6.00 $4.00
3 $8.00 $6.00 $4.00
9 $8.00 $6.00 $4.00
10 $8.00 $6.00 $4.00
For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/
When the Rainbow Is Enuf
April 29 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00
March 30 $5.00 $4.00 $2.00
May 1 $5.00 $4.00 $3.00
June 2 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00
KU students with a valid ID will receive a
50% discount off the regular ticket price
Senior Citizens will receive a $1.00
discount off the regular ticket price
Groups of 15 or more are eligible for
a 10% discount
Public KU Students with ID Senior Citizens Group Rate
(118 or more)
**Tyrone Guthrie Theatre Performance**
All seats reserved
Orchestra Front $9.00 $4.50* $8.00 $8.10**
Orchestra Rear $8.00 $4.00* $7.00 $7.20**
Mezzanine $8.00 $4.00* $7.00 $7.20*
Balcony $7.00 $3.50* $6.00 $6.30**
*50% savings
*50% savings
**10% savings
William Inge Memorial Theatre Series
Holiday
Philip Barry's classic comedy
September 29-30 and October 1-4
8:00 pm Inge Theatre
Evening Light
The contemporary Russian drama
by Alexei Arbuzov
October 23-28
8:00 pm Inge Theatre
Evening Light
The Abdication
Ruth Wolff's powerful psychological study
February 9-14
8:00 pm Inge Theatre
Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz's
avant-garde farce
November 19-23
8:00 pm Inge Theatre
The Madman and the Nun
Chhau-Indian Folk Dance Theatre KU's Andrew Tsubaki performs authentic Indian dance theatre April 7-8 8:00 pm Swarthout Recital Hall
Public KU Students with ID Senior Citizens Group Rate (15 or more)
Individual Performances
$3.00 $1.50* $2.00 $2.70**
*50% savings
**10% savings
Seating limited
Theatre for Young People Series
Pot-Pourri Productions
A varied schedule of exciting theatre adventures
April 13-18
8:00 pm Inge Theatre
All seats general admission
Tales from Hans Christian Anderson
Book by Mary Jane Evans in
collaboration with Deborah Anderson
Lyrics by Mary Jane Evans
Archival Collection
Saturday, September 26
10:30 am University Theatre
Jim-Thorpe, All American
By Saul Levitt
Music by Harrison Fisher with special editing by Cal Thunder Hawk Saturday, January 30
2:30 pm University Theatre
Pride of Conjunction with the Haskell Indian College Thunderbilt Theatre
All seats reserved
Tickets are $1.50 regardless of age
The University of Kansas Performing Arts 1981-82
Season tickets go on sale Monday,
August 24, in the Murphy Hall
Box Office
Tickets for individual performances
go on sale three weeks before the
event
VISA/MasterCard accepted
The Box Office is open from
10:00 am to 5:00 pm Monday-Friday,
from 7:00 to 8:30 pm on nights of
performance, and one hour before
curtain time for matinee performances
To make reservations,
call 913/864-3982
Student and senior citizen rates
available
For groups of 15 or more, inquire
about our special group rates
Mail orders accepted after
August 24; be sure to include a
*tamped, self-addressed envelope
M
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
坚
BOB GREENSPAN/Kensan Staff
KU sprinter Deon Hogan will sit out this season to prepare for the '84 Olympics.
Three tracksters to sit out season
After last year's disappointing sixth placed finish in the Big Eight Outdoor championship, the men's track team was selected without the services of three top athletes.
Long jumper Mark Hanson, spinner Deon Hogan and triple jumper Sanya Owolai will sit out this year.
"They redshirted themselves," Assistant Coach Steve Kueffer said. "Mark Hanson felt the chance to be an All-American would be greater in two
years. Sanya and Deon are planning for the Olympics."
The Jayhawks will rely on their new recruits to keep alive hopes of taking the Big Eight Indoor and Outdoor titles this year.
One of the top recruits in Tyke Peacock, who high jumped 7-5 3/4 this summer in Switzerland. Peacock will also be playing basketball.
representing the United States in the World Cup track competition.
He will be in Rome in September
"He's one of the best in the country," Kuefer said.
Others helping KU will be sprinters Kelvif Hollins and Adrian Jones. Jones posted 10.24 in the 100-meter-dash and came in at 10.5 in the 100-and 26.2 in the 10
Graduation losses were relatively light, as only Mike Ricks, Joel Light, Mike Moris and Paul Malott left the team.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
Page 9
THE WINNER IS
KU women's swimming coach Gary Kemp celebrates a meet victory with his swimmers. Kemp will take over the coaching position of the men's team as well this fall.
When Gary Kemp became Kansas"s men's swimming coach last month, he must have thought he had inherited a gold mine.
By JIM SMALL Sports Writer
Kempf inherits additional coaching job
Sports Writer
Not only does a strong nucleus of swimmers return from last year's team, which finished third in the Big Eight, but also two talented swimmers are academically eligible for the upcoming season.
FORMER OLYMPIC swimmer Ron Neugent, who transferred to KU from Southern Methodist last year, and butterfly specialist Cameron Dunn, from Sydney, Australia, will compete for the Jayhawks in the 1981-82 season.
"They (Dunn and Neugent) will definitely help the team," Kemp said. "Whenever you can add an Olympian to your team like Ron, it will help. And Cameron has given us much needed strength in the individual medley."
Despite the addition of Dunn and Neugent to the KU roster, Kempt was displeased with the men's recruiting drive.
"We had a thin recruiting year, but since I came into the program so late, there's nothing you can do about it," he said.
Although the Jayhawks failed to recruit top prep swimmers, Kempi said he believed that KU had a chance to win the Big Eight title.
"WE'RE GOING TO have to perform
very well to win the Big Eight," Kemp said. "I'm not saying that it's out of reach, but we're going to have to work hard for it."
In addition to filling the spot left vacant by Bill Spahn, who accepted a coach's position in New Mexico, he will remain as the KU women's swim coach.
Kempf is very optimistic about the women's diving recruits. Diving has a weak spot for the Jayhawks in past seasons.
"There is a trend across the country to combine programs," Kempf said. "I've been successful with the women's team, there's no reason I can't be with the team."
The KU women's team won the last seven Big Eight titles, and, with another strong recruiting year, Kemp is hoping for another crown this season.
State champions Carrie Gangle, Kansas City, and Maria Bell, St. Louis, should bolster Kempf's diving squad this season.
Kempf also recruited three swimmers from Wichita that he called very impatient.
Shelly Bleck (freestyle, breaststroke, individual medley), Kelly Burke (breaststroke, individual medley) and Michele Compton (butterfly, individual medley, freestyle) should add to an already strong Jayhawk swim squad.
Returning from last year's squaira to Tami Thomas and Jenny Wagstaff. Both competed in the National Sports Festival in Syracuse, N.Y., this sum
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mer and both hold Big Eight swimming records.
Coaching two teams can be difficult, especially when the teams are in different cities at the same time. Luckily, Kenny that will happen only once this season.
When the men's team competes at an invitational in Lincoln, Neb., from January 15 to 17, the women's squad includes Austin, Texas, for another invitational.
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Page 10
University Daliy Kansan, August 20, 1981
Good recruiting year bolsters Jayhawk men's, women's golf
By GINO STRIPPOLI
Sports Writer
A diagonal sixth place finish in the Big Eight last year made talk of a trip to this year's NCAA championships seem optimistic. But after a recruiting year that some coaches only dream about, KU women's golf coach Ross Randall said that the Jayhawks would be a team to reckon with in the upcoming season.
"We will definitely be a stronger team than the one last year" said Randall who also coaches the men's team. "With our new recruits, we should move up quite a ways in the standings."
For Randall's prediction of a trip to the NCAA tournament to become a reality he must rely heavily on his top two recruits, Bev Boozer and Lisa Bradley, who brings a long list of credentials to KU.
Boozer, a transfer from UCLA, will join KU with two years of collegiate
experience. She served as one of the captains for the Bruin team her freshman year and transferred to KU after her sophomore season. Boozer goes into her first season as a Jayhawk county coach and-strike victory in the City Water War.
"Bev told me she's ready to play," Randall said. "She has the potential to be a great player."
Randall' also has high praise for Bradley. Bradley is coming off a successful summer during which she won the Kansas State Junior's champion of the U.S. to the semifinals of the U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links championships.
"Lisa" and Bev both have a chance to become great golfers," Randall said. "With their scores, we'll be counting 76s instead of 88s."
Boozer and Bradley will team with top returning golfers Patty Coyle, 11th in the Big Eight, and Lisa Howard, 24th in the Big Eight, to form the core of Randall's team.
"We can definitely win the Big Eight in Iowa and we are the nationalists are not out of the question."
Randall also pulled off a recruiting coup for the men's golf team, bringing in three players who should help the team.
"The three men we wanted the most, we got, so it was a very successful team," said Kendall, who is entering his second year as head coach of both golf teams at KU.
The three men Randall signed are Brad Demo and Rob Wilkinson, both of Coffeyville Junior College, and Dan Callahan of Wichita Northwest High School in Oklahoma. He was Kansas State champion and Kansas was a Junior College All-American.
For Randall to reach his goal, he must get solid play from his newcomers and veterans alike. the top vetners for the men's golf team will be Jim O'Shaa of Stanford, the big Eight, and Dean Frankiewicz, 28th in the Big Eight.
Tennis team gets new coach
KU men's tennis coach Randy McGrath knows at least one thing about this year's unpredictable tennis season; it will keep most of his time running two teams.
"Now that I'm only coaching the men's team, I will be able to devote more time to it." McGráth said. "Last year I spent most of my time trying to run two practices and schedule two seasons."
McGRAITH WILL RELY on three players returning from last year's team. They are Ed Bolen Charlie Stearns and Jim Svett.
don't expect any one player to dominate."
The team will be bolstered by freshmen Scott Alexander and Rick Aubin. Aubin won the Kansas state championship the past two years.
"Both of our recruits are good, but they haven't played their teammates yet," McGrath said. "I'd say they're even with Bolen and Stearns."
MEGRAT SAID his main goal for this year's team was to improve on last year's seventh place finish in the Big Apple, but although competition was tough, his players played up to their potential, they could easily improve on that finish.
Improvement is also on the mind of first year women's team coach Kathy Matthews.
to McGrath last year, was a co-captain of the 1979-80 women's tennis team.
"I'm looking forward to a good year," Merrion said. "I know the job pretty well, so I don't foresee any problems."
Merrion's team will consist of four veterans--Corey Nason, Shawn Willson, Maureen Gullolf and Marn Jensen—and three newcomers—Beth Rainard, Stephanie Dickey and Greta Fromberger. Fromberger was Missouri's No. 1 singles player last year.
"WE SHOULD have a lot of depth on this year's team and that will help a lot," Merrion said. "We should be good in singles matches, because all our players are fairly good singles players."
San Diego Chicken to appear at Tulsa-KU game
Feathers may fly at the Tula-s-KU game Sept. 5.
Certainly, the teams will go at it hard on the field. But a winged war could be brewing-between the San Diego Chicken and the Jayhawk.
Tulsa announced last week that the infamous fowl would make an appearance at the Labor Day weekend contest.
The Tula game provides trivia buffs with several interesting statistics. For instance, it is the only KU game to be played at night this season.
Hurricane swarmed over the Jayhawks, 56-0.
And, from the record books, the Jayhawks have never scored on the Golden Hurricane. KU faced Tulsa in 1933 and 1944 and the Hurricane won both contests, 7-0. In 1946 Tulsa was again victorious, 27-0, and in 1946 the
The Hurricane, picked by preseason polls to win the Missouri Valley Crown, is led this year by Coach John Cooper, a former KU assistant coach until 1972. Cooper is in his fifth year at Tulsa, where he has a record of 26-18.
The Tulsa ticket office is expecting a carriage of 12 passengers between the two schools in 35 years.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981 Page 11
HAWK
The absence of seniors Lynette Woodard and Shebra Legrant will be evident as the women's basketball team faces the task of strengthening their program.
Rebuilding year in store for Javhawks
By BRENDA DURR
Sports Writer
The Kansas women's basketball team last year hoped for a berth in AIAW final four, but this year with the loss of two outstanding starters, Katherine and Shebra Legrant, Coach Marian Washington is faced with a rebuilding year.
Woodard averaged 24.4 points a game last year and played in every game during her four years here. Nationally she won the most prestigious award for a women athlete, the Wade Trophy. She was a four-time Kodak All-American and played for the 1980 U.S. Olympic team.
Llegan was the No. 2 scorer for Kansas last year with an 18.5 average. Both Llegan and Woodard are winting in their third-round basketball Association draft in September.
Besides losing Woodard and Legrant's offensive punch the Jayhawks also will lose their court leadership.
"Their value was obvious in terms of their skill in the program, but they were just as valuable in the areas of leadership and experience," Washington said.
Another blow to Washington's depleted corps is the loss of guard Mary Myers. Myers is out for the season with a knee injury.
"Myers hurt her knee participating in the National Sports Festival representing the Midwest team in Syracuse, N.Y." Washington said. "She's had surgery and they had totally reconstruct her knee."
The team may also lose center Megan Scott, who is considering transferring to another school.
Washington said Scott might change her major to veterinary medicine and become a physician.
a sophomore last year, averaged 10.5 points a game.
Washington said she hoped that Shyra Holden, a center who had not played since December 1979, would play this year. Holden left the University because of enrollment and academic problems, but Washington said that she might be readmitted this fall.
Washington will have four recruits to help rebuild her team into a national powerhouse. They are, Barbara and Vickie Adkins, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Rose Peeples, Peoria, Ill.; and Angie Snider, Overland Park.
"There are fine, talented young ladies in the program," Washington said. "Kids like Tracy Claxton and the team will bump, but most of the team will be juniors."
"If we get a year of experience the future looks good for us," Washington said.
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Page 12 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
33
David Verser's capable hands were a mainstay of the KU offense during his years as a Jayhawk. Verser was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals at the 10th pick in the 8th round of the NFL draft, and he is one of a few KU players still in the pro ranks.
Pro ball Senior Jayhawks drafted,become free agents
By RON HAGGSTROM Associate Sports Editor
The professional football ranks, through the draft and the signing of free agents, claimed ten former Jayhawks.
Two players were drafted and six others signed free agent contracts with the NFL. Two players signed free agents contracts with the CFL.
Wide receiver David Verser was a first round pick of the Cincinnati Bengals.
Verser's 30 receptions for 576 yards, 19.2 yards per catch, last year earned him associated Press second team All-State selection in the Shrine Game and the Senior Bowel.
"He is a super athlete. He has good hands, good speed and good size," said Head Coach Don Fambrough of his former standout wide receiver.
Another wide receiver, Lester Mickens, was the New Orleans Saints with round choice. In the Saints possession, Mickens ran the fastest mile on the team.
Last year Mickens made 10 catches
for 123 yards. His biggest game came in the season opener at Oregon, when he had four receptions for 33 yards.
The NFL's free agent signees included Lara Kemp, Harry Sydney, Joe Tumpick, Frank Wattetle, Bob Whitten and Scellars Young.
Fullback Harry Sydney signed a free agent contract with the Seattle Seahawks after rushing for 223 yards and five catches in his final campaign.
Mickens was joined in the Saints camp by fullback Larry Kemp and safety Frank Wattete.
Kemp who rushed for 164 yards in his final season, was released.
Wattelet second in the secondary in tackles and tied for second on the team in interceptions, was re-signed by New York, her originally failed to pass his physical.
The Chicago Bears signed safety Joe Tumpick, Tumpick, who led the team with five interceptions and who was named first in the tackles, appeared in the Hula Hula.
Harry Sydney
Linebacker Scellars Young and tackle B Johntained joined V塞尔 in the
Harry Sydney
Bengals camp before both were released.
Young is fourth in career tackles and made 21 stops against Colorado in 1978. Two Jayhawks signed free agent contracts with CFL teams.
Guard Augusta Kyles signed with the Toronto Argonauts and tackle Steve Oliver joined the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. However, both were released.
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University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
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The sure left foot of Bucky Scribner was one solid facet of the 1980 Jayhaws squad. Scribner averaged 44.1 yards per kick last year and is a strong candidate for All-America honors this season.
Final 1980 Big Eight Conference Standings
1980 season diverse, dramatic
Overall Record
By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Editor
| | W L T O | Pct | Iceland | Pts. Iceland |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oklahoma | 6 | 1 | .908 | 281 127 |
| Nobreka | 6 | 1 | .857 | 292 159 |
| Kannas | 5 | 1 | .714 | 59 168 |
| Kanaas | 3 | 1 | .710 | 19 158 |
| Oklahoma | 2 | 4 | .333 | 115 183 |
| Iowa State | 2 | 1 | .286 | 115 183 |
| Kanaas | 1 | 6 | .143 | 74 178 |
| State | 1 | 6 | .143 | 74 178 |
W L W. T Pct. Pts. Opp.
Okahama 10 2 8 .833 690 359
Nebraka 10 2 4 .833 390 179
Missouri 8 2 0 .833 368 159
Missouri 4 2 0 .464 171 708
Okahama 8 4 0 .464 171 708
State 8 2 0 .360 173 147
Kansas 8 5 0 .350 173 147
Kansas 3 8 0 .363 129 212
Colorado 1 10 0 .363 129 212
Last year's football season was a hedge-judge of upsets, near misses, narrow wins, embarrassments and at times, disappointment, atting, and, most of the time, entertaining.
Here is a brief blow-by-blow account of last year's 4-5-2 burrise finish.
Conference
Oregon: This game allowed some sportswriters to dust off that terrible old cliche about ties being like kissing under the leadership of a green freshman quarterback named Seurer (pronounced Sewer by the uninformed) to score a lone touchdown, making the tally 7-5. Bambrough caught to go for the extra point and Kansas had come up with the tie for the first game of the season, 7-7.
Pittsburgh: Optimism raised by the Oregon tie was quickly killed by an 18-3 defeat at the hands of the Panthers, whose awesome defense held the Jayhawks to a total of 86 yards, while their offensive wracked up 400 yards.
Louisville: This is where the embarrassment comes in. The Cardinals weren't underrated by the Jayhawks; they weren't even thought about it. It showed in "Louisville's 17-9 victory. A bright spot: Kerwin Bull rushed for 103 yards.
Nebraska: This 54-0 loss had few bright spots for the Jayhawks. The best KU play of the game came after the final gun sound, when the Jayhawks refused to shake the hands of Nebraska players. The Huskers had gone for a two-point conversion after one of their infinite touchdowns.
Syracuse: Upset time for the Jayhawks on Syracuse's home turf, where KU saved face for the Louisville loss by defeating the highly regarded Baylor. KU belted 145 yards and quarterback Steve Smith passed for 166 more.
Iowa State: The Jayhawks again regained their footing, defeating the Cyclones 28-17. Junior college transfer Dwryne Crutchfield friched for 117 yards for Iowa State, an omen for KU, and Bail held 154.
Oklahoma State: Now the clique became 'kissing your sister twice.' The Jayhawks and the Cowboys battle to a
Kansas State: The annual cross-state dogfight was narrowly by KU, 20-18, in Manhattan. Bell had a field day against the Wildcats, picking up 216 yards and carrying the ball a backbreaking 38 times.
14-14 tie. The solid kicking game failed
82-yard field goal in the final seconds.
Taylor stepped in and picked up 100 yards on 19 carries.
Oklaahoma: As usual, the Jayhawks gave the Sooners plenty of fight in Lawrence, but, also, usual, the Hawks gave 19 with Bedford and an injury, with rich, Garfield
Colorado: The Buffs, in the uncomfortable but, for them, familiar, role of Big Eight doormat, were overby the Jayhawks in Builer, and last fall I lost the job despite a foot condition that became known as turf toe.
Missouri: The Tigers ruined KU's chance of a Peach Bowl bid, downing the Jayhawks 31-6. Three early Tiger touchdowns left the Jayhawks reeling, and Bell again was forced out with the recurring toe injury.
Final 1980 Kansas Football Statistics
KU Opp.
First downs 171 215
First downs, rushing 106 124
First downs, passing 56 78
First downs, penalty 11 14
Attacks rushed 138 173
Lifted limit, net loss 223 348
Rushing, net yards 1,079 1,278
Forward passes attempted 145 212
Forward passes attempted 212 244
Pass completion percentage 46.2 48.4
Passing, net yards 1,280 1,615
Rounding, net yards 8 7
Interceptions by 12 15
Yards returned,
intersides 107 144
Total yards, intersides
and passing 3,230 3,783
Pounds number 68 67
Yards扑unting 2,890 2,690
Yards扑unting average
count 62.3 40.1
Pounds return 22 19
Yards returned, pants
count 73 34
Yards returned, shoes
count 230 650
Yards blocked by,
pants 13 13
Fumbles, total 13 13
Fumbles, total 20 37
Fumbles, penalized 60 25
Yards penalized 613 494
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Page 14
University Daily Kansan, August 20. 1981
FBI still mum on probe into alleged game-fixing
By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Editor
Sports Editor
No one but the Federal Bureau of Investigation really knows whether the Big Eight is being investigated for fraud, and, as usual, the FBI isn't talking.
Last spring, a Boulder, Colo., newspaper published a story saying that three Big Eight basketball games, including a Missouri-Kansas contest, were under investigation by the FBI. He expected three among officials and investigators to be informed April 13 that it indeed was investigating allegations.
The FBI, however, stopped before pointing a finger at any specific schools. The games allegedly under investigation were the KU-Missouri game in Columbia Feb. 9, the Oklahoma State-Colorado game in Boulder Feb. 14 and the Nebraska-Missouri game Feb. 21.
Athletic Director Bob Marcum then announced that he had received word from the Big Eight office that KU was being investigated by the Big Eight Commissioner Carl James was
PETER M. BENNENBERG
Bob Marcum
asked how he knew that, he replied that
he wanted to be informed information
on that particular game.
What James would not or could not say was whether the FBI had requested any information at all. The big Eight team meeting with the FBI and was refused.
After all the intrigue, an answer to a puzzle would be fascinating, but as of now it remains unknown.
BIG EIGHT spokesman BIl Hancock said recently that his office had received no news of the incident since the confusing events of last spring.
Dave Kaywood of the NCAA's enforcement division said that he, too, had not heard anything more about the incident.
"To my knowledge there have been no announcements or new information," he said. "I really don't know what's taking place."
Marcum is sticking with his original statement that KU is not involved.
"It's all a mistake," he said. "We got tossed in by a comment made to a newspaper, not through an official notice, like the Big Eight, the NCAA or the FBI."
"Once something like that is on the wire service, it's impossible to do anything about."
THE FBI will neither confirm nor deny the allegations. Tony Tripplett, FBI media representative, referred all cases to a criminal original FBI statement issued last April.
Lockwood's optimism soars over volleyball team's chances
If KU's volleyball team comes anywhere close to Coach Bob Lockwood's expectations, the upcoming match is the best ever for the volleyball squad.
Lockwood's team will be led by co-captains Shelly Fox and Jill Stinson. Fox and Stinson will play the setters positions in the Jayhawk's 82-line game.
"This will definitely be the best team we have ever had," said Lockwood, who is entering his third year as head volleyball coach.
"Both Shelly and Jill are good leaders and their experience will help the younger girls." Lockwood said. "They are fine players who know the game."
Fox will be the top returning letter winner from last year's team. She won the award as the top setter at a Super Bowl game, hotbed of American volleyball.
"Shelly went to that camp and really played well," Lockwood said. "To win
the award as top setter at that camp is a very big honor."
Fox probably will be joined on the court by Stinson and Splorer Lori Erickson, Donna Abeln and Susie Quirk, who is the tallest player at 6-foot-2. The other players, Lockwood said, will either come from walk-ons or one of the five players he signed to scholarships.
"We had a very good recruiting year," Lockwood said. "The players looked very good in the auditions that we had."
Lockwood's top recruits are Beth Vivian, Jill Burns, Ann Price, Tammmy Hambleton and Kathy Kennedy. Lockwood also signed Lori Suffocate, play for the volleyball team in the fall and the softball team in the spring.
"All of our new players have some experience in Junior Olympic or United States Volleyball Association play," Lockwood said. "This will definitely
help them make the transition to our game."
Lockwood will need the help of his recruits to fill the hole left by April Beaver. Beaver, a member of the Region Six first team in last year's regional tournament, left school last spring.
"April will definitely be hard to replace," Lockwood said. "She knew a lot about the game, and anytime you lose someone like that, it hurts."
Lockwood said that although the team might be KU's best ever, its record might not show it. The Jayhawks will travel almost every weekend to tournaments and the competition at those tournaments will be tough. Lockwood said that the Jayhawk's clock for finishing in the Big Eight were better.
"Nebraska and Oklahoma will be the teams to beat at the Big Eight championships," Lockwood said. "But this year no one is out of the title race.
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25
KU guard Tony Guy is tripped up by an Iowa State defender during a game last season. Guy, Victor Mitchell and David Magley form the experienced nucleus of this season's basketball team. Kelly Knight, redshifted last year because of an injury, also will
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Page 16 University Daily Kansan, August 20, 1981
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, August 24,1981 Vol. 92, No.2 USPS 650-640
Budig stresses KU's potential as 'top 10' university in '80s
Staff Reporter
By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas has the potential to boost our ability to manage these injuries in the future according to its new champion.
And Chancellor Gene A. Budig pledged to achieve that potential with the help of KU faculty, staff, students and officials, in his speech to be delivered at Allen Field House today.
In a copy of his prepared speech, Budd said, "I believe that within the decade of the 1980s the University of Kansas will be recognized as one of the top 10 universities in the nation.
"I as I begin my service as chancellor, I pledge myself to work toward that goal. I promise that I will not rest until we have achieved it, and I invite you to hold me to my objection."
Budig was scheduled to be inaugurated this morning during the annual University opening convocation. All 9:30 and 10:30 classes were cancelled to allow students to attend.
BUDIY BECAME chancellor Aug. 1, replacing
Chancelor Dut Schuhman. In his speech, Budi
y BECAME chancellor Aug. 1.
"One of my chief duties will be to explain to our constituencies the needs and the pential of the University," he said.
"My fundamental concern is the issue of adequate compensation for our faculty and staff
who are, as I said, the heart of this University. If KU is to remain a vital, innovative and productive institution, we must be able to retain, honor, compensate, our finest teachers and scholars.
Budig listed funding for KU libraries and the need to replace and improve scientific equipment as his other major concerns, and he said he would work with the college staff with elected officials to gain support for KU
"I am confident that we can work together effectively for the mutual benefit of the state and the University," he said. "Our futures are, after all, inextricably intertwined."
Budig also called on students to work with the University in order to receive the best possible education.
"We cannot educate you," he said. "We can only make your education possible if you are willing."
BUDIG'S REMARKS were to follow a traditional inauguration ceremony. The ceremony was to open with an academic procession including delegates from 189 colleges and universities, KU faculty, staff and officials, members of the Kansas Board of Regents and Kansas Gov. John Carlin. All Kansas Regents institutions and all Big Eight conference universities planned to have representatives at the ceremony.
The chief and deputy marshals of the University were to lead the procession
Representatives from universities, colleges and learned and professional societies were scheduled to march according to the years their institution had begun with the Harvard University representative.
Budig's father-in-law, John Van Bloom, was to represent Bloom's alma mater, Union College. Bloom was to march ninth in the procession of academic delegates.
THE CONVOCATION schedule included remarks by Gov. Carlin and a composition by James Barnes, KU assistant director of bands, to James Roberts, by the KU Band, directed by Robert Foster.
After the composition, Sandra McMullen,
chairman of the Board of Regents, was to make Budd's chancellorship official by investing him
into the university as its office, a mace,
and a silver ceremonial collar.
The ceremony was to start with an invocation and end with the singing of "The Crimson and the Thunder."
Budil follows a long line of KU chancellors beginning with R.W. Oliver, who served from 1865 to 1867. Oliver, an Episcopal rector, hired in 1869 during his stint before return to the ministry.
Budig, 42, is a native of McCook. Neb. he received his bachelor's degree in journalism, his master's degree in English and his doctoral education, all from the University of Nebraska.
JUSTICE
JULIE GREEN/Kansan Staff
District attorney questions paraphernalia law's validity
By STEVE ROBRAHN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Two months have passed since the Kansas law changed, but almost nothing has changed in Lawrence.
KU residence halls have no policy on how to deal with paraphernalia violations, the district attorney has not prosecuted anyone for violating such rules as usual at Lawrence's two head shops.
Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone said Friday that he was awaiting the outcome of a court case that would determine the validity of the law before he actively enforced it. That ruling is expected to come in about a month and will settle a lawsuit brought by an association of Kansas paraphernalia dealers against Attorney General Robert Stephan.
"It's a case of legislators wanting to go home and say, 'Look what we've done to curb drug abuse,' when they haven't done a damn thing," Malone said.
MALONE HAS repeatedly attacked the law for being vague and unenforceable.
In addition to specifically outlawing bongs, pipes with screens, roach clips, cocaine spools and similar devices, the law prohibits the sale or use of these devices intended for use with controlled substances.
Feds to probe Med Center charges
This means many stores could be guilty of selling drug paraphernalia if there are indications a customer is purchasing a product for illegal purposes. Malone said.
A GROCERY STORE could be selling paraphernalia by selling baggies, he said, and a hardware store could be found guilty for selling alligator clips.
A U.S. Department of Labor's investigation of Affirmative Action procedures at the University of Kansas Medical Center next month could prove troublesome, the head of the labor department agency conducting the investigation said yesterday.
By SHARON APPELBAUM Staff Reporter
See LAW page 5
Robinson said the investigation was "strictly routine," but she said it might be complicated by racial discrimination and harassment complaints that employees of the facilities could not access equipment fitted with the Equal Employment and Opportunity Commission against the Med Center.
"I hope I'm not sending my people into a hornet's nest," said Betty Robinson, director of the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs.
At least seven Med Center employees have filed grievances with the EEOC since 1977. Several black employees alleged in their complaints they had been verbally harassed and
Jim Scaly, administrative assistant to the chancellor, said Saturday that the Med Center's Affirmative Action plan would stand up to the investigation.
OFFICIALS AT THE Med Center learn of the investigation last month in a letter from the court that uncovered the case.
denied promotions by their white supervisors and administrators.
Robinson said Friday that her division's investigations became more complex when the Trump administration began.
Since its inception in 1978, the contract compliance office has periodically checked on federal contractors, including universities, which have been involved in this. This is the first investigation at the Med Center.
"It is a good Affirmative Action plan, parallel to the one on the Lawrence campus," he said.
He said the EEOC complaints were "routine complaints like any organization gets."
Robinson said she couldn't tell now whether the investigation would become complex. Robinson
See INVESTIGATION page 5
No results yet in Title IX investigation
Bv EILEEN MARKEY
Staff Reporter
The results of last year's investigation into alleged sex discrimination in KU athletics have been bouncing between Kansas City, Mo., and Washington, D.C., all summer.
KU officials expected to receive the results after spring, but athletic officials said Friday they had no reason to believe the game was over.
Helen Walsh, spokesman for the Office of Civil Rights in the Department of Education in Washington, said the results had been delayed because revisions had to be made.
"The regional office in Kansas City drafted a proposed letter of finding a few weeks ago, and we requested some revisions." Walsh said. "They'll send it back to us for approval."
THE LETTER was sent back for revisions once before, but Walsh said that her office needed more information and that a delay was inevitable.
“It’s just impossible to meet the 90-day deadline,” she said. “A statement of finding is very detailed and very long. It’s a complicated procedure.”
Phyllis Howlett, assistant athletic director,
of the University of athletics had not heard anything about a football game.
TITEL IX is a 1972 federal law intended to prohibit sex discrimination in education. If the University of Kansas is found in violation of the law, it could lose all or part of its federal aid.
"I would hope that the University would not need ITX hovering over their heads to keep them."
Separate complaints of discrimination against women's athletics at KU were filed in 1978 by Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, and Anne Levinson, 1980 KU graduate. In financial aid, travel funds, equipment facilities and coaches' salaries.
KU was among eight universities chosen by the Department of Education in the first round of investigations into alleged sex discrimination in athletics.
A four-week investigation, which ended in November 1880, resulted from the complaints filed by Banks and Lewison. A ruling by the Department of Education was expected Jan. 17.
TWO OF THE first eight universities to be investigated already have received their letters of finding, and Walsh said other letters would go out soon.
"I can only be grateful that the whole thing is still in consideration," she said. "The pressure is not off Strong Hall. It’s all applause as far as I’m concerned."
Although she faced her complaint almost three years ago, Banks said she had not been charged.
"We will be issuing other findings very shortly," she said.
The University of Akron in Ohio originally was found in violation of anti-bias laws in a letter issued April 20, but the university was allowed to correct it and to correct its program and did not lose funds.
The University of Bridgeport in Connecticut was issued a letter of finding Aug. 13. Walsh said that university was in compliance on financial and planning plans, and plan compensating for inequities in other areas.
According to Walsh, if a university was not in compliance with Title IX, it would be given time
Jane
Gretchen Budig, wife of Chancellor Gene A. Budig, sits with Daphne, the family pet.
Gretchen Budig balances social, family obligations
Staff Reporter
By LISA MASSOTH Staff Reporter
She had just settled in her chair on the sun porch when both the doorbell and the telephone rang. Minutes later, her 14-year-old daughter and a friend walked through the front door and into a small room off the sun porch to watch television. Before long, the phone ran again.
Constant activity is a way of life in the Budiz household.
As her husband, Chancellor Gene A. Budig,
learns the administrative ropes, Gretchen
Budig keeps busy trying to balance a hectic
family life with her own full schedule.
Mrs. Budig is not a complete stranger to Lawrence, have come here in 1986 to watch a KU football game. Her brother, a KU player at the time, was playing for the Jayhawks.
She said she was enjoying her return to Lawrence, but has been so busy unpacking and getting ready for the fall semester since the start of this school year hadn't time to explore much of the city.
"Each time I walk downtown I see something different," she said.
APART FROM SETTING into her new home, Mrs. Budig has been working on her fall schedule, which includes numerous dinners, receipts, pre-game parties and alumni events. With the help of her husband and alumni, she has also been planning functions to be held at the chancellor's residence.
Although she will be involved in planning and coordinating many of the University's social activities, Mrs. Budg prefers to leave it up to her husband and expressed disinterest in policy-making.
"They hired my husband for that job," she said.
Although she has been called the "First
"I'd just as soon be referred to as 'Gretchen Budig,'" she said. "It's sort of silly, but I live with it."
Lady of the University," Mrs. Budig shrugged her shoulders at the title.
Rocking back and forth on a dining room chair, she talked about her fall plans.
"Weather permitting, I want to have the football pre-game lunches out on the lawn.
Monday Morning
with box lunches. soft drinks and balloons," it said. "It's supposed to be fun; it's a game."
HER NEW DUTIES have left her little time with her family.
"I enjoy it, but I'm trying to figure out how we are going to have a family life," she said with a smile.
The Budds have a son, Chris, 16, and a daughter, Mary Frances, 14. They also have a brother, Alain, a dogue Daphne, 11, who reams through the house and helps greet visitors at the door.
When they can find time, the Budigs like to play sports or relax at home.
"We play tennis and golf or sit on the front porch and watch people," she said.
Finding free time isn't always easy, though Even her child,lead hectic lives.
"the problems with the kids is they have their own scheduler said, they said that it's not back and forth," he recalled.
This served as a mode of communication when they all come and go at different times,
"Everyone is gone so much that I just tell them to be at church on Sunday," she said. The Buduis attend St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, 1229 Vermont St.
The Budig family lives on the second and third floor of the chancellor's residence. The
the chancellor's residence. The
See WIFE page 5
Bob, Bob, Bob.
Weather
WARM
Today will be partly cloudy with a high near 90, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Tonight will be continued partly
cloudy with low of 60 to 65.
Winds will be light and variable.
Tomorrow will be pleasant with a high of 85 to 90.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
---
News Briefs From United Press International
Khadafy calls U.S. attack 'international terrorism'
BEIRUT-Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadify and Ethiopian president Mengistu Hile-Mariam yesterday accused the United States of "international terrorism" for downing two Libyan warplanes in a dogfight last Wednesday the state-run news agency JANA said.
"The downing of two Libyan fighters by American warplanes last week is considered an act of international terrorism," the communique said, adding that it was "a violation of United Nations Charter."
The accusation was contained in a joint communique issued at the end of a visit by Khadjady to Ethiopia. Khadjady later arrived in Abu Dhabi for an investigation.
The statement carried by JANA also charged that the United States in-assessment of Iran's military reports press reports that the Central Asian Armenia was plotting to kill Khamenei.
Libya also picked up some conditional support from Kuwait, where Abdel Rahman Al Awadi, acting minister of state for cabinet affairs, said, "We condemn any aggression committed against any Arab country regardless of its justification."
The two Soviet-made Libyan fighters were shot down in waters that the United States claimed were international.
Newsweek magazine reported yesterday that a Libyan submarine provided a "momentary scare" by heading toward the U.S. 6th Fleet in the Gulf of Sidfar a short time after the Libyan F-14s were shot down. But the submarine quickly quickly made an about-face and sailed, ending U.S. fears of retaliation.
Top government officials said the Reagan administration will almost certainly repeat the naval exercise that provoked the shoot-out with the Libyans, Newsweek said.
Newsweek quoted one military planner as saying a July report to Defense Secretary Casper Weinberg concluded the risk of major retaliation was "low, very low," and one well-informed source said the secretary did not question the report.
Global boycott of flights avoided
The International Federation of Air Traffic Controllers Associations, leaving a possible boycott of U.S. flights up in the air, yesterday urged renewed talks in the American controllers' strike, but Secretary of Transportation Drew Lewis rejected the call.
The actions came on opposite sides of the Atlantic as the U.S. controllers walk-out headed into its fourth week. The illegal strike has pared commercial air traffic to 75 percent of normal and raised concerns about air safety.
Despite Lewis' refusal to resume the talks, Robert Pike, president of the workers union, said, "We'll negotiate this afternoon, tomorrow, when we can."
But the strikers seemed to have lost a powerful card in their hand when the international controllers group decided yesterday not to announce any new rules.
However, one source at the IFATCA meeting in Amsterdam, said the group had agreed on strength, but as yet secret, measures to take if President Obama fails to sign a deal.
Medflv threatens additional crops
The spread of the Mediterranean fruit fly to a sixth California county is turbinating its ripe $4.5 million crop of bell peppers scheduled for worldwide distribution.
The discovery of a fertile female medfly trapped in a walnut orchard in San Benito county, 15 miles from the previous quarantine zone, prompted an immediate counterattack by helicopters spraying malathion, an insecticide. The quarantine area was expanded by 200 square miles to 2,827 square miles, but medfly fighters said they were almost helpless in dealing with motorists who transported fruit and vegetables out of the restricted area.
“Of course it's discouraging,” said Dick Thompson, a medfly project specialist. “We knew we were going to find satellite infestations. They're
Officials said highway patrol roadblocks were ineffective and expensive, and they may be abandoned.
In San Benito county, the agricultural commissioner said, farmers annually harvest $100 million worth of crops. The total agricultural output of
Friends believe Diana is pregnant
LONDON~Close friends of Princess Diana believe she is expecting a baby, the News of the World said yesterday.
They believe that just like her sister, Lady Jane Followes, Diana may produce an heir almost nine months to the day after her wedding, the
Diana, 20, and Prince Charles, 32, heir to the British throne, were married July 29.
A Buckingham Palace spokesman said there would be no comment about the report.
The newspaper said the princess' father, Earl Spencer, thought talk of a grandchild "a bit premature," but added, "I must say she looks absolutely radiant."
The couple ended their two-week Mediterranean honeymoon Aug. 15, and flew to Balmoral, the private estate of Queen Elizabeth II in Scotland.
Crash of Taiwan jet studied
TAIPEI, Taiwan--Officials probing Taiwan's worst aviation disaster yesterday listened to cockpit flight recorders from the jetliner that exploded in Hawaii.
Three Americans and a Canadian resident of California were among those killed in the flight.
The investigating committee that listened to the plane's two flight recorders, declined comment on their contents. But General Mao Ying-tsu, Taiwan's civil aeronautics director, promised "the most thorough in-depth study possible" of the aircraft asked Boeing Co., the plane's builder, to send experts to assist in the probe.
The Boeing 737*317 flight recorders were found yesterday. Authorities said the recorder containing flying data was undamaged, but the one containing landing data was severely damaged.
Chapman to be sentenced today
NEW YORK—Mark David Chapman, who admitted he killed ex-Bates-
star John Lennon, is to be sentenced today in state supreme court in Ma-
terica.
Witnesses said the Far Eastern Air Transport jet blew up in mid-air Saturday morning, shortly after its takeoff on a flight from Taipei to the southern port city of Kaohsiung. The explosion may have happened at the aircraft's designated cruising altitude of 20,000 feet, officials said. The plane had taken off two hours earlier, but was forced to return because cabin pressure failed, as it did on a similar flight Aug. 4.
Chapman's lawyer, Jonathan Marks, said Chapman was delusional and was not mentally competent to plead guilty earlier this summer to Lennon's slaying Dec. 8, 1980. Judge Dennis Edwards said he would let Chapman be tried, according to sentence to him more than 20 years in prison because of the plea.
Chapman was arrested at the fashionable Dakota apartment complex where Lennon lived minutes after the singer was shot four times in the chest.
Since then, Chapman has been held under tight security at Rikers Island Prison.
Those who have seen Chapman report that his moods fluctuate wildly, from peace to despair, from calm to wild hallucinations.
Against Marka'* advice, Chapman withdrew a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity in June and pledged suicide to second-degree murder. He said that he had also tried to commit the murders.
Student lobbying group opens KU chapter
By JO LYNNE WALZ Staff Reporter
The United States Students Association, a national student lobbying organization, has established a chapter at KU this semester, Patricia McQueen, a USSA spokesman said, Friday.
McQueen, a board member of the Heartland Region of USSA, said that this year her organization planned to distribute information to KU students about national student issues, such as financial aid.
by dues paid to USSA by its members,
and the University of Kansas' dues
were paid by Student Senate last fall.
in return for its money, KU was
represented by the lobby in
Washington, she said.
She said that USSA would also like to keep students up-to-date on activities and voting records of their state legislators.
As she spoke, McQueen was sitting behind a spread of informational pamphlets at the Associated Students of Field House at enrollment in Allen Field House.
ASK is a member of USSA, which comprises campus governments and state student organizations across the nation, McQueen said.
"Mainly, I think the first year should be information." McQueen said.
Local chapters, she said, were funded
Eventually, McQueen said, USSA would like to establish a voter registration task force here to enrol voters to vote in local, state and national elections.
Bob Frigo, a KU graduate who attended the national USSA congress in Madison, Wis., earlier this month, said that student organizations in the Midwest and the South had often bought memberships in USSA only to gain experience. They have then only maintained minimal activity in USSA he said.
As a national organization, McQueen said, USSA lobbies for student issues in Washington, and offers testimony before congressional committees.
"Traditionally, the active mem-
ember has been on the East Coast."
Erkka.
However, both Frigo and McQueen said they injured the USSA chapter at a training session.
The East coast chapters, Frigo said,
traditionally have been in favor of
"Some of the Midwestern and Southern schools want to be more pragmatic," he said.
lobbying not only for issues that affect students, but also for issues that affect the public in general, such as solar power and conservation.
They have wanted USSA to concern them with how efforts only on issues that affect their lives.
The philosophy difference between students in the Midwestern and Southern states and students on the East coast is to reflect the merge of the National Student Association with the National Student Lobby in the 1970s to form USSA.
The National Student Association
Hrs. 8-8 M-Th
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lobbied for issues that affected the public as well as students, while the National Student Lobby worked for stricty student issues, Frigo said.
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USSA's national chairman, Janice Fine, would like to mend the regional division and pay more attention to pragmatic issues, Frigo said, to attract more - Midwestern and Southern schools.
The University of Kansas is one o. Midwestern schools that has been attracted to USA recently. The Heartland University, Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska.
Students interested in helping USSA establish itself at KU may contact McQueen through the Student Senate office.
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How Can I Get More Information
For information about intramural activities, stop by or call the Rec Services office. For sports club information, contact our sports club coordinator, Jay Hinrichs, at 864-3546. For information about all our facilities, call 864-3371 and for hours of open recreation call the Rec-Info line, 864-3456.
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Indeed we do. The Rec Services 1981-82 informational brochure will be available soon in 208 Robinson.
99
University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
Page 3
Commission studies downtown development
By MIKE ROBINSON Staff Reporter
The summer months may have been a vacation for some, but the issue of downtown development kept the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission busy conducting study sessions and surveys.
Beside the study sessions, the Planning Commission prepared three surveys on business, parking and preservation in downtown Lawrence.
The City Commission will review a final draft of the plan in the next several weeks after suggested changes have been made.
In its second session with the Lawrence City Commission, the Planning Commission Thursday unveiled the early drafts of a comprehensive downtown development plan.
The plan is being prepared by the Planning Commission and Robert B.
Teska Associates, Inc., an Evanston,
Ill. planning consultant.
It calls for the establishment of eight downtown development districts from the Kansas River south to South Park, and from the island Street west to Tennessee Street.
THE DRAFT ALSO included plans for expanded downtown parks, better access to downtown for pedestrians and a downtown hotel.
"Virtually anybody who uses downs the will benefit," said City Commissioner Barkley Clark. he said development would result in a wider range of jobs, including more patrons for businesses and better goods and services for shopmers.
If the final draft is approved by the Planning Commission and the City Commission, a public hearing will be held late in September, according to Dean Palos of the Planning Commission.
"I think the plan will be received very well," Clark said. "It should sail through the Planning Commission."
The final plan will be the culmination of four goals, including the three Planning Commission studies.
the operating hours of most businesses, how long those businesses had been in operation, and what image store owns in the general public had of downtown.
THE FIRST STUDY prepared in Downtown Survey of Business gathered.
In the survey, businessmen and the
general public agreed that downtown development, especially in the form of new high-rise housing.
The second Planning Commission study, the Downtown Parking Survey, analyzed parking patterns.
parking and pinpointed overused and underused parking facilities.
Palos said that the city would soon know what direction the development plans would take.
School of Business stiffens admission standards
By LILLIAN DAVIS Staff Reporter
Students already admitted to the School of Business, relax. Those who are not, however, might stay working a day or two if they require requirements are taking effect this fall.
Before admission to the school can be granted, a student must now complete 60 hours of college credit, have at least a 2.0 grade point average and have successfully completed certain designated courses.
Last year, only 50 hours of completed
work were required. 2.0 GPA were
required for admission.
Peter Lorenzi, last year's director of the undergraduate program, said the
THE NEW REQUIREMENTS, which include completion of Business 240 and 241; Economics 140, Math 113, 115 or 121, and 121, 114 or 122; Psychology 104 and 260, and Computer Science 200 were required by the School of undergraduate affairs committee, said John Tolefson, dean of the School of Business.
With the old system, if a student were admitted to the school without having completed any of the courses now required, it could have taken him another four years to graduate, Lorenzi said.
new admission requirements gave "explicit, direct advice to students as to what to wear and them" and more adequately prepared them for their junior and senior years.
Students were coming up short at
stay another semester or two, be said.
"Any student could tell you what things had to be accomplished to graduate," Loreni said. "By changing the requirements, we are merely mandating what had usually been done in the past."
WHILE THIS FALL the GPA admission requirement will be 2.0, next fall it will jump to 2.2 and then to 2.5 in 1983.
Lorenzi explained that the higher GPA was instituted to keep pace with the quality of graduates from other schools.
The student's GPA is just as big a
percentage as he would have if he
be has taken. When students begin
coming in with GPAs of 2.5 in 1983, they will have a lot more room for one bad semester without the fear of flunking out, Lorenzii said.
Because the school had to communicate to such a large number of freshmen and sophomores, making sure they came in prepared was essential. The requirements assured that they would. Lorenzi said.
He said that there might be a few problems with the requirements that the school had not yet anticipated, but in the end, they would be corrected.
"The committee spent more time in three separate meetings this past year on this undergraduate program than in any other." All the problems will be taken care of.
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Aerobic swimming—6:30 a.m. -7:15 a.m. TR in Robinson pools
Sunrise Fitness Program orientation and enrollment meeting will be 4 p.m. Wed., Aug. 26 in 202 Robinson. Program begins Aug. 31. For more information call 864-3371
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
Opinion
Battling back on budget
We are 23,500 salmon swimming upstream. As students in general and as students at a Kansas state college in particular we find ourselves battling a strong steady current of financial difficulty. But we swim on.
There were long lines everywhere during enrollment, but if the lines in front of the Guaranteed Student Loan and Pell Grant (BEOG) tables are any indication, the tuition pinch has started.
Unfortunately for students, the pinch has come at the wrong time. Just as tuition climbs, the Reagan administration, in its wisdom, has pushed for and won drastic cuts in the GSLL and Pell Grant programs.
The availability of GSLS had been practically unlimited, but effective Oct. 1, loans are available automatically only to those families whose adjusted gross incomes are below $30,000. The change hits hard at middle-income families, and at
colleges trying to keep enrollments up in the face of disheartening demographics
On Pell Grants, the government has increased the percentage of discretionary income that parents must contribute toward their children's education.
Chancellor Budig has the right idea. He is eager to battle the current with lobbying at both the state and federal levels to safeguard money for higher education.
In apparent mimicry of Reagan's budget cuts, the Kansas Legislature last spring chose to get tough with the Board of Regents. A 10 percent faculty salary increase proposal was lopped to 7 percent. A 9 percent library acquisition request ended up at 5.5 percent.
We're behind him because we have to be. Together, our personal educational aspirations make a up a societal will that must not be ignored. Education doesn't belong under the knife.
Med Center bonus checks defy 'grim' financial outlook
Students are always the last to know and the last to be asked.
The Kansas Legislature voted last spring to raise tuition by 15 percent. The Board of Regents kindly settled on 22 percent despite the efforts of thousands of students who voiced their oppose-ment, and made a decision to increase the university and tuition to increase for the University of Kansas to remain a top-notch institution.
Administrators painted a grim financial picture. Budget cuts had already been made. KU was forced to buy 1,500 fewer books and 800 fewer journal subscriptions last year. Fewer music teams were cut. Costs had skyrocketed and the money just wasn't there. right? Wrong.
While students were working extra hours at often degrading, definitely low-paying jobs so they could write that $459 check for in-state or $1,117 check for out-of-station tuition, thousands of dollars were being given away to the University of Kansas Medical Center to nurses, clerks, secretaries and cleaning personnel. More than $46,000 in bonuses was handed out by Donald Barnhorst, chief of KUMC's cardio-thoracic intensive care unit.
According to Barnhorst, on June 19, $1,000 checks went to each of 23 nurses, in operating technicians, two nurse technicians, an operating room coordinator, two residents, three secretaries and a person who runs the unit's heart-lung machine. In addition a $2,000 check went to David Cobb, chief of the monitoring technicians. A woman who cleans up the operating room and a ward clerk each received checks for $500.
"I told our business manager to reward our people for a year of tremendous work," Barry said. "We all worked together."
Though state law provides nothing in the way of bonus plans for either classified or unclassified workers there seems to have been nothing illegal about the checks because of the way the hospital is organized. Each of the hospital's 15 departments is a private corporation chartered under the laws of Kansas. Barmhorn serves as director and president of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery Chartered. How convenient.
Though there was nothing illegal about the
I
CINDY
CAMPBELL
checks, the sizable amount did raise the eyebrows of some administrators and hospital employees.
For Kansas state-paid nurses who make
whole payments in 1957 a month, $1,000 is a
stable chunk of income
"It's usually not such a big amount of money," Charles Hartman, vice chancellor for clinical affairs at the hospital, told reporters. "Other departments (at the Med Center) have done that (bonus payments) for additional duties at Christmas time."
Barnhorst said he had given out buotes before. He couldn't remember how many times, however. One nurse reported that earlier buotes ranged from $25 to $100.
Aside from the large amounts, Hartman said that the summer bonuses had been a "closed thing." He said he considered such payments "private affairs."
State money a private affair? My, my.
Wouldn't you like to buy a used car from that man?
In the grand scheme of things, $46,000 is not a large amount. When but a policy of cutting back is in effect and students are bearing the brunt of higher educational costs the policy of financial conservatism should be carried out across the Exceptions should be few and far between.
The responsibility of administrators to keep qualified people is important, especially in light of a current nurse shortage, but not to the point where you out hush-hush state money for such extravagance or instead-paying student should be concerned. We deserve better. In fact, we should demand it.
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letter should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the letter is written by an individual, the letter should include the class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
PREPARATION H
JOHN DEAR
STUDENT NAME
459.00
AMOUNT DUE
TO THE STUDENT:
BE PREPARED PAY YOUR FEES
Fall staff to pursue daily excellence with mix of changes and consistency
Letters policy
With the Back-to-school issue out and this first regular issue in the boxes on Jayhawk Boulevard, much of the worry is past. The work continues daily, so that the most of daily excellence to ourselves and our readers.
The guard has changed on the University Daily Kansan. While much of the campus population basked in a shortened country club week, the guard had been at a center of work and worry for the new fall staff.
Our goal is nothing short of a superb, responsible publication that trains student journalists but it informs, that promotes education of issues while it explores those issues.
Achieving our goal will demand labor and vigilance but the task will be greatly simplified by the many talented, experienced people on the staff.
Bob Schaad, is working closely with me as a fall managing editor. He spent the summer as a copy editor-intern on the Springfield, (Mo.) Leader and Press. Last spring Bob was art director and copy chief for the Kansan and in the fall before was makeup editor.
ScottHooker, an photographer-intern this summer on the Rochester (N.Y.) Deemcrat and director Scott, a Kansas photographer last year, will direct the photography and art staffs.
In charge of staff reporters is Tammy Tierney, who just returned from a summer in England and spent the spring '81 semester as a congressional intern in Washington. Tammy previously worked on the Kansas as a reporter, wire editor and copy chief.
This morning, amid fitting fanning, the University of Kansas gets a new Chancellor, Gene A. Budig, the former president of West Virginia University. At the same time, students, faculty and staff lose an administrator with qualities rarely found in academic institutions. Del Shankel, last year's acting chancellor and a long-time administrator, returns to full-time teaching and research next spring following a sabbatical this fall in Japan.
The associate campus editor is Ray Formalek, who worked this summer as a reporter-intern for the Tulsa (Ok.) Tribune. Ray has been the editor and last spring was assistant campus editor.
Tributes to individuals have never been the stock and trade of journalists; generally, praise is found only in obitaries or at testimonial dinners. And I could easily give such standard line for Shankel: his years of service teaching microbiology and biochemistry as well as western civilization, his enormous list of publications and professional societies and his work with patients, the man, acting dean of liberal arts and sciences, executive vice chancellor and acting chancellor.
Tracee Hamilton, who has traveled through the ranks of the Kansan sports staff first as a sports writer and last spring as associate sports editor, is this fall's sports editor. Tracee spent the summer as a copyeditor-intern in Springfield, too.
Shankel's year marked by calm concern
Irving Schiff
One KU dean admitted that administrators quickly learn stock answers to difficult problems and often begin losing the desire to find the best solution. One of Shankel's greatest assets as an
This theme was echoed by other students, faculty and administrators whom I talked with last week. Everyone told me much the same thing: Shankel's kindness, patience and genuine concern for individuals and the University make him outstanding.
DAVID
HENRY
On a more personal level, Shankel's genial and low-key manner is almost shocked. Somehow, I suspect most people, especially students, expect an administrator such as the chancellor to be a perennial fixture. Shankel also a leading expert on medieval Polish history. With Shankel, what you see is an intelligent man
In the midst of many skirmishes, Shankel remained calm and patient. During the free speech, banner policy controversy he took a lot of heat from the public and the press and never wilted. Last spring, the way he handled allegations of mismanagement at the Med Center may have prevented massive funding cuts by the Kansas Legislature.
But in doing that, I'd be missing the mark, for Shankel has given KU far more than the facts reveal. After working with him on University committees and seeing him as a western civilization professor, it's clear to me that Shankel's greatest contribution to KU is himself.
The instructor was nas insistence on finding the solution to a problem. Sometimes, of course, this is not possible.
"Shankel genuinely cares about people's opinions and their station in life is inconsequential," said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs. "While perhaps it's not very efficient administration, he always took time to listen to all sides of an issue."
without a whiff of intellectual pomposity who
may be able to "go beyond" to-dee-yo-
nature of an innumerable sageman.
A good friend of Shankel's summed it up best. "Del's greatest contribution (to the University) was to bring out the best in all of us as an institution. His qualities are infectious."
Del Shakel also has a strong loyalty to KU. His is not a blind devotion but rather a deep concern for the institution as a community of individuals. Shakel had planned to return to teaching last fall. However, when the Board of Regents asked him to serve as acting chancellor, he accepted the position fully knowing the problems of being a lame-duck leader. Yet, to his credit, he held the place together in the interim year with grace and competence.
His humility is striking when he meets with students. He clearly believes the University exists primarily for the education of students and the transmission of knowledge through research. While he can't always be labelled a teacher, some students are important to him. He works in the dorm room and the laboratory to his administrative work and he resumes teaching next spring.
Thank you Dil Shakker, for your contributions to the project. We look forward to seeing again in the spring.
Administrators are always under careful scrutiny from the public, alumni, faculty and students to make the "right" decisions. Shankel's year as actuarial chancellor proved to me and many others that he was indeed a person of great integrity. His actions have shown that vulnerability and sensitivity can be valuable assets, not liabilities.
SCOTT FAUST Editor
Kathy Brussell just returned from New York, where she spent the summer as an intern for Reader's Digest magazine. A Kansas reporter in Kentucky, Kathy was assignment editor in the spring.
Karen Schlueter, entertainment editor, will be managing a Tuesday and Friday entertainment page called Spare Time. Karen was a Kansas reporter last spring.
Don Munday has been assigned the very important task of ensuring that the articles in these pages are factually and grammatically correct to the letter. As head copy chief, Don will direct two other copy chiefs and guide a staff of copy editors. He was editorial editor in the spring and has also worked on the Kansan as a reporter and assistant campus editor. Don spent the summer as a copy editor-intern on the Milwaukee Journal.
Through innovative use of photographs and art, headlines that grab your attention and interest, or for how the reader will perceive the pages, we hope to produce a more attractive, lively paper.
That's just a sampling of the staff of about 80 that will be putting together each morning's Kansan, along with the overriding goal of exercise, have outlined specific plans to improve the paper.
For similar reasons, the front-page Monday Morning feature will be continued. These articles will be light, entertaining looks at people and activities. You'll like it.
Also in the new pages, in addition to a constant effort at making the copy as probing and insightful as possible, we have chosen to expand our coverage of the student body as individuals.
When you win a scholarship or are sent to a national convention by your organization you'll get recognition in print. This kind of coverage is a hallmark of small-town journalism, and whether we like to admit or not, that's really what we're up to here on the hill.
The editorial page, too, will see some change. We continue to encourage letters to the editor commenting on things we do or on campus and community issues in general, but we want to go a step further. We will publish a guest column every week.
We ask that persons with topics for guest editorsorials call us and set up an appointment with Kathy. We expect to pick and choose from the final list of guests' guidance on the final form the guest columns take.
Tracee, too, has plans to improve the sports page and our sports coverage. For example, in a feature called Etc., she will strive to print results of intramural sports and major league box scores. Also, she and her staff will offer their services on video and on sports and editorial columns on a regular basis.
Like Monday Morning, another successful innovation from last spring, the Friday Pot Shots feature will continue this semester on the editorial page.
So goes a taste of who we are and where we're taking this paper. We intend to keep you interested and keep you reading. Let us know whether we're meeting our goal.
The University Daily
KANSAN
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Newsroom--864-4310
Business Office--864-4358
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Editor Business Manager
F Scott Faust Larry Leibengauer
Managing Editor Robert J. Schaud
Campaign Editor Tammy Ternery Kathy Ternery
Editorial Editor Tahya Ternery Katy Ternery
Assistant Campus Editor Kay Forman
Assistant Campus Editors George Cognata
Assignment Editor Cynthia L. Curris
Art Director Scott Hook
Head Copy Chief Don Munday
Wire Editors Pam Howard, Vaneasa Heron
Entertainment Editor Karen Schulter
Sports Editor Treese Hamilton
Associate Sports Editor Hargittage
Makeup Editor Don Forteil, Khaly Maqg
Coach Chefs Cindy Campbell, Amy Collins
Coach Chefs B greenman, Mark McDonald, John Eisle, Karl Jackson, Keith Flannery, Drew Torres
Staff Artist Peni Crabtree
Editional Columnists Geral Beach, Cindy Campbell, Rebecca Chancy, Karl Elliott, Vaneasa Herron
Don Munday, David Henry, Brian Levinson, Kevin Heather, Kaley Kaup, Brad Sturtz
Don Munday, David Henry, Brian Levinson, Kevin Heather, Kaley Kaup, Brad Sturtz
Editional Cartomina Entertainment Writer Lift Liechick
Sports Writer Gianni Crabtree
Staff Reporters Peni Crabtree, Bob Moore, Jane Nurelda, Sand Rory
Staff Reporters Peni Crabtree, Bob Moore, Jane Nurelda, Sand Rory
Pam Alloway, Sharon Appleton, Mike Ardua, Lillian Dave, James Glover, Lilippe Cynthia Henrich, Diane Meave, Jennifer Jolyne, Teresa Ruebart, Mike Robranan, Steve Robranan, Joline Waalt
Retail Sales Manager Terry Knoebler
Campus Sales Manager John Caldwell
National Sales Manager Marcee Jacobsen
Classifier Manager Lauren Moore
Production Manager Ann Horberger
Transport Manager John Egan
Staff Artist John Reedling
Staff Photographer Cory Henk
Retail Representatives Molissa Rader, Jan Johnson, Kelly McCarthy, Beth Henkel
Leslie Ditch, Renée Yoreue, Susan Cooksey,黛妮 Thompson, BarBass
Howard Shanklin, Ferry Heil, Brad Lang, Jandel Wenderdorf, Sharon Bodin
Campus Sales Representatives Johanna McLeen, Treedy Cropper, John Oberman
Sales and Marketing Advisor John Oberman
University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
Page 5
Investigation
From page 1
Kansas Commission on Civil Rights and the Med Center's Affirmative Action office.
COMPLIANTS SENT to the EECO allege that whites with less experience and less seniority were promoted over blacks, and that black supervisors were not paid supervisor's wages.
Robinson said her office did not investigate specific complaints but did consider them when determining the quality of an Affirmative Action program.
Normally, the office's investigations take about 60 days, but Robinson said Washington sometimes grant extensions. She added that the Center's structure could delay the investigation.
"From what I understand, at the KU Med Center, there isn't one central office that does the hiring."
THE MED CENTER has 30 days to submit its Affirmative Action plan, pointing out any deficiencies in hiring and promoting minorities and women.
"If we find deficiencies, we will advise the Med Center of them and require correct action," Roberts said.
The report must list the number of minority and female applicants and the number hired, rejected, promoted or transferred. The contract requires that the applicant determine what to investigate in its opioid issue.
Wife
first floor is reserved primarily for entertaining and for visitors.
From page 1
Mrs. Budig said that she was pleased with the house and the furniture arrangement, making only small changes, such as moving a lampshade and pushing the furniture close to the walls.
"We need a traffic pattern," she said, gesturing to the wide, open spaces in each room. "I want to make it look comfortable and inviting, but still have a lot of room."
ALL THE DOWNSTAIRS furniture comes with the house, and the art work on all the walls is on loan from the Spencer Art Museum. Budig said she chose paintings that appealed to her, as well as by Kansans and faculty members.
A huge, full-length mirror with a carved wooden frame in the foyer is the only piece of furniture downstairs that belongs to the Budigs.
She has put small labels in the corner of her painting, telling who painte it and who does it.
"It's been in my family for years." Mrs. Budig said, with obvious admiration. "It's probably from Pennsylvania, since that's where my father is from."
The Lincoln, Neb., native said she'll miss the beauty of West Virginia, but she is glad to be back in the Midwest.
Malone has pointed out that practically anything can be used as an aid to ined drugs, ranging from soft drink cans to cardboard toilet paper tubes.
Law
From page 1
"The law is absurd," he said. "One thing law enforcement doesn't need is another unenforceable law. It's just silly."
Meanwhile, sale of paraphernalia-type items continues at Bokonom Imports Ltd. and Potion Parlor, E12. E.Eight St., and Exile Tapes and Records, W15. W.Ninth St. Some of the items specifically prohibited in the law, such as bongs, are for sale at both stores.
"No products sold for illegal purposes," the sign also says. "If we have any reason to believe that you intend to use any of these products for illegal purposes, no sale will be made."
A SIGN PROCLAMING "No Paraphernalia Sold Here" hangs on a shelf beside bongs and pipes at Exile Records.
Steve Flack, owner of Exile, said the pipes and other items for sale all had legitimate uses. He said he would not comment further until the outcome of the lawsuit against Stephan.
Exile has joined the Kansas Retail and Trade Cooperative, which is the group challenging the law, although Bokonon has not become a member.
Mark Williams, manager of Bokonon, said that
"It's a case of legislators wanting to go home and say 'look what we've done to curb drug abuse,' when they haven't done a damn thing."
-Mike Malone, Douglas County District Attorney
none of the products for sale there were intended for illegal purposes and that he would refuse to sell items if he had indications they were intended for illegal use.
Williams said his store had to be extra careful since it wouldn't receive legal assistance from the firm.
MALONE SAID he didn't believe either shop was trying to get caught selling paraphernalia for them.
"If the law is constitutional we will do everything in our power to enforce it, even though there may be a lot of problems to enforce it," he said.
Residence halls are required to abide by state law. The resident directors aren't sure how to handle violations.
Malone said that if the law were followed to the letter, people could find themselves giving statements at the grocery checkout line stating the intended use of bagsges and other items.
"I would probably deal with it like I would deal with a bottle of Jack Daniels," said Glenn Allen, Hashinger Hall resident director.
NO ALCOHOL stronger than 3.2 beer is allowed in the residence halls, Allen said, and when someone has a bottle of whiskey, he is told to remove it from the building or to dispose of it.
Alen said that most of his efforts up to now had been focused on getting people moved into the halls and he hadn't had time to worry about paraphernalia violations.
He said that policy might be developed by the Office of Residence Programs and the Association of University Residence Halls, but not sure if it could be effectively enforced.
"We don't search rooms or frisk people when they come the door," Allen said. "We're not policemen, and unless someone is using a controlled substance in their rooms, a paraphernalia violation probably wouldn't ever come to my attention."
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Book purchased Spring '81...$16.95
Current Dividend of 6%
(Period 69)...1.01
ACTUAL COST OF BOOK..$15.94
All cash purchases are eligible for this program, so save money on Texts, Supplies, Clothing and More!! Period 69 receipts (January 1, 1981 to June 30, 1981) Payments Begin Again on September 1, 1981!! At either Satellite or Kansas Union Stores.
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/
University Daily Kansan, August 24. 1981
Loan fraud plagues KU
Despite the efforts of KU's office of financial aid to screen applicants, late payments and fraudulent applications for short-term loans continue to plague the Kansas University Endowment Association.
George Stewart, the Endowment Association's controller in charge of short-term loans, said that the few students who defaulted on their loans made the program more expensive for all students.
The only cost to students for the loans is a 6 percent interest charge that covers losses and administrative costs. The higher rate of interest would drop as well.
"It's difficult for me to understand why students borrow and promise to repay, but then they don't follow through on that promise, especially if they give them a notice before their payment is due," Stewart said.
Based on past experience, the Endowment Association suffered a 4.8 percent rate of loss, Stewart said. He estimated that he had $7,800 on about $2 million in loans.
IF A STUDENT does not pay on the due date and fails to apply for an extension on the loan, the student receives a past-due notice telling him that he cannot enroll again at the University. The records are frozen and the loan has a 14 percent penalty interest charge on it. Stewart said.
If the loan is still not repaid after this, the borrower will receive a letter telling him that the collection will be turned over to an attorney.
On the short-term loan application, the only restrictions on a student is to maintain at least a "C" average, to use credit cards for educational purposes and to repay the loan.
Applications are turned in at the office of financial aid and students are given a personal interview by one of the counselors.
One of the restrictions, that of using the money for educational purposes involved defining what an educational purpose is, he said. On the office's list of priorities are the costs of tuition and books, living and transportation.
"The presumption of this office is that the student is honest," Weinberg said. "We can't bring a student down to see what he spends his money on."
Stewart said that he had suspected some students of using the money for other purposes. "It's in the grey areas of his purpose that abuses occur," he said.
A Kansas City senior, who admitted to misusing the loan, said that he lied on his loan application. The student, who asked that his name not be used, said he borrowed $300 and told financial aid officers that he used it for apartment rent when actually he used it to buy a stereo.
Storm losses increase grants
By TERESA RIORDAN Staff Reporter
Additional financial assistance could brighten the skies for students and their families whose homes or schools are located in recent Kansas summer storms.
Candidates previously turned down for a Pell grant (formerly a Basic Education Opportunity Grant) may now qualify for aid if their financial losses, according to Jerry Rudolph, KU director of financial aid.
Only students who have already applied for a Pell grant may file a supplementary form if their family's financial status was affected by losses from recent storms, Rogers said.
He added that farm families who had incurred crop or equipment losses in areas such as Barton, Pawnee or Douglas counties, which have been delicately national disaster affected primarily affected by the Pell increases.
Students who lost only stored furniture or clothing in the June 19 tornado that swept through Lawrence will have to wait for all increases, according to Rogers.
However, they may apply for low-
interest loans from the Small Business Administration until Sept. 14, according to Fred Clark, SBA branch manager in Kansas City, Mo.
In addition, people who suffered damage to their homes during the tornado are also eligible for the SBA loans.
The tornado severely damaged the Gaslight Village mobile home park and the Fort Knox warehouse near the Fort store at 31st and Iowa Streets.
"Anyone having an uninsured physical loss from the tornado may apply for a 3 percent loan if he is able to itemize and document the loss by storage receipts," Clark said.
An applicant may qualify for up to $10,000 for personal property losses or up to $50,000 for home damages. Clark said. The loan, however, will not cover luxury items or non-essentials.
To receive a loan, the applicant must assure the SBA that the funds will be used to restore his property in the weather condition without upgrading.
The loan repayment schedule is based on the individual's ability to pay, according to Clark.
Kansas Power and Light Co. has closed a portion of 19th Street because of repairs that began Wednesday at the 19th Street substation.
According to Fred Bryan, Lawrence division manager of KP&L, 19th Street is scheduled to be open by September 11.
Repairs close portion of 19th Street
KP&L is burying power lines in the substation between Oudsdahl and Stewart streets to upgrade the service system of Kansas and surrounding areas.
"The University has grown and remodeled, added air conditioning, laboratories and other advancements," Bryan said. "The power requirements it needs has grown with these expansions."
19th Street is not completely closed, but drivers cannot turn east onto 19th Street from Iowa Street, and the street can be accessed off from Stewart Avenue to Quadahl Street. Drivers can use 15th and 20th streets as an alternate route.
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Webster says a heathen is "one who does not believe in the God of the Bible." They rage to get rid of God's Word, the Bible, its Laws and Commandments for men. An easy and sure way to get rid of the Bible is to neglect, quit reading and remain ignorant! Chris said: "TO HIM THAT HATH SHALL BE GIVEN, BUT FROM HIM THAT HATH NOT SHALL BE TAKEN AWAY WHAT THEHSE MEETH TO MEAH? 'Fail to use your possessions families and lose them!' Doubtless this explains the loss of the Bible, the Testaments from our schools. It is not just the fault of the Supreme Court and others in high authority, but also on account of the neglect and resulting ignorance of probably a large percent of our citizens who call themselves Christian.
The secret of Luther's great life and power was the result of finding the Word of God and "wastening it more than his necessary food." indeed, he of God had to do this because he was so much a part of it.
How long has your favorite author or columnist or commentator been writing, writing or talking? How much longer do you think he will live? How long have you lived? How much longer upstay and overthrow one "jot or little" of God's Word? Christ said it would be easier for heaven and earth to pass away! Would it not be wise for you, me, and all of us like Job to "ESTEEM THE WORDS OF GOD'S MOUTH MORE THAN YOU KNOW?" LAY IT UP IN OUR HEARTS that WE MIGHT NOT SIN AGAIN HIM?"
Luther said: "THAT THE BIBLE IS GOD'S BAND AND BOOK I PROVE THAT ALL THOUSING THAT HAVE BEEN, AND ARE, IN THE WORLD, AND THE MANNER OF THEIR BEING, ARE DESCRIBED IN THE FIRST BOOK OF THE WORLD, DOES IT STAND TO THIS DAY INFINITE POTENTITY OF THE WORLD, DOES IT STAND TO THIS DAY INFINITE POTENTITY OF RAGED AGAINST THIS BOOK AND SOUGHT TO DESTROY AND UPROOT IT ... BUT THE PREVAILD NOTHING: THEY ARE GONE AND VANISHED, WHILE THE BOOK REMAINS, AND WILL REMAIN FOREVER AND EVER, PERFECT AND ENTIRE, AS IT WAS DECLARED AT FIRST, WHO HAS THIS IT — WHO HAS THIS PROTECTED IT AGAINST SUCH MIGHTY FORCES? ON ONE, SURELY, BUT GOD HIMSELF, WHO IS MASTER OF ALL THINGS."
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University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
Page 7
Prof evaluation is included on Senate agenda
While University of Kansas students vacationed, Student Senate members spent the summer planning projects for this fall.
On their agenda is the revision of the faculty and curriculum evaluation system and a Senate committee to oversee evaluations.
The Senate's first meeting will be a reception to welcome Chancellor Gene A. Budig and his family to the university. The reception will be from 4 to 5 p.m. Oururs in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union and is open to the public.
Bert Coleman, Senate president, said that under a Kansas Board of Regents stipulation, there was supposed to be a student evaluation committee. According to Coleman, there is no such committee and never has been.
Coleman said he would like to set up an evaluation committee consisting of 50 or 60 people and make evaluations mandatory for all the faculty at least once a year. Under the present evaluation system, Coleman said, faculty had the choice of whether or not to be evaluated.
Coleman also made several appointments this summer. Joining the Senate are Audrey Bishop, appointed as a half-time attorney for Legal Services, and Louis Bolton, Senate executive secretary appointee.
Committee appointments are:
Memorial Board: Larry D. Humes,
Mikl Gordon, Laura Nelson, David C.
Van Parys and Julie Meilenize; Health:
Bruce MacGregor, Mark Holloway,
Jim Appelbaum, Mindy Brown, John
Higgins, Amanda Amedard Smith,
University of Kansas Athletic
Corporation: Matt Keanen and Bren
Abbott; Legal: Steve Bennett and Joe
Foergetty.
Also included in Coleman's appointments this summer are the following: Associated Students of Kansas' Board of Directors: Marie McDougal; Transportation: Steve McMurry; Events: Tim Snackne, Anthony Coleman, Dave Morrison, Patrick Jones, Bruce Harris, Terry Fredrick, Lisa Ashner and Brenda Darrow; Recreation Advisory: Keith Sevege, Ann Stucker, Ron Tobinson, Tammy Vaughn and Peter Slone.
According to Coleman, there are 16 appointments to the Judiciary Committee that have not been made yet. Appointments are made by the Senate president, and as Coleman said, "The more student input, the better we like."
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THE KANSAS CITY STAR The Kansas City Times FALL STUDENT DISCOUNT
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I agree to subscribe to the Kansas City Star and Times for the Fall 1981 semester at the above special rate and will pay in advance of delivery. I understand that the offer is effective beginning the first day of registration and expires the last day of finals. This offer is only made to areas serviced by a carrier or delivery agent of the Kansas City Star.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
KU plans employee fine policy
KU administrators are working on a "fair and cautious procedure" for garnishing or withholding employee salaries in an effort to collect thousands of dollars in delinquent fines, a KU administrator said Saturday.
William Hogan, associate executive vice chancellor, said that the proposed policy should be ready for implementation by spring semester 1982.
Last year, delinquent fines totaled $88,000, according to the University's business office. Most of the fines were parking and library charges.
Withholding paychecks has been a sensitive topic since the Kansas Board of Regents asked the state Legislature to authorize the proposal in 1979. A proposal was authorized in 1980 that gave the Regents the legal right to push for the University's implementation of the plan.
UNTIL NOW, the University had not way to ensure the payment of fines levied against a faculty member. However, students can have their transcripts or enrollment materials held until fines are paid.
Under the plan, an employee who is delinquent in paying a fine has 15 days to contest it before a designated hearing officer. Otherwise, the employee waives his right to a hearing and the paycheck may be withheld.
If a complaint is filled but is found invalid, ample time will be supplied to allow the employee to seek a loan to make up for lost wages.
The proposed policy brought mixed reactions from KU faculty.
Tim Miller, lecturer in religious
studies, said he believed that it must were subject to fines, faculty members should be subject to them also. If fines are to be imposed, there should be a means of collecting, although garnishment may be somewhat harsh.
"Generally, there shouldn't be a privileged class at any university," he
Miller said that the policy would not
occur because he tried to avoid
incurring fees.
JIM MIELKE, associate professor of anthropology, said that garrisonment or withholding a check on only one offense would be harsh.
"It bolts down to the magnitude of the problem," he said. "I think it's fair in the extreme cases where someone is abusing a privilege."
Mielle pointed out that the faculty was expected to pay for parking, whereas in non-academic situations, parking was free.
Mielle once came to campus to prepare a lecture at 10:30 p.m. He parked in the small parking lot behind Danforth Chapel and got a ticket. A security guard told him that the lot is never for public use, even after regular campus hours.
Carl Leban, associate professor of interdisciplinary studies, is concerned about the constitutionality of the policy. Garnishment of wages outside the University must go through the court system. He said that an administrator had no right to step in and take wages without due process of law.
"I'm not saying it's right or wrong, I just hope it's legal." Leban said.
A 46-year-old Kansas City, Mo.
man remained in serious condition
yesterday after being run over by a
vehicle on Saturday. He suffered
accident Saturday at Perry Lake.
1 killed, 1 injured in boating accident
Donald Johnson, 7300 Jarbose丘,
suffered severe cuts on his lower body and was in surgery for nearly five hours at the University of Kansas Medical Center Saturday night.
The accident occurred at 12:10 p.m. at the Perry Marina, a saffir's deputy said. Perry Lake is in Jefersonville and has 16 miles northwest of Lawrence.
His wife, Barbara Johnson, 46,
was pronounced dead at the scene by
the Jefferson County coroner. An
official from the Jefferson County
Sheriff's Office asked Mrs.
Johnson received cuts on her head
from the boat's probeller.
The owner of the boat, John Ooton, 7710 Northwest East Side Drive,
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The runaway boat continued to speed uncontrollably in the marina's cave until two men capsized it, Crick said.
The manager of the Perry Marina said the boating accident was the first to occur at the marina cove in 11 years.
The boat then run in small circles, and finally came back to run over both the Johnsons, Crick said. Neither of the Ootons were hit.
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Carl Crick, a witness and a member of the squadron, said that after the boat's throttle stuck, Ooton's boat flipped, spilling the passengers into the water and striking another boat.
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Johnson and Ootan both were members of the U.S. Power Squadron, a club that teaches classes on boating safety.
Weatherby Lake, and his wife, Marge, were taking the Johnsonsto their sailboat 50 feet away.
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On Campus
TODAY
OPEN CALL AUDITIONS for fall semester University Theatre productions will start at 7 p.m. in the University Theatre. Sign up for an audition time in the Hall lobby from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Auditions are open to all students.
THE INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will hold a large group meeting p.m. to 9:30 p.m. in the Regional Room 1064. The schedule will be Scheduling time with God.
APPLIED ENGLISH CENTER ENROLLMENT will start at 1 p.m. in the Kansas Room, Union.
Room, Union.
TOMORROW
OPEN CALL AUDITIONS for fall semester University Theatre productions will start at 7 p.m. in the University
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Theatre. Sign up for an audition time in the Murphy Hall lobby from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Auditions are open to all enrolled students.
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University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981 Page 9
DEADLINE AUGUST 31 KU STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE
If you have not purchased your insurance for this school year stop by Watkins Memorial and get your enrollment forms for the 81-82 school year. This must be in by August 31. If you have any questions, you may call toll free at 1-800-527-0519 or 749-0477.
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
Bookstores compete for students' money
By LISA MASSOTH Staff Reporter
As the new semester starts, the blanual battle of the bookstores has begun once again.
Competition between the Kansas Union Bookstores, on the second floor of the Union, and J. Adams in is full swing, as both strive to attract more customers.
Competition has been the name of the game for the two bookstores, but both managers enjoy the constant struggle for new customers.
"I'm 100 percent in favor of competition," said Steve Word, general manager of the Union Bookstore. "It forces us and him (the manager of Jayhawk Bookstore) to give the best deal."
Bill Muggy, Jayhawk Bookstore manager, agreed.
manager, agreed. "The competition has become much
more noticeable in the last year," he said. "The Union has adopted things I implemented."
Muggy cited such examples as more advertising and more assertiveness in student services, like buying books back at any time during the semester.
Used books have been one way for students to save money when their checking accounts drop to critical levels. This was one area where the competition was stifter between the two stores.
The two bookstore managers had trouble agreeing who had more used books, but both stores had a plentiful selection.
Muggy said he had the largest percentage of used books in stock.
"Two-thirds of our sales are used books." Muggy said.
However, Word said he had more used books because he had the largest number of books overall.
Title IX
From page 1
to develop a plan to correct any inequities. The plan would be closely supervised by the Department of Education, she said.
According to the latest court interpretation of Title IX, made in 1979, compliance requires athletic departments to divide total expenditures for all men's sports by the total number of women's sports and the total expenditure per athlete. That amount must then be spent for each female athlete.
He did admit, though, that his ratio of used books to new was not as high as Jayhawk Bookstore's.
"We have a larger selection of used books because we have more volume," World News reported.
If any problems arise with the new plan, the department can take 30 days to develop a case and take the university to court.
"He (Muggy) may have three books out of four that are used, but have only four books," Word said.
For new books, the difference in prices usually is very small between the two stores. Textbook list prices are usually higher than Word, according to both Muggy and Word.
A new introductory biology book sells for $20.95 at both stores. A new psychology book is $19.95 at both stores and is $15 used. However, a new introductory chemistry book is $20.95 at Javhawk, $24.95 at the Union.
"Students don't realize that bookstores have nothing to do with prices," Word said. "They are set by the publishers."
Word said he had experienced roughly a 4 percent increase in prices compared to last year. Muggy said his sales jumped 18 to 8 percent over last year's prices.
Book publishers apparently do not sympathize with the financial problems associated with face. Muggy said that recent publisher's prices had exceeded the inflation rate.
"We get more used books to fight it," he said.
"I'm considering putting the
Word was not pleased with the price increases either.
publisher's name and address by a sociology book that went up $4," he
When the subject of prices other than textbooks came up, both men were adamant about the deals each offers at his store and neither was shy when complaining about his competitor down the street.
Muggy said his prices were 10 to 20 percent lower than the Union's on such items as spiral notebooks and notebook paper. He also said that across the board, students save more at Jayhawk because of the number of used books he had and because of his low prices than if they bought at the Union and waited for the dividend rebates offered by the Union.
"They give the rebate because they overcharge on non-list price items," the
Word said he got volume breaks, allowing him to sell basic required supplies cheaper than Jayhawk. Paper-mate supplies were one example.
OVERLAND PHOTO
"We get wholesale prices from Papermate because we're their account," he said. "We deal directly with the manufacturer."
A quick price check placed the Union Bookstore out in front of the price battle. One hundred sheets of narrow-line notebook paper was $1.15 at the Union, $1.25 at Jayhawk. An Eraserate pen was $1.75 at the Union, $1.98 at Jayhawk. Spiral notebooks sold for $1.19 to $1.29 at Jayhawk; at the Union prices ranged from 96 cents to $3.49 fo a four-section notebook.
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John Brilbach, Wichita sophomore, shops for textbooks yesterday at the Kansas Union Bookstore.
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THE HIGH COST OF A COLLEGE EDUCATION JUST WENT DOWN A FEW DEGREES.
ANNOUNCING THREE NEW ARMY NATIONAL GUARD PROGRAMS THAT CAN HELP YOU PAY FOR COLLEGE.
If you're like many college students, the closer you get to your degree, the deeper you get into debt. But, you don't have to get in over your head. Not when you join the Army National Guard.
Because now, the Guard has three new programs to help you pay for college: the College Loan Repayment Program; the Educational
Assistance Program, and the Enlistment Bonus Program. And you don't have to wait for graduation to take advantage of them. You could join the Guard right now.
You see, the Army National Guard is part-time. After your initial training, it takes just two days a month and two weeks of annual training a year to serve. So there's plenty of time left for your studies. And you get paid for every hour you put into the Guard, so you'll have extra cash for books, lab fees, and all those other little expenses that come up.
Of course, there's more to the Guard than money. It's a chance to do something good for your country, as well as for people right in your own community. The Guard can give you more options in your life and more control over your financial future.
If that sounds like where you want to be, see your financial aid officer, contact your local Army National Guard recruiter, or use the tollfree number below for complete details on how the Guard can help you pay for college. And help in a lot of other ways, too. But hurry! These special programs for college students are available for a limited time only.
The Guard is America at its best.
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
Call toll-free: 800-638-7600. In Hawaii: 737-5255; Puerto Rico: 723-4550; Virgin Islands [St. Croix]: 773-6438; Maryland: 728-3388; in Alaska, consult your local phone directory. Program terms, payment amounts and eligibility requirements subject to change. All programs not available in all states.
4
University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981 Page 11
Photos sharp as Voyager nears Saturn
PASADENA, Calif.,—Voyager 2 moved closer to Saturn yesterday as it transmitted spectacular pictures to earthbound scientists seeking to understand the planet's dazzling rings and moons.
The task of Voyager 2 was to take more than 260 pictures of Saturn's clouds, plus a total of 90 images of the moons Hyperion, Dione, Rhea, Titan and Iapetus. Saturn has 17 known moons.
While still 1.6 million miles away from Saturn, which is nearly a billion miles from Earth, the spacecraft was to carry out a 20-picture search for any undiscovered new satellites that may be circling the gaseous planet.
Voyager 2 makes its closest approach to Saturn at 8:50 p.m. CDT tomorrow, when it will swoop to within 63,000 miles of its clouds. It will be 14,300 miles closer to the ringed planet than Voyager's approach nine months ago.
POVERTY
IS A
WOMAN'S
ISSUE
[Image of a woman with dark hair and a serious expression, wearing a black jacket with white stripes.]
Voyager 2 flew within 560,000 miles of Iapetus Saturday and transmitted about 30 detailed pictures. Scientists hope the photographs will reveal why the surface of the moon is six times darker on one side than the other.
One theory holds that Iapetus originally was an icy sphere, but that it has been showered and partly covered by a mantle of rocks neighboring Saturnian moon. Phoebe
POVERTY IS A WOMAN'S ISSUE
Another theory holds that the dark surface is indigenous to the moon and that its covering layers of ice have been dropped off, exposing the underlying rock.
Not one, but... SIRLOIN STOCKADE 2 GREAT MON.-TUES. SPECIALS
6-oz. Sirloin
Club
Steak
Dinner 329
Reg.
$4.68
Chopped Sirloin 289 Dinner Reg. $4.28
Dinner includes Baked Potato or Fries, Stockade Roll and Butter and Salad Bar.
FREE SALAD BAR
NO COUPON NECESSARY
SIRLOIN STOCKADE
1015 Iowa Street
ERA NOW
EQUAL RIGHTS NOW
WE ARE THE MASTER
ERA NOW
ERA NOW
SUPPORT THE ERA
CREATORS OF ERA
ERA N.O.W.
LAWRENCE CHAPTER
NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN
JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staff
ERA rally
Nearly 100 people marched in Lawrence Saturday as part of a nationwide effort to raise money for theEqual Rights Amendment. The walkers, who began at South Park, Massachusetts Street, sought to raise $4,000 so supporters of the ERA could meet a June 30, 1982 ratification deadline. The ERA is three states short of ratification. Sara Morgan, Lawrence, (left photo) holds a sign before the march began.
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, & Wednesday
Ev
G.P.
Are
TWICE AS NICE!
Every other drink is FREE
5 to 10 p.m.
701 Mass. - A Private Club - Applications Available
G. P. LOYD'S
Do you recognize these guys?
N. BALAKRISHAN
P
You should. They make a lot of decisions that affect your life—especially your education.
We know them. We work with them every year. We're ASK, a statewide student lobby group. Through us, students have input to state government. But we can't do the job alone. If you would like hands-on experience with the Kansas Legislature, we can give it to you. Applications for the KU Delegation are being taken now.
Contact: Dan Cunningham
Student Senate Office
105-B, Kansas Union
864-3710
The KU Delegation of THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF KANSAS
John Cartin—Govemor, Kansas
The students' voice in Kansas government.
Paid for by the KU Student Senate.
Ross Doyen—President, The Kansas Senate
Wendell Lady—Speaker, The Kansas House
DON'T FORGET ABOUT HEALTH CARE COVERAGE!
Act now and you can be covered from September 1 by the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Direct Enrolled Student Program.
This program is available to all full-time students through age 25 by direct application only. The coverage is comprehensive and the cost is competitive. Single student $28.91 per month and family membership $83.67 per month.
This program
by direct ap.
Pie En
NAH
ADOR
CITY
SCHO
Mail the coupon for a descriptive benefit booklet and an application. Or inquire at your local Blue Cross and Blue Shield Office, 2852 Four Wheel Drive, Lawrence.
Don't risk the expense of costly hospital and doctor bills. Act today so you can be covered from September 1, 1981.
(no Public Relations Dept. Box 230, Tupaia, Kansas 68659)
(no Public Relations Dept. Box 230, Tupaia, Kansas 68659)
Please send information and an application for the Direct Enrolled Student Program.
+
Blue Cross and Blue Shield
of Kansas
An equal opportunity employer
Page 12 University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
CFA-NBC pact to bring added television revenue
By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Editor
The Kansas football program is involved in a game of a different kind— the waiting game.
KU and 32 other schools, members of the College Football Association, Friday ratified a television agreement with NBC lasting four years and guaranteeing each school two televised appearances and $1 million.
CFA members have until Sept. 10 to officially ratify the agreement or to withdraw.
"That's a minimum of $1 million," Athletic Director Bob Marcum said yesterday. "TV guardians you that you don't have to have to gate it at the gate."
"Now, if you appear in a regional broadcast, you get $400,000. A national broadcast gets $600,000."
The CF A pact would guarantee the school $500,00 per game.
OVERLAND PHOTO
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intramural touch football and soccer officials meeting Tuesday August 25 at 6:30 p.m. in 202 Robinson
A
99
GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-7264
Jin Hao
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EVE
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SCIENCE FICTION, 9:41
Tuesday
2:15
EVE. 7:30 & 9:20
HILLCREST 1
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ESCAPE US
FROM
MIDLAND
WALK MUSEUM
KURT MUSSELL
7:30-8:30
Marcum said he didn't think KU would change its vote of approval before the deadline.
EVE. at
7:30 & 9:30
Weekends
at £2.00
FIRST MONDAY
IN OCTOBER
five other Big Eight schools. Missouri and Iowa state votes against the pact.
CINEMA 14
THURSDAY
9:30 AM-12:00 PM
EVE I
8:30-9:30 AM
Weekdays
at 2:00
"It would be pure speculation on my part," he said. "The CFA schools are focused on business and looking at the deadline. The CFA schools are involved in other sports now."
Marcum acknowledged that the main reason behind the school's approval of the new curriculum is
"That's another way of stating it," Marcum said.
"I'm sure Missouri' and Iowa State have good reasons why they voted against it," Marcum said. "And they believe the potential to change their votes."
CINEMA 1
THE ART OF THE MOVIE
in the Supreme Court
7:30 & 8:30
Weekends
at 9:30
FIRST MONDAY
IN OCTOBER
CINEMA 2
THE ART OF THE MOVIE
Dudley Moore - Liza Minelli
John Gielgud
arthur
HELD OVER: IN WEEK
DAYS
FRI, SAT, SUN
FRI, SAT, SUN
FRI, SAT, SUN
But the possible rift between the CFA and the vote, runs deeper than the vote, Marcum said.
Marcum did not see the 6-2 vote, however, as a sign of a conference split. "THE SCHOOLS usually go along with the majority vote," he said.
"EVERYONE HAS stated the monetary facts," he said, "and certainly they are important. But so really there are two exposures would really be a plus.
"NOW THAT WE have voted in favor of it, we will probably hold that," he said. "The chancellor (Budig), Del Brinknan and I have a meeting and discussed it before the vote in Atlanta."
CINEMA 2
Dudley Moore 'Liza Minelli'
John Gielgud
arthur
HELD OVER! IN WEEK!
941
1036
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"You have to look at the schools that have a predominance of the votes—what share do they contribute to the NCAA? I think it's vastly disproportionate. That's something people have to look at.
"When you look at the enormous facilities we all have to keep up . . . and most of us have heavy non-revenue programs."
SUNSET
DINE IN THE TAPE
ONLINE
CHECK HER DOSSE!
WETTO AV ASPION
(PLUS!)
also free
to see
the movie
WEVEN
BE KILLED
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WAIL 10-00
"It's not just money alone," he said.
"The schools are saying "we do have unique problems and we want more of a say."
But Marcum said money was not the only motivation.
If the pact is ratified, all 61 CFA schools must participate. And that's where the trouble starts.
The NCAA, of which the CFA schools are members, already has an agreement with ABC and CBS for
"WE HAVEN't appeared since 1973," he said. "But schools like Illinois have appeared several times. One year on one game and one year two games,
"It's always been out there," he said. "If it hadn't been this, it would have been something else."
know what course the NCAA might take.
television rights. But Marcum said the distribution of game appearances was not always equal under the present system.
"Yet often you have heard them say you must earn your way on."
KU has a better shot than ever at earning its way to a bowl game this season. He was the extended immediate disciplinary action for the CF A schools. Marcum said he didn't
Kansas was joined in its 'yes' vote by
NEED A RELIABLE CASSETTE RECORDER FOR SCHOOL?
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AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASS
DOWNTOWN
Question
What is a dromedary?
Where can you rent a typewriter?
When is Homecoming?
Where are the SUA trips going to?
When is Edward Albee coming?
How much does a tent rent for?
When is the turkey trot?
Where can you get a free game of bowling?
What is SUA?
When is Mother's Day?
Answer
1981
1982
SJA the planner calendar the university of kansas
Now on sale at all Union Bookstores . . . & the SUA Office $2.50 the planner includes discount coupon worth more than the price . . .
SGT. PRESTON'S OF THE NORTH
Every Monday Night
Pitchers $1.75
8 p.m.-2 a.m.
SALOON HOURS
Mon.-Sat.
11 a.m.-3 a.m.
Sunday
12 noon-1 a.m.
BAR - RESTAURANT
WILD FREEDOM
A wilderness park
Downtown Lawrence — 815 New Hampshire
This Tuesday Night
DRINK SPECIAL
Margaritas $1.35
8 p.m.-2 a.m.
FOOD HOURS
Mon.-Thurs.
11 a.m.-11 p.m.
Fri.-Sat.
11 a.m.-midnight
There will be a meeting held for men and women (excluding freshmen) who are interested in being
Hosts or Hostesses for the Kansas University Athletic Department
on Tuesday Evening, Aug.25 at 7:00 PM in Room 135 of Parrott Athletic Center
You must be a K.U. student in good standing during the 1981-1982 academic year.
脚趾处
Tie InWithUs *Recreation Services Intramural Touch Football & Soccer
- Play in three leagues is available:
Trophy League, most competitive league
in which teams vie for the Hill Championship;
Recreational A, a bit less competitive; and
Recreational B, which is play for the pure fun of it.
- Play begins Aug. 31
Touch Football—Wed., Aug. 26. Robinson Gym No.1
- Managers Meetings
Trophy—6 p.m. Rec A—6:45 p.m.
Rec B—7:30 p.m.
Soccer—Thursday, Aug. 27,
7 p.m., 202 Robinson
---
- Note: A team representative must attend managers meetings in order to enter a team intramural competition.
SURVIVAL SKILL EXTRAVAGANZA
Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop
Designed to enhance a student's time management and improve concentration with reading, listening,and notetaking.
August 27
6:30-10:00 p.m. 300 Strong Hall No Registration Required.
Rapid Reading Series
September 3,8,10,15,and 17 Registration Required.
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Effective Listening Series
September 24 and 29 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Registration Required.
For more information or to register, call or come by the Student Assistance Center, 864-4064, 121 Strong Hall.
Bachel
Modula
Douglas
8208
Moving
bedroom
water
Sublear
water
1
University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
e
Page 13
issouri
act.
State
voted
they
their
Kansas City suffers loss to New York
By United Press International
NEW YORK—Larry Milbourne hit a freak home run and Craig Nettles added a three-run shot to highlight a four-run first inning yesterday, and the Rangers posted an 8-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals behind Ron Gudryd.
Milbourne lofted a high fly near the left-field foul line that Royals' outfield hit. The ball struck Wilson in the side of the ball, bounded off the front of the box
Nettles then followed an infield hit by Dave Winfield and a walk to Oscar Gamble with his 10th horse of the year, a long drive off starter Rich Gale. $4.50.
seats and rolled behind Wilson into left as Milbourne circled the bases.
Guidry, 8-3, allowed five hits while striking out seven in seven innings to its fourth straight decision and extend its personal scoreless innings streak to 20.
New York added four runs off Gale in the second on RBI singles by Jerry Mumphrey and Milbourne and Gamble's two-run homer.
Kansas City, which did not score in the final 19 innings of the weekend series against New York, loaded the bases against Ron Davis in the eighth but Amos Ols took a third strike to end the inning.
Kansas City
Wilson, lf
Washington, ss
G. Brett, ss
Otis, cf
May, th
White, 2b
Alken, 1b
Mickey, rt
Walman, c
AB R H B1
4 0 2 0
3 0 1 0
4 0 2 0
4 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
33 7 0
New York
Marykum, cf
Milwaukee, bf
Winfield, if
Gamble, dh
Jackson, fr
Nettles, 3b
Brockham, 1b
Watson, 1b
Cerone, c
Douglas, ct
TOTALS
AB R H I
1 1 1
5 4 2
3 2 2
4 2 0
2 2 0
1 1 3
1 1 1
4 0 0
4 1 0
4 1 2
4 1 0
36 8 11 8
Kansas City 000 000 000-4
New York 440 000 000-4
THE BEST PRICE
• 76 Lines of Quality Audio
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YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
400 000 696
E-G.Brett,DP-New York,LOB-Kansas City)7,New
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(10),Gambie (8),SB-Winfield,MP-
T2: T.27 A.40,528
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE shop
Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, Ka 849
National League
WELCOME KU STUDENTS!
Independent COIN-OP SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
We have 3 coin-operated laundries to serve you.
New York 3, Cincinnati 1
San Diego 2, San Francisco
Albuquerque 5
Chicago 6, San Francisco
Los Angeles 10
Louis 11 Los Angeles
American League
Detroit, 7 Texas, 4
Philadelphia, 12 New York, 8 Kansas City, 5
Milwaukee, 6 Minneapolis
Veeland, 6 California, 4
Baltimore, 7 Oakland, 4
9th & Mississippi (Open 24 hours after Sept.1)
19th & Louisiana
26th & Iowa
Lor
Tuesday
Night
Special
Buy One Corn Dog
GET ONE
FREE
August 25 only
4 pm to closing
Look For
Our Coupon In:
Vista
RESTAURANTS
1527 w. 6th
Lawrence
Book
The University Daily
Subcase 2 Bdt Apt. Park 25 $277/50/month water paid. Water Call 0:216-3289 8-28
Moving out of town. Need to nablase in bedroom unfurnished apartment. From $95 water paid. $0.00 bonus offered. #84-8566 9-4
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
Bachelor Pad, Grad Students, Profs. 28
Modular home, appliances, weather dryer
C/A on 40 acres *9 miles of L. Lawrences,
C/o Lake Co. Lake I., mile 242, mph 8-27
CLASSIFIED RATES
one
time
$2.25.
.0"
15 words or fewer . . .
Each additional word.
to run
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
one time two times three times four times five times six times seven eight times nine ten times
$2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.50 $3.70 $4.55 $2.09 $8.15 $6.50
$1.25 $0.30 $0.45 $0.50 $0.65 $0.85 $1.05 $1.35 $1.65
AD DEADLINES
PRECINCTON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, kitchen with island, washer/dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen, quiet surroundings. Open house 1-5pm. Call (843) 842-3757 for additional information. if
FOR RENT
Single room for rent, new wiring, electrical, new fire alarm system, new locks, 10 minute walk from campus $90/no.
Call between 8-5 843-3228
... Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can
be posted or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 840-2955.
Gung Fu classes Monday & Wednesday
ing at 7:30 in Robinson Center
beginning August 24. For information call
Bob at 81-2928.
9-2
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Vitise the Book End in Quantrill's Flea Market, for quality used books at retailable prices. 811 New Hampshire, weekdays 10-5. Weekends 8-28.
WHY NOT!
WHY NOT!
Sell your
unwanted items
with a classified
in the
UDK
864-4358
Like to think? Love to dream? "Dream
Understanding?" Kansas (ca-an-ab) Usa,
bullon catalog 24, 65 to Kansas, Box 212, Lane
KS 6045
8-26
UDK
844-4358
1878 Trumbull TR-7 coupe, vrs rpw low mileage
1878 Trumbull TR-7 coupe, vrs rpw low mileage
1878 Trumbull TR-7 coupe, vrs rpw low mileage
1878 Trumbull TR-7 coupe, vrs rpw low mileage
Honda Express Mopar under 700 miles
Perfect performment order. Offers over $300.
Contact Ashley Mooney, 816 Hayworth
(phone 864-351-357) 8-28
Single rooms and two bedroom apartments
Single bedrooms and walk of campus
Call between 8- 543-8228
Cabinet number: 843-8228
2-15" Mags wheelies, GS 400 1978 Simul
motorycle, 10,000 miles, $700.00 living
room furniture best offer Call 842-0328
avantage.
8-28
JAYHAWK
WEST
NOW LEASING
1 & 2 BEDROOMS
Free Shuttle Bus
To Campus
For Students
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Would you like to use these notes to study
Makes uses to use them, 1) study
preparation; 2) preparation; 3) exam
preparation; "New"
preparation; "Old" book; "Owen
Civil The Bookmark, and Great Book"
The Bookmark, and Great Book
abundant storage, 24-hour maintenance, indoor and outdoor pool, ample parking, 2 laundry facilities. For more information
Alternator, starter and generator specialists,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 390 W.
tf
842-4444
EVERYTHING BUT BICE -But unclaimed or
unused items in stock. Goods, goods,
buildings supplies-neat old junk and
toys. In the back and in the save
a bundle! 6 and 9 Vermont and
Open 9+ weeksdays. Saturdays until
5:00.
Wanted male Christian roommates large quirky house close to campus, dishwasher, laundry machine, field aid. Pay your month. Call Darryl Otl 811-856-1400, Kentucky. tf
Tennui Reaches. New-Used Fischer power-wave glass plan. Head Vidas. Head Traphicle Graphic C. 80. Body Baccala. Body Traphicle Graphic C. Will Roy. Roy Body. Your request for your request is 864-3931 evening. 9-30
*
FOR SALE
Fulca 50mm camera w/atrap, U.V. filter; 2 close-up lenses; $125.00 Kinston Kingston Guitar $15.00 New Dolby component $50.00 Slide projector $30.00 Scott Schoffler $739
1971 Triumph 750 motorcycle. Original
engine, 841-300 (days) *28*
(weeks) *841-300* (days) *28*
197" Subaru 4-speed low mileage runs good.
197" Call 842-6447. 8-27
Unleashed freight and damaged merchant-
ware. Fully stocked in items Everything
但冰 616 Vernmont
KZ420 motorcycle 1976, extra clean, low
mileage. Baldock Doe Boat, Jock 182,
3rd. 843-2973.
Opticaena integrated amplifier, 65 watts;
motor drive, 80 watts;
moving coil 715, $433/3000 After 5, 8-28
moving coil 715, $433/3000 After 5, 8-28
Did you leave it at home? Pick up a re-
pair kit, mug, money saving Household
goods; sweeter sweets; blender and other small appliances; house-
ware; dishware; cast iron skillets; kitchen
tables, dishes, cast iron skillets, kitchen
waistbands; large white fake fur coat - 2400 Alabama; Apart-
ment number: Nine to Five; Saturday, August
29th.
Tables, chairs, dressers, outseats and speakers, lamps, ping pong tables, rear windows, fireplaces, graphic wall murals, large mirrors, bird door. Everything from the wonderfinder to the everything BUT ICE open 9-7 weekdays. Saturday until 5:40. CAREER SCHEDULE 8-28
Stereo speaker sale. 10' base, 5' midrange,
$29 Everything But Phone
Verizon
8-28
Poodle skirts, pendetles, pleated pants,
skirted dresses, pantalons, plains dresses,
dress skirts, pantalons, pumps, and period
clothing. Choose from clothing deals at
Clothing dealers of Quaintill's Fite Male
New Hampshire. Open Sat. and Sun
10-5.
Lentar BW enlarger, print frame, lamps, trays, tongs, bottles, and other darkroom equipment for $10.00. Call 843-5194 8-28 "48" Parallel bar for drafting table. Is in
48" Parallel bar for drafting table. Is in very good condition. Call Debbie 79-60-4260.
HELP WANTED
Help wanted with light housecleaning or some sewing 4 to 5 hours per week, Thurs. or Fridays. $33.50 per hour. Transportation necessary. Call 841-1247 for appointment.
Student help needed. Part-time for Fall and Spring. Must be able to work a full day or up to 5:00. General labor and skilled trades assoc'd. Housing Department Maintenance Shop. Housing Department Maintenance Shop. Housing Department 864-3894 as soon as possible with your phone or e-mail, an opportunity Affirmative Action Employer. 8-28
Buckey's Drive-In is now taking applications to the D-Link DPW400Q (between 9:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m.) - Buckey's Drive-In.
Wanted: X-ray tech to cover some vacation
Wanted: X-ray tech to cover some vacation.
Wanted: X-ray tech to cover some vacation.
Wanted: X-ray tech to cover some vacation.
Wanted: X-ray tech to cover some vacation.
Part-time help, service station work 842-
1135 8-26
RESEARCH ASSISTANT Office of Affirmative Action. Must be eligible for work/work experience in office work; organizational ability, typing ability; and ability to work with others. Office of Affirmative Action Strong Hour M-F Contact: Georgia at 864-356-2003 Deadline August 26, 2000
LEGAL RESEARCH ASSISTANT Office of Affirmative Action. Must be eligible for technical legal questions to organize and present information in a comprehensive way either in written form or research either through coursework or professional work Contact: Juanita Duarte Deadline: August 31, 5:00 pm 8-28
SGT. PRESTON'S
BAR-RESTAURANT
Needs Experienced,
Hardworking, Friendly
BARTENDERS
Apply at
815 New Hampshire
M-F 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
The Infant Toddlers Center are now hiring
custodians and toddlers. Apply in person at 101 &
89a Hall Road, New York, NY 10002.
DearFriend Mom needs all-day care Wed. & Fr.
Your home or mine 84-792-702
Have an extra hour? Volunteer as a girl
Call Tweensies and Wednesday,
84-792-5479
EXECUTIVE Coordinator. KU Graduate Knowledge Council Applicant should have knowledge of the KU governance structure. Will be responsible for a coordination of programs developed by a graduate assistance funder by the graduate assistance funder. Will provide a month's appointment, eligibility for staff cover letter (including two references) to KU Campus Kansas Urbon Box 1, by 5 p.m., August 28. Interviews will be held August 29. Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.
Engineering/Drafting Part-time
Medical device company has immediate
product development project of medical equipment.
project: laboratory centrifuge. Contact
Martin Medical, 38270 W 101rd (12 miles
from Los Angeles) K-10 Wheeler). KS-1
585-1844.
Part-time work on campus, stapling posters
your own schedule, 4-12 hours choose from a
schedule of 4-18 hours based on the amount of
material to be staplen; based on the amount
rewards 44-77 per hour. This position requires
supervision. For information, contact
sensation. For information, contact
Washington, Washington 88119 (206) 828-8111.
Artists (free-lance) talented fast workers,
needed for magazine & promotional work.
Write to Zahid Ibidi, Director of Commun-
ities at 1817 Saint A. Louis,
Lawrence, KS. 8-26
MISCELLANEOUS
Do you enjoy fresh air, exercise, adventure and the company of wonderful people? Do you love to meet other Dan's for the first meeting. August 26, 8:00 pm the Big Eight Room at the Room 8-26
NOTICE
Lawrence U.S.D. 497 Continuing Education
fall semester. For further information call
the fall semester at Lawrence High School
at 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Call
be left off!
PERSONAL
Attention Fr., Soph, Jr. & Seniors!!! Class cards may be purchased at the BOCO office in the Union. 8-25
Spectacular Specials for Senior class card holders. Cards available at the BOCO office in the Union. 8-27
Come and brows in Barb's Second Hand
Rose, 515 Indiana. We have quality clothes,
household items, jewelry & gifts for all
ages. 842-4746. 9-30
The Mofet-Beers Band has an immediate opening for female singers. Please be qualified. 749-3649 or 841-9797. 8-28
Feel good about yourself! Ballet, exercise,
jazz, and modern dance classes for adults
begin Sept. 8 Lawrence School of Ballet.
842-4555. 9-4
Silk Screen printing t-shirts, etc. 1-1,000 group discounts. Shirt art by Swells. 749.
1611. 9-4
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Clams Bangs
Buy 1, Buy 3 - Trade
Gold - Silver - Coins
Antiques - Watches
*1 New Hampshire
Boyd's Coins-Antique
751 New Hampshire
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KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here:___
---
Name: Classified Display:
Address: 1 col x 1 inch — $3.75
Phone:
Dates to Run: ___
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Ad deadline to run Monday ... Thursday 3 p.m.
Thursday ... Tuesday 1 p.m.
Page 14 University Daily Kansan, August 24, 1981
20
BIG
8
20
10. (3分) 已知 $a_{n+1}=\frac{1}{2} a_n^2 + \frac{1}{4} n^2$,求 $a_5$。
Kansas stuff
Wayne Capers leaps for a pass in last year's Kansas-Oklahoma game. Capers caught three passes for 89 yards in yesterday's Jayhawk scrimmage, which the first and third squads won, 13-9. KU quarterbacks pass for a total of 448 yards.
--although he did indicate that Walter Mack might fill the spot.
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Associate Sports Editor
It's elementary, my dear Watson.
Find out about the Administration of Justice Program offered by Wichita
An aerial attack staged by the quarterbacks highlighted the rain-shortened contest, which ended 13-9 in 100 remaining in the fourth quarter.
Kansas concluded its two-a-day
workouts yesterday with a scrimmage in
St. Louis.
SOPHOMORE quarterback Frank Seurer, an honorable mention all-conference signal caller last season, completed 7 of 11 passes for 182 yards, throwing touchdown passes of 50 yards to junior flanker Wayne Capen and 16 yards to junior tight end Jeff Schoffner, after a 90-yard drive before the half.
However, it was senior quarterback Steve Smith, who completed 10 of 15 passes for 109 yards, who caught Head Coach Don Fambrough's eye. Smith lost the starting position last year to Seurer.
"His ability to read the defense has really improved," Fambrough said. "We can't go in with one quarterback, certainly. He didn't surprise me."
Third string freshman quarterback make Frederick completed six of seven pass defenses.
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The ground attack was led by sophomore tailback Kerrin Bell, last year's Big Eight Newcomer of the year who rushed for 44 yards on 8 carries.
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Fambrough said after the scrimage that the position still wasn't settled.
Mack, who played tailback in Bell's shadow last season, was switched to fullback earlier this year, and the change didn't slow the San Francisco, Calif., native. Mack picked up 22 yards on five carries.
"Mack has adjusted to the position change really well," Fambrubg said. "He's a good blocker, though not as big as you'd like."
BOB JOHNSON, Independence, Kan., Junior College transfer, led the receivers with four catches and hauled in a 65-yard pass from sophomore quarterback Jeff Sneed in the final period
"You don't replace a Verser, but I've felt all along we had a number of good receivers in Russ Bastin, Jum Boushka, Capers and Johnson." Fambrough
The Jayhawk wide receivers had a banner day, proving they could ease the loss of second team All-American David Verser this fall.
Defensively, the Jayhawks were led by the linebackers.
Boubika and Capers each nabbed
their hands while Bastin caught one
48-yard tape.
"Both defensive units played well, but our linebackers played exegeteannly well," Fambrought said. "But we have to concentrate on eliminating our mistakes, like lining up offside. There's no excuse for that."
Sophomore place kicker Dodge Schwartzburg kicked the only goal field in the contest, a 31-yard boot that capped a nine-play, 80-yard drive.
All-America candidate Bucky
Schuster punted 11 times for a 49-yard
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have to feel good," Fambrough said. "Like it expected, it was a good effort. I thought of where we were last year—we should be more experienced in most areas.
"There is not a lot of a difference in attitude, however. You've got to have a good attitude to get through two-a-days. Their legs are dead. They'd better be, anyway. If they're not dead we've been doing something wrong."
JAYHAWK NOTES: The Jayhawks sustained only one injury during the scrimmage. Junior strong safety Kay O'Connor gave game limping during the second period.
"I'm concerned about Ray Evans," Coach Dan Fambrouch said. "We'll find out today how serious he is, and I hope you communicate like this. We can't afford to lose any more
people. Anything else will be a situation scrimgine."
Senior center Ed Bruce is also sidelined with a knee injury.
Sophomore light end Ernie Wright is suffering from an ankle injury and is calling for help.
The Jayhawks announced the red-shirting of junior fullback Chris Emerson and sophomore linebacker Scott Connors. Junior defensive end Todd Bertsch was declared academically ineligible.
Kansas announced last week the addition of Iowa to their football schedule in 1985 and 1986. KU will play at Iowa in 1985 and at home the following year. Iowa replaces previously slated contests with Stanford, ford.
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KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, August 25, 1981 Vol. 92, No.3 USPS 650-640
Budig stresses faculty pay raise at convocation
BY SHARON APPELBAUM
Staff Reporter
Officials dressed in colorful academic robes gave laudatory speeches at yesterday's convocation, but under the ceremonial veneer, plain politics reigned.
Budig has said he hopes to convince the *Kansas Legislature* of 13 percent approval from University faculty.
In his inaugural address, Chancellor Gene A. Budig stressed the importance of support for the university, saying, "My fundamental concern is the issuance of adequate compensation for our faculty and staff."
But State Sen. Paul Hess R-Wichita, later his proposal's "out of the realm of possibility."
After a luncheon following the ceremony, Hess said she would see the governor and the Legislature given that gift.
Hess, however, took a pessimist view of Bengal's chances of pushing through his proposed institute.
BUDIG HIS TRAVELED around the state this summer to drum up support for the University. He has said that he has traditionally worked well with state legislatures. While he was president of West Virginia University, he won a 12.5 percent increase for university staff
"If you look in past years at the amount asked by the University and the Board of Regents, although they ask for increases in good faith, in the amount asked by the Board responded with the amount asked for," he said.
Hess said that if teachers ended up with a 9 or 10 percent salary increase, they would be better off. The average would be better off.
"average," but he said he would be disappointed with a figure lower than 8 percent.
Hess was part of a crowd of 3,000 people, including state legislators, Gov. John Carlin and members of the board of Regents, who heard Budig's speech in Allen Field House.
CARLIN ALSO SPOKE at the ceremony and told Budig, "The people of this state are impressed with what they've seen so far. I want the opportunity to work with you on your goals."
But later, Carlin said he could not predict what and of sailing increases he would propose to the islanders.
"It's something we can work through the process. I've historically been a strong backer of higher education, but now I don't even know what kind of revenue is available."
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"I think the Legislature in all likelihood will be inclined to go along with what the governor is instructing."
Hess said the final salary figure would depend largely on Carlin's final proposal.
"We'll do all we can not to allow the universities to deteriorate. We can't just cut back every year without deterioration occurring."
THE LEGISLATURE APPROPRIATED a 7 percent salary increase last spring. The Board of Regents had proposed an 11 percent increase, while Carlin asked for 8 percent.
"I think we silk back this year," Hess said. "We had a pretty tough year."
He said he favored an increase that could compete with inflation and possibly surpass it.
But Budig said in his address that salaries intended to compensate for inflation were not enough.
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"It is not simply that we must keep pace with
inflation, although the deed is pressured," he said.
See CONVOCATION page 5
Future bleak for 13 percent increase
RICHARDSON/Knapp Staff
Chancellor Gene A. Budg adjusts his袍 before yesterday's convoction and inauguration held at Allen Field House. Some 3,800 people attended the mid-morning ceremony.
Staff Writer
By BOB MOEN Staff Writer
The 13 percent faculty pay raise sought by Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Lawrence legislators apparently have a slim chance of being cratched through the 1982 Kansas Legislature.
Hayden said that he understood Budig's request to help the higher education institutions but that the 13 percent raise was, in reality, unfessible.
"It is unlikely that an increase like that would be "appressed." State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood and chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said yesterday.
He speculated that any salary raise would be between 7 and 10 percent year after the year he started.
Since beginning his chancellorship, Budig has
been stumped the state's 105 counties to meet legislators and win more money for higher
"Dr. Budg has done a phenomenal job contacting legislators on a one-to-one basis about the need, volume and service the University of Kansas provides to the people and youth of the state," State Rep. John Solbach, D-49th District, said.
Sobach, who has talked to Budig twice, said the new chancellor's efforts "could be successful" and added that the state could afford an increase of more than 13 percent in faculty salaries.
"Thirteen percent is a moderate increase in light of inflation on faculty salaries," he said. "Kansas is a wealthy state and can afford to support education more than years ago."
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-46th District,
she also supported the 13 percent increase.
but she doubted that such an increase would be passed.
"I think we ought to try for 13 percent, but we might end up with 10," she said.
However, the third representative from Lawrence, Jesse Branson, D44th District, said he better supported Budig's lobbying efforts would make it easier to other legislators about the University's needs.
She commended Budig's efforts, but she sent the final salary increase would be decided by the Legislature no matter who was chancellor.
"It is much easier to talk to a legislator who can identify with and know about a problem," she said.
But, she said, the faculty pay raise depends on the amount of revenue the Legislature produces.
Such key issues as the severance tax, which
y issues as the severance tax, which
See INCREASES Rows 5
BIG HALL
KEITH FLANFRV/Kansan Staf
THE UNIVERSITY OF CLEVELAND
Campus crusader
Chris Alexander, Bird City junior, a member of the campus Christian group Marantha, preached outside Flint Hall yesterday. KU students were less than receptive as they walked past Alexander without acknowledging his message.
KU halls not yet filled despite big enrollment
By JANICE GUNN
Cie H
Staff Reporter
Despite an increase of 24 students after first day enrollment this year on the Lawrence campus, the number of KU students living in residence hills is down.
"This is the first time in five years that we have not had to go to temporary housing," said Fred McEhlene, director of the office of residential programs.
In the past, residence halls were usually overflowing with students the first week of classes, and many students lived in the libraries, rooms or rooms of their halls until openings were available.
The only hall that was forced to use its ironing rooms this year to house students was Oliver Hall, McElenzie said. Oliver was overcrowded from the day students were allowed to move in.
According to McElenhie, McColum Hall, which has space for 53 more students, has the greatest number of openings of the eight KU residence halls.
A cut in the hall's student-government or party budget is possible, McKillen said, because of the fallout from the 2011 attack.
Students were given until 12 p.m. yesterday to arrive at or contact their halls. After that, their spaces were available to any students seeking rooms.
Some students who wanted a roommate, but never got one, were lonely last week.
"Not having a roommate is kind of nauty house! I'm new here," she said. "I'm lonely at time."
Carol Lachti, Moundridge graduate student, said that she knew of at least three girls on her floor in Hashington Hall who were living alone in double occupancy rooms.
"I would guess that we didn't merchandise them well enough or advertise them well enough," said Tina. "It could be a good idea."
One of the two apartment complexes owned by KU's housing department, the Jayhawker Tower, has several open apartments left. The other apartment, Stouffler Place, is full and has a waiting list.
TOM PRATT, manager of the Jayhawk Tower, said that he was not sure how many apartments he had left but that he had enough to put a vacancy sign outside.
J. J. Wilson, director of the office of housing, and extra space in the Towers could have been built elsewhere.
Compared to some of the other apartments in Lawrence, the number of vacancies at the Towers was high. A salesperson at Meadowbrook Apartments, T-101 Windsor Place, said that only two studio apartments were available.
A manager at the Village Square Apartments, as Avalon Road, said no apartments were available.
Whistle sounding off on time-for a change
It has been a University of Kansas tradition since 1923. It awakens sleeping students and cuts off long-winded professors.
Warren Mitchell, of Mitchell Agency Realtors in Lawrence, said that there were only a few apartments left in the complexes his firm rented.
The keeper of KU time is the steam whistle atop the power plant building, and because of a new digital computer master time system, it will never ever be ever, Thomas Anderson, director of Facilities.
Last spring the widely heard and respected whistle misfired and occasionally didn't sound at all.
The problem could have put an end to KU's resounding signal for the end of class periods—
the old pendulum-style timepiece was a candidate for the lunk vard.
The mechanical parts in the heart of the old clock had worn out. Anderson said.
Facilities Operations employees sounded the whistle manually for a couple of weeks while they waited for a new computerized ticker to arrive.
However, the 5-second burst of steam from the boilers powering heating and cooling systems at
Although the Facilities Operations people tried their best, the whistle sounded sporadically. Students and faculty came to mistrust the whistle, if it even sounded at all.
the University may now be more accurate than most of the other timepieces in Lawrence, Anderson said, because it is synchronized by short-wavelength radiation. U.S. Bureau of Standards in Collins, Colo., Carlo.
"We hear about it whenever the whistle doesn't blow," said Gary McManness, electronics technician in charge of the new clock.
McManness said the only thing that could possibly go wrong with the new clock would be electronic problems but that the clock shouldn't break down after because there were no moving parts to wear out.
Weather
Cloudy.
Partly cloudy skies are forecast by the National Weather Service in Topeka for today and tomorrow. Today's high temperature will be in the upper 80s but it will be slightly cooler in the mid 69s. There is an 82 percent chance of rain today and tomorrow.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan. August 25, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Abscam-convicted senator recommended for expulsion
WASHINGTON - The Senate Ethics Committee unanimously voted yesterday that Sen. Harrison Williams, Jr., D-N.J., should be the first U.S. senator expelled since the Civil War because his Abscense involvement was "ethically repugnant." Williams wowed to fight it.
"I have indicated I am not going to resign. I am going to advance every opportunity that is before me to show clearly my innocence. This is a significant step in furtherance of my opportunity," Williams said.
Meeting with reporters after the recommendation was made, Williams, the only senator involved in Abscam and the only convicted participant remaining in Congress, said, "I certainly feel in my heart, and I know in my mind that I did done anything that warrants resignation or expulsion from the U.S. Senate."
The vote came after seven hours of arguments by lawyers for both the convicts and the commissioners, and came after the convict's acquittal in a corruption conspiracy trial.
Sen. Malcolm Wallop, R-Wyo., chairman of the panel, said none of the committee members enjoyed the task of voting to expel their colleague, but Mr. Wallop insisted that it be done.
The committee decided that the resolution would not be sent to the Senate until Williams' appeal before Judge George Pratt was decided. That meant that the Senate debate on expulsion probably would not take place until Pratt ruled on the appeal motions, probably not before October.
his sage and he happily told
His wife, Jeanette, sat by the side of the 23-year Senate veteran.
Williams called it a victory that the panel recommended postponing the Senate debate until after his appeal.
Williams said twice he was grateful that the committee recognized that "mitigating circumstances" might arise in his case and that the Senate should hold off its consideration until his appeals were over.
WASHINGTON—The Reagan administration announced yesterday it would notify Congress on Sept. 9 that it intends to sell Saudi Arabia $8.5
U.S. unveils arms sale to Saudis
The package includes five airborne Warning and Control System aircraft (AWACS). The AWACS plane, through its radar and communication network, can direct interceptor planes to hostile aircraft. Each aircraft costs about $127 million, including ground support equipment.
The agreement also calls for conformal fuel tanks. The tanks, attached along the wings of the F-15 fighter, would allow long intercept missions.
Officials say the deal will provide 1,177 Sidewinder air-to-air missiles, which can be fired at a hostile aircraft from any angle. Navy F-14 Tomcat fighters used the Sidewinder missile to shoot down two Soviet-built Libyan aircraft last week.
The deal also calls for the sale of six KC-135 tanker aircraft. The new four-engine tanker will allow the Saudi's F-15s to remain airborne for extended periods, thus increasing their range.
Chapman sentenced to 20 years
NEW YORK - Mark David Chapman, the self-proclaimed "Catcher in the Rye," was sentenced yesterday to a prison term of 20 years to life for killing former Beatle John Lennon in an ambush his attorned called a "monstrously irrational" act.
Chapman, 26, who pleaded guilty in June to the slaying after announcing that God had ordered him to confess, clutched a copy of "The Catcher in the Rye" throughout the court proceeding and read a passage from the novel as his "final spoken words."
Flanked by armed guards, Chapman remained impassive as State Supreme Court Justice Dennis Edwards ordered him to serve a minimum of 20 years in jail.
Earlier, Edwards rejected a defense motion to throw out Chapman's guilty plea and a defense request for a new psychiatric hearing.
There is no doubt in the court's mind that he is accountable, responsible, said Edwards, who described Lennon's slaying as a "knowing, voluptuous, manipulative man."
The judge also said there was "no question that the defendant would benefit from psychiatric treatment."
South Africa denies mobilization
PRETORIA, South Africa—South Africa yesterday denied as "blatant lies" Angolan claims that south African troops were massing for a major offensive along its southern border with Namibia.
"These latest accusations are such blatant lies they are pathetic."
"All the communicans of the Angolan Ministry of Defense can be described as very poor propaganda attempts," said a South African Defense Force spokesman. "They are just a smokescreen to hide the unrest in Angola itself.
and published in Portugal yesterday said South Africa, Angola's capital, and in a major offensive against Angola's provincial capital of Ondulvile.
"A great concentration of forces of the racist South African Army, mercenaries and angolan puppets (anti-government guerrillas)" had been observed across the border from Ondjiva (formerly Vila Pereira de Eca) about 30 miles north of the frontier, for three days, the communal said.
It claimed the military buildup coupled with seven separate South African "bombing and strafing" raids in the area in the preceding five days signaled a big push against the town of 5,000.
Hinckley indicted for Reagan attack
If convicted, Hinkley could face up to life imprisonment for attempting to kill the president and assault with intent to kill while armed.
WASHINGTON - John W. Hinkley Jr., the 28-year-old drifter who may have been motivated by a crush on teen-age actress, Jody Foster, was indicted yesterday on charges of trying to kill President Reagan and wounding three others.
A federal grand jury returned a 13-count indictment against Hinkley on charges that he assassinated Reagan on March 30 as the president left a Washington hotel.
A Justice Department spokesman said Hincley would be arraigned Friday, when he will enter a plea before U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker.
Hinckley, the son of an Evergreen, Colo., oiiman, also was charged with assault with the intent to kill Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy, White House press secretary James Brady and District of Columbia police officer Thomas Delahanty.
The spokesman said he could not say whether Reagan might be a witness at the trial. The White House had no comment on the indictment.
WASHINGTON—President Reagan's Cabinet Council has recommended administration support for a complete lifting of natural gas price controls by 2013.
Group urges faster gas decontrol
The sources said the Cabinet-level group last week decided in favor of a position statement flexible enough to support several different approaches to decision making.
Under the preferred choice, a position statement would call for a three-year phase-out of controls for all gas by 1985, with controls to be lifted immediately.
The administration also would insist on ending legislative restrictions on gas use, as well as price subsidies for residential consumers
Gas utilities, as well as consumer and labor groups, oppose any such speed-up in the leisurely pace of gas decontrol set in motion by Congress in 1985.
Mike Pohorzer of the Energy Action Consumer Group said there was "absolutely no justification for lifting prices" at this time.
First-day figures show increase of 74 students
Enrollment figures for the first day of the fall 1981 semester at the University of Kansas showed an increase of 74 students over last year's first-day enrollment figures, Gll Dyck, dean of admissions and records, said yesterday.
Final enrollment will be available Sept. 18, the 20th day of school.
Total enrollment for both the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses was 24,326, Dyck said, compared with the first-day fall 1980 enrollment of 24,452.
The first-day enrollment at the KU College of Health Sciences and Hospital of Houston, Kan., was up 50 students from last at this time, from 2,258 to 2,302.
First-day enrollment at the Lawrence campus was up 24 students, from 22,300 to 24,500.
Many factors were expected to affect enrollment, including the 22 percent increase in tuition and a cutback in
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the quality of education offered at KU would prevent students from ever declining drastically.
student loans, according to Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor. He said he was glad those problems hadn't deterred students from attending KU.
"I'm most pleased that as many students as did cast their lots with us at KU."
"Students are becoming more sophisticated about their education," he said. "Because of the quality of our educational programs and the variety of the programs, we offer a choice to a lot of students with different interests."
Chancellor Gene A. Budig was unavailable for comment, but James J. Scaly, administrative assistant to the budget Budig was pleased by the increase.
"KU continues to be an attractive
player," said Joe. "We've gone to the students.
"We're glad to have the students."
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Student Senate brochures being readied for distribution
Three months late, but still timely,
according to student body Vice
President Bren Abbott, Student
Senate summer information
brochures should be delivered in the
next two weeks.
The black and white glossy brochures, which explain the history, committees and services of student government, were supposed included in freshmen pre-enrollment packets during the summer.
Instead, student senators will distribute the 10,000 brochures, which were sent to the printer yesterday, through residence halls, sororities, fraternities and scholarship halls, Abbott said.
Although the Senate cannot be to certain to reach all freshmen with the brochures and distribution will be more difficult because of the Abtout告示 the brochures would still accomplish their purpose.
"Our main goal is to increase student awareness and voting at upcoming elections," Abbott said.
One of the reasons the brochures were delayed was a decision to switch from color to black and white photos, which printed costs, according to Abbott.
Abbott said that the brochure was not a fancy publication but that it would provide information about the Senate for several years.
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University Daily Kansan, August 25, 1981
Page 3
School of Engineering ponders admission limit
By LIZ HOPPE Staff Reporter
Climbing enrolment figures for the School of Engineering in recent years has forced the engineering faculty and administration to consider putting a limit on the number of students admitted into the program.
Robert Zerwek, associate dean of the school, said the enrollment figures for this year were larger than the figures at this time last year.
Existing job opportunities for engineering graduates have outstripped the number of students the engineering schools can educate, he said. He said that for engineers has driven salaries combined with attracting more students in the field.
Starting salaries for many new engineering graduates have been $20,000 or more. Zerwek said. The department has no trouble finding work.
"Every engineering graduate who wants a job can get one. Most of them have several offers to choose from," Zerwek said.
INSTEAD OF benefiting the school by increasing its revenues, the enrollment trend has caused a shortage of engineering professors, Zerwek said. For the same reason that people have been going into engineering—the higher salaries—professors are being hired to train students paying schools or to private industries capable of paying double university salaries.
The greatest demand for engineers has been in energy-related fields: chemical, petroleum, electrical and mechanical engineering. The University of Kansas also offers civil, aerospace and architectural engineering and engineering physics. Even in those fields, the rise in enrollment has been evident, Zerwekh said.
Vincent Murhead, chairman of the aerospace engineering department, said that two years ago, 166 students were enrolled in aerospace engineering. Last year, that figure rose to 214. Estimates for this year set aerospace enrollment at 240 to 250 students.
Women's Basketball
All those interested in trying out for Women's Basketball meet in
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Catering Service available in both locations. Dining Service hours are limited during break periods Call University information.
Robert Harder, secretary of Social and Rehabilitation Services, meets with Carlin Friday. Harder said that he did not expect any decisions to be reached at the meeting and that he saw the conference as an informal session of budget implications for the current fiscal year and fiscal 1983.
U
THE KINSAS UNION
Carlin begins '83 budget discussions
By United Press International
Topeka—Gov. John Carlin and members of his cabinet have begun a series of closed-door "pre-budget conferences" to evaluate state agencies' planning under the state's new budget system.
next July, the state will operate under a new budget system devised by Muchmore. Under the system, the administration gives state agencies three separate dollar agencies that must draw up budgets for four programs would be operated with the varied amounts of money.
Transportation Secretary John Kemp was the first cabin member to meet with Carlin and budget director Lym Muchmore yesterday. To reporters, the conferences are scheduled to continue all week.
The agencies must have the budget plans ready Sept. 15. After a series of further hearings and decisions from Carlin, the governor will present his budget to the 1982 Legislature. Lawmakers will schedule their own hearings during the session under the plan and
For fiscal year 1983, which begins
Sylvia Hougland, secretary on aging, meets with Carlin tomorrow. She said she viewed the meeting as a chance to outline budget issues to governor and to see whether her plans were in line with the governor's.
examine the budgets before sending their versions to the governor for enactment.
Kemp said that in yesterday's session, he explained to Carlin what highway projects could be completed at different funding levels. But Kemp said that he had discussed the issues before the meeting and that he viewed the recent discussions as aimed at the new budget system.
"I think it was a kind of a progress report to see whether we had any problems and maybe some agencies do, that are real problem areas." Kemp said.
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THE KANSAS CITY STAR The Kansas City Times FALL STUDENT DISCOUNT
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, August 25, 1981
Opinion
Madness sans method
Good Lord. Just when you thought it might be safe to give a notoriously unstable Third World leader the benefit of the doubt he turns around and does something that only reinforces world-wide conceptions of him as a madman.
When the press reported last week that two U.S. Navy F-14 jets had shot down a pair of Soviet-built Libyan fighters in the Gulf of Sidra, the initial reaction of many Americans was anger at having been violated and smug pride at giving the audacious Libyans exactly what they deserved. But after they thought about it, the folks at home had to admit that the decision to order the U.S. Sixth Fleet to conduct maneuvers in waters claimed by
Libya had been made with a purpose. President Reagan was clearly testing Col. Moammar Khadafy, Libyan leader and radical ruler extraordinaire. Part of the president's predictable risk buticky get-tough policy, no doubt, the pros and cons of which are still being debated.
But three days later, Khadafy exploded on the front pages of every newspaper with threats of World War III and a vow to defend the Gulf of Sidra to the hilt. There will be no end to "American fanaticism," he cried, until there is another Vietnam—which he obviously is willing to provide, even if it involves the death of every last Libyan man and woman.
Pardon us, but who's being fanatical here?
Budig's strong, silent start must now give way to action
I first met Gene A. Budig on the eve of the Regents announcement that he was to be KU's 14th chancellor. He had agreed to be interviewed by the Kansas, represented by me, during the only spare time he had that March weekend. I found Budig a difficult person not to like. He was personable and warm, but without the greasy guile of many public figures.
Five months later, my original perception of Budig stands. Personally, I like the man. However, I'm sure the two of us will disagree about certain KU issues.
Thus far, I can't fault his actions much. While most of us were hustling hamburgers this summer to pay for that 22 percent tuition in college, we are still bringing the University to the people he said.
Budk needs that the public support generated from this tour will help greatly the next time a state legislator like Joe Hoagland, D-Dover Park, tries to submarine the University budget and find ways to reward wins points with the alumni, who contributed more than $13 million to the University last year.
Our new chancellor is an old pro at this type of public relations. Using the same bring-the-university-to-the people technique, Budig received enough support to create 70 faculty members who are not affiliated with Virginia and to put UWV in the top 7 percent of all schools in attracting National Merti Scholars.
Okay, it's obvious that he be's an "A" student in PR and that he gets results, you say, but what about issues and answers? Well, that's hard to say. Frankly, Budig has made a practice of趾停膝 the more specific questions about KU'S problems.
From the start, the excuse has been that he's new to the job and the University and can't be expected to speak definitively on every issue. In the beginning, that was enough for me, but let's face facts: Budig has been speaking on behalf of KU since July, when he began his trek through the state. He officially took office Aug. 1. It's about time he addressed our questions.
This is what we know so far:
- Budig supports the 13 percent faculty and staff increase proposed by the State Board of Regret.
- He believes student tuition should reflect 25 percent of the cost of education at KU.
- He does not believe the Kansas University
N. R. POOJAL
KATHY KASE
Endowment Association's investments should be a matter of public record.
- He wants an 11 percent increase in the KU Other Operating Expenses budget.
- Whether Budig will recognize the KU
Classified Senate.
- Whether he will inquire further into the tactical altercation in the Kansas City Times in a stoic story told by
- What his views on faculty unionization are.
- Whether he thinks the women's integra-
tional athlete is more currently
integrated, he notes that the NCA
- How he plans to kee KU faculty, especially in the science and engineering fields, from leading universities.
And the above list doesn't include upcoming issues that Budig will have to address, such as financial exigency, early faculty retirement and expansion into possible Title IX violations in athletics.
To be fair, this is quite a list of issues and Budig has had to spend considerable time acquainting himself with the University and its programs. That's quite a bit of work, but not too much that he hasn't had time to set some goals for us.
One of Budig's goals is for KU to become one of the top 10 state universities in the United States. (Currently, he thinks, we're in the top 25.) Our chancellor has another goal of seeing Kansas' universities cooperate to improve higher education in the 1980s. And he has pledged to fully support and advance higher education in Kansas.
I am told by his former students and colleagues at the University of West Virginia that Gene Budig is a conscientious administrator. I have been told by Budig that he will address these issues—that it's just a matter of time. I believe him.
But the time to begin is upon him.
I AM OPPOSED TO SEX EDUCATION IN THE SCHOOLS.
STUDYING HUMAN REPRODUCTION WILL LEAD TO DISCUSSIONS ABOUT THE BODY.
THE NAKED BODY.
THE NAKED BODY.
THAT'S RIGHT, NAKED!
STARK, BARE
NAKED!
THAT'S RIGHT, NAKED!
STARK, BARE
NAKED!
EVIL, PULSATING,
NAKED
LITTLE
BODIES!
DO YOU REALIZE THAT NO MATTE
HOW MANY CLOTHES
WE PUT ON, THAT
UNDERNEATH
EVIL, PULSATING,
NAKED
LITTLE
BODIES!
DO YOU REALIZE THAT NO MATTER
HOW MANY CLOTHES
WE PUT ON, THAT
UNDERNEATH...
WE ARE ALARMINGLY NAKED?
WE ARE ALARMINGLY NAKED?
WE MUST REJECT SUCH PERVERSION SO THAT KIDS CAN GROW UP MORAL AND HEALTHY.
LIKE ME.
WE MUST REJECT SUCH PERVERSION SO THAT KIDS CAN GROW UP MORAL AND HEALTHY.
LIKE ME.
Library censors muzzling free choice
Once again, parents are trying to protect their children from the sinful literature in our nation's libraries—books such as the dictionary.
A survey released last month of almost 1,900 school officials throughout the country showed that censorship was widespread and increasing in the public schools.
The American Heritage Dictionary has been banned in schools in three communities in recent years and five standard American dictionaryaries have been published in the mid 70s, according to the Washington Post.
Among the most objectionable literature on a recent censorship hit list were Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Sports Illustrated magazine and magazine, Love Story and Brave New World.
THE LIFE OF TOMMY KIRKSON
More frightening is that censoriship is also being attempted in our public libraries—one of the largest.
This latest wave of censorship threats does not surprise Bob Malinowski, associate dean for library services at KU's Watson Library. He attended a meeting of the American Library Association in June and said that censorship was a "primary concern of (the association)."
Recently, in Great Bend, residents labeled three sex education books pornographic and unsuccessfully tried to have them removed from the public library There. Luckily, the wisdom of the Great Bend Public Library Board prevailed and the books remain.
What is surprising is that the report showed the majority of the censorship challenges came from parents acting on their own, not the Moral Majority. (However, the report could not show how many of these parents acted that way primarily because they believed in the Moral
BRIAN LEVINSON
Majority.) The sad fact is that by their behavior, these parents are acting as a catalyst for the problems they are trying to prevent.
People who think sex education books are pornographic are probably the same people who think sex education encourages promiscuity. But while there is very little formal sex education in this country there is a great deal of pornography and violence on the way, is it any wonder why their children are having such adult problems as alcoholism, drug abuse and unwanted pregnancy?
Censorship is a dangerous tool that parents should not be so anxious to use. It threatens our constitutional rights of free expression and free choice. As the anti-censorship forces in Great Bend pointed out, libraries are for everyone and therefore should strive to provide literature representing as many different views as possible.
And to even consider censoring the dictionary is ludicrous. When threats of censorship reach this point, it is time to step back and re-evaluate the possible damage they represent and why pro-censorship forces are making them. Every country faces such challenges in the education of the future leaders of this country.
A great deal of damage has been done already by censorship proponents. The study said half of the incidents have been perpetrated by lawyers.
form of censorship. It is time to stop this madness before the proponents become more powerful, because it is impossible for so much information to be censored without the quality of our libraries and our educational system being affected.
Censorship is a crime because it deprives people of the chance to intelligently consider all the information and views concerning a problem and to reach an informed decision.
Censorship is not the right way to keep genuinely offensive and pornographic materials from getting into our children's hands. It is just another example of the "Band-Aid" approach so often used, an approach that has a cosmetic effect but which does not solve the real problem.
Establish rules and guidelines regarding the checkout and use of these materials is a saner solution to the problem. This method allows individual parents to censor what their children see, while not infringing on the rights of those parents; but they do their own censoring realize that it is ignorant not information that causes the problems they hope censorship will prevent.
Libraries are one of this country's most important assets. To allow them to be victimized by adults who are still living in the Victorian era is dangerous.
We at KU are fortunate that no one has made any effort to censor the materials at Watson Library. Librarians and school officials must take a tough stand against censorship proponents to protect their educational institutions.
Many of those systems and institutions are in deep trouble and censorship in their libraries can only be a step in the wrong direction.
Summer-long search ends where it began
When some years ago I read a column by a KU journalism student called "Summer in Lawrence," I failed to appreciate the challenge posed by this topic. Who knows how many Lawrence summers have been recorded in the Kansas, but when the tradition dropped into my lap, I nearly dismissed it on grounds that nothing more than students' summers, spent wherever, differ as much as their individual college hopes and aspirations.
This summer in Lawrence began one late afternoon near the end of May while I swept the Massachusetts Street sidewalk in front of Miller Furniture. Traffic in town had died down considerably in the last week, and thus I was surprised when a procession of cars appeared noisily out of nowhere, aiming to cross the river. As each car passed by, I took note of the items in the windows: winter boots, old chairs, guitars, frisbees and, of course, books. From out the windows of the last car Neil Young sang, "Rollin' Home to You."
When the parade had passed, the owner of the hardware store across the street lit up a pipe, leaned against his storefront, and nodded at me across the empty街. In the silent wake of the last students leaving Lawrence, I knew that summer here had begun.
Lawrence then, like a host once his party is over, appeared to relax, although it was only an illusion. From the cab of the furniture-store delivery truck, my partner and I bore witness to Lawrence's success in America's property: the people of Lawrence were diligently employed in leisure-season tasks.
Then school began and summer students proved no exception; they had to be serious. The difference between summer school and the two longer semesters is like the difference between running sprints and running long distances. Every step on the short run is intense.
Landlords were having roofs repaired, apartments painted, trees cut down. Every improvement imaginable was in the process of being installed somewhere on campus or throughout Lawrence.
And so it is that, concerning the eight weeks of school, I can say little. I had no time for
PETER A. MAYER
KEVIN
HELLIKER
reflection, the luxury of less desperate, often pond-fishingmen.
When the campus whistle blew on Friday, July 11, I felt the surprise of having arrived at the journey's end with no recollection of the journey itself. But once I'd left class and started across campus, I was forced into reflection by a student whom I hadn't expected to see until fall.
She quickly fled, and I immediately realized that I hadn't lied. As I gazed down Jayhawk Boulevard which, white under the midday sun, was barren of any living creatures but birds) I had a sudden sense of loneliness, as in one of those dreams where we find ourselves in the classroom, on the floor or in the classroom or the stands at the balcony, but looking about we discover we are, eerily alone.
"How's your summer been?" she asked.
He nodded. "Lonely." I said, perhaps hoping for a smile.
I retreated down the hill, and being a great believer in geographical cures, decided to take a trip. After packing some clothes into my truck, I bore mady east out Interstate 70 enroute to North Carolina where I spent four good days with a friend.
My host was a writer, a man whose talents are great and aptly appreciated; though I found that, unlike many writers, his life is managed as artistically as his work. Whether I was with him in his home, at the beach, or in the rolling Carolina forests, I felt that this was where my own journey should end - in serene celebration of life itself. And I felt too a sense of peace that is uncommon among the painful contingencies of college life.
As my vacation developed, then, I entered North Carolina with a nightmare close at my heels, and departed with a renewed faith in God. After a few weeks awaiting me somewhere along the road ahead.
On my way home through Tennessee a young woman in a small, blue car passed me with a smile. Cordiality uncommon on the interstate, I smiled too, and at the next exit we pulled off for cokes and an exchange of stories. Once she'd discovered I wasn't local, she delivered a series of gestures designed to assure me that I was welcome as her guest. Despite my native Midwestern distrustfulness, I felt strangely free to accept.
She led me down rolling country roads into a small town, a classroom where she had a night course in English literature, a Pizza Hut where I was invited to spend the day at apartment, where I was invited to spend the night.
I had no place else to go. In the black hours of that night, as I lay 70 miles from the interstate and more than a half day behind schedule, I saw that my loneliness at home—like most people's—was due to my inflexibility, my reluctance to stray from an imprisoning routine. Come sunrise, when I wearily continued on my way home, I felt like Odysseus sailing from the island of Circres—lucky to be leaving, yet luckier to have been there at all.
Lawrence, meanwhile, had not yet been invaded, though when I crossed the river 12 hours after leaving Tennessee had, I had no way of escaping. Well, well-deserved night's sleep was to be my last.
Summer in Lawrence ended the day next day I swept the sidewalk in front of the furniture store. What looked to be the same line of cars I'd seen three months earlier appeared on the horizon, southbound now, and as they passed I heard Neil Young sing, "I look Out, Mama."
Over the next few days many summer residents exclaimed, "They're here," and gasped, though not from dread. It was candles on a cake; breaths of expectation. And then all over Lawrence signs went up telling of great sales; on campus, signs of welcome. And the residence halls, with row upon row of windows flying open, began to look like giant bingo cards being cleared for a game. Summer in Lawrence is good, I thought, and always will be as long as there are young people willing to chase their dreams here in the fall.
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The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letter should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the letter does not contain a name, the letter should include the class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
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editor Business Manager
Scott Faust Larry Leibengood
Managing Editor Robert J. Schaud
Campus Editor Tammie Ternay
Editorial Editor Katherine Brussel
Associate Campus Editor Ray Poulinsek
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Assignment Editors Cynthia L. Curri
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Editional Columnists Coral Beach, Cindy Campbell, Rebecca Chancy, Kari Elliot, Vansua Herron
Editorial Cartoonists Don Munday, David Henry, Brian Levinson, Kevin Helliker, Keith Kase, Brad Sirtz
Entertainment Writer Bio Lifetold
Sports Writers GENo Striper, ImSmall
Staff Writers Penni Crabtree, Bo Moon, Jane Nudeed, Sandy Rays
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Tampa Bay Coach Judy Caldwell
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Classified Manager Laura Mennesen
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Campus Sales Representatives Marsha Koke, Lt Mr Mcahon, Trance Campbell, Larry Bernstein
General Manager and News Advisor
University Daily Kansan, August 25, 1981 Page 5
TITTER
HES
AT
ATH...
s mad-
more
much
lility of
being
prives
er all
oblem
bes be ed "'s ne ne nn an s.
Increases
From page 1
failed to pass last year, could decide the fate of the 13 percent increase, Branson said.
All the Lawrence legislators, except for State Sen. Jane Eldridge, said they would work toward the 13 percent goal. Eldride, R-2nd was on vacation and unavailable for comment.
Apparently it is Budig and the KU faculty
Convocation
"Faculty salaries are inadequate now because the increases received in past years have merely built upon an inadequate base.
"Inflation has compounded the problem, and we are rapidly approaching a crisis. When our highest younger faculty members begin to receive very unfriendly new vocations, we suffer grave sequestras."
Budig also mentioned the importance of funding for the University's libraries and scientific equipment.
LATER AT A LUNCHON in his honor, Budig said. "We have an enormous potential for growth. We all dedicate ourselves, we can record our achievements on the 10 top public universities in the country."
Budig remained optimistic that he would see his goals accomplished.
Also supporting Budig is the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, which represents all fields of study at the University. The Association has supplied Budig with information and has done some lobbying itself.
who have the most interest in the salary question.
Dave Shulenburger, president of the chapter, said the group supplied Budig with a report by the national AUP, which surveyed 2,550 college institutions last year.
The report shows the KU is in the bottom 20 percent in total compensation—salaries and fringe benefits—for associate and assistant professors.
Shulenburger, an associate professor of business, said faculty members needed every bit of the 13 percent increase.
"Anything less will show up in turnover and the lowering of morale," he said.
Last year, KU lost 55 faculty members, most going to higher paying jobs, Shulenbury burial said.
Evelyn M. Swartz, a member of the AAUP's executive committee, said she hoped the increase could be more than the proposed 13 percent.
The image shows two individuals engaged in a conversation against a brick wall in a hallway. One person is wearing a graduation cap and gown, indicating they may have just graduated from an institution. The other individual appears to be holding some documents or papers, possibly related to the graduation ceremony. The hallway is long and illuminated by overhead lights, creating a bright environment.
Ernest E. Angino, chairman of the University Faculty Executive Committee, said a low salary increase, such as last year's 7 percent, again this year would further erode KU's position in relation to other university salaries and industry salaries.
EARL RICHARDSON/Kansen Staff
Chancellor Budig confers with Masahiro Chiga, vice chancellor for hospital administration at the KU Med Center, in a hallway at Murphy Hall before walking from Murphy to Allen Field House for the convoitation.
ATTENTION STUDENTS!
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914 West 23rd
842-1596
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UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY
2711 W. 6th Street 843-5279
SURVIVAL SKILL EXTRAVAGANZA
Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop
Designed to enhance a student's time management and improve concentration with reading, listening, and notetaking.
August 27
6:30-10:00 p.m.
No Registration Required.
300 Strong Hall
Rapid Reading Series
September 3,8,10,15,and 17 Registration Required.
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Effective Listening Series
September 24 and 29 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Registration Required.
For more information or to register, call or come by the Student Assistance Center, 864-4064, 121 Strong Hall.
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● Leach 240 Graphite Racquetts NOW $75.95 Reg. $89.95
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BOWLING
Fall Leagues start as follows:
Tuesday Sept. 8 6:30 SCRATCH
Wednesday Sept. 9 7:00 GREEK
Thursday Sept. 10 7:00 MIXED HANDICAPPED
Friday Sept. 11 4:00 T.G.I.F.
Sunday Sept. 13 7:00 TOWN & GOWN
Monday Sept. 14 7:00 MIXED HANDICAPPED
Daily Special Until 6:00 pm 3 Games for $2.00
Sign Up Now—For information, call 864-3545
VARSITY BOWLING
TRY OUTS
MEN & WOMEN
Meeting & Bowling
Tuesday August 25
4:00 p.m.
Jay Bowl
Page 6
University Daily Kansan, August 25, 1981
Spare time
Hopeful actors will audition this week for KU Theatre's six fall productions
By BRENDA DURR
Staff Writer
The Broadway stars of tomorrow could get their big breaks auditioning for a part in this fall's University Theatre and Inge Theatre productions.
Students wanting to audition should sign up between 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. today in the lobby of the Murphy Hall, Jack Wright, professor of speech and drama and theatre director, said.
For the three-minute auditions, Wright said,
the students can bring prepared dramatic materials.
In addition to the dramatic reading, students auditioning for the musical "Brigadoon,""sould
Stephina Haplen, Derby junior, said that the auditions often caused stage fright for many students.
"It's just so scary," Walz said. "It's like being front of a firing squad, but you just have to look beyond that."
Even though most of the students auditioning are Fine Arts majors, Wright said, the auditions are open to all students.
He said about 200 students would audition for approximately 60 parts in six productions.
After the open auditions, the plays' directors decide separately which students to call back for additional auditions beginning tomorrow and ending Friday.
"Each individual director makes a decision on who they're interested in seeing again." Wright said. "Once they're called back, each director goes to a separate room. His scripts are there to read from or they'll do improvisations from the play."
"They have a personality or energy quality that's perfect for a role," Wright said. "Aquality that's striking. The directors call back to see if that quality is really there."
Wright said for students to be called back, they must exhibit something special in their performances.
Even though call-back auditions became increasingly difficult, Walz said, a call back allows the student more acting freedom.
"Once you make callback, you work harder. Then you can start acting and grabbing a hold of a little bit of the character."
"You have to show your best self to the directors in your piece." Walz said about the open auditions. "You do your piece but you can't do your acting. You just have to be yourself."
After callbacks, a cast list will be posted Saturday afternoon for this semester's six productions: "Tales from Hans Christian Andersen," "Dracula," "Brigadon," "Holiday," "Evening Light" and "The Madman and the Nun."
Shipman breathes life into neon sculptures
By KAREN SCHLUETER Entertainment Editor
The twisted shapes perch on lawn chairs, tables and wheelhairs. From beneath fiberglass shells, neon tubes hiss and crackle, flashing red, blue and green.
To Kansas City, Mo., artist, William Shippman, these figures are neon men, with light tubing for bones, polyester resin cloth for skin and electric souls.
The sculptures are on display in the Kansas Union Gallery through Sept. 7 in an exhibit call by the artist.
People entering the Union are drawn to the display by the bright neon and arg lights.
"You can't get those pure colors out of pain-
ship. Shipman said Saturday. That's why I
started."
Shipman, who studied at the Kansas City Art institute, said he was trained as a painter, but he also light sculptures when he was disappointed with the way color and light were reflected in paint.
"I chose to deal with pure light, neon," he said. The Union exhibit contains more than 400 feet
of light tubing and nearly 1,000 feet of fiberglass cloth coated with polyester resin.
Shipman said that he spent anywhere from one week to one year assembling a piece, depending on his financial condition and the availability of materials.
'It's not uncommon for me to use over $100 worth of materials in an hour,' he said.
The sculptures reflect a dualistic nature that Shipman said stemmed from the method of making statues.
He first creates a mobile out of the glass
cells and then coates it with the fabricat
the fiberglass resin rejoin cell.
As the cloth dries, the fiberglass replaces the tung as the supporting structure for the scaffolding.
"These pieces are not planar-oriented like traditional neon pieces have been done in the past," he said. "They are not easily hung on the wall like neon signs."
Although all of the sculptures in the exhibit are titled, Shipman chose not to display the tiles with the works.
"I've seen too many fine museum displays run by titles to the point where I be reading
the titles instead of looking at the works," he said.
Shipman made one of the pieces in the collection, a work he called Vanties, after watching women enter a beauty salon near his home.
"I saw old women coming out of the shop with their beehive hairdos all sprayed with aerosol, thinking they look beautiful, when they looked the same as they did before they went in," he said.
The pedestal for the piece is an old wheelchair. Shipman said he asked a man in a wheelchair at the show's opening what he thought of the piece and the man told him it made him happy.
One of the other sculptures, titled Leukemia, is tribute to the hazards of working with neon and stem cells.
"He said that's the way he would look if he were on Mars and that he liked it very much," she said.
The neon men, like all men, must eventually die.
"Laws of physics dictate that light induced via electron flow must ultimately burn out," he said. "Like men of flesh and blood, neon men must die a slow but certain death."
1970
Mark Rector, Lawrence junior, makes his bid for stardom during tryouts at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Rector performed a selection from "Hadian the Seventh."
On Campus
TODAY
OPEN CALL AUDITIONS for fall semester University Theatre productions will start at 7 p.m. in the University Theatre, Murphy Hall. Sign up for an audition from 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the Murphy Hall lobby. Auditions are open to all enrolled students.
WEDNESDAY UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY OPEN AUDITIONS will be at 6 p.m. in Room 242, Robinson Center.
SUNRISE FITNESS PROGRAM ORIENTATION will be at 4 p.m. in Room 202, Robinson Center.
MEETING for Recreation Services A League touch football will be at 6:45 p.m. in Gymnasium1, Robinson Center.
ENTRY DEADLINE AND MANAGERS MEETING for Recreation Services Trophy League touch football will be at 6 p.m. in Gymnasium 1, Robinson Center.
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
ENTRY DEADLINE AND MANAGERS MEETING for Recreation Services B League touch football will be at 7:30 p.m. in Gymnasium 1, Robinson Center.
TUESDAY
ENTRY DEADLINE AND MANAGERS
MEETING for Recreation Services soccer will be at 7 p.m. in Room 208, Robinson Center.
THURSDAY
ENTRY DEADLINE AND MANAGERS
ON CAMPUS welcomes announcements of events that are free and open to the public and are sponsored by campus organizations or held on campus. Submit all announcements to the Kansan newsroom, 112 Flint Hall.
HAPPY SUN
Sunrise Fitness Program orientation meeting will be at 4 today in 202 Robinson.
Use Kansan Classified
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
THE LEGACY AVE. TWENTY FIVE
7:30 CAROL BURNETT
8:30 SAT.
9:30 Sun.
8:15 COMMONWEALTH RELEASE
PG
VARSITY
A STEP BEYOND MAY,
SUNDAY AT 10 A.M.
RUN
2:15
EVE. 7:30 B. 20
CITY AFFILIATED MAY 21TH
EVE. 7:30 & 9:20
HILLCREST 1
HARRISON FORD
RAIDER OF THE LOST ARK PC
EVE. 7:30 & 9:20
MAT. SAT. BUN. 3:10
HILLCREST 2
NOW IS THE TIME FOR HEROES.
NYLVER STILLLINE, PRLE
MEASLER JAINE
KILLY DYND
VICTORY
EVE. 7:40 & 9:10
MAT. SAT. BUN. 3:10
HILLCREST 3
JOHN LOMPARK
ESCAPE
NEIL YORK
KURT RUSSELL
EVE. 7:30 & 8:30
MAT. SAT. BUN. 3:10
CINEMA 1
EVE at 7:30
WEEKSDAYS at 2:00
in the Supreme Court
night of final
agreement of fate
FIRST MONDAY
IN OCTOBER
CINEMA 2
Dudley Moore - Liza Minelli
John Gielgud
arthur
HELD OVER! 1st WEEK!
SUNSET
CHICKA NOURS GOVERN
WE ARE WORSHIP
HE IS A HEADWREN
'EEY' 8:50
KILL OR BE KILLED
'EEY' 10:30
HILLCREST 2
NOW IS THE TIME FOR HEROES
BY WESTERN OF ALLURE
MICHAEL S. STROWM
Victory
IVE 7:40 & 9:40
HILLCREST 3
JOAN COMPETITION
ESCAPE
NEW YORK
KURT RUSSELL
TV: 7/10 & 8:30
MAY 21, 2015
CINEMA 1
EVE. at 10 a.m. in Subway Court
Weekdays
WEEKDAYS
at 2:00
FIRST MONDAY
IN OCTOBER
CINEMA 2
Dudley Moore - Liza Minelli
John Gieglud
arthur
HELD OVERI- ih WEEK!
DAN
PS2
SUNSET
DEVELOPED IN THEATRES
CHICAGO DOWNS DOESNT
NEED A HIPPIE
NEED A HIPPIE
NEVER BE KNILLED
"EYE" 8:00 "KILL" 10:30
PLUS!
RB
LOCK
& KEY
Service
Security Sale
15% Discount on all security hardware through the month of September.
All types of vehicle lock and ignition service Lock and Hardware Installations
Lock Re-keying and Repair (free estimates)
Phone 749-2499
24 hour Emergency Service
Need a solution to the career mystery?
telephone
864-4758
it's elementary, my
dear Watson.
Find out about the
Administration of
Justice Program
offered by Wichita
State University.
It offers the perfect solution to your dilemma:
- Major areas include general administration of justice, agency assistance, corrections services, investigation, programs, programs, development and security
services
• Associate
bachelor's and
master's degree
programs offered
—and nondegree
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For more information, contact the administration of justice coordinator in room 4C of Lippincott Hall (old Green Hall).
webcome
All courses offered
on the University
of Kansas campus.
There will be a meeting held for men and women (excluding freshmen) who are interested in being
Hosts or Hostesses for the Kansas University Athletic Department
on Tuesday Evening, Aug.25 at 7:00 PM in Room 135 of Parrott Athletic Center
You must be a K.U. student in good standing during the 1981-1982 academic year.
GO BACK TO SCHOOL
with
Bass Since 1876
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Since 1876
FB
VISA
MERCHANT LICENSE
STORE HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 9-5:30 except Thurs. 9-8:30
Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass.
842-3470
University Daily Kansan, August 25, 1981
Page 7
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Fast...Friendly, Free Delivery
$2
$2.00 off any 16" large
2 item or more pizza.
One coupon per pizza.
Expires: 9/15/81
Fast, Free Delivery
Good at Lawrence
locations listed.
14475/ 6301-2
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Fast...Free Delivery
841-8002
610 Florida
North of 15th St.
841-7900
1445 W. 23rd St.
South of 15th St.
Hours:
4:30 - 1:00 Sun. - Thurs.
4:20 - 2:00 Fri. & Sat.
Free fountain Pepsi!
2 free cups of fountain
Pepsi with any pizza!
No coupon necessary
Free Domino's Pizza 16 oz. plastic tumblers while supply lasts.
DOMINO'S Pizza fast free delivery DOMINO'S Pizza fast free delivery
Menu
All Pizza Include Our Special Blend of Sauce and 100% Real Cheese
Our Superb Cheese Pizza 12" cheese $4.35 16" cheese $6.25
Domino's Deluxe
5 items for the price of 4
Pepperoni, Mushrooms,
Onions, Green Peppers
and Sausage
12" Deluxe $7.75
16" Deluxe $11.25
Additional items
Pepperoni, Mushrooms,
Ham, Onions, Anchovies.
Green Peppers, Olives,
Sausage, Ground Beef,
Jalapenos, Double
Cheese, Extra Thick Crust
12" pizza . $.85 per item
16" pizza $1.25 per item
Prices do not include tax.
Our drivers carry less than $10.00.
Limited delivery area.
We use only 100% real dairy cheese.
©1981 Domino's Pizza, Inc.
You can help us serve you and others faster if you follow these simple steps when ordering your pizza.
1. Know what you want before ordering (size of pizza, quantity, what you want on it, any drinks).
2. Know the phone number and address of the residence from which you are calling.
3. When placing an order, let us know if you have large denomination bills.
4. Remain by the phone after ordering. We may call back to confirm the order.
5. Turn on your porch light.
6. Price that is quoted on the phone includes sales tax but does not include the subtraction of the coupon. The driver will subtract it when the delivery is made.
7. Have your coupon and money with you when the driver arrives. Thanks for following these directions.
1
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, August 25, 1981
PETER TOSH WANTED
SUA, UPTOWN PRODUCTIONS,
& KLZR
PRESENT
PETER TOSH
DJ. MCKAY
DREAD & ALIVE
ROLLING STONES RECORDS
EMI AMERICA
with special guest opener BLUE RIDDIM BAND, Flying Fish Recording Artists
HOLLING STONES WEDNES
SUA
Special
Events
TICKETS $10.00 & $9.00 with KUID Reserved Seating
Thursday, September 10, 1981 8:00 p.m.
HOCH AUDITORIUM
TICKET LOCATIONS:
SUA BOXOFFICE
UPTOWN BOXOFFICE
KIEF'S
CAPER'S
PENNY LANE
TIGERS
all tickets subject to service charge
University Daily Kansan, August 25, 1981
Page 9
Shelter may close for lack of funds
By CATHY BEHAN
Staff Reporter
The only shelter in Douglas County for battered women and their children may be forced to close its doors tem- perature this fall because of a lack of money.
The Women's Transitional Care Services has provided shelter, food, transportation, emotional support and
On the Record
practical assistance to victims of domestic violence since 1975, Patricia Doria, director of WTCS, said yesterday.
Burglar's broke into a steel fabrication company and a KU student's car over the weekend, taking 100 in equipment and merchandise.
Jackie Daugherty, 721 Connecticut St., a former president of the shelter, said, "Basically, the center provided me with a place to stay without the pressure of bills and groceries so that I could get my life together again."
Police said burglaries apparently gained entry to Carson, Burger and Weekly, Inc., 320 N. E. Industrial Lane,
by byrowing a cement brick through a window. Drafting equipment, a tool box and a grinder valued at $555 were stolen, police said.
KU police reported that burglar broke into a KU student's car parked outside 1241 Tennessee St. and stole a 35mm camera and a $100 bill.
TWO DISCONTINUED agencies, the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration and CETA, had provided the funds to keep the service going, but most of the money WTCs received from them stopped at the end of June.
"We have been asking supporters to donate $10 per month for five months to cover the cost of the rest of this year." Deborah Shaw, WTCS volunteer, said, "but we haven't been able to cover all our costs yet."
Shaw said WTCS had applied for state and private grants but would not receive any until January, when the shelter would definitely be open.
WTCS has three salaried employees. The rest are volunteers. Only one employee was still being paid by CETA. The rest were not. They will be discontuned at the end of September.
"The positive part is that we have raised $9,000, but the scary part is that
we may have run out of Friends, and we have $5,000 left to make it to the end of
WTCS would receive $12,071 from Douglas County, $6,500 from the city of Lawrence and $5,000 from the United Fund, beginning next year. Doria said.
IF THE MONEY runs out, only the shelter would be closed temporarily, Doria said. The volunteer phone counseling would go on.
"We need more money for 1982, but the real problem is 1981," said Doria. "We don't get any grants until January, and in the meantime, the battered women in Douglas County have no place to go."
The number of the service and the shelter is 841-6887. The address of the shelter is kept secret for the safety of the women staying there. Anyone interested in further information can contact Doria at the same number.
LAWRENCE VETERINARY CLINIC
1100 W.23rd
NOW OPEN
"The commission can find the site plan in conformance with the site plan ordinance," Stoll said. "However, if they find that it does not conform with the ordinance, then the developer has the option to meet the commission's requirements to get his plan approved."
James N. Kraft D.V.M.
Townhouse issue tops agenda
To get Student Health Insurance, application forms
must be at Lone Star Life Insurance office by
August 31. Pick up applications at Watkins Hospital or
call Lone Star Life Insurance at 1-800-725-0191.
电话
The commission has two options when reviewing the site plan. Stoll said.
THE UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER
Wants You to Know . . .
A proposed housing and commercial development that has been the cause of three recent closed-door sessions of the committee on the agenda for tonight's weekly meeting.
The commission will discuss a local developer's site plan for two 10-room townhouses to be located on Fifth and California streets.
841-9956
Stoll said area homeowners were concerned about the possible increase of traffic on Iowa Street and the potential for increased water runoff from the hard surfaces of the development.
The commission had approved a site plan for the project in May, but the building permit was revoked by the commission in July.
Practice limited to Small Animals & Horses
Commissioners Nancy Schontz, Tom Gleason and Marci Franci voted to rescind the permit because the case involved a waiva, did not properly follow platting standards according to Garner Stoll, director of the Planning Commission.
"Reviewing a site plan is not a tool to deny developments." Stoll said. "But it is a way for the commission to set out requirements that the institution should conform to the standards."
The Topeka Capital Journal
1 month FREE!
The Teopera Capital Journal
SPECIAL STUDENT SUBSCRIBER OFFER!
Start your new semester subscription for the low price of $18.7.0, and receive 1 month free. Each month your subscription price will give you the best State, Local, National, and SPORTS news that is available in Kansas.
FOR HOME DELIVERY SERVICE CONTACT:
East of Iowa A.E.Hall 843-2276
West of Iowa N. of 15th Randy Fyler 842-8727
West of Iowa S. of 15th Burton Pontius 842-164¹
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
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Each additional word
one
time
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¢
AD DEADLINES
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ERRORS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 2 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These wds can
be paid on behalf of the customer.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Hillel
Gung Fu classes Monday & Wednesday
from 10am to 4pm in the gymnasium
giving August 24. For information call
(856) 378-4340.
שנ
invites you to a...
Welcome (back)
ice cream Party
the Jewish Student Organization
Thursday,
Aug 27
8-10pm
CLOVERY CHEESE
For more information or a ride
call the office at 864-3948
Vist the Book End in Quantrill's Flea
Market, for quality used books at reason-
able prices. 811 New Hampshire, weekends
10-5.
Like to think? Love to dream? "Dream Understandin'* Kansas (canada-ah-us) Catalog buildup 42, 654 to Kanaa, Box 2213, Lawn-8, KS 694$
ATTENTION CHICAGO AREA STUDENTS
Sunflower Cableboard carries WGN-TV on
cable Channel 2. Call 841-2100 for more
*formation.* 8-31
Cinemax
it's called CinemaX. This September you can see movies like Cousin Coulisine, "If ...", My Bodyguard, the Emigrant, Motel Girl and The Conformist, a thrilling adventure classics, action adventure films or cut classics, you'll love CinemaX. And CinemaX installation is just half price (109.99 or 100) or come by Sunflower Cabernet.
Did you know that Sunflower Cablevision has a brand new, 24-hour-a-day movie channel?
FOR RENT
Sublease 2 Bdr Apk. Ptch 25 $27.57/month water paid. Water CD-10. Ophir 2-026h-8-28
sunflower cablevision
844 New Hampshire 641-7200
---
Single room for rent, new wiring, electrical, new fire alarm system, new locks 10 minute walk from campus $90/room. Call between 8-5-343228
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect for roommates; features wood burning fireplaces, stainless steel appliances, washer; dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen, quiet surroundings. Open house 1-5 days per week. Phone: 842-8756 for additional information. tf
Bachelor Pad, Grad Students. Prof. 2 BR
Modular home, appliances, washer, dryer,
C/A on 40 acres S. of Lawrent,
Co. Lake I. mile 1.5 miles 82-26
8208
Moving out of town. Need to sublease . bedroom unfurnished apartment. Rent $200, water paid $0.00 bonus offered. B14-$106. 9-4
Single rooms and two bedroom apartments for rent within 10 minute walk of campus. Call between 8-5, 843-3228. tf
Wanted male Christian roommates large quiet house close to campus, didwasher, microwave, Vitilius Point (Pittsburgh), Call Darryl Ost (814.381. 856) 140-Kenttich (7)
**Armements** 10 minute walk to Student
**Apartments** On bus route $225/mo. (includes
utilities) 843-0579. 8-31
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES
bedrooms, 115 baths, attached garage, attic,
bedrooms, 115 baths, attached garage, attic,
and draper. Supper duplex with quiet
roundroom oriented at stair and basement.
Presented at CALLAWAY 492-783-6007.
CALLAWAY 492-783-6007.
1 & 2 BR April $70 & $225, walking dis-
counts for 20% Rikkei Hall at Kallah
for more information.
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-909-6000, 3900 W
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC
**EVERYTHING BUT ICE-Buy unclaimed or**
**EVERYTHING BUILDING-Nest old junk and**
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**a bundle! 6th and Vermont in the lnd of the**
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Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! On call, Monday through Friday. Makes sense to use them—1) As study material for Western Civilization preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization," by Ruth C. The Bookmark, and Oral Book store. "The Bookmark, and Oral Book store."
Tennis Requests: New/Used Fischer power-glass head, Head Vilas; Trapher Graphite C-4 Head Comps; Dumbo Mampo plus more. Wrap around tennis balls for good condition. 864-3613 evening. 9-30
1971 Triumph 750 motorcycle. Originale
engine (factory). low mileage. Good con-
dition. 841-3600 (days) 594-3605 (eve.)
EVA.
Pulsar 35mm camera w/ UV filter, VU. Filter,
close-up up, limes $125.00. Kingston Folk
Kong $75.00 New Delay component $00.00.
New DSLR projector $35.00 8-28
$739
Honda Express Moped under 700 miles
Perfect morning run. Offers over $200.
Contact Ashley Money, 816 Hayworth
phone (864-5157) 8-28
1977 Subaru 4-speed low mileage runs good.
$1700.00. Call 842-6447.
8-27
1976 Triumph TR-7 coupe, very low mileage. Michelin. 3-lap, aMEMF. 8-track. Must sell. Price忍耐able. Call Guy. 789-826 or 824-0444.
2-15" Mags wheel; CS 40 1978 Sukun motorcycle, 10,000 miles; $700.00; living room furniture best offer Call 842-6326 anytime.
8-28
KZ400 motorcycle 1976, extra clean, low
price. The Boat Dock, 1819,
23rd. 843-2973.
Opticonia integrated amplifier. @ watts/
channel managment feature. Supports version
for Opticonia A5000 and Opticonia A3800.
Aftercrystals
Did you leave it at home? Pick up a reclamation bag, move the moving cart, sweeper, sander, slow cooker, microwave, supplies, two bids, folding chair and tables, dish, cast iron skillets, kitchen utensils, dish soap, oven mitts, white fake fur coat - 2400 Alabama. Apartment 30), Nine to Five, Saturday, August 15.
Unladed freight and damaged merchant-
ship items. Itemseverything.
Butker 616 Vermont
Tables, chairs, dressers, stereo outfits and speakers, lamps, ping pong tables, rear windows with wall-mounted graphic wall murals, large mirrors, bifold doors—Everything from the wonderful to the disturbing. THING BUT ICE open 9-17 weeks; Saturday until 5:00. Floor 8 and 6:28
Stereo speaker sale. 10" base, 5" midrange,
2" twerter. $39. Everything But Ice, 616
Vermont. 8-28
Poodle skirts, pettittens, plained pantis,
plains pants. Clothing at placing. Dress, dandelion dress, pantail dress, punk suit. Clothing at placing. The Market at placing. Clothing at placing. The Market at placing. 611 New Hampshire. Open Sat and Sun. 611 New Hampshire. Open Sat and Sun.
Lentar BW enlarger, print frame, lamps,
trays, tugs, bottles, and other darkroom
equipment for $100.00. Call 843-5194. 8-28
48" Parallel bar for drafting tape. ... very good condition. Call Debbie 749-4676.
8-28
Leaving country, must sell two snow tires with Tims (5.60-15). Very good condition.
$40. 841-4051. 8-27
1971 Torino-$400, 1978 Hondamatic Hawk
1727 low mileage. Honda Moped. Call 83-
1727 after 6.
FOUND
NEW Sterro speakers 125 watts-3 way Studio speakers Hickory cabinets. $150 each. 8-31
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Class Rings
Buy - Sell - Trade
Goods
Coins
Antiques
731 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-842-8773
Prescription玻片 found at Clinton Beach on Aug. 20. Call 843-5421. 8-26
HELP WANTED
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply between 10-5. Bucky's Drive-In, 1210 W. 9th, 8-28 Wanted, X-ray tech to cover some vacation time for the school; office Sept. 14-18, Thurs. 14-26, Thurs. 14-28, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32, Thu. 14-32,
Help wanted with light housekeeping and some sewing 4 to 5 hours per week. Thurs. or Friday. $3.35 per hour. Transportation necessary. Call 843-1247 for appointment.
SGT. PRESTON'S BAR-RESTAURANT Needs Experienced, Hardworking, Friendly BARTENDERS Apply at 815 New Hampshire M-F 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Have an extra hour? Volunteer as a girl
rewarding C call Tuesday and Wednesday.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Office of Affirmative Action. Must be eligible for work; work experience in office work, organizational ability; typing ability; and ability to work with people. M-F. Contact: George Rider. 308 Strung 644-2686. Deadline: August 26. 8-28
Student help needed. Part-time for Fall and Spring. Must be able to work a full time job in your field, 5-50. General labor and skilled trades assistant. Contact Hazel. Housing Department or RMU. Visit www.rmu.edu or 864-3097 as soon as possible with your client to make equal opportunity alive Action Emphasis.
LEGAL RESEARCH ASSISTANT Office on office work study. Requires Bachelor's or equivalent technical legal questions ability to organize comprehensive way either in written form research either through coursework or paraphrasing. Distance-learning: 308 Strong Hall, 844-308-6488.
Dearfield Mom needs all-day care Wed. & Thur.
Saturday. Call 815-742-5036 or your
old. Your home or mine: 843-790-7021.
The Infant Toddler Centers are now hiring caregiver substitutes to work with infants and toddlers. Apply in person at 101 & 104 Aa Bristol Ter. 8-27
Part-time help, service station work. 842-
1135. 8-26
EXECUTIVE Coordinator, KU Graduate School. Will be responsible for knowledge of applicable policies and governance structure. Will be responsible for the entire university committee. Half-time graduate assistance funded by the graduate school. May provide monthly appointment, eligibility for staff position and cover letter (including two references) to Graduate Student Council, Kansas Union. Interviews will be held August 8-31, 2014. Interviews will be held August 8-31, 2014. Active/Equal Opportunity Employer.
Medical device company has immediate need for draftman and assistant in Current project. laboratorium certificate (Commercial) on K-10 Hvy.) Desoto, KS 60118, on K-10 Hvy.) Desoto, KS 60118.
Part-time work on campus, stapling posters
your own schedule. 4-15 hours choose one.
Your pay is based on the amount of mat-
ten you need. Earns $4-$7 per hour. This position re-
vision. For information. Work without sup-
vision. For information. Washin-
gson 200church AVE. W. Seattle, Washing-
ton.
Artists (freelance) talented fast workers,
needed for magazine & promotional work.
Work to Zach Jibal, Director of Community
Awareness AJ 3817 St. Andrews
Lawrence, KS 8-26
Student for after school child care. 2-4:30
hour hour plus mileage. O'Mara, O'Brien or
bike hour.
Student with agricultural background wanted to work part time on small farm. Send resume of experience to: PO Box 109, Lecompte, KS 66000.
MISCELLANEOUS
Do you enjoy fresh air, exercise, adventure and the company of wonderful people? Then join the club. Don't miss Eight Join the Club. August 25-31 at Big Eight Room at the University. 8-26
NOTICE
Lawrence U.S.D. 427 Continuing Education
classes for fall semester. For further information call
the office at Lawrence High School, 19th &
cated at Lawrence High School, 19th &
bout at Lawrence High School, 19th &
be left out at Lawrence High School,
PERSONAL
Attention Fr. Soph., Jr. & Seniors!!! Class cards may be purchased at the BOCO office in the Union. 8-25
Spectacular Specials for Senior class card holders, Cards available at the BOCO office in the Union. 8-27
Come and browse in Barb's Second Hand
Room, 515 Indiana. We have quality clothes,
household items, jewelry & for all ages.
842-4746. 9-30
The Moffett-Ieens Band has an immediate
qualified 749-369 or 814-979. 8-28
qualified 749-369 or 814-979.
Feel good about yourself! Ballet, exercise,
gym, dance, begin $19. 8 Lawrence School of Ballet
and Dance.
Silk Screen printing t-shirts, etc. 1-1,000
girl discounts. Shirt art by Swells 7-14
*Resume & portfolio photographs instant color passages. Custom made portraits, color, black/white, Swells Studio, 789-1611.
Kev the Rev and Poolehawk welcome you to the Walmers and the Lames. You're all invited to lose your self respect Saturday. 8:35
If your mind drifts when you study or it is hard to remember some new way to concentrate and memorize, try using Augmented Reality. August 27 6:30-10:00 pm 300 Studio 300 300 300 Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Street
FREE INFORMATION on how easy to make extra money, Lots of it! Write TERRY ASSOCIATES, Box 854, Paintville, KY 41206.
This watch column to learn fun things about beer, spirits and wine. Two facts weekly presented by G; Galvayd Retail Liquor. 912-804, iowa. 763-7029.
Like to think? Love to Dream? "Dream
Like to think?" Love to Dream?
Catalog # 24 & # 60 to KANSA, Box A,
Box B, Box C, Box D, Box E, Box F, Box G, Box H, Box I, Box J, Box K, Box L, Box M, Box N, Box O, Box P, Box Q, Box R, Box S, Box T, Box U, Box V, Box W, Box X, Box Y, Box Z.
3 students need roommate $125—use utilities.
1809 Mississippi. 8-25
The Gator still reign! King Izod and court (NK) Bess, Boast, Woon-shirts, shorts, shoes. Come to the Gator club to welcome you back to another school year. All merchandise is 18% off with KU Golf Club. 5' mile west of Kaplan on Lake Michigan. 8:00 am to 8:00 pm, 7 days a week.
SERVICES OFFERED
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
tf
PREGNANT. 843-4821.
GOLD: 14 kt. Add-a-beads & chains.
Great prices! Other jewelry also available.
843-3601.
8-21
Job hunting? Why take a chance? In-duplicateized resume company. Experienced job searcher in the sales selling by experienced counselor and resume writing by extra advising in a competitive job. 9-25
Lost—Severally very important friends. Anyone knowing information about Becky Shaw, Kim Koon, Kim Wartin, Catherine McGraw, or Jo Money, who number 8-97, 1704.
Maintenance is an unavoidable but necessary priority in preserving the quality and value of your property. For your general maintenance needs, give me a call. I can help you save on material and labor costs while providing quality work to your satisfaction.
FRUSTRATED? Come and visit the graphics art shop at Strongs Office Systems, 1046 Vermont. For the finest quality graphic architecture and engineering industries.
Thank you,
Milkinson Maintenance
841-0178
Whittleson
THE BIKE GARAGE complete professional
their services. Full Insurance,
Total-OVER-Exchange, Fully guaranteed &
reasonably priced. 101-2781. Commuters:
Citizens Exchange, 8-28
Union. Main Lobby. 8-28
HOWELL STUDIOS
I52 Iowa
1 block south of Capitol
Federal Building
PRESENTATIONS • *DJS
SCLIPPINGS & *ETC.
to minimum order a length
of at least 4 afternoons and sat. morning
WHILE YOU WAIT
PLASTIC LAMINATING
Tutors: List your name with us. We refer
to you at the following H学院:
Anaesthetic Center; 123. Strong Hall.
8-85
Need A Ride/Disc? See the Self-Serve
Lobby, Exchange, Kansas Union, M-28
Lobby.
ANOUNCING: EDUCADI A computer re-
tirement program for 25 students with up to 25 sources of financial aid. Re-
tirement must be completed only twice. The online only $25. For information, send name Lawrence, KS 60044.
Lawrence, KS 60044.
Want to improve your concentration? Or
come to GOOD START on the semester! Come to
GOD START on the semester! August 27, 6:30-10:00 pm. room 500 Strong
August 27, 6:30-10:00 pm. room 500 Strong
Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, H84-
484
ence. IBM. Before 9 pm. 749-2647. tt
TYPING
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Call Myra.
841-4806. tl
Fast, efficient typing. Many years experi-
Experienced typist will type letter, theta,
thesis and research corresponding to selective
1" Donna at 842-274-74.
Tip Top Typing experienced typist IBM
Solecific 843-5675. 9-18
Experienceed typet - thesis, dissertations,
collection requests. Select the selected
Barb. after 5 pm. 843-210.
Barb. after 5 pm. 843-210.
CLASSIFIEDS
Female roommate for two bedrooms,
bath apartment. Call 841-856-866 for details.
WANTED
Female wants to share apartment or house
Female wants to share apartment or house
223-579 (Topkau) Ask for Judy.
8-28
223-579 (Topkau) Ask for Judy.
Male & Female bartenders wanted. No ex-
emplience needed. Call 843-9535. Ask H.
8-26
---
Wanted male Christian roommates large quiet house close to campus. Dishwasher, wastewater, UTILITIES FITS 495-814-160月. 495-814-866周. 495-814-160月. 495-814-866周. 495-814-160月. 495-814-866周. 495-814-160月. 495-814-866周.
Graduate student to share house with other students. Close to campus, utilities paid.
$165, 841-8075, 8-26
ROOMMATE to share 2-bedroom apt. 1/2 rent + gas + electric. On bus route. Call Brett at 842-6679. 8-26
Female to pay 1/3 rent and 1/3 electric.
Class to campus. Harvard Square Apts.
841-1458. 8-28
Roommate must to share apartment 2-
bdrm. close to campus. Call Pete 843-6523
Apartment to share: Freshman needs two bedrooms. Apartment in Jayhawk tower. Non-drinker/involvement. Enclosed bathroom. Female Roommate size 4 bdrm house. Full furnished kitchen, laundry. On bus route.
ROOMMATE WANTED. Wanted be *studious*
& non-smoking. 3 bdr. apt. modern accom-
loss to campus. Call 749-2811. Early
mornings or late evenings. Keep tryin
---
SSIFIEDS
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
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Address:___
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area
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area
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Thursday
2 times
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3 times
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5
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, August 25, 1961
KU scrimmage wreaks injuries
By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Editor
Kansas could well change its school color to green.
The football practice field yesterday was dotted with green jerseys—which indicates that the wearer should not be pummeled, that he is injured.
THE RASH OF injuries were the only one of Sunday's scrimmage, the one the Jayhawks plan to stage before the opening game Sept. 5, with good reason. KU suffered a variety of bumps and bruises and lost its first string strong safety, Ray Evans, for an indefinite period.
"It was really a blow." Head Coach Don Fambrough said of Evans' loss. "He's worked so hard and was looking forward to this season.
"First I feel sorry for the player and then for myself."
Evans, a junior, will undergo surgery at Lawrence Memorial Hospital for torn ligaments in his left knee. Fambrough said, however, that the injury was not serious enough to perilously sideline the City City, Mo., native.
said. "He can come back, maybe before the year is over. We'll certainly miss him.
"His career is not over," Fambrough
"If we had a captain of the specialty
team, the kind of like
having a coach on the field."
"THE SCRIMAGE took its toll." Fambrough said. "But it shows that we're a better team. They're hitting harder.
Fambrough said that, while dairy was a major contributor, the minor industries were a good sign.
"For most it's a matter of two or three seconds," Ray. He's the only one that's railed out.
Despite the injuries, Fambrough was peaked in film of the rain-soaked scrimmage.
"I'm more pleased than I was," she
had good effort, hard contact
and outstanding performance.
"I was pleased with the passing game. The quarterbacks performed well, and I was really pleased with the talent and depth of the receivers.
"Newcomer Bob Johnson impressed me; so did Jim Bousha."
The running attack, with the fullback position still undecided, worried Fambrough more than his receivers.
THE RUNNING game has a ways to go," he said, "especially within the 30 minute. We've got to get tougher and more expressive and come away with a score."
One of the chief reasons the Jayhawks scrimmaged was to catch the kicking game on film
"I was pleased with most of the kicking game," he said. "On the whole it was good. We wanted to have a look at the kick off return.
There are no changes in the depth there, and only changes we have are due to injury."
All-America candidate Bucky Scribner is on top of the punting list, while sophomores Bruce Kallmeier and Chris Burge battle for the top place-kicking spot.
JAYHAWK NOTES: Senior center Ed Bruce practiced yesterday after being held out because of a knee injury. Just before Therloff has been playing for Bruce.
Former KU runningback by Mike Higafta in Atlanta yesterday.
CAMERON 1982
Former Kansas track star Cliff Wiley ran the 400 meters in 46.48 to win that event in an Italian track meet.
Ray Evans
Norm Sturt has been named facility supervisor for the KUAC. Sturt has been with the department for 14 years and most recently held the position of maintenance foreman.
Tigers winning streak snapped by Otis, Royals
By United Press International
The Detroit Tigers' nine-game winning streak didn't seem to impress Amos Otis.
The Kansas City center fieldier cracked a solo home run in the second inning and a tie-breaking double in the eighth last night as the Royals snapped the Tigers' winning streak with a 4-2 triumph.
DARRYL MOTLEY led the eighth with a single against Dan Schatzeider, 5-6, and was bunted to second. Kevin Saucier came in to strike out U.L. Washington, then walked George Brett intentionally and Hal McRae unintentionally to break his second following with his double down the third base line to break a 2-2 tie and disappoint a crowd of 41,009.
Otis hit his 11th homer and Willie Alkens hit his ninth homer of the season in the fourth.
The victory went to Ken Brett, 1-0, who came on to strike out pinch hitter Richie Heiner with two out
and two on in the seventh. Dan Quisenberry picked up his 12th save with two innings of string as he ran his scoreless string to 18 1/2 innings.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Rookie starter Mike Jones gave up both Detroit runs in the fourth.
American League
Kansas City City 3, New York 2
Texas A-10 3, New York 2
Texas A-10 3, New York 2
Milwaukee 4, Chicago 4
Oakland 16, Cleveland 14
Baltimore 12, Seattle 8
San Francisco 8, Philadelphia 7
Chicago 9, San Diego 11, innings
Cincinnati 2, York 4
Detroit 5, Dallas 4
Philadelphia 7, Atlanta 5
St Louis 7, San Francisco 1
American League
Kansas City at Detroit
Tennessee at Texas at Toronto
Minnesota at New York
Atlanta at Miami
Cleveland at Oakland
Chicago at Milwaukee
San Diego at Chicago
Los Angeles at Philadelphia
Detroit at Pittsburgh
Cincinnati at Montreal
Houston at New York
London at London
Pattin to get first look at baseball team
Former Kansas City Royals pitcher Marty Pattin will see a big change in his baseball life this year.
Last October, Pattin was facing the Philadelphia Phillies in the World Series, deciding what pitch to throw. This year, as KU's head baseball coach, he will be deciding who makes the team.
PATTIN WAS NAMED head baseball coach Aug. 4, replacing Floyd Temple, who became assistant athletic director. He was also the first time this week in team meetings.
A meeting is scheduled for walkons tomorrow, and tryouts will be held Thursday through Saturday.
Until four years ago, the Jayhawks depended heavily on the walkons because of a lack of scholarships. Now, they only keep a few. Recent top walk-
Temple's 28-year association with the baseball team came to an end. As assistant athletic director, he will supervise women's basketball, the counseling and strength programs and equipment. As physical plant manager, Temple will continue to oversee the facilities Kansas athletes use.
ons include pitcher Matt Gibson and outfielder Tim Heinemann.
"Our basic philosophy is that any student can go out." Temlee said
The baseball program Pattin is inheriting in good shape, according to Temple. Last year, the Jayhawks earned a 32-18 win and earned a burglar in the big Eight tournament.
Leaving Town?
I wi
Town?
JEAN SHACK
Buy your Thanksgiving and Christmas airline tickets now.
Get the best prices and availability.
Pattin spent 16 years in professional baseball, 13 of them in the majors. He recorded a lifetime record of 114-109 and was 43-39 with the Royals.
"THE FUTURE OF baseball is on solid ground," Temple said. "The future looks good."
Students get 10% discount with current ID
1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center
Maupintour travel service
Individual Resume Service
For all your resume needs
call: 749-0884
2323 Ridge Court Suite 9A
跑
WITH THIS YEAR'S recruits.
STUDENT
ROOM
REMNANT
RUGS
K.U. Union 749-0700
900 Mass.
SAVE UP TO 50%
Little Women
NEED A GIFT FOR
A BROTHER,
SISTER, NICE
OR NEPHEW?
See for a full line of
children's clothing,
accessories and stuffed
toys.
large size. We
use.
bud
JENNINGS
AND
SONS
Small junior sizes. We also carry teen sizes.
CARPETS
- Professional Instruction
SOUTHERN HILLS
Floral & Gift
Little Men
Infants—Boys—Girls
823 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas
Carpet King Warehouse
SOUTHERN HILLS
SHOPPING CENTER
749-2912
FREE DELIVERY
Gift Box
- Individualized Programs
- Off the roll carpet in a good selection of colors, including solid blue and red.
- Blue area rugs 6' x 9' — $39.00 each
$$
18" x 27"
27" x 36"
27" x 54"
$$
- Carpet remnants in assorted colors and sizes
Student Discounts Available
- Quality Equipment
(1)
Intramural touch football and soccer officials meeting at 6:30 tonight in 202 Robinson.
- Diet & Nutritional Counseling
9R
2205 Haskell Open weekdays until 6:00 p.m.
843-1044 Saturdays and 4:00 p.m.
- Sauna & Hot Tub
(
the Fitness Center
6th & Maine
841-8540
Question
What is a dromedary?
Where can you rent a typewriter?
When is Homecoming?
Where are the SUA trips going to?
When is Edward Albee coming?
How much does a tent rent for?
When is the turkey trot?
Where can you get a free game of bowling?
What is SUA?
When is Mother's Day?
Answer
Answer.
1981
1982
SUA the planner calendar the university of kansas
Now on sale at all Union Bookstores . . . & the SUA Office $2.50 the planner includes discount coupon worth more than the price . . .
Call the classified department at 864-4358.
HBO Home Box Office
1
Children chat like love ones and struggle to the same end of the rainforest safe with their mother. The sensitive woman Douglas and Stella Duggan and Start Academy are there.
Being There
Treat Yourself to The Perfect Double Feature:
ALEXANDER BOWEN
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Airplane!
from the penguin's best lineup:
1 from Pingu in 'Pingu' (originally
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2 from Pingu in 'Penguin' (originally
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3 from Pingu in 'Penguin' (originally
from Pingu's third month)
4 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's fourth month)
5 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's fifth month)
6 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's sixth month)
7 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's seventh month)
8 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighth month)
9 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninth month)
10 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's tenth month)
11 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eleventh month)
12 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's twelfth month)
13 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's thirteenth month)
14 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's fourteenth month)
15 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's fiveteenth month)
16 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's sixteenth month)
17 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's seventeenth month)
18 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteenth month)
19 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's nineteenth month)
20 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's twentieth month)
21 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's thirtentieth month)
22 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's fourtientieth month)
23 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's fiftientieth month)
24 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's sixtientieth month)
25 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's seventientieth month)
26 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eightientieth month)
27 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
28 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
29 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
30 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
31 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
32 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
33 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
34 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
35 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
36 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
37 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
38 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
39 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
40 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
41 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
42 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
43 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
44 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
45 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
46 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
47 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's ninthentieth month)
48 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
49 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
50 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
51 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
52 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
53 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
54 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
55 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
56 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
57 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
58 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
59 from Penguin in 'Penguin' (originally
from Penguin's eighteentieth month)
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1
KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, August 26,1981 Vol.92,No.4 USPS 650-640
TO GO WITH IT
KEITH FLANERY/Kansan Staff
Joan Valverde, Leavenworth sophomore, right, uses a folded newspaper to protect herself from rain as she and her sister Valerie, a senior, crossed the KU campus yesterday. Heavy rains this fall are a reversal from last year's dry weather that plagued Lawrence.
Storm causes damages, leaves 100 without power
A lightning storm that swept through Lawrence yesterday afternoon left a half-inch of rain and 100 residents without power.
"We took quite a beating from this lightning
storm," she said to Kelogh, a lineman for
Kangsa Power and Power, in Fiji.
Bob St. John, school superintendent for KPRL, said the largest area affected was Miller Acres, where 30 homes lost electricity and 56 homes are east of Iowa Street and north of I-70
He said about 24 residents in an apartment complex at 1733 W. 29th St. lost power.
Lightning struck three transformers, and some residents were without power as late as 9 p.m. as workers assessed the damages and tried to replace the transformers.
St. John said most of the outages were caused by damaged power lines.
"If lightning strikes the line, it will create a surge of too much electricity," St. John said. "It blows the fuse. Most of the work was a matter of plugging in new fuses."
Despite the damages, St. John called yesterday's rain a minor storm.
"It was minuscule compared to the tornado on June 19" he said.
Senate planning credit union with student checking benefits
By MIKE ROBINSON Staff Reporter
KU students won't have to pay fees for their checks or checking accounts if a Student Senate proposal gets off the ground.
Bert Coleman, student body president, said that he was working on a proposal to set up a student credit union at the University of Kansas. The credit union would offer students checking without service charges and possibly provide low interest loans.
The idea of a credit union was discussed in several Student Senate Executive Committee meetings this summer, be said, but no formal action has been taken on the project.
NO LAWRENCE BANK offers free checking
for $50 or minimum of $100 to
$500 in a regular account.
In some special accounts, such as interest-
payments or limited credit loans, we can get free check-
bills by issuing limited credit loans to go for free check-
pays.
"I think Lawrence area banks are taking advantage of students." Coleman said. "Students don't have a lot of money in the bank and 25 cents (per check) is a lot of money."
But he said that a credit union could be the biggest boon to students since the Senate began the war.
Coleman said the specifics of the proposal have not been worked out yet and that it might be a better approach.
THE IDEA FOR a credit union came from several credit unions at eastern universities, College of Business.
He said he hoped to pattern the credit union here after the student credit union at the University of Connecticut in Storrs, Conn.
That credit union has been in operation since 1979 and has assets of nearly $2 million, said Craig Lund, head of computer operations and operations of the Student Credit Union at the university.
IT OFFERS checking accounts, savings accounts and summer money certificates, Lund said. The union is staffed by more than 100 student volunteers and a paid full-time manager.
Lund said that 2,185 people participate in the credit union.
The credit union also is considering purchasing a money machine for its student union and working with a statewide bank to offer students a students no matter where they are in the state.
Coleman said he was unsure how Lawrence area banks would react to the idea of students depositing money into another institution and he afraid pressure might be used to kill the idea.
But Lund said that although one Connecticut bank has been hostile toward the student credit union, several other banks had been very helpful.
HE SAID MANY of the banks saw the student credit union as a recruiting ground for future workers and they liked the novelty of helping to start the credit union.
"They (the other banks) also look at us as being, I guess you'd call it, 'cute,' he said.
The University of Connecticut credit union began with a $20,000 grant from the *Student Senate* and has since backed each year for 7,000. Lund said.
The additional money is used to fund new programs the credit union is trying. Otherwise, the organization is now self-sufficient, he said.
Coleman said he would like to take the same approach and have the Student Senate appropriate up to $30,000 to get a credit union started.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student at fairs, said he believed more study should be undertaken before Senate approved the idea. Ambler said that more research and polling of students would be necessary.
students needed to be done to make sure that Ambler said that more research and polling of students needed to be done to make sure that there was a real need for a credit union.
"If students shop around, I'm sure they can find something that fits their needs," he said.
HE ALSO suggested that Senate ask the University employee credit union to expand its services to include students rather than spend the money to start a new credit union.
But Coleman said he thought the idea was worth pursuing and he would push for the credit union during the rest of his term, which ends in November, and behind.
Shankel named special counselor to Budig
By SHARON APPELBAUM Staff Reporter
Del Shankel, former acting KU chancellor, has not finished his administrative career vet.
Budig said those issues included aca programs and the University budget.
Chancellor Gene Budig who has named Shankel as his special counselor, said yesterday, "I intend to consult with Dr. Shankel on a regular basis." She also noted that the university's unique appreciation of the University of Kansas."
Budig announced the appointment at a luncheon following Monday's convocation and in-
"His contribution will not be limited to special projects," Budig said. "He will be consulted on many major issues that will confront the University."
Richard Von Ende, executive secretary to the chair of the National Research Council would also continue his work on special programs.
Shankler has been studying the problems of mixin athletics and academics. He is also negotiating contracts with private practice schools to provide security at Kansas Medical Center, Von Ende said.
Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs, said Shankel would help determine "what it's worth to have these people practice medicine and teach students."
Shankel he said he would be "happy to assist (Budie) in every wav possible."
this special rule for two reasons. First, I want to formally recognize his many contributions as executive vice chancellor and acting chancellor. Second, I want him to remain active in the administrative affairs of the University. He has much to offer KU.
Budig said, "I am asking Dr. Shankel to accept
"It is important to draw upon our very best faculty and staff."
Shankel plans to leave on sabbatical Sept. 15 to study in Japan. He will return in November to take on his new job, and he will teach biology and biology during the spring semester.
"I am heartened that Dr. Shankel is willing to assume this added responsibility," Budig said. "That characterizes the man and his academic career."
BY STEVE ROBRAHN
Parking-permit fee mistakes found
Staff Reporter
Some residence hall students have been overcharged for parking permits, but confusion surrounds exactly when the overcharges happened and how many students were affected
Embarrassed KU Parking Services officials said yesterday that anyone who was charged too much would receive a full refund of the over-charge.
"Those people will be contacted and their money will be guaranteed by you," said the attorney, director of law.
The problem arose when a clerk misunderstood the price of residence hall permits and charged students $24 per year instead of $2.
Kearns said his department was aware of only the persons who were overcharged—all on Monday.
HOWEVER, AN EMPLOYEE of the KU Student Assistance Center said a clerk had at-
See REFUNDS page 5
Wendy's offers food, money for pennies
FUNKERS
By MARK ZIEMAN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Wendy's, ain't no reason to take your pennies anyplace else.
In an effort to scrounge up extra pennies, Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers. 523 W. 23rd St. is offering its customers free merchandise for fifty cents in exchange for every roll of pennies.
Like other area businesses, Wendy's has been hit by a penny shortage. Manager Diane Douglas figures that a Junior Frosty or small fries is more than worth a roll of the precious pennies.
"Most of our customers don't realize there is a shortage of pennies," Douglas said. "Our bank is allotting us two or three dollars a day in pennies, and we need almost ten dollars a day."
A Lawrence restaurant is offering free french fries in exchange for pennies, which are in short supply these days.
Local banks, however, also want their share of the hoarded pennies.
Jill Grammer, manager of the Douglas County Bank at Ninth and Kentucky Streets, said that the bank will provide a service for the bank.
GRAMMER SAID THE bank was urging its customers to "please bring their pennies to us." The bank has even offered to roll the pennies she said.
Grammer said that the Wendy's offer was made for the purpose of getting more pennies back into circulation and was not intended to be used in hoard pennies even more in hope of future returns.
In fact, at one time the bank was getting $500 a week in wages, she said. Now it is getting only $20 a week.
"Our allotment of pennies has been cut to one-quarter of what we normally get a week," she
"We will not roll pennies for people to use at Wendy's," she said, citing an example of a customer bringing in $48 worth of pennies to be rolled for use at Wendy's.
Other businesses in the area also have been hit by the shortage, Grammer said, but as of yet no other business has resorted to giving out free merchandise.
Every week the Douglas County Bank is shipped an allotment of pennies from the First National Bank of Kansas City, Mo., which in turn sends an allotment to the Federal Reserve.
Bob Britton, assistant vice president of cash reserves for the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Mo., said that the bank began allocating pennies in March of 1980.
Grammer added that others might follow Wendy's example in the near future.
"This is simply a case of demand being greater than supply," Britton said. "We noticed in 1980 that the demand was quickly reaching the point of exhausting our inventory."
BRINTON SAID THE demand was caused mainly by the price of copper, which at the time was near the point where a penny was worth more than one cent.
Brinton said the price of copper has decreased since then, but the demand for pennies has not, and there is no evidence that it will.
Bronton said that although the penny shortage was serious, it was an artificial shortage.
"There are plenty of pennies out there," he said. "There has always been and always will be a trend for people to take pennies home and board them. People empty their pockets at night and don't bother to use the pennies the next day. I do that, too."
He said that unless people returned the pennies to circulation, matters could get much worse.
"We have been able to keep our allocation program at current levels because we have received additional shipments from the mint," he said.
Briton said it was possible that those allocations would be reduced in the future, possibly soon. This would cause the Federal Reserve to reduce its allotment by as much as 30 percent of the banks' shock waves that would hit hard at the banks, businesses, and ultimately, the consumer.
KU
It will be partly cloudy today with a 39 percent chance of thunderstorms, according to the National Weather Service forecast.
Highs today will be in the low to mid 80s. Lows tonight will dip into the lower 60s.
It will be continued partly cloudy with a rain on Thursday with a high in the mid 80s.
Violations of city zoning regulations may cause fraternity to close house
Four members of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity but one month to buy their house before it is put on sale.
The owner, Kent Synder, Overland Park, said he had already given the fraternity six months to decide whether to purchase the house.
However, even if the fraternity buys the house, it still faces violations of the city's zoning laws.
Under the law, no more than four unrelated people can live in a house in the Oread neigh-
ALTHOUGH THE FOUR fraternity members now living in the house meet this standard, the code also requires that a fraternity or sorority in the house be registered with the foot lot. The house has a 3,500 square foot lot.
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said the measure he could be sure are how large the condo complex is.
The Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sigma Chi, Acacia, Beta Theta PI and Alpha Tau Omafra graternities also are in the Oread neighborhood. A member of the Sigma Phi Epsilon house and one from the Acacia house said they were not sure if their lits were broken. Other houses could not be reached for comment.
Snyder said he recently sent Omega Psi Phi a letter stating that the members would have to buy their house at 1147 Kentucky St., pending action by the City Commission to change the
zoning for the lot, or he would put the house up for sale.
Brent Fouse, Pasedena, Calif., senior, and secretary for the Omaha PSi Phis, said the members had not yet sorted their mail, but would do so on their first meeting tomorrow night. He said they could take no action until they had their meeting.
FOUSE SAID THAT they were a small
externality and could not understand why the laws
were so strict.
"It's just a difference in opinion," Fouse said. "We just don't have a fraternity we just don't have 20,000 square feet."
Jeff Southard, president of the Oread Neighborhood Association, said that when the men leased the house, either they or the owner did not understand the zoning law.
"We don't really have anything against them, but we'd just like to see the zona rules uplift," he said.
Fouse said all they wanted was a house to live in with no limitations put on it.
ACCORDING TO Wildden, a fraternity cannot exist where the Omerna house is located.
Last spring, the city made Sydney and the four men spring in the house remove three Greek settlers.
Wildgen said that Snyder guaranteed him that
SOME OF MEYE'S AGE 5.
University Daily Kansan. August 26. 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Food, housing costs cause inflation to hit double digits
Inflation leaped back into double digits in July, increasing consumer prices at an annual rate of 15.2 percent with sharply higher food and housing costs, the government reported yesterday.
The pace was the fastest in more than a year, but Reagan administration officials said the higher prices had little significance, and a private insurance company has been slowing.
After adjustment for seasonal factors, the Consumer Price Index increased 1.2 percent for July, the biggest one-month jump since March 1980, the Labor Department said. A full year at that rate would compound to 15.2 percent.
The index reached 274.4 in July. That means goods and services that cost $100 in 1967, now cost approximately $274.
After May's Consumer Price Index showed less than a 10 percent increase for the third month, council chairman Murray Weidenbaum said, "Double-digit inflation . . . is behind us."
The rising prices meant an American paycheck did not go nearly as far as before, and the Labor Department's measure of spendable earnings after taxes was only up 2.1 percent.
Since June, grocery store prices increased 0.9 percent with the costs for beef, pork and fresh fruits leading the way. A pound of pork chops was up 12 cents for the month to $2.20 a pound, and the average cost of T-bone steak rose 21 cents to $4 a pound.
Housing costs increased 1.6 percent, mainly reflecting home financing costs, which were up 3.2 percent.
A White House spokesman said the consumer price increases had little significance.
the president's economic program is long term." he said. "We expect it to begin taking effect in the next several months. Then we will see some change."
Official: Begin. Sadat to resume talks
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt-Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin agreed to resume the Palestinian autonomy talks before the end of September, a senior Egyptian official said early today.
The official said the exact date of the talks, which have been deadlocked for more than a year, would be fixed in consultation with the United States
Egyptian Foreign Minister Gamal Hassan All was to call on U.S. Ambassador Alfred Atherton in Cairo Saturday to start consultations, the official said. He did not specify if the talks would be at the ministerial or a lower level.
The Egyptian official said he did not know what had happened at the two leaders' 11th summit conference to encourage Sadat to resume negotiations.
U.S. fighter planes sent to Israel
The Air Force also cleared the way for delivery of 14 F-16 Falcon fighter-borne lifting flight imagers in August. Of the fatal crashes of an F-16 Fighting Falcon, all Air Force Bases
WASHINGTON- U.S. Air Force crews flew three F-15 fighter Eagles to Israel yesterday, formally ending President Reagan's embargo on exporting warplanes to the Jewish state.
The F-15s, worth $25 million each, landed at an undisclosed Air Force base in Israel after a 13-hour flight. The F-16 aircraft still are awaiting safety clearance at two American Air Force bases, but the Pentagon said a few would leave for Israel this week.
The president had held up the planes because of Israel's raids using American-made aircraft on an iraqi nuclear reactor June 7, and on Pakistan's nuclear reactors.
In lifting the embargo, the administration did not address the question of whether Israel had violated its 185 arm agreement, which permits the use of weapons against civilians.
The administration said it wanted the planes dispute settled so it would not cloud discussions over Palestinian rights when Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin arrives in Washington Sept. 8.
Angola threatens to unleash troops
LUANDA, Angola -Angola charged yesterday that South African planes, troops and tanks were locked "in violent combat" with Angolan defenders deep inside the African country, and it threatened to mobilize its 20,000-man Cuba burglar to counter the invading force.
A spokesman for the South African defense headquarters in Windhoek, South-West Africa, remained silent on Angolan claims of a full-scale invasions.
Yesterday, the spokesman said, four South African soldiers were killed in heavy fighting along the Angola-South-West African border.
But the South African spokesman said the soldiers were killed while trying to destroy the Angolan bases of guerrillas belonging to the South-West Africa, said in South Africa, which administers South-West Africa, said it had been engaged in the guerrillas for control of the mineral-rich territory since the early 1980s.
The Angolan defense army claimed South African troops backed by squadrons of jeffrieshers and dozens of tanks, pushed 90 miles across the river.
The Angolan news agency Anagp said President Jose Eduardo Dos Santo a message to the United Nations, warning that the attack could ignite a "war" between the two countries.
Postal contract may raise postage
WASHINGTON - A new $4.8 billion contract covering the bulk of the nation's postal workers was approved by two major unions yesterday.
But to pay for the new pact, the U.S. Postal Service might increase the charge for sending first class mail to 20 cents.
Vincent Sombrotto, president of the 176,000-member National Association of Letter Carriers, said his union approved the contract by a 4x-1 margin. And Moe Biller, president of the American Post Workers Union, said his union would follow suit all ballots were counted.
The new contract would give workers an estimated 10.5 percent pay increase over their current annual salary of $19,195, with raises and bonuses of $2,100 over the next three years, plus cost-of-living adjustments. Workers also will get a $150-one-time bonus for restoring the contract within 45 days.
Postmaster General William Bolger said the increases could be paid for $12 a 20 cent rate for first class mail, a figure the Postal Service is now requesting. The independent Postal Rate Commission twice has rejected such a raise.
Both men denied that President Reagan's hard-line stand in the air traffic controllers' strike affected the outcome of yesterday's balloting. "Absolutely not," Biller said. "No effect whatsoever."
41 reported dead in El Salvador
SAN VALADOR, El Salvador—The bodies of 41 civilians were found yesterday in a sharp upswing of political killings in El Salvador, judicial officials said.
Most of the civilians had been shot to death and several showed signs of beating and torture, officials said. Another 23 people were reported killed Monday in political violence that has claimed more than 22,000 lives in 20 months.
Judicial authorities said the bodies of 20 of the civilians were found along a stretch of highway 22 miles southeast of the capital, in a part of the country where many of the victims died.
Meanwhile, 240 political prisoners declared an indefinite hunger strike yesterday to protect death threats against relatives, the Salvadoran Human Rights Organization said.
Voyager 2 continues after Saturn climax
PASADENA, Calif. -Climaxing a four-year journey, Journey V 2 sped toward the high point of its mission to Saturn yesterday, sending back eerie space music, pictures of battered and mishapen moons and revealing that famous rings are an extravagant necklace of thousands of ice strands.
By United Press International
under the command of its on-board computer, dived into a perfect course to make its closest approach at 10:24 p.m. CDT.
The spacecraft, gorging itself on information with television cameras swiveling and instruments clicking
"We have threaded this needle in space," exulted Esker K. Davis, the project manager, saying the craft would hit its target nearly a billion miles from earth, just 2.5 seconds ahead of schedule. An error of 20 seconds would have thrown the mission off its precise tinetread.
The nuclear-powered craft transmitted photos of the rings, which have fascinated astronomers for 371 years,
made of icy chunks circulating the planet. The rings appear to be formed of so many thousands of strands that the traditional picture of a half-dozen large rings and separate rings has "gone by" said Bradford Smith, a team leader.
Atlanta Press Club may appeal judge's ruling to bar cameras
coverage of the trial might do to
heigher public curiosity
about the case.
By United Press International
Cooper also pointed to guidelines set by the state Supreme Court, stating that trials may be televised only when the judge is not in agreement. Williams' attorney opposes cameras in the courtroom during the trial, which is tentatively to begin Oct. 5.
ATLANTA-The Atlanta Press Club says it may appeal a judge's ruling barring cameras from the October trial of two girls who were injured in two of 28 skylings of young blacks.
Fulton County Superior Court Judge Clarence Cooper ruled yesterday that the "potential harm" television
The pictures also revealed a huge hunter, about 60 miles wide, on the moor; the man is standing in a shallow pool.
The crater reminded scientists of the crater on the Mimas moon seen by voyager 1 last November. It covered about a third of the surface.
Voyager 2 also made recordings as it passed Saturn's bow shock, the point in space where the solar wind strikes the planet's magnetic field and flows around it.
There is no sound in space audible to human ears, but the recording was reconstructed from the spacecraft's music as a music synthesizer and tape recorder.
Speeded up to eight times its real speed, the tape sounded like the ringing of unearthly church bells—deep gongs mixed with higher peals rising and falling as the spacecraft moved through the landscape in immense insistent background note, like the ominous shark music from the movie, "Jaws."
Voyager 2 is sending back volumes of data, enough to keep researchers busy for years, leaving bermised scientists to ponder such mysteries such as the missing moonlets and the "hamburger moon."
They will have plenty of time. The Saturn sun is the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's last planet, and its years to come, until NASA reaches 2 mochs. Neptune near the edge of the solar system in 1986 and 1989—if its radio holds out.
Voyager beamed back pictures Monday revealing that the moon *looks not only oddly shaped, but orbits in an unusual way, perhaps knocked as a skeleton.*
Measuring 220 miles long by 130 miles wide, it looked originally like a buttered bread roll.
The spacecraft found no sign of the "lost moonlets" researchers had theorized must exist within Saturn's rings, sweeping like cosmic snowblows through the gaps seen between the rings.
Pulled by Saturn's gravity, the spacecraft accelerates to 54.113 mph at its closest approach point, giving scientists their closest look at its bands of cold gas storms ripped by 1,100 mph winds.
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University Daily Kansan, August 26, 1981
Page 3
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ROTC offers no immediate financial aid
Students who turn to the military as a last resort in paying for their education may be disappointed. No immediate aid is available through any of the three branches of the KU Reserve Officers' Training Corps.
Last year, about 15,000 students applied for the 1,500 scholarships offered nationwide through the Air Force ROTC program, according to Col. Jack Gentry, chairman of the KU Air Force ROTC. He estimated that about 10 of the recipients were enrolled at the University of Kansas.
The maximum number of scholarships awarded remained unchanged.
THE NAVY ROTC offers 6,000 scholarships nationwide, which a student could receive as early as his second semester in the program, accented to Cmdr. William Flynn, associate professor in the KU Navy ROTC.
He added that because of the division of the 6,000 scholarships among the different states, there is a better chance of receiving a scholarship, than students from other states.
"'The competition is still pretty keen in the Midwest, but not as tough as in the South.'"
A new student in the Army ROTC could not get financial aid for at least one year, because of the yearly basis on which the scholarships are ad- dressed according to Capt. William Taylor, assistant professor in the Army ROTC.
THE ODDS ARE better, however, because more scholarships are given through the Army than through the
other two branches of the ROTC. Last year, 26 ARMY ROTC students were on full scholarship.
"If you've got over a 3.0 average, you're in pretty good shape," Taylor said, about everybody who applied last year and had a good record got a scholarship."
Scholarships from all three ROTC branches cover a student's tuition, fees, books and other expenses, except room and board. Monthly living allowance is included.
1981-82 Budget Rəquest Forms are available in 208 Robinson. All Sports Clubs Interested in Student Senate Funding Allocations need to complete the request
ATTENTION SPORTS CLUBS
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Sept. 4 at 5:00 p.m.
Budget hearings will begin the week of Sept. 7th.
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The KU Delegation of THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF KANSAS
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, August 26, 1981
Opinion
Up the hill slowly
Looks like Chancellor Budig is fighting an uphill battle already. In his inaugural address on Monday, Budig stressed that his fundamental concern for the University was "the issue of adequate compensation for our faculty and staff," and he has promised to push for a Regents-approved 13 percent salary increase in the Kansas Legislature. Considering his background, he hoped we had the man to do the job.
But also on Monday, even before Budgi had a chance to fight, State Sen. Paul Hess announced that the 13 percent figure was "out of the realm of possibility." Anything above 8 percent would be tolerable, he said, although falling below that would be "disappointing."
Disappointing? More like disastrous. When Acting Cancellor Del Shankel presented KU's budget requests to the Board of Regents this summer, he requested a 17 percent increase in faculty salaries and fringe benefits. During the
past academic year, he reported, 42 faculty members left KU, and 21 of them said inadequate salaries were their chief reason for deserting the ship. Who can blame them? The 7 percent raise they got from the Legislature last spring will barely keep pace with inflation these days, much less provide incentive for teachers to stay on and work enthusiastically in their chosen fields.
Offering decent faculty salaries is the most basic of prerequisites for retaining a well-qualified teaching staff, which in turn reflects on the integrity of a school. The governor and the Legislature must begin taking this issue seriously if the University is to have any hope of continuing to be a respected state institution.
And if Budig really harbors hopes of KU becoming one of the top 10 state universities in the country, he will have to do quite the selling job to the powers that be. We can only hope they will give him a chance.
Brother gets words of advice for surviving freshman year
Monday marked the beginning of my junior year at al' KU. I'd nearly forgotten the confusion that seemed to haunt me through most of my first semester as a freshman.
but the memories (some of them might be more appropriately called nightmares) flooded back as I helped my brother Tom move assigned belongings into Pearson Schol Hall.
Now if I'd been the thoughtful, generous sort of sister into which Mother always hoped I'd evolve, I suppose I'd have taken more time to realize how much I should college at KU, particularly the first semester.
Of course, as Tom will attest, that's not the kind of sister I am.
But if a burst of inspiration were to sucess,
come over me, I might drop him a note. Perhaps
something like this:
Dear Tern
Well, you should have had your first taste of college classes by now—notice I say 'should
REBECCA
CHANEY
have." If you're already cutting classes, I hold little hope for the rest of the semester and you can ignore the rest of this letter.
I thought you might appreciate a few bits of useful information garnered during the past two years. Follow this advice closely and you can tell Mother to forget the pre-packaged "survival kits" she'll be hearing about in the mail—ask for the cash instead.
Then again, you survived enrollment without the benefit of summer orientation or my excursion (although you who vacations for three months may never walk). Our Work deserves little empathy in the first place.
Actually, having coped with the hassle of enrollment from the beginning, you should be able to manage the rest without too much difficulty.
The key to surviving at KU is learning to understand and live with the system. You are not the student body president, the son of a rich and influential alumnus or even a Kansan columnist, and you probably won't be able to change the course during the next six months.
One rule of thumb is this: If what you need to do or know is extremely important, you'll have
an answer in no time; *"Come back tomorrow"*
and "You'll have to see someone else about that"
If, on the other hand, your problem is totally insignificant, you are guaranteed one long, drawn-out, complicated procedure after another until you finally give up, as I did after trying for several weeks to be disenrolled from one of two identical Western Civilization sections last spring.
Don't be too discouraged by all this, though. Once you've learned to deal with the disadvantages of a large university, you will find that KU, thanks to its size and reputation, has a lot to offer academically and socially, as the new chancellor will assure you.
Try to do the little more studying than partying at the beginning of the semester so you can do more socializing and less cramming in the final week. (Mother made me promise to deliver that line.)
When the inevitable all-nighters do come your way, you can always liven up the evening with a "Joe's run." Doughnuts and cream horns help digestion of books and other materials. I won't be surprised if you're going to how to get to Joe's. There isn't a student on campus who couldn't point the way.
As to your living arrangements, you will probably enjoy school hall life. But if you have trouble adjusting to life with 50 men, just be thankful it's not 150 men or even 400.
When it comes to fixing up your room, the best way to get it done is to send a list of all needed items to Grandma. Who knows, she may even stick in a batch of homemade cookies, though I never got any. One of the inequities of life is that when men leave home, they get homemade cookies; a woman's lucky to get a set of cookie cutters or cake tins.)
I guess that's about it. Best luck for the coming semester. Don't worry, you'll do fine. Hundreds of other students manage without such sage advice.
Just one word of warning: Do not send your dirty laundry to Grandma. It may mille on the wall.
Love, Barbara
P. S. I noticed there are signs around F'Int Hall, "Danger, Dangling Objects," with sinks and toilets lying nearby. What with Marvin Hall and other renovations, campus is full of such demo cases, we read the signs and do not get hit by a falling tree that won't survive this semester. I'll never live it down.
Reagan's plan deserves a chance
At first blush, the oft-cited historical economic changes of the Reagan administration appear nothing more than a deluded effort to rob blindly from the poor and give generously to the wealthy. Such a distortion is especially magnified when taken in the context of the yelpings of special interest groups that represent the poor.
But such noise is to be expected and should be seen as natural considering the cold fact that federal monies to social services are being trimmed. Indeed, the poor, who expect generous handouts from a bloated bureaucracy, would not be overjoyed when the funding of their livelihood has decreased to a trickle.
Hair Oil
John Porter
81
That is not to say, however, that the distressful voices of the poor should drown out
PETER MAYER
BRAD
STERTZ
the more discerning voices that point out the long-range benefits of the tax and budget cuts. This more cool, less panicky position be taken to reinforce the Reagan budget cuts.
Certainly in the short-run there will be problems as people used to handouts from the state will find the coffers empty. Certainly in the short-run there will be welfare recipients, college students, farmers and elderly who will find their futures muddled. And it is certainly these people who have been raising the greatest outcry at the Reagan plan.
What has been missed, however, by these premature doomsayers is that the crux of the economic package is short-range belt tightening. No change can be enacted, no system revised, without sacrifice. But the early critics of the Reagan plan cry that they will be giving to the system, and when they are done, there will nothing left for them to take. It is in this conjecture that they are wrong.
"But what's this?") they cry, "Are we to depend on (shudder) big business?" Precisely, replies the Reagan administration. By sacrificing now, the White House maintains, the future will be immeasurably brighter.
The doomsayers cry that their supportive programs will be slashed beyond recognition. The Reagan administration has promised not a disruption of services, but a scaling back and a trimming of bureaucratic fat and waste. It is the administration's contention that the federal government has grown too pervasive, reaching octopodous dimensions.
Thus, in the effort to revamp and revive the economy, in the spirit of lowering the oppressively high interest rates and in the name of lowering unemployment, the Reagan administration decided to decrease the responsibility of social service by expanding the private sector.
As the administration sees it, the industrial output of our land is oppressed by the lack of money available for investment. Added to that is the onerous burden of federal regulations. And added to that, the American economy is hopelessly stagnated in a no-win situation with high interest rates, high unemployment and high income; the economy is trapped in an economist's nightmare, with the rope tightening as the federal government expends each year.
To remedy this, the Reagan administration announced a Jeffersonian plan that would cut the role of big government in the everyday lives of you and me. By lowering the cost of maintaining a federal government gone rampant, the White House expects the country, meaning you and me, to have more money for investments, more money for saving and greater growth that would provide as many services as did the sluggish, old New Deal method.
Thus, with lower unemployment, lower interest rates and lower inflation, the
This is the point that the derivative voices fail to recognize. They fail to see that when big business is allowed to expand, more jobs will develop. They fail to see that if business can grow, it must expand, then interest rates will drop. And they fail that when business growth inflation should sink.
government will no longer have to compensate for the currently high economic indexes. The services will, however, be around for those who truly need them.
It is the borderline cases who will be trimmed out. But they will not be trimmed out for long because when the Reagan economic plan takes effect the goods and services they once got from the government will be unnecessary with an improved economy.
After all, something had to be done. Our economy was vexing even the most expert economists. Our nation was hopelessly mired in conditions that punished our industry and hence economy, while promoting the industry of nations like Japan and West Germany. And our system was founded upon an economic theory that was eventually abandoned by its own creator, John Maynard Keynes, because it was unworkable.
Change was called for and the Reagan administration, on the mandate of the last election, delivered. Now, as the cupboards become more bare and the handouts more expensive, it is time for a new economic approach that has been around since our Constitution was written
We are in the midst of a change for the better and we must not be hasty in condemning an economy that is designed to create wealth instead of distributing wealth.
Letters to the Editor
To the editor:
'Safety' may not be so easy at Wolf Creek
Tim Elmer's story on the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant as a business boom for Burlington, Kan. (Aug. 20) is worth reading. No less an authority than Edwina Ware, waitress at the company, then there, says that the nukel plant, now under construction, i.e., shall remain, "safe."
After hundreds of hours pouring over books, articles, interviews and reports公司提供 construction functions.
COLUMN
THE COLUMNS WORKSHOP® (981) BY CHICAGO TRIBUNE
IN NEWS & INDIGO
malfunction of commercial nuclear plants, I would have thought otherwise.
Edwinna doesn't know what they'll do with the wastes, "but whatever they do, I am sure it will be safe," she says. Somebody oughta tell her to pass up the seafood in San Francisco, where thousands of drums containing highly radioactive wastes are breached and leaking at the bottom of the bay. Pass, also, on the water in the Columbia River, where 150,000 gallons of radioactive wastes were spilled at Anford, Wash., within 200 yards of the river bank.
...WELL, MR. PRESIDENT, THE GOOD NEWS IS THAT WE HAVE SOME AMAZINGLY CLEAR PICTURES...
The Burlington mayor says we should take a lesson from France and reprocess spent fuel: "When they get done with it, they don't have any trouble with nuclear waste because there is nothing left of it," he says. I'm impressed! A typical commercial nuke plant yearly turns out over 200 pounds of plutonium, which has a half-life of 24,390 years. It will decompose completely into other elements (some of them lethally radioactive) in about 500,000 years. Nothing can speed up, slow down or alter that process, and it happens apparently. Incidently, one pound of plutonium is able to kill every human being on the entire planet if everyone gets a microscopic dose in his lungs.
Burlington gets two swell new schools and brisk trade at the restaurants and lumberyards
Everyone has an opinion, and the right to it. Sometimes an opinion is informed by facts, sometimes by wishful fantasy and sometimes by a wallet full of bucks.
Jack Klinknett Lawrence resident
Decal rule takes sides
To the editor:
This letter concerns itself with the bovine policy that has been established by a person or persons of similar character associated with Parking and Traffic Control. On more than one occasion, I have received a parking ticket for posting the parking permit decal on the wrong side of my car's bumper. Irrespective of any underlying logic, the determination of which side is the wrong side is made by a person interpreting P&TC policy.
I assume the policy of requiring drivers of automobiles to place the parking permit decal on the left side of the bumper was established for the convenience of officers who have undergone training. I should only on that side. To have them look elsewhere must cause them severe anguish, which results
in the "offender" being issued a ticket. Also, for such a trivial offense, one could assume this practice was necessary to maintain the ticket-writing quota of the day.
Truthfully, I would assume that this policy is based on domestic automobiles. Upon surveying any parking lot, one will find that most tail pipes (the element protruding from an automobile that expels gashes resulting from internal engine combustion and is usually colored black) are located on the right side and/or behind one of the rear wheels. The exception to the rule is foreign cars. I own an automobile that was made in Germany. The tailpipe is on the left side and automotive past the rear bumper. If I put the hallowed parking permit daced on the left side of the bumper, it would be burnt out or completely covered with exhaust fumes within two months. Thus, I would then begin to get tickets for not keeping my clean decal遇到 to be seen and read.
Moral of the story: No police can be established that fits all persons in all situations at the same time.
David J. Szymanski
Assistant professor of health,
physical education and recreation
The University Daily KANSAN
(USPS 56940) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday, students may expect Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class students are for $13 monthly; Kansas 60435) Subscriptions by mail are for $12 per month; Kansas 60448) Subscription by mail are for $16 per month or $8 year outside. Mail is sent to the Kansas county and for six months or $8 year outside. Semester, paid through the student activity fees.
changes of address to the University,
Daily Kissan, Fri. Hall. The University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS 86045
Editor ... Business Manager
Scott Fault ... Larry Leinwood
Managing Editor ... Robert J. Schaul
Campaign Editor ... Jeremy Surry
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Sales and Marketing Adviser .. John Obernan
General Manager and News Advisor .. Ralf
University Daily Kansan, August 26, 1981
Page 5
Union food manager resigns
By DIANE MAKOVSKY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Mariann Scheetz, manager of Kansas Union Food Services, is leaving her job after a little more than seven years. Friday will be her last day.
"And I think there will be career opportunities where I'm going."
"My husband has a job in New York. That's why I'm leaving. It has nothing to do with the Union. Schoetz said. "I've moved enough places to know that most things have elites in them."
Scheetz, her husband and 18-year old son will be moving to Westchester County, N.Y. Her other three children will remain in the area. Two children of Kansas and one lives in Kansas City, Kan.
"This is a case of the parents leaving the children," Scheetz said.
Omega
From page 1
the house was not a fraternity and that no more than four people would be living there.
Fouse said, "We're going to get this deal straightened out no matter what it takes. If we win this battle maybe other small fraternities won't be hassled."
The fraternity is small, but proud, Fouse said. He recited what he said was the Omega Psi Phi Eight men thoroughly immersed in true Omaha. The greater asset than 50 with lukewarm enthusiasm.
ABOUT THE POSITION she was leaving,
coach's name is it's primarily a position of
coachs and teammates.
The coordination involves choosing the products, scheduling personnel, adding people to care of catered affairs and providing food services in seating areas in the Union and the Satellite Union.
The major change that has been made since Scheetz took over is in the bakery. The bread for the soup and salad bar, the desserts and the rolls are now baked in the Union kitchen. Most of these items were store-bought when Scheetz took over food service operations.
Both Scheetz and the kitchen staff took pride in making most of their meals from scratch, scorching.
Scheetz described her staff as helpful and "delightful."
Lilly Coults, secretary for the dining services
of the staff was saddened that Scheetz was leaving.
ACCORDING TO Ruthie Stohs, assistant personnel manager for the Union, no one has been hired to replace Scheetz vet.
Scheetz received her dietitian's degree from Drexel University, in Philadelphia in 1954.
Scheetz had experience in food service operations at the University of Delaware in Newark, Del, before she took her position here at the University of Kansas.
She said that she never wanted to work in a hospital, where the emphasis would be on nurses.
At the Union, she said, nutrition was considered in the cooking of meals but she could not tell people what to select in the cafeteria lines.
Oracle Corp.
Mariann Scheetz, director of food services for the Kansas Union, is leaving her post after more than seven years.
From page 1
tempted to overcharge her last Thursday when she was purchasing a permit for a handicapped student.
Refunds
Gillian Logan, the Student Assistance Center employee, said she had gone to the parking services office in Hoch Auditorium with a $22 check from the handicapped student.
A clerk told her she was $2 short of the amount required to purchase a residence hall permit. Logan said, but when she returned with her amount, another clerk told her the fee was only $2.
"These two clerks had a little discussion about it," Logan said. "And finally the first clerk said something like, 'Wow, I've been doing this all week—I'll have to start processing refunds.'"
Kearns denied any overcharges occurred last week because he said the clerk in question didn't know where the charge was.
PHYLILES WILLIAMS, office manager for parking services, said overcharging for parking permits had never happened at the University and attributed the mistake to human error.
"It is unusual, but the rates have all changed this year," Williams said. "The person who made the mistake is a good employee and has been longer than anyone else in the department."
An accounting computer in the parking services department is expected to determine who was overcharged, regardless of whether the student paid with cash or check, she said, and refund checks will be mailed by the comproller's office.
Students who paid the two extra dollars will be notified of the mistake and will receive a refund
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, August 26, 1981
Student leader pleased with Budig's accessibility
Tuesday's Student Senate punch-and- cookie gathering with new KU Chancellor Gene A. Budig indicated a swing in education and administration relationships.
The swing is toward more accessibility of students to the chancellor, according to Bren Abbott, student body vice president.
BUDIG SPENT AN hour chatting with about 45 student senators in the Kansas Union, outlining his goals.
Abbett said that Budig appeared very receptive to students, as was Del Shankel when he acted as interim chancellor last year, but that both were different from Archie R. Dykes, KU's former chancellor of seven years.
"I never even met Dykes, and I was involved in student government," Abbott said.
"But I've met with Chancellor Budig four times, even though we have barely started the semester."
David Adkins, Student Executive Committee chairman, said he, too, thought that Budig's approach contrasted with Dykes's administration.
"Students were afraid to approach Strong Hall when Dykes was chancellor." Adkins said.
"In the past, an edict was handed down. Now, I feel confident that the administration will solicit our input before major decisions are made."
In addition, Budig has included Student Body President Bert Coleman his weekly Monday morning meetings with selected staff and faculty members.
to "increase the amount of student involvement in University government"
MEETING PERIODICALLY with the Senate was one way Budig proposed
Coleman, who was not present at the reception, said Budig was providing "an access to information that could be an asset to student government."
In his discussion with students, Budig
instead several student-related priorities
and emphasized the need for a
One major goal was to establish a pre-enrollment system, but Budig was not certain when could he be implemnted before he had yet had time to explore the possibilities.
Pre-enrollment for KU has been discussed for the past several years at KU, but never implemented.
Loren Busy, Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee chairman, said that he sponsored a Senate bill last year to re-enroll, but it died in committee.
Busby said he might re-introduce the resolution, but such a decision would require approval from the administration and faculty, as well.
SCHNEIDER
OTHER GOALS BUDIG outlined were sustaining present enrollment figures and a recruiting of more minority students.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig met with student senate representatives at an informal reception yesterday.
JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staff
Ticket sales continue
University of Kansas students will be getting a little more football for their money when they purchase season tickets this week.
"There are seven home games versus five or six in years past." Woeberd insisted.
On Tuesday, KU seniors began
purchasing tickets, costing $50 more than
last year.
Last year, a season football ticket
included five home games and 400
"We're trying to increase revenue to cover rising costs," she said.
bad football ticket prices had not rise significantly in the past three years.
Susan Wachter, athletic business manager, said the increase was needed to earn revenue and to cover the cost of an extended home game schedule.
included five home games and cost $19; Wachter said football ticket prices had not risen significantly in the past three years.
"We're trying to increase revenue to cover rising costs," she said.
Juniors can purchase tickets today; sophomores can purchase them Thursday and freshmen can purchase tickets on Friday. Students must have a KU identification card with a current flicker on it to purchase tickets.
Tickets will reainm on sale this week and can be purchased on a seniority basis between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. at house, Nancy Welch, ticket manager said.
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University Daily Kansan, August 26, 1981
Page 7
Trial scheduled for El Dorado couple charged with selling uninspected meat
By LILLIAN DAVIS Staff Reporter
Buying and selling uninspected meat is against the law in Kansas, as David and Ngam Thi Remsberg have discovered.
Butler County Attorney Bill Ronan said his office had proof that the Remsbers were buying adult-weight hogs at small book auctions, butchering them in a small stock on their property and then selling them mostly to Vietnamese customers.
The El Dorado couple has been charged with 11 counts of selling uninspected meat and one count of not having acquired a license to slaughter meat animals from the Kansas Board of Agriculture.
Ronan said their trial was scheduled for Sept.1.
Ronan said he had evidence that the customers would come to the Riemsberg's home, select the hog they wanted and then wait for it to be butchered.
"The conditions were generally
On the Record
A burglary, a larceny and an attempted burglary were reported to Lawrence police Monday.
Burglar's stole an antique clock, an antique mailbox, a portable television, a wall picture and a kitchen clock from Kent. Terrace sometime Monday night.
A larceny occurred at Henry's Drive In, Sixth and Missouri streets late Monday night. Police said a lawn mower worth about $153 was taken.
Police report the total loss was around $535.
unsantary, with a great deal of blood and files," Renan said.
Would-be burglars broke through a second-story window of Ed Marling Department Store, 825 Massachusetts St., Monday morning and tried to open the safe. They were unsuccessful, police said.
He said the hoga were shot outside and then dragged through the dirt into a cave.
"The carcasses were cut up while still on the ground." Ronna said.
The Remsberg's lawyer, Dan Dwyer, said there was no question that slaughtering was being done at the Remsberg's residence. However, he claimed that it was done only for family consumption, a stipulation allowed by law.
His operation was not big enough to handle more than a few hogs at a time; only enough for his family members, Dwyer said.
Dwyer said if Remberg did sell any of the hogs, "it would have been impossible for him to go outside of the law more than a very negligible amount."
Notified of the slaughters last spring by neighbors, the Butler County health department asked the Remsberg several times to close their operation.
By JOLYNNE WALZ Staff Reporter
Money and meter problems leave bills at Med Center
The University of Kansas Medical Center does not have the money to pay its electrical bills.
Exactly how much is owed is not yet known, but Kansas City, Kan., Board of Public Utilities officials estimate that a person has an estimate in about two months.
Only $192,131 was paid on the June bill of $297,000.
When the BPU raised its electrical rates in May, the Med Center's utility budget had already been set by the Legislature, based on the old rates, Keith Nitcher, director of university business affairs, said.
Also, since May 5, when a metering error was discovered at the Med Center, the BPU has been trying to determine how much the
Med Center owes in retroactive payments.
In May, the Med Center complained that its bill was too high. Technicians from the BPU met with KU representatives to see if they could discover what was wrong with the meter at the Med Center, Silvester Byrd, public relations director of the BPU, said.
Because of the presence of four screws in the metering device, the meter had been registering less than 10 percent. The center than it should have, Byrd said.
"We're assuming it was an oversight," he said. "Efforts are being made now by the Board of Directors to make a duplicate metering board."
The original metering board has been corrected, but the duplicate board will register electricity use as it was recorded from sometime in
1975 until the problem was detected on May 5.
"I think the first order of importance is determining what the outstanding bill would really be," Byrd said. "I'm sure that KU has not budgeted enough money to pay their current bills, and we understand their problem. Of course, the BPU has a problem. too."
To obtain back payment, the BPU would have to file a claim with the state Senate Ways and Means Committee.
Committee chairman Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said that he thought the Med Center had paid its bills in good faith and that he did not support giving the BPU a retroactive payment.
Nitcher refused to comment on the possibility of retroactive payment.
"That will have to be discussed on a high level." he said.
THE BEST PRICE
THE BEST PRICE
• 76 Lines of Quality Audio
• Complete Service
• Discount Prices
• Mail Order
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
GRAMOPHONE shop
Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, Ks.
842-1811
• 76 Lines of Quality Audio
• Complete Service
• Discount Prices
• Mail Order
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
GRAMOPHONE
shop
Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, Ks.
SALE!
CAMPUS SPORT
SR
The ideal lightweight campus commuter. Japanese Quality at a super low price.
SAVE
$2500
off list price
CORRADO
Mick's Bicycle Shop
1339 Massachusetts
842-3131
SVA FILMS Presents
Tonight
SEE THE ORIGINAL 'PSYCHO'
UNCUT! THE VERSION TV
DIDN'T DARE
SHOW!
ALFRED
HITCHCOCKS
PSYCHO
M
SEE THE ORIGINAL'PSYCHO'
UNCUT! THE VERSION TV
DIDN'T DARE
SHOW!
ALFRED
HITCHCOCKS
PSYCHO
M
Plus: Hitchock's NUMBER 17 7:30 p.m. $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium
DEADLINE AUGUST 31 KU STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE
If you have not purchased your insurance for this school year stop by Watkins Memorial and get your enrollment forms for the 81-82 school year. This must be in by August 31. If you have any questions, you may call toll free at 1-800-527-0519 or 749-0477.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, August 26, 1981
City commission defers talks on lot development
By JOE REBEIN Staff Reporter
Discussion of the site for a development planned at Fifth and California streets was deferred last night by the Lawrence City Commission after a lawsuit filed by the office took commissioners by surprise.
The suit, filed by Vangard Corporation under Duane Schwaad, asks that the City Commission be forced to open the building permit it revoked in July.
The commission had approved the site plan for the 9-acre development, but the building permit was later revoked when the commission found that Schwada did not properly follow plotting requirements.
The attorney for Schwada, Richard Zinn, called City Manager Buford Watson late Tuesday asking him to defer the matter until Sept. 15 he could be present to give the developer's views.
The commissioners agreed with Wikibooks recommendation to defer the discussion.
In other matters, commissioners passed a proposal to draw guidelines that Gene Bernofsky, 1201 New York St., could follow to get a Community Development grant loan for rehabilitating his home.
Bernofsky's application for a $16,000 loan/grant had been delayed until
signed an agreement to conform with the city's environmental code.
Lynn Goodell, director of Community Development, said a pile of firewood next to Bernofsky's house was the main violation.
"There has been some implications made that Bernosfalk moved here from Colorado to milk the city for some money. Larnide now." "That is something," Bernosfalk said.
Bernofsky's attorney, Richard Larimore, accused the city manager's staff of "playing games" with Bernofsky's application.
He said inflation had added 20 percent to the $18,000 Bernofsky needed to meet its goals.
Goodell said the Community Development Committee would have to review Bernofsky's application to bring it up to date.
Commissioner Don Bins, however, called Bernofsky a "chronic malice."
Mayor Marcel Francisco said most of the planning for the developer completed.
Commissioners plan to review the developer competition and the comprehensive downtown plan at a study session Sept. 16.
The commission also instructed the staff to continue negotiations with Tasks Associates, the Evanson III., Ill.; to work with consultants with about downtown planning.
"We have an overall good downtown plan," Commissioner Tom Gleason said. "Now it is time to start implementing it."
HAIR GALLERY
Welcome Students Back!
Bring this ad in for 5.00 off
on any service by our trained hair designers
Grooming for Men - Beauty for Women
hair
garden
H 8
- hair analysis
* reconditioning/styling
* skin treatment
* creative hair coloring
* manicuring
* hair style support systems
8
REDKEN
2330 Louisiana
Tuesday-Saturday
Thursday evenings
Please call for an appointment 842-8379
INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE
THE FUJICA STX-1 SLR.
STX-1
FUJICA
A SMALL PRICE TO PAY TO SHOOT LIKE A PRO!
Sale in progress
STX-1 Kit Featuring
FUJI FILM
Film & Cameras
28mm Wide Angle Kominar Lens
135mm Telenphoto Kominar
Full really aims to please with the new 360mm photography, introduced to 360mm photography, has modern light, light-dressing styling. An in-depth understanding of quality features that make picture take longer than ever. The STXI-7 you get the accuracy of full aperture silicon metering, a bright control center view finder, speed to 17000/of a second. Plus, an automatic exposure speed also has a convenient bayonet mount for changing lenses FAST. The Fujica STXI-7 creates a pretty picture. In fact, you won't find a better reason to buy this camera, and give it a
Your choice of these lenses
Lens
1 * Electronic Flash
2 * DeLuxe Carrying Case
3 * Sky Filter
4 * Lens Care Kit
5 * Fuji Color Print Film
6 * AA Batteries
7 * Better Pictures Booklet
- Better Pictures Booklet
269 $ ^{9 5} $
1 • Soft Pouch Case for Lens
Pre-Inventory Clearance Sale in Progress
Complete Price Kit
ZERCHER
PHOTO
19 Iowa 1107 Mass
ZERCHER PHOTO
On Campus
919 Iowa
KU JAZZ ENSEMBLE AUDITIONS will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., 414 Murphy Hall. Sign up for an audition time next to 214 Murphy Hall.
TODAY
SURUNGE $FITNESS$ PROGRAM
BASILIEN CEEIT AT b with 4 PATRAM
BASILIEN CEEIT
ENTRY DEADLINE AND MANAGERS MEETING for a League touch football will be 8:45 p.m. Gymnasium 1 Robinson Center.
UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY
will be at 6 p.m.
224 Bathing Griddle
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 on the Big Eight Room Kansas State.
ENTRY DEADLINE AND MANAGERS MEETING for Recreation Services Trophy League p.m., gym, pymnasmum. L.Robinson Center.
ZE
ENTRY DEADLINE AND MANAGERS MEETING for football will be at 7:30 p.m. gym, University 1, Robinson Center.
THE NEW LIFE STUDENT
THE FEMALE STUDENT
study at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room.
THE FIRST SESSION OF THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR will meet at the Wesleyan University Baptist Ministries Center, 124 Oreared Avenue, the seminar is on Christian spirituality.
ROCK CHALK REVUE MEETING for all interested living groups will be at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room. Union.
EPIISCOPAL EUCHARISTIC
we will meet at aoon in
Pandorfbah 1
TOMORROW
THE KEU GERMAN CLUB will hold a kafesetu at 4:30 p.m. 405 Wesley St.
Pence's Garden Center West
914 West 23rd 842-1596
- tropical plants * hanging baskets
brackets
Need a solution to the career mystery?
Monday-Friday Complete plant care system Saturdays
10 a.m.-8 p.m. 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
- plant food
- potting soil
telephone
864-4758
its elementary, my dear Watson.
Find out about the Administration of Justice Program offered by Wichita State University.
It offers the perfect solution to your dilemma:
● Major areas include general administration of justice, agency administration, corrections services, interimiation, prevention programs, development and security services.
● Associate, bachelors and master's degree programs offered—and nondegree bound students also welcome.
● All necessary courses offered
- All necessary courses offered on the University of Kansas campus
For more information, contact the administration of justice coordinator in room 40 of Lippincott Hall (old Green Hall)
Get the Lowest Prices on your Most Favorite Jeans & Tops at KING of Jeans levis Back-to-School Sale
at KING of Jeans levis
Sale
today thru Sunday only
Levi's
Recycled Jeans
st. legs, boot cuts, flares
(hundreds to choose from)
$1199
Dee Cee
Painter's Pants
white, red, khaki, green
l. blue, royal navy, yellow
(reg. $17)
$1299
denim - 14**
Levi's Recycled
Junior Jeans
sizes 1-15 reg to $29
$999
Levi's
Western Shirts
reg to $21
$1399
Levi's
Recycled
Corduroys
bells, st. legs, boot cuts
$999
All
Men's
Fashion Jeans
Brittania,
Levi's Movin' On
$5 OFF reg price
(sale items excluded)
All
Gal's Jeans
Levi's, Chic, Lee, Brittania
$5 OFF reg price
(sale items excluded)
All Levi's
Corduroys
st. legs, boot cuts, flares
10 colors! reg $20
$1599
Levi's slightly irregular
California Straights
reg. to $29
$1797
All
Designer Jeans
(Calvin Klein, Jordache,
Sergio Valente)
$5 OFF
(sale items excluded)
Top brands
Junior Tops
$20 value
$599-$899
Levi's Recycled Jeans
Dee Cee Painter's Pants
$11^{99}
$1299
denim. 14"
Levi's Recycled
Junior Jeans
sizes 1-15 reg to $29
$999
$999
Levi's, Kennington, Campus
Men's
Short Sleeve
Shirts
reg to $22
$899-$1299
$8^99-$12^99
$13^99
Levi's Recycled Corduroys bells, st. legs, boot cuts $999
All Men's Fashion Jeans Brittania.
$999
All
Men's
Fashion Jeans
Brittania,
Levi's Movin' On
$5OFF reg
price
$5 OFF reg price
All Gal's Jeans
All Levi's
Corduroys
$5OFF reg price
All Levi's
Corduroys
st, legs, boat cuts, flares
10 colors! reg $20
$1599
Levi's slightly irregular California Straights
st. legs, boot cuts, flares
10 colors! reg $20
$15^99
$17^97
All Designer Jeans
$5 OFF
Top brands Junior Tops
Top brands
Junior Tops
$20 value
$599-$899
$ 5^{99} - $ 8^{99}
Don't miss this chance to save - This week only at
KING of Jeans Levi's
S
740 Massachusetts
University Daily Kansan, August 26, 1981
Page 9
Royals GM to undergo cancer treatment
By United Press International
Kansas City, Mo.-Joe Burke probably will be able to keep a near normal schedule of his duties as executive vice president and general manager of the Kansas City Royals while he undergoes treatment for cancer, the Kansas City Times reported Monday.
Burke, who has been the Royals general manager for seven years, was diagnosed as having cancer of the colon codes last week, the Times reported.
The KU football team may be winding down its pre-season practices, but a number of other KU teams are just getting started.
Dr. Ronald Stephens, director of the Oncology Department at the Med Center and one of two doctors treating Burke, said the Royals 57-year-old executive had cancer in more than three dozen places.
Ion-revenue sports trvouts scheduled
Head Coach Marty Pattin will hold a meeting for all those interested in playing on the KU baseball team, including players from Allen Field House. Tryouts will be
held tomorrow and Friday.
The KU women's basketball team will hold an open meeting today, 4 p.m., in Room 101, of Allen Field House.
"WITH CHEMOTHERAPY treatment, the survival rate is very good, very high," Stephens said.
Burke, contacted at Royals Stadium Monday, said that his doctors have assured him the condition could be treated successfully.
"Luckily for me, I have not been a smoker or a drinker, and I have age on
Tryouts for the men's tennis team will be Saturday, August 29, 9 a.m., at the Allen Field House varsity tennis courts.
my side. With all the bad news, the doctors have been able to offer some encouragement," he said.
"AT THIS time, I'm fairly confident and encouraged by what the doctors have said. I intend to do what I can to beat it."
Burke reportedly sought medical advice two weeks ago, after a lump developed on the left side of his throat.
---
Leaving Town?
Intramural touch football
Buy your Thanksgiving and Christmas airline tickets now
Get the best prices and availability.
managers meeting tonight in Robinson Gym No.1
Maupintour travel service K.U. Union 749-0700 Mass
Trophy League—6 p.m.
Rec. A—6:45 p.m.
Rec. B—7:30 p.m.
NOW OPEN
Practice limited to Small Animals & Horses
The University Daily
841-9956
KANSAN WANT ADS
LAWRENCE VETERINARY CLINIC James N. Kraft D.V.M.
1100 W. 23rd
841-9056
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or fewer ...
Each additional word
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
$2.50 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.50 $3.80
$1.25 $1.25 $1.40 $1.60 $1.80 $2.00
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 9 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 9 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 9 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 9 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
The Kanans will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Ging Fu classes Monday & Wednesday
evening at 7:30 in Robinson Center
beginning August 24. For information call
bob at 841-2928.
9-2
(Cinemax)
sunflower
cablevision
844 New Kingsway 601-3200
Did you know that Sunflower Cablevision has a brand new, 24-hour-a-day movie channel?
It's called CinemaX. This September you can see movies like Cousin Couline, "My Bodyguard, the Emigrant, the Emigrant and the Courier," you like like like movie classics, action-adventure films or cut classics, you'll love CinemaX. And CinemaX installation is just half price or 50% off 100 or more for sunflower Caviation.
---
Like to think? Love to dream? "Dream understood?"
KANASA (can-sha) - Bu Catalog 24-6s to Kansas, Box 2213, 8-26
KS 60045.
Visit the Book End in Quantrill's Flea Market, for quality used books at reasonable prices. 811 New Hamphire, weekends 10-5. 8-29
Hillel
PRINCETON PLACE FACITO APARTMENTS.
PRINCETON PLACE FACITO APARTMENTS.
for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces,
dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen
washer, dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen
washer, dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen
washers. Named "2920 Princeton Place, of bone
house."
Moving out of town. To sublease a
bedroom unfurnished apartment. Item $280.
water paid. $150.00 bonus offered. #41-8066
9-4
בנ
the Jewish Student Organization
invites you to a...
Single room for rent, new wiring, new
electrical, new fire alarm system, new locks,
10 minute walk from campus. $90/mo.
Call between 8-5-3228.
Welcome (back) ice cream Party
Bananas
FOR RENT
For more information or a ride call the office at 864-3948
Thursday,
Aug 27
8-10pm
ATTENTION CHICAGO AREA STUDENTS
Sunflower Cabinet carries WGN-TV on cable Channel 2. Call 841-2100 for more information.
8-31
Middle Eastern extravaganza featuring Nejal Saturday, Aug. 29, Lawrence Arts Center. 7:30 pm, $2.50 seated. 8:28
ENTERTAINMENT
Bachelor Pad, Grad Students, Profiles 2, BR Modular home, appliances, washer/dryer, C/A on 40 acres S. of Lawrent Co. Lake 1 mile $1,452 @ 8208
8208
8-27
Sublasbe 2 Bdr Apt. Park 25 $2747.70/month water paid. Call John O-2588.7-828
Single rooms and two bedroom apartments
Call between 8-6. 843-3228
Call between 8-6. 843-3228
Wanted male Christian roommates large quiet house close to campus, dishwasher, laundry, microwave, internet Padd? $85-$140
Call Carilyn Daly! 011-851-3487. 1407 tucky
Appartments 10 minute walk to Student
room route $25/$mo includes
unities 943-6797
1 & 2 BR Aurora $70 & $25, walking dis-
counts to the Rialk Hall at Ball for
more information
8-31
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES,
bedrooms, 112 baths, attached garages, attic,
pillow bed new applique, ceilings with
rounded locations at 26th and 48th floors,
rounded locations at 26th and 48th floors.
Sublease 1 bedroom apt. fully furnished
2 bedrooms, electricity. Call 814-863-
1144 D-Mas.
Sublet 120 - apartment Rent $217.50/mo.
Deposit $200. Call 749-0288. 9-1
FOR SALE
1971 Triumph 750 motorcycle. Original English (factory), low mileage. Good condition. 841-3600 (days) 984-3695 (days). 8-28
Fulcrum 35mm camera w/strap, UV filter, close-up lens $125.90, Kingston Folk Polk $75.90 New Dolby component $40.90 slide projector $30.90 Scoot $8.90 8739 8-25
Tennant Racquets. New Used Fischer power glass plus. Head Vilas. Trabert Graphite C-6. Clarity. Allison Trade. Allison Trade. Also Will Bary Trade for your requiement in good condition. 864-3913 evening. 9-30
EVERYTHING BUT BE CLEAR but uncalled or damaged *height* — furniture, household items, appliances, baby gear just about to my item large or small and save me room! (Open 9-7 weekdays, Saturday until 8am)
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sales
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them (1). As study
guide, 2. For class preparation, 3. For exam
examination, 4. For classroom use.
*Civilization* 'available now at Town Crier,
The Bookmark, and Oread Book store.'
Honda Express Mopar under 700 miles.
BMW M360i under 550 miles.
Kathy Aubry, Meyer 818, Hayward
Carson, Ford 904, Honda 902.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. #8-906-3900. 35000
K2400 motorcycle 1976, extra clean, low mileage $285.30. The Boat Dock 1976, 8-28
Tables, chairs, dressers, stereo outfits and speakers, lamps, ping pong tables, rear entry doors, graphic wall murals, large mirrors, bifold door—Everything from the way we WERE EVERYTHING BUT ICE升 9-7 weekdays Saturdays until 5 00 Corner of 6-8th and 8-28
177 Subaru 4-speed low mileage runs good.
$170.00. Call 842-6447. 8-27
1976 Triumph TR-7 coupe, very low mileage. Michelle, 4-speed, AMF, 8-match. Must sell. Price negotiable. Call Guy, 7628 or 842-4444. 8-26
Unclaimed freight and damaged merchandise. Wide variety of items. Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont. tf
2-15" Map wheels GS 490 1578 Suyakii
room furniture best offer C+41 84326
room furniture best offer C+41 84326
Lentar BW enlarger, print frame, lamps,
trays, tongs, bottles, and other darkroom
equipment for $100.00. Household 843-5194. 8-28
Optonica integrated amplifier, 65 watts/
channel many features, incl provision for
moving coil, $173. 843-3098 After 5. 8-28
Did you leave it at home? Pick up a meal, good sweeter toast, a slow cooker, blender and other small appliances; house tables, dishes, cast iron skillets, kitchen utensils, white felt fur coat, 2400 Alabama, Apartment 301, Nine to Five, Saturday, August 14.
Stereo speaker sale. 10" base, 5" midrange,
2" tweeter. $33. Everything But Ice, 616.
Vernont. 8-23
Poodle skirts, pendetons, plated pants,
petticoats, dresses, and shoes. Dresses,
dantellas, panties, purses, punk and period
clothing at pleasing prices. The Vintage
Museum sells vintage apparel. 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat, and Sun
3-7pm.
48" Parallele bar for drafting table. Is in very good condition. Call Debbie 749-4676.
Leaving country, must sell two snow tires
840. 841-605. (840-615). Very good condition.
840. 841-605. 8-27
speakers Hickory cabinets $120 each 8-31
Swimming in a bicycle bike. Just tuned up.
Motorcycle in a garage. Just tuned up.
1971 Torin~$400, 1978 Hamadamal Hawk
400, low mileage. Honda Moped. Call 843-
1737 after 6. 8-31
Olympus OM 1 body black $185 Olympus
Olympus OM 2 body black, new and
new, with Olympus ollipter,
b447-747,
Schwinn 10-speed bicycle. Just tuned up,
nsw tires. Call 842-4368 after 5. 8-29
NEW Stereo speakers 125 watts w/ way Studio
speakers Microwave, ceiling, A/c each 8-31
For sale one twin bed-bed spring and
mattress. In good condition. Call 841-1828
1879 RSP Capul in excellent condition. 19,000
track, must track U-141-B211. 814-531 - 814-534
track, must track U-141-B211. 814-531 - 814-534
CUTLASS 68, blue. AC, AM. $345. 84-21
4372 after 4 pm.
Allman Brothers 2 tickets, 8th row center main floor—best offer, 841-4724, 8-28
1973 Pontiac Grand Safari, redwood burl tarp
outside 1963 put up pick-up truck, 285cstt
deck GARAGE SALUTE, 282n. 1429. 749-0223. 9-2
Technics RS-631 Stereo cassette deck, like
new Tunison 843-1772 8-28
Pacer 1970. 43,000 miles, 6 cylinder, automatic. AM FM stereo, new tires, many new parts, call (864-1211) make offer. 9-1
FOUND
Prescription glasses found at Clinton Beach on Aug. 20. Call 843-5421. 8-26
A pair of men's jeans found on Naisthm
Drive. Call 843-9215 evenings.
8-28
HELP WANTED
Help wanted with light housecleaning &
some sewing 4 to 5 hours per week. Thurs,
or Fridays $3.35 per hour. Transportation
necessary. Call 843-1247 for appointment.
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for its employment 219 between 6am-8pm on Monday. Call (304) 576-7200.
Have an extra hour? Volunteer as a girl
scout leader, or assistant. Satisfying
& rewarding. Call Tuesdays and Wednesdays.
842-5427
8-28
Wanted: X-ray tech to cover some vacation time for private office Sept. 14-18, Mon. Wed. and Fr. 9-5. Tues. 1-5, Thurs. 9-12, Mond. 8-28
9-325 (As for Paula).
Student help needed. Part-time or Fall and Spring. Must be able to work a full 40-hour shift, up to 5,000. General labor and skilled trades assignment. Housing Design Maintenance. Housekeeping Drafting. Maintenance Workshop. Bth or 864-3697 as soon as possible with your employer for equal opportunity. Affirmative Action Employer.
Wanted: Person to teach Spanish You learn
English. I learn spanish. 841-791. 9-1
LEGAL RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Office of Research with study team. Required ability to research technical legal questions; ability to organize comprehensively war test in written form for law students; ability to conduct research either through coursework or parachute internship. **Seng Hai Long**, 864-306-6948, seng.hailong@unimail.edu
RESEARCH ASSISTANT: Office of Affirm-
ment Action may be eligible for work;
work experience in office work; organizational
experience in office work; organizational
a set schedule within office hours of 8-5
M-F. Contact: Georgia Rider, 308 Strong
684-368-3868. Deadline August 15, 2016
5:58pm
EXECUTIVE Coordinator, KU Graduate Student Council Applicant should have been admitted to the University governance structure. Will be responsible for coordination of programs developed by the graduate assistancehip by the graduate month appointment, eligibility for staff month appointment, eligibility for staff month appointment (including two references) to Graduate Student Council, Kansas Union. Interviews will be held August 29-31. Interviews will be held August 29-31. *ActionEqual Opportunity Employer.*
Engineering/drafting Part-Time immediate delivery of drafts and drawings for drafters and assistant in product development. Laboratory centrifuge. Content creation. K-10 fw/td. RSU, 685-184.
Dearfield Mom needs all-day care. Wed. & Thurs for girls. P.M. kinder. and 2½ year-old. Your home or mine. 843-7802. 8-28
Part-time help, service station work 842-
1135. 8-26
The Infant Toddler Centers are now hiring caregivers to assist with infants and toddlers. Apply in person at 101 & 104 Aa Bristol Ter.
Part-time work on campus stapling posters
Work on job site, based on schedule,
4-15 hours weekly. No cell phone
schedule, 4-15 hours weekly. No cell
phone schedule, based on the amount of material distrubuted by 84-47 per hour. This position requires 84-47 per hour. For information, contact Jeanne
vision
Artists (freelance) talented fast workers,
write to Magazine & promotional work.
Write to Headquarters of Commu-
nations. GCSA S. 1617 St. Andrew's
Lawrence, KS. 16-26
Student for after school child care 3-6:30
Student for after school child care 5-9:30
Bachelor plus calligraphy Calligraphy O'Brien B218
Calligraphy O'Brien B218
Student with, agricultural background wanted to work part time on small farm. Send resume of experience to: PO Box 109, Lecompan, KS 60500.
Persons willing to stay evenings and nights with a disabled student. Schedule varies. Evening meal, call 749-0288. 9-1
Campus representative wanted to order and deliver penils, pens and supplies. Flexible hours, campus preferred. Call 212-825-3292 during 1:48 p.m., only. Call Dan Stevens:
Food service worker position available 9-30 am-2:00 pm M-F Work/Study preferred. Hilltop-864-4940. 8-28
LOST
REWARD-LOST a 1 mo male Brindle Boxer named junior jipped out of car. call 843-509 or Pam at 864-3790 with any information. 8-28
MISCELLANEOUS
Do you enjoy fresh air, exercise adventure and the company of wonderful people? Don't. Don't. Don't. The first meeting, August 26, 7:50 am in the Big Eight Room at the Upsilon
NOTICE
EPISCOPALIANS
Holy Eucharist 12 noon every Thursday at Danforth Chapel
Sundays at 5pm at Canterbury House.
Lawrence U.S.D. 497 Continuing Education
class attended by fall seminar. For further information call
800-263-5411 or situate at Lawrence High School, 19th &
8th Avenues, 8:00 am-4:30 pm. bk left out
bk left out
PERSONAL
Spectacular Specials for Senior class card holders. Cards available at the BCOC office in the Union. 8-27
Come and brows in Barb's Second Hand
Roll, 515 Indiana. We have quality clothes,
household items, jewelry & gifts for
9-30.
842-4746.
The Moftet-Berles Band has an immediate opening for female singers. Please be qualified 749-3649 or 841-9797. 8-28
quantum 14,809 or 814-735
Feel good about yourself! Ballet, exercise,
jazz, and modern dance classes for
Ballet 4,809 & Lawn School of Ballet
4,842
Resume & portfolio photographs, instant color passports. Custom made portraits, color, black white, Swells Studio, 749-1611, 9-4
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Boyd - Sold - Trade
Buy - Sell - Trade
Gold Silver - Cash
Coins
711 New Lamport
Lamport 40444
91-1824-8773
www.boyds.com
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
If your mind drift when you study or it is hard to focus, consider enrolling in a student academy at the University of Skien. It offers advanced Algebra 6 and 8 courses, 200 Study Allowance for each course, and Student Assistance Center, 121 Strength Training Center.
FREE INFORMATION on how easy to make extra money. Lots of it! Write TERRY ASSOCIATES. Box 854, Paintville, KY 14240
Watch this column to learn fun things about beer, spirits, and wine. Two facts weekly presented by Galyard Retail Liquor. 912-845-7039. 845-7039. 8-26
Like to think? Love to dream? "Dream
Understandings?" KANAS Arena
Bullet
Catálogo x4 64: 16 to KANAS Arena
221, Larryeva. K 65045.
8-36
The Gator will reign! King Izod and his
nike (Bike) Boat. Wilson-shorts, shoes.
Caps, hats, shorts to welcome you back to another school year. All merchandise is 15% off with KU Golf Club. Includes golf club, shoes, wet season apparel, sale sheets. Up to 8:30 am on 8:00 pm, 7 days a week.
Lost—Several very important information. Anyone knowing information regarding Becky Shaw, Kim Koon, Kim Warrior, Caleb McKenzie or Jo Mooney, please call 49-1704
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
THF
RIGHT. 843-4821.
GOLD! 14 kt. Add-a-beads & chains.
Great prices! Other jewelry also available.
843-3601. 8-31
Hope you enjoyed your summer, we’ve certainly made an effort to manage the management of Havels Crossing thank you who shared the good times with us. We are looking forward to next year which has been approved by the Lawrence City Commission by vote of 4-10 abstainment and we will be open on Sunday, 11 until 5 pm, also open Sunday 11 until 12. Wallet for your support is greatly appreciated for a great food. Hope to see you, one block north of the union at The Crossing, P.S.—Jerry.
FREE KITTENS, 7 wks, trained, 842-3609 8.31
if it's late, you're home and you're really
want something doomed to die.
but, deliciates. Call CUB-
MAN 411-3289 for a YELLOW SUBLIVERY
midnight. Sunday through Tuesday.
1-9am
Sunday afternoon? Playing golf, friends and family. Then the Alverson Gran Prix is for you. Learn to play golf and Sunday courses in the yachyhawk and Sundown courses in the Gran Prix and put a little golf in your own yard.
Wanted: Quarterback for hard-nosed INDEPENDANT football team to play in trophy league, big arm, mobility a musl. Cajon grest. 300-875. Call Joe J62 842-307. 9-28
SERVICES OFFERED
Maintenance is an unavoidable but
FURSTRATED Come and visit the graphics arts shop at Strong Office Systems, 1049 Vermont. For the finest quality graphic architecture and architecture bookstore 8-28
Maintenance is an unavoidable but necessary priority in preserving the quality and value of your property. For your general maintenance needs, give me a call. I can help you save on material and labor costs while providing quality work to your satisfaction.
Thank you,
Brad Wilkins
Wilkinson Maintenance
841-0178
THE BIKE GARAGE complete professional
homes in New York. Total-Ovalea,
Pays-All guaranteed & reasonably
priced. 841-273-8. Commuters:
Exchange, Exchange Kash.
Union. Mumbai Lobby
Bike to sell?
Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
ANNOUNCING: EDUCAID A computer re-
commissioned with up to 25 sources of financial资
借 with up to 25 sources of financial资借. Re-
commissioning will only cost $25. For information, send name
Lawrence, KS 60044. 3004 Alchemy
Lawrence, KS 60044.
MATH TUTOR, patient and experienced ed
clinician. Stats,七/hr. Bob, 841-7293,
classifier and Stats,七/hr. Bob, 841-7293.
Want to improve your concentration? Or
can you just relax? GOOD START on the amniotic Zone!
GOOD START on the amniotic Zone!
Annual Tuition 8:00-10:00 pm, room 300 Room
Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-757-3212
BabySaiting—After 4 daily; weekends all day. Would like steady position. Call 864-1139. 8-27
TYPING
Need A Ride/Ridder? See the Self-Serve Car Pool Exchange, Kansas Union. Main Lobby 8-28
Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting selectric Call Donna at 842-2744.
Fart, efficient typing. Many years exper-
ience. IBM. Before 9 pm. 749-2647.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Call Myrna.
841-4980. [f]
Experienced, typist - thesis, dissertations,
paper mints, paperbacks. IBM correcting selective
Barb. after 5 pm. 842-2310. (f)
Tin Top Typing experienced typist IBM
Sulcetric 843-5675. 9-18
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, self-correcting Selectite.
Call Ellen or Jeannam 841-2127. ff
Experienced typist, term paperist, theorei all microlecanal, MH correcting lecturer, or else, or pica, and will correct phone. Phone 843-854, Mrs. Wright.
ff
Female: roommate for two bedroom, two bath wardroom. Call 841-8586 for details
WANTED
Female wants to share apartment or house with other female(s) students. Call 913-232-5279 (Topka) Ask for Jody. 8-24
Male & Female bartenders wanted. No experience needed. Call 842-9533. Ask for Terry. 8-26
Wanted male Christian roommates large quiet house close to campus. Dishwashers, laundry. microwave. UTILITIES PARK. Bathroom. Call Darryl Ott 84-8386. 106 Kentuckie.
ROOMMATE to share 2-bedroom apt. $ \frac{1}{2} $
rent + gas + electric. On bus route. Call
Brett at 842-6679. 8-26
Graduate student to share house with other students. Close to campus, utilities paid.
$165. 841-8075. 8-26
Female to pay 1/3 rent and 1/3 electric.
Close to campus. Harvard Square Apts.
841-1458. 8-28
Roommate wanted to share apartment 2-
bdrm. close to campus. Call Pete 843-6523
Apartment to share: Freeman need two or three male students to share an apartment in Jayhawker Towers. Non-drinkers smokers preferred (913) 524-781-8-31
Female Roommate nice 4 bdrm house. Fully furnished kitchen, laundry. On bus route.
Call 841-7758. 8-28
JOURNALISTS: The Goodwood Daily News (KS) needs a reporter immediately. Direct any inquiries to Tom Drelling at 915-899-6126 or 899-544.
Female roommate to share 2 bdr. apt. $135/month + 1² utilities. Call 843-3277. Foreign Student welcome. **9-1**
Roommate wanted large 3 bedroom duplex
mile from campus. Call Dave at 841-8066
for information. 8-28
Wanted female non-smoker roommate to
share a 2 bap, apart on bus route, beautiful
location. Call 749-3612. 8-2
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Don't want to drive across town in the summer heat to send in your classified ad? Take advantage of this form and save yourself time and money while still receiving the satisfaction of placing your ad in the Kansan. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ks 66045. Use rates below to figure costs.
Classified Heading:
Write Ad Here: ___
Name:
Address:
Phone:
Dates to Run
| | 1 time | 2 times | 3 times | 4 times | 5 times |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 15 words or less | $2.25 | $2.50 | $2.75 | $3.00 | $3.25 |
| Additional words | .02 | .03 | .04 | .05 | .06 |
Ad Deadline to run: Monday Thursday 3 p.m.
1
Classified Display:
1 col x 1 inch—$3.75
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, August 26, 1981
10. a) 30 b) -25
KC Royals lose extra-inning game
By United Press International
DETROIT—Lance Parrish lined a one-out single in the bottom of the 10th inning to score pinch-runner Mickelle with the winning run last night, lifting Detroit to a 4-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals, the 'Jersys' 10th win in their last 11 games.
Richie Hebner singled to right with one out, the first hit loser Dan Qusenberry, 04, has given up in his last 11½ innings, dating back to June 8. Kirk Gibson followed with a single and Kelleher ran for Hebner, scoring when Parrish put a liner past right fielder Darryl Motley.
KEVIN SAUCIER picked up the victory, his second in as many decisions, pitching $1 \frac{1}{2}$ innings.
Motley tied the score 3-3 in the sixth by hitting his first major-league home run. An infield single by Willie Wilson, one of his four hits, Frank White's double and George Willey's triple. Fifth艾克林 tided the game 1-1 in the third with his 10th home run and second in two nights.
Gibson singled home a first inning run for the Tigers. Hebner's sacrifice fly in the third gave Detroit a 2-1 lead and Tom Brookens, who made a diving stop on Alken's shot, scored in scoring in the fifth, hit his third home run of the season in the fourth for a 3-2 lead.
In other AL games, Chicago downed Milwaukee 5-1, Minnesota shut out New York 3-0, Cleveland blanked Oakland 2-0, Texas stopped Toronto 6-1, Baltimore defeated Seattle in extra frames, 6-5 and California beat Boston 8-7, in 10 innings.
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
TODAY'S GAMES
West Coast Saloon
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Detroit AB R H BI 0
Peters, dh 4 1 2 0
Trammell, sr 3 1 0
Korpi, f 3 0 1 0
Heber, h 4 0 1 0
Kalleher, pr 4 0 1 0
Glioeo, b 5 0 3 1
Parrich, c 5 0 1 1
Leach, rf 5 0 0 1
Cowen, rf 0 0 0 0
Brooke, bs 3 0 1 0
Whitaker, bz 4 1 0 1
TVA a 36 4 11 4
Kanu City 011 011 04 64
Chicago
Your Concert Connection
Kansas City
Bowman AB R H B
1. White, 2b 5 4 0
G. Brett, 3b 4 0 1
A. Ames 4 1 1 1
M. McLean, 3 3 0 0
Otis, cf 5 0 0
Quirk, 6 4 0
Wathean, 1 0 0
Motley, rf 4 1 1
Motley, ss 4 1 1
TOTAL 4 1 9 3
Win tickets for the Alman Brothers
Little River Band
tonght at the coast.
2222 Iowa
SOUTHERN HILLS Floral & Gift
E-Wilson, Tramuel. DP-Kansas City 2 LOB-Kansas City. KS WI
❤️
STUDENT ROOM
REMNANT RUGS
SAVE UP TO 50%
bud
JENNINGS CARDETS
AND
MORE
29th & lower
843 9090
SOUTHERN HILLS
SHOPPING CENTER
749-2912
FREE DELIVERY
Detroit 4, Kansas City 3, 10 innings
Minnesota 3, New York 0
Cleveland 5, Washington 1
Nashville 5, Wisconsin 1
Tuscon 6, Toronto 1
Baltimore 6, Seattle 5, 12 innings
Boston 7, Boston 10, 10 innings
National League
Chicago 4, San Diego 3
Arizona 5, Philadelphia 7, 11 innings
Philadelphia 12, Philadelphia 2
Montreal 1, Chicago 1
New York 2, Houston 1
St. Louis 2
the Fitness Center
American League
Cleveland Cavaliers at Detroit
Detroit at Minnesota
New York at Chicago
New York at Washington
Seattle at California
California at Baltimore
Oakland at Boston
Nationals at Atlanta
Houston at New York
Cincinnati at Montreal
Atlanta at Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh at San Francisco
Chicago at Los Angeles
Student
Discounts
Available
- Individualized Programs
- Professional Instruction
- Quality Equipment
- Diet & Nutritional Counseling
- Sauna & Hot Tub
6th & Maine
841-8540
W's JEAN SHACK
Students get 10% discount with current ID
1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center
SCHWINN
1820 W. 6th
842-6363
Hours: Mon-Sat. 9-6 We service all makes.
NCAA Rules Committee makes football changes
The committee added one more safety rule, prohibiting a defensive player from blocking below the waist an offensive player in position to attack the trailing back designed to protect the trailing back in the quarterback option.
Mission, Kan.-With an improved safety record and zero fatalities last season, the football Rules mattered in response with the fewest major changes in a decade.
By United Press International
Use Kansan Classified
Also, defensive players attempting to block scrimmage kicks may not: jump or stand on a teammate or opponent; place a hand on a teammate to get
PASSING
SKATE CENTER
JAYHAWK NOTES: During the NFL's Tuesday deadline for cutting rosters down to 50 players, two former Jayhawks were released.
In a first step toward reducing nonpersonal fouls from 15 yards to 10 yards as requested by the Coaches Association, the penalty for holding or illegal obstruction by offensive or defensive players was reduced from 15 to 10 yards.
Sydney scored a pair of touchdowns for the Seahawks in the fourth quarter of the opening exhibition game against San Francisco.
Defensive back Eddie Lewis and
by Detroit and Seattle respectively.
leverage for more height; and be picked up by a teammate.
The Topeka Capital Journal
SPECIAL STUDENT SUBSCRIBER OFFER!
1 month FREE!
WHEELS=FUN
Start your new semester subscription for the low price of $177.70, and receive 1 month free. Each month your subscription price will give you the best State, Local, National, and SPORTS news that is available in Kansas.
FOR HOME DELIVERY SERVICE CONTACT:
East of Iowa
A. E. Hall Randy Eyler
West of Iowa S. of 15th Burton Pontius 842-1661
843-2276
843 8727
Independent COIN-OP SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRIES
WELCOME KU STUDENTS!
We have 3 coin-operated laundries to serve you.
9th & Mississippi
(Open 24 hours after Sept. 1)
19th & Louisiana
26th & Iowa
3210 Iowa 841-6848
- • • ADULT NIGHT SPECIAL • •
August Special—Every Monday from 8:30 a.m.
Welcome Back To KU
LADIES FREE! Men pay the full admission and their Ladies Skate for Free!
KU STUDENT SKATE SESSIONS
EVERY WEDNESDAY
KU SESSION—KU College I.D. --Admission $2.00
Stated
--camera shop, inc.
Private Party Sessions Available
SURVIVAL SKILL EXTRAVAGANZA
Rapid Reading Series
August 27
September 3,8,10,15,and 17 Registration Required.
Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop
Designed to enhance a student's time management and improve concentration with reading, listening, and notetaking.
6:30-10:00 p.m. 300 Strong Hall No Registration Required.
Effective Listening Series
For more information or to register, call or come by the Student Assistance Center, 864-4064, 121 Strong Hall.
7:00-9:00 p.m.
September 24 and 29 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Registration Required.
WOLF
WOLFE'S E.O.S.
SALE
(SALE IN PROGRESS ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE)
(SALE IN PROGRESS - ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PREOIR SALE)
It's the End of Summer and time for Wolfe's annual E.O.S.
Sale. Here is your opportunity to save on photography items
throughout the store. E.O.S. means deep cut prices on new
and used merchandise that we must sell to make room for our
fall inventory. All items are limited stock and subject to prior
AT-1 Canon
NL AT-1
with 50mm f1.8 lens
A cannon so easy to use it's the smallest automatic. Takes all of
cannons accessories designed for a type camera, perfect for
the beginning photographer or the shooter who needs a
second camera. $22999
Canon
AE-1
PROGRAM
CAMON 180mm f/2.8 L IS USM
CANON
REW
CANON AE-1P with 50mm f 1.8 lens
The camera that started the automatic camera revolution has been changed to become a more versatile camera. With the program control the camera makes all the exposure decisions for you.
$329^{99}$
SAVE ON LENSES ONLY A FEW OF HUNDREDS ON SALE LISTED HERE.
NEW MTAN
SALE
28mm 1.28 Tarmac Zenzer
195.00
139.50
194.90
28mm 1.28 Tarmac Zenzer
195.00
139.50
194.90
80-200 1.24 Virtor Zenzer
195.00
139.50
194.90
100-200 1.15 Tarmac Zenzer
195.00
139.50
194.90
100-200 1.15 Pro caisson Zenzer
195.00
139.50
194.90
30-400 1.15 Kitezen
175.00
229.00
USED LENSES
10.90 and up
LENSES ON SALE TO FIT MOST 35mm CAMERAS MANY1 OR 2 OF A KIND. COME SEE US.
35mm SLR CAMERAS
FILTERS
Nikon AR with 1.8 I
Olympus OM2 with I1.8
COPERNICI X2 with I3
COPERNICI X3 with I7
Yashich FX-3 with f2
Yashich FX-4 with f2
Pentax M5 Super II with f2
Pentax M6 Super II with f2
Pentax M7 Super II with f2
Penica AX1 with f2.2
Penica AX2 with f2.2
Penica AX5 with f2.5
Pentax ML with f2
Pentax ML II with f2
Conan A1 with I1.8 Black
Olympus OM1 with I1.8 Black
Pentax MB-1 with I1.8 Black
Retail $219.9
$375.0
$600.0
$1,000.0
$2,000.0
$2,999.0
$4,999.0
$6,999.0
$9,999.0
$12,999.0
$15,999.0
$18,999.0
$21,999.0
$24,999.0
$27,999.0
$30,999.0
$33,999.0
$36,999.0
$39,999.0
$42,999.0
$45,999.0
$48,999.0
$51,999.0
$54,999.0
$57,999.0
$60,999.0
$63,999.0
$66,999.0
$69,999.0
$72,999.0
$75,999.0
$78,999.0
$81,999.0
$84,999.0
$87,999.0
$90,999.0
$93,999.0
$96,999.0
$99,999.0
Assortment of round filters in screw thread sizes.
SAVE 50% 99' to '3''
BONUS: Buy 3 sale filters and 4th one is free. (free filter is the lowest priced one of the 4).
ENLARGERS
U
L
NEW
RETAR
SALE
Coaster 35CZ
109.95
59.99
CREDIT Card
(volume reduced) | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Began 2de dwell kit | | 295.00 | 199.00 |
| Began 67C PVC kit comp to | | 202.00 | 199.00 |
| Beater 67C PVC kit comp to | | 197.50 | 199.00 |
| Pride 30d with skid | | 195.50 | 99.00 |
| Omniger 66 Delco | | 389.00 | 99.00 |
| Omniger 66 Delco | | 489.00 | 99.00 |
| Bacerial 23c with Dicloire head | | 857.00 | 699.00 |
FREE 35mm SLR
CAMERA CLASS WITH
THE PURCHASE OF
ANY SLR CAMERA
FROM WOLFE'S
(A $20.00 VALUE)
(
ELECTRONIC FLASH
| | RETAIL | USED |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Sumpack 522 | 230.00 | 149.90 |
| Hammerite 724 | 180.00 | 99.90 |
| WriteRs 875 | 172.95 | 99.99 |
| ProSC 1400 Thruster | 49.95 | 32.99 |
| Bax CX 55 | 29.95 | 13.39 |
| MioBeta 600A | 19.95 | 11.99 |
| Otrumia 0175 | 19.95 | 11.99 |
| Pro C1 1800 | 49.95 | 39.99 |
| Kalimari Maximite | 19.95 | 6.90 |
| Hammerite 1600 | 19.95 | 10.99 |
| Hammerite 1543 Slave | 29.95 | 19.99 |
| Orcam SC18 Slave | 69.95 | 19.99 |
| Simpathi | 69.95 | 19.99 |
| Simpathi 271 | 70.00 | 39.99 |
| PhiliPZTIC 625 | 129.95 | 59.99 |
| Hammerite T285S | 159.95 | 99.99 |
| Roller Belt | 159.95 | 100.00 |
| Roller Trigger | 19.95 | 9.99 |
| Roller 134 used | 129.95 | 9.99 |
| Automotive A10 310 used | 139.95 | 9.99 |
| Pentatom 2500mm | 139.95 | 9.99 |
| Pentatom 2000 used | 98.00 | 39.99 |
| Juicer A2 | 94.95 | 29.99 |
MOVIE CAMERAS
| | RETAIL | SALLE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Maximax XL825 Zoom | 249.50 | 129.90 |
| GK11 ZX40 | 295.00 | 139.90 |
| GK11 ZX700 | 306.00 | 149.90 |
| Oncoon 405MK240 | 539.00 | 129.90 |
| Bell & Hall 3124 1204 | 429.95 | 129.90 |
| Bell & Hall 3124 1204 | 429.95 | 129.90 |
| Bell & Hall 3124 1204 | 249.50 | 199.90 |
| Bell & Hall 3123 2124 204 | 249.50 | 199.90 |
| Bell & Hall 3123 2124 204 | 249.50 | 199.90 |
| Bell & Hall 3123 2124 204 | 189.95 | 129.90 |
| Monstror XL4 204 | 459.95 | 129.90 |
| Monstror XL4 204 (vivid) | 459.95 | 129.90 |
| GK157204 hatchback | 169.95 | 129.90 |
| GK157204 hatchback | 169.95 | 129.90 |
| Bmm 104 (vivid) | 239.95 | 129.90 |
MOVIE PROJECTORS
| | MTAIN | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Ball & Howell 1411 salient | 229.50 | 99.99 |
| Ball & Howell 1511 salient | 229.50 | 99.99 |
| Ilmena 16100D sound | 569.95 | 339.99 |
| Ball & Howell 3311 sound | 349.95 | 239.99 |
| Ball & Howell 3831 Kualalung | 229.95 | 149.99 |
| Ball & Howell 3831 Kualalung | 229.95 | 149.99 |
| Ewing 5 210 D sound | 419.50 | 219.99 |
| Ewing 5 210 D sound | 419.50 | 219.99 |
| Ewing R 3000 D sound | 549.50 | 199.99 |
| Ewing R 3000 D sound | 549.50 | 199.99 |
| B&H 8002 (1923) sound | 299.95 | 199.99 |
| B&H 8002 (1923) sound | 299.95 | 199.99 |
| Chinan 6100 sound | 299.95 | 179.99 |
| Chinan 6100 sound | 299.95 | 179.99 |
| Cable Computer 5001 sound | 189.95 | 199.99 |
| Cable Computer 5001 sound | 189.95 | 199.99 |
ENLARGING
PAPER
---
Large selection of Agfa, Ifford and Unicol black & white paper including resin coated and paper base. Sizes 5x7 thru 16x20
1/3 to 1/2 OFF
RETAIL PRICE
WOLF CITY BIKES
By St
Wolfe's
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
Topeka, Kansas 66603
The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, August 27, 1981 Vol.92, No.5 USPS 650-640
Only 'needy' students to get guaranteed loans
Staff Writer
BY BOB MOEN
Money, once so easily attainable by any KU program, will not be as easy to get in the future.
On Oct. 1, President Reagan's budget cuts will alter the low interest loan requirements so that the Federal Reserve can maintain its reserve.
If the student's family income exceeds $30,000,
the student will be eligible for a loan. Those below the $19,000 will be automatically eligible.
JERRYROGERS, director of the financial aid office at the University, has fewer guaranteed loans and benefits in the change.
Rogers said he did not know how many students would be affected because there was no way of knowing how many borrowers had family incomes above or below the $30,000 limit.
He said a statement or evidence of some kind would be required to show financial need of the student. So far, the government has yet to provide the specific details.
"It will cause a big problem in processing," he
adds. "Extra postage, extra time and extra delay."
Another change that has already taken effect, longer than 5 percent origination fee charged every student at UNC.
FOR INSTANCE, students who received a $1,000 guaranteed loan this semester would have$135 saved.
But the origination fee did not turn back the number of applicants. In fact, the number of loans dispersed and processed this semester is more than doubled that of last year's total.
Rogers said more than $15 million exchanged hands during enrollment last week between the financial aid office and 3,699 students who were trying to beat the Oct. 1 deadline. About 2,000 loan applications are still being processed by the bank, undoubtedly raising the dollar figure even higher.
Nationwide, about 3.6 million students are expected to borrow almost $8 billion this year.
The program specialist for the U.S. Department of Education in Kansas City, Mo., Steve Dorson, attributed the high figures to the few changes in the loan program this year.
But, Dorsson said, the Reagan administration will ask for additional changes in the following
"It's hard to say at this time what the volume will be, but it will be reduced significantly after processing."
"I'd say by 50 percent at least." she said.
KATIE STUDEBAKER, head of the student loan department of Anchor Savings Association, said she expected a "drastic cut" in the number of loans it processed.
Anchor Savings is the only bank in Lawrence that deals with Guaranteed Student Loans.
Since January, Studebaker said, the association has granted 8,700 loans worth almost
Other Lawrence banks and saving associations do not handle the loans because of either poor repayment or not enough resources to satisfy the demand.
Studebaker said Anchor was not worried about the repayment, but he would loans were gover- nance. **INMANCEL**
See FINANCIAL page 5
Taking a break
Two KU students find time between classes to study on the steps of Wescoe Hall amid the rush of the first week of school.
Former vice chancellor has new role
Grade gripes send students to Balfour's door
By LISA MASSOTH Staff Reporter
Disgruntled students are William Balfour's biggest business, and the largest percentage of them have been in the job market.
UNFORTUNATELY, no such place exists at KU.
As University Ombudsman, Balfour hears grievances from students and faculty at the University of Kansas. He is also a professor of physiology and cell biology.
In his annual report, Balfour said he had heard
that the last year, 61 of them con-
cerned grade problems.
halfour said he was in favor of an academic grievance committee with the power to change
"Students don't feel like they have a good hearing," he said. "They to the chairman of the department who usually backs up the department. There ought to be an objective hearing."
"I'm building a scenario like Wichita State's," he said. "The student talks to the dean of student affairs, who decides if he should take it (the grievance) to the committee."
Wichita State has used this process since 1969, Balfour said, and the committee has changed about 20 percent of the grades students have complained about.
But, as a faculty member, Balfour said he could easily see the other side.
"I wouldn't like somebody to come along and change a grade I've given," he said.
The University Senate executive committee, which has the power to act on Bailour's suggestion, did not move to form a grievance committee at its meeting yesterday morning.
Ernest Angino, geology professor and chairman of SenEx, questioned appointing such a committee because he said teachers cherished the work of students who had many students, the student didn't have a valid claim.
"You get some cases that are justified," he said, "but some students are just playing games.
JIM SEAVER, director of Western civilization and SenBex memorial grade was a teacher, a teacher and a staff member.
"Any time you bring in a third party, there is a problem," he said.
Should SenEx decide to provide an outlet fo
student grade disputes, they would take a recommendation to the University Council, which would vote on the matter.
The strongest argument against such a committee Balfour said, concerned professors changing grades in classes that weren't in their field. For example, a grievance committee member might be an engineering professor who was reviewing a grade given in photojournalism.
"He wouldn't be criticizing the student's work, but the way the course was taught and set up," he said.
One grade was changed last year as a result of a student complaint.
"The chairman of the department talked to the student and concluded that the expectations of the teacher had not been clearly explained." He said, "The grade was changed from a B to an A."
Ombudsman serves as KU's sounding board
Staff Reporter
By LISA MASSOTH
Even though he resembles old St. Nick, with his bush, white eyebrows and sideburns, the jovial professor hears students's complaints instead of children's wishes.
1. nan just resigned the vice chancellorship and was finding it hard to settle back and be just a teacher again." William Ballour, University of Haarsman said, explaining how he acquired the job.
"Besides, no one else applied."
Balfour was vice chancellor for student affairs from 1968 to 1976.
Hearing grievances from annoyed students and faculty is just one of Balfour's many tasks. He also runs the human biology program at Auburn and helps by病理学 a human biology seminar and advises students.
"I advised 104 students last week," he said.
"That's a record."
The job as ombudsman creates mixed feelings for Balfour
"Once I get into a particular setting, it's fine," she said. "I'll go there on (ombudsman affairs) on the calendar ahead."
on a grievance depends on what the problem is, he said.
Balfour provides a sounding board for all types of complaints and problems reported by both students and faculty members. Whether he acts
"I talk to the person who made them mad," he said. "I've gotten an occasional regulation changed that's hard on students."
Four years ago, a student went to Balfour with an employment form that had a clause at the bottom which said, "We reserve the right to talk to your neighbors." Balfour talked to the department that had the form and they changed it.
A. D. MORRIS
During his three years as ambudman, Balfour has heard many memorable complaints.
"One student had #400 in parking fines and he was mad because they wouldn't let him back in school," Bailour said. "The student said, 'I just want you to be treated to.' He lived in Jayhawk Towers!"
One of the new complaints Balfour heard last year was a result of probation and dismissal rules in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The new requirements, which were passed by the College Assembly, are 1.0 for freshman, 1.5 for sophomores and 2.0 for upper classman. If these grade point averages are not maintained on probation for one semester, if his grades do not improve, he is dismissed from school.
"There were certain grade point averages to maintain starting last year, and it caught a lot of
William H. Balfour, University ombudsman, sits at his desk in Malott Hall.
SenEx requests sexual harassment policy advice
The University Senate executive committee said yesterday it could not make a decision on a sexual harassment policy until other groups could offer their advice.
By SHARON APPELBAUM
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, had given SenEx two drafts to review, one concerning employers and employees and the other concerning student-teacher relationships.
But George Worth, ex officio member of SenEx, had looked over the draft and told the group, "No individual or no pair of individuals really should be charged with doing this one all
SHIRLEY HARKESS, a member who examined the policies with Worth, said, "We don't really reflect the concerns of classified employees."
She added that she wanted to solicit responses from concerned groups, such as women's health.
Classified employees are workers who are not members of the faculty or administration.
"They have an important role to play in University policy. They're better situated to invite comment."
SenEx is composed of three students and six faculty members who are chosen to represent the institution.
And David Adkins, SenEx member, said, "I'd like to see the draft of the report for students go through the channels of Student Senate." Cobb later explained that he sent the drafts only to SenEx because "it is the only body with both faculty and students built in.
Cobb said he was open to SenEx asking for advice from other groups and said he would talk to Ernest Angino, SenEx chairman, on how to go about it.
HE PREDICTED that the policies could be presented in final form by the end of the semester.
The University had initiated the policies because of reports of sexual harassment at KU and other campuses around the country.
The University is required by law to make a sexual harassment policy as part of its affirmative action plan, but Cobb said he believed a policy protecting students was also necessary.
Cobb said the drafts were the result of "several hands over several months," including the office of Affirmative Action, University Council and the vice chancellors.
But SenEx members said they could still see several problems with the drafts.
For example, Worth mentioned a clause in both drafts suggesting that anyone harassed should first talk to the other person involved. Worth called that proposal "unrealistic."
COBB LATER SAID, however, that such a person could be harmed, if the harassed person did not feel threatened.
Worth also objected to the use of normal grievance procedures for harassed persons, saying, "We ought not to have them traveling around Strong Hall knocking on all the doors."
In other business, the committee approved the rewording of a policy that prohibited any University-required activities during finals week and stop day.
Harkess asked if the two policies could be joined into one University policy. But Angino questioned the legality of the mature and said he wanted to give Vickie Thomas, University general counsel.
Angino said the policy wasn't changed, only simplified. The rule is mainly designed to prohibit scheduling of basketball games during finals, but Angino also offered the example of a
See SENEX page 5
Hit-and-run accident kills Oskaloosan
Staff Reporter
Bv LILLIAN DAVIS
A Douglas County man was killed yesterday in an apparent hit-and-run accident on Highway 56 south of Lawrence.
A preliminary investigation conducted by the Douglas County sherriff's office showed Miesbach was struck while walking in the eastbound lane near the junction of Hightows 89
Trooper Bob Leahhew said Meisbach died of massive injuries to the head and torso.
William Miesbach III, 24, of Oskaloosa, was found about 6 a.m. by a passerby. Police said Miesbach had been struck by a vehicle traveling at a high speed.
Leahew said that Miesbach was hit by more than one vehicle but that he probably was killed by the first impact.
the involvement.
"He (Miesbach) was rolled over or dragged for quite a distance," said Douglas County Sheriff Rex Johnson.
He said the investigation was still in progress and he clarified comment on the description of any vehicle involved.
Gleaned that more than half the bones in Miesbach's body had been broken. He said that the body was found about 300 feet from where the first impact apparently occurred.
Investigators found a Yellow Cab stuck in a field along the one-half mile west of the bark. The heck was open.
Miesbach was an employee at Yellow Cab Co. of Lawrence and had repeatedly given false call reports to his dispatcher after 9 p.m. Tuesday, investigators said.
Neighbors told police they had seen a bale with recklessly in the area between 4 and 5 a.m. yesterday.
Police suspect that Miesbach abandoned the cake after making several attempts to get it out of the oven.
Police also said that Miesbach may have gone into a fit of rage before leaving the cab, apparently breaking the windshield and tearing out the microphone.
Leahew declined to comment on the cause of Miesbach's behavior.
Miesbach's employer, Ward Thompson, owner of Yellow Cab, told police he did not know why Miesbach had been so far out of his territory.
Thompson had reported the cab missing about 4 a.m.
Weather
Weather
Today will be mostly cloudy, with a 30
occurrence of rain, according to the
KU Weather Service.
The high will be in the low 88s, and the low will be about 59. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the low 89s
The weekend will be more of the same, partly cloudy and mudgy with highs in the mid to upper 80s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
U.S. plane target of missile
WASHINGTON — A U.S. reconnaissance plane flying in South Korean and international airspace was apparently fired at by a North Korean surface-to-air missile on Tuesday.
A Pentagon spokesman said what was apparently a North Korean missile exploded several miles from the high-flying SR-71 aircraft, which landed
The spokesman said the SR-71 was on a "routine mission" at the time of the incident. He said it would be "sheer speculation" to link the incident to the shooting down last week of two Libyan jets by two Navy fighters in the Mediterranean.
In Santa Barbara, Calif., deputy White House press secretary Larry
Kennedy said he would hold the record of the incident at his regular
national security briefing about 8 a.m. on Friday.
The Pentagon spokesman did not say exactly when the incident occurred and did not announce the development to reporters until more than seven weeks after it happened.
Asked about Reagan's reaction to the news, White House counselor Edwin Meese said, "The president was concerned about it, obviously. But there weren't really enough details from the Defense Department to evaluate the situation."
The Pentagon spokesman would not say exactly where the incident occurred, where the SR-1 landed afterward or where it was based. But it is unclear whether the plane crashed into a building.
Asked if the incident could have been a missile firing, the Pentagon spokesman said, "Yes."
"If a missile was launched, it could have originated from any one of a number of missile sites in North Korea," he said.
Meese, asked whether or not he considered the incident a provocation by North Korea, said it was up to the Pentagon to evaluate that question.
Frozen cameras mar Voyager trip
PASADENA. Calif.-Voyager 2 developed a mysterious problem that required the use of an infrared laser to enter space and marry what had been a perfect gassenger, with Saturn's rings.
The camera platform lost its ability to move from side to side on the far side of Saturn, but the problem came after most of the important scientific work was done, NASA officials said.
"I'm胶 it happened when it did and not a day, or even hours, earlier," said Bradford Smith, chief of the camera transmission team.
The spacecraft was still relatively close to Saturn, 380,000 miles, at 10 a.m. CDT yesterday. As it was moving away at more than 34,000 mph, its cameras beamed back a picture of a dark sky surrounding what appeared to be a single star.
Jet Propulsion Laboratory spokesman Al Hibbs said signals received about 1 p.m. CDT showed the craft had responded to a command to use a laser.
"It looks good—it looks encouraging so far," he said, but he added that engineers were still not noticeable that the camera had moved through its viewfinder.
"First indications are that it moved properly," he said. "But we must be cautious and conservative about these things and confirmation may come."
Medfly found in Los Angeles area
The Mediterranean fruit fly has made a 300-mile leap into southern California for the first time and now poses a more serious threat to the billion-dollar harvest of the state's fruits and vegetables, agriculture officials confirmed today.
Two of five Medflies found in Los Angeles County were fertile, lab tests showed, and along with them were discovered nine Medfly larvae, indicating a second generation of the destructive pest had taken root.
The files were found Tuesday at a private residence in eastern Los Angeles County.
Plans for aerial malathion spraying in a Log Angeles suburban area of 40,000 last night were announced immediately. State workers went door to door.
In addition, an 81-square mile quarantine zone was created. Notices were handed out in both Spanish and English, and radio and television stations
News of the latest Medfly discovery came as U.S. officials failed in efforts to persuade Japan to admit untreated fruit from California areas unaffected by the Medfly infestation. An industry source in Tokyo said the Japanese authorities recommended that fruit importers buy from states other than California.
The states of Texas and Florida were expected to press further a demand that the federal government allow a tightening of quarantines against California produce.
Southwestern state officials meeting in Arizona sought further assurances on the safety of allowing in California fruits and vegetables.
Louisiana said it had the support of other states in calling for the foundation of trust from a one-county buffer zone surrounding all infested areas.
Egvpt. Israel set to resume talks
ALEXANDRIA, EGYPT—Egypt and Israel yesterday agreed to resume the stalled talks on Palestinian autonomy next month, but their leaders sidestepped most of the issues frozen in disagreement since the talks were suspended more than a year ago.
Concluding their 10th summit in four years, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin told reporters the autonomy talks would resume Sept. 23. Egyptian sources said the first session would probably be in New York.
"We had two fruitful meetings yesterday and today," Sadaat said. "The highlight of our talks was our agreement that we resumed the talks for the full week."
Begin had sought resumption of the talks, suspended by Egypt last year after passage of a new Israeli law on Jerusalem. He reportedly felt the need to demonstrate progress in the peace process before his first summit with President Reagan Sept. 8.
But whether the talks themselves made progress was open to considerable doubt, given the wide gulfs that separated the Egyptian and Israeli positions over what should constitute "autonomy" for the 1.2 million Palestinians living in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Talking to reporters, the two leaders also skirted several other sensitive issues discussed during their talks—the Israeli raid on an Iraqi nuclear facility in northern Lebanon and the guerrilla offices in a civilian quarter of Beirut, Lebanon, and the current conflict between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization in south Lebanon.
Thousands protest 'Equality Dav'
President Reagan, vacationing in California, had proclaimed "Women's Equality Day" to mark the ratification of the 19th Amendment Aug. 26, 1920, but most of the observances were in the form of demonstrations on behalf of the Equal Rights Amendment.
WASHINGTON—Thousands of women across the nation marched and sang a few got arrested yesterday to mark the 61st anniversary of the war.
In Washington, 21 chanting, singing women dressed in the long, white dresses of the suffragette and, saying they represented "a sea of smoldering women" at a rally in Boston on June 19.
Charlotte Bunch, a feminist activist and author from New York City, said the demonstration was staged because Reagan has "done nothing" for the cause.
The White House event, she said, was designed to demonstrate "that women are not canalual about the question of women's equal rights and that there is a need for them."
After 75 minutes, the women then walked into the busy avenue, where they sat in the street and were arrested. They were booked for disorderly conduct and paid fines of $10 each to be released.
Classified employees still seek recognition
By TERESA RIORDAN Staff Reporter
The wave of press coverage and fanfare following the inauguration of KU's new chancellor has left the largest group of employees at the University feeling as they have felt for many years—swept aside.
Although classified, or civil service, employees constitute the largest organized group of employees in Douglas County, they continue to feel like "second-class citizens," according Senate President Suzanne Cup.
Cupu said that she was hopeful for increased classified input after a meeting with Chancellor Gene A. Budig that continued to ignore classified employees.
They include librarians, janitors,
printing service, technicians, animal
custodians.
The 1,600 classified employees are the most diversified group of employees.
Classified Senate Secretary Debbie Walker said she, too, was encouraged to attend the event.
"He seemed very supportive of our concern about raises," she said, "but
ALTHOUGH WALKER thought Budig would make certain that classified employees were included under his administration, "this way, we have to deal with the new administrative every time the University gets a new chancellor."
he could not see any advantage of including 'classmates' employees in companies.
Cupp said she was not surprised that Budig had plans to incorporate the Classified Senate into University governance.
"Originally, the Senate's goal was to become part of KU governance," Cupp said, "but we have been told 'No' so far. We've learned we have looked for other options.
"Actually, working directly with
Including classified employees on administrative search committees was one priority of the Senate with which Budig has agreed.
legislators (for pay increases) has been much more effective," she said.
CLASSIFIED EMPLOYEES were excluded from the selection of Budig as KU chancellor.
The University of Kansas Medical Center is seeking a clinical staff to benefit heart and cancer research.
Med Center gets $62,000 for cancer research
John T. English, a KU Endowment Association spokesman, announced the
Hazel M. Wyatt, bequeathed the money to the Med Center. Her husband, the late Arthur Wyatt, attended the Kansas City Medical College in 1913.
"Private gifts are the mainstay of
research at the KU Medical Center." English said. "Mrs. Wyatt's thoughtful gift provides vital support to cancer research at the Medical Center."
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The Med Center has been especially noted for its cancer research.
patients with melanoma. Now the survival rate of patients with melanoma, an often fatal form of cancer, has doubled.
Immunotherapy, a treatment that prods the body's own immune system to destroy cancer cells, was developed at the Med Center as a treatment for
The Topeka Capital Journal
In addition, the Med Center is one of only 12 facilities in the nation authorized by the National Cancer Institute and the Food and Drug Administration to develop and study all cancer drugs still on clinical trial.
The Topeka Capital Journal
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3:30, 7:00, 9:30 p.m. $1.50
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no refreshments allowed
1
University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981 Page 3
Parking services sets refunds
Refunds are in the works for two people who were overcharged for residence hall parking permits, University of Kansas Parking Services yesterday after examining records of residence hall parking permits.
Two staff members were affected by the mistake, which occurred when a clerk misunderstood the new residence permit procedure and took the role of parking services, said yesterday.
One University staff member was issued a permit for $44 instead of the one required.
The other overcharge was to an employee of McCollum Hall, he said.
He said the staff member had to park his car in the lots near residence halls on Daisy Hill because of his job location.
"These people have been contacted, are already underway," Kearns said.
Robert Turves, associate director of the Student Assistance Center, said he has been a regular presence at UNT.
job because few mistakes had occurred in his dealings with Kearns' department.
Turvey added that the Student Assistance Center employee who was nearly overcharged for a permit was performing an errand for a hospitalized student for a handicapped student, as was reported in Wednesday's Kansan.
Tapes on jet reveal voice
Bc Lifted Press International
TAIPEI, Taiwan—A tape recording of cockpit conversations just before a Far Eastern Air Transport Boeing 737 crashed and killed all 110 people aboard that there was no warning of trouble in aircraft aviations officials said yesterday.
An initial playback of the tape was too blurred to make out, but officials told him the tape further said that they could hear the pilot speaking in a clear normal voice.
I am a Christian, but I do not believe in God. I do not believe in Jesus Christ. I do not believe in the Bible. I do not believe in the Holy Spirit. I do not believe in the Virgin Mary. I do not believe in the apostles. I do not believe in the prophets. I do not believe in the angels. I do not believe in the demons. I do not believe in the evil spirits. I do not believe in the魔鬼. I do not believe in the devil. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Devil. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Devil. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Satan. I do not believe in the Satan.
Cindy Woelk
By MIKE ROBINSON Staff Reporter
Student cases keep lawyer happy
With her carrot-red hair and youthful looks, Cindy Weekik is sometimes mistaken for a legal intern or law student by the people who enter her office in the basement of the Satellite Union.
But the director of Student Legal Services takes it all as part of a job she enjoys.
Since last March, Woolk has headed the organization whose main job is to advise students on legal matters and problems.
Week* said legal services gives advice on matters ranging from landlord-tenant and traffic cases to business issues, contracts and health insurance.
ONE OF THE aspects of the organization that she enjoys the most is the variety of cases.
"If a lawyer sees the same things, he gets bored," she said. "The more variety we have the more challenged we are."
The Russell native graduated from the KU School of Law in 1977 after receiving a degree in social work also at KU.
Before taking over the job from former Director Steve Ruddick, Weok worked with the Kansas Defender Project, a legal advisory group for inmates in Kansas correctional institutions.
She said she became a lawyer because she was interested in the profession and because she enjoyed school and wasn't ready to leave after receiving her bachelor's degree.
The service aspect of the job and the ability to do exclusively legal work drew Woelk to the legal services position.
"If you work for a big city law
firm, you have to do research-type work for years," she said. "If you go into private practice, you have to learn how to be a secretary and your secretary, things like that."
The organization performs numerous services such as drafting legal documents, negotiating out-of-court settlements, researching legal questions and incorporating student institutions registered with the University.
LEGAL SERVICES can also represent students in court in landlord-tenant and consumer cases and in state or federal administrative hearings if the hearings require a person's status as a KU student.
Grade appeals, intra-University disputes, KU traffic court proceedings, disputes between students and cases against the University are off limits to Student Legal Services.
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University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
---
Opinion
An unsupported shelter
Budget-cutting may be fun, if you're David Stockman. It may even be for the "good of the country."
For the women of Lawrence and Douglas County whose lives are filled with pain and fear of violent mates, however, budget-cutting is neither fun nor good. In fact, it may be awful.
Saving tax money is beautiful in black and white, but budget cuts filter down to people and sometimes they leave scars.
The end of the Law Enforcement Administration and CETA, two victims of belt-tightening, has stopped the flow of federal money to the Women's Transitional Care Services in Lawrence, and the center may close its doors this fall as a result.
A plea has gone out to WTCS supporters for five monthly contributions of $10 to keep the center operating until January, when help from alternative funding sources, private grants and state aid is expected to replein澈 emoils coffers.
WTCS will receive $12,071 from Douglas County, $6,500 from the city of Lawrence
and $5,000 from the United Fund beginning next year, but only $5,000 is left for the remaining months of 1981.
If the help from supporters isn't forthcoming, volunteer phone counseling will continue, but the center, which in the words of a former resident provided "a place to stay without the pressure of bills and grocery so that I could get my life together again," may shut down temporarily.
The center's offerings of shelter, food, transportation, emotional support and practical assistance will not be there for those who need to reassemble shattered lives. There will be no haven, no refuge from terror for women and their children.
WTCs's funding gap is a troubling example of the effect of snap budget cuts on communities. The "fat" of slashes in social services often translates into vital help at the local level.
In Washington, the cuts are easy to make. In Lawrence, they're pretty tough to take.
ERA grist for dreamers without attitude changes
The Equal Rights Amendment will not be ratified by the June 30, 1982, deadline.
It's frightening that such a basic right is under the law would be questioned in this freeway.
Unfortunately, this country is not ready for equality for all its citizens. The reluctance of individual state legislators might appear the major barrier to the ERA, but for it to ever have the power to pass laws with national attitudes toward women must change. Instead of going forward, this country is regressing.
When the ERA was proposed in 1972, supporters were optimistic. Many states ratified the amendment quickly.
DING HUA
KARI
ELLIOTT
Now, 35 of the necessary 38 states have passed their ratifications. Sixteen of those rescinded their ratifications. One step backward.
Then Ronald Reagan, who opposes the amendment but supports equal rights in principle, was elected president. Half a step backward.
Reagan did nominate a woman as a Supreme Court justice, but now he wants to ease or eliminate federal regulations concerning sexual harassment in the workplace, hiring discrimination and in the education of Education's Title IX rule among others. One steer forward and two stews backward.
The administration wants to lighten the "burden" of regulations inflicted upon business, industry and local governments, and save money by using more efficient keeping and by cutting bureaucratic red tape.
A presidential task force could wipe away many of the gains made by the civil rights and women's movements over the last 15 years if they were seen as too burdensome. But, then, how could rules that promote equality and civil rights be a burden?
One man, even the president, cannot alone bring a reform that millions of men and women support.
The administration is not the only one underminding the Equal Rights Amendment. A Kansas City television station recently dealt a blow to women's equality when it fired a woman newscaster after a survey revealed that she was not attractive enough and that she did not defer
to her male colleagues. One giant leap backward.
How can we expect the ERA to be passed when a woman's job still depends upon how she looks and dresses?
If viewers want a kewpie book who reads well and makes cute comments, they can change the font.
Female television journalists are criticized if they are not immaculately dressed, if their hair isn't perfect, if they are too old or too fat. These female critics applications to women, but not men.
The television public doesn't see too many gray-haired, fat or wrinkled women newscasters, although these physical characteristics on men indicate authority and wisdom. Would a woman as rotund as Today's Willard Scott be hired? Probably not.
More insidious are the pervasive forms of subtle discrimination that slip into the public's subconscious as stereotypes but later come to mind as accepted norms.
For example, women in television commercials often are shown as more concerned with cleaning, cooking and beauty than with work or corporate mergers. Another step backward.
One of the most powerful influences affecting equality is language. Not only are women excluded from our language, a double standard exists. Two stems backward.
Admittedly, "chairperson" or "congressperson" graze on the ear, but there is no reason why "police officer" shouldn't be used as "foreman," or "supervisor" instead of "foreman."
A more blatant inequality exists but cannot be corrected with a modification of the term. For example, an unmarried man is a "bachelor," which comnotes a fun-loving, youthful swinger. A married woman, a "spinster"—conjures up a without an untractive person knitting in a rocking chair.
Other language differences accentuate semantic biases. "Man's work" is important, "woman's work" is frivolous. Quet men are designed as 'caustic', but similar women are "timid".
If proponents of the ERA want the amendment ratified, marches and legislative lobbying are only the beginning. They must protest blases in the media, employment and even TV commercials.
Without these small protests and complaints, society's attitude toward women will not change.
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CONTENTS:
1. AYATOLLAM-TYPE
WITTE BEARD
Richardson
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
Pity Bani-Sadr, washed up in Paris
I feel sorry for Abolhassan Bani-Sadr
Now, I know it's not in vogue to sympathize with Iranian bigwigs. Even former Iranian bigwigs who were bitten by the same hand that fed them. But the thought of lonely old France is frightening. In France, with nothing to eat except chocolate cake, is kind of sad. Yes, even to Americans.
I'm not alone, either. Evidently, some of his fellow Iranians still support him; there are a few in Iran still humming "Bring Back My Bani to Me." But as you may have noticed this past summer, the few are rapidly becoming fewer.
He spent most of the summer—since he was kicked out of office, anyway—in hiding, where he vowed to make a comeback. Yep, he said, of 'black eyes and black moustache would be back. He promised to bring Iran back to him. Can't you just see Bani-Sadr, saddred in a black leather jacket, cruising around Tehran on his motorcycle? Heyyyyy!
Oh, sure, we as Americans can smirk at Bani-Sadr's troubles. After all, this is the same guy who weekly stood by while hundreds of shah supporters were executed. Now he's appalled to see that Bani-Sadr supporters are being executed, also by the hundreds. (This differs from KU, where all we have are athletic supporters.)
Now, you probably remember Bani-Sadr as the middle-of-the-roader during the tumultuous Iranian revolution. To many, he seemed wishy-washy; one day, he'd plea for a hostage crisis, and the next day, it'd be, "America, your sister sleeps with wart hogs."
But in fairness to the man, it's obvious that he was caught between opposing political
forces. And that was Bani-Sadr's basic problem—he was never in control. From one side, this Col. Klink figure was manipulated by the clergy, who were hell-bent to make people good Moslems, if they had to kill everybody to do it. And from the other side, he
DON
MUNDAY
was pressured by those who just liked to torture people, but who hadn't gotten their freedom.
But most of all, Bani-Sadr ran into trouble because he never seemed to understand what the rest of us knew all along—that Uncle Khominiw was (and still is) a space cadet. He was an expert at that behind the shaggy beard and glassy eyes were geraniums in the cranium.
Now, however, from the comfort and safety of French soil, Bani-Sadi sees things diffi- cultively. He clearly now the reign has gone. He decries that the rejection and repression of the ayatollah, Saints alive!
I remember the days when he'd say all those same nasty things about America. But then, I doubt that he was creative enough to think them up for himself. I'll bet he had speechwriters to think up phrases like "gravy-sucking pig" and "foul stinking dog" and "great Satan." (That last one would make a niffy name for a rock group.)
And after all, if I ban-Sadr had been smart, he might have brightened the words "Death to America" and renamed it "Death to America."
But unlike smart political exiles, who take
their nations' treasures with them when they leave, Bani-Sadi is not a millionaire. He's just an ordinary fellow who would have been perfectly happy selling shoes in a backwoods town, filling mail but what instead got caught up in international politics. He just got in over his head.
That's precisely why I can sympathize with him. He's the type who probably took bodybuilding courses when he was a kid so bullies wouldn't kick sand in his face when he went to the beach. And, I suspect, many of his current problems date back to his troubled childhood.
Take his name, for instance. The other children no doubt taunted him with chants like, "Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, takes his bath in river water." Poor kid. Look at his inexperience, going down the street, and some inconsiderate person would shout out, "He,vey there's B.I."
And let us not forget all the good things he did. He, more than anyone else except maybe Steve Martin, brought back Groucho glasses. (In fact, I suspect he was elected on sympathy votes when people realized he really looked like that.) Look at how he boosted sales of American flags (and Bic lighters) back during those crazy demonstration days. And I hear that every April, he dressed up like the Easter-Bani just to please the kids.
Fortunately, Bani-Sadr is alive and living in Auvers-sur-Oise, despite the best efforts of Tehran prosecutors, who want to give him a trial and then lop off his head. The president's body, he says he wants in exile until his triumphant return to Iran. Say, that'a familiar story, isn't it?
Poor dejected Bani-Sadr. I feel so sorry for him.
But then, maybe not too sorry.
Letters to the Editor
University badly out of step on computer enrollment
To the editor:
Having once again braved the perils of juggernautism, I asked why ask why school of this size and
- NO NEED TO FEEL GUILTY. WE'RE RICH AND THERE'S A NEW FEELING IN THE LAND. THE HELL WITH HIM!
prestige continued to use an archaic and inept system. When nearly every school of any appreciable size has moved to computerized enrollment and some form of scheduling control, it seems strange that KU has resisted the temptation to move into the last half of the 20th century by doing so as well.
Could the reason for this frustrating nostalgia be that it costs too much or could it be that the alumni who endow KU so generously feel that if they have a need, then they, it is good enough now? Neither of these
reasons seems likely. Rather, it is more probable that no one in a position to change the registration process feels that it is really necessary.
Those who have this opinion are not accompanied in their belief by students, who actually have to go through registration from semester to semester. Perhaps a poll of the students who responded would serve to at least promote a feasibility system of conversion to a more efficient system.
Michael B. Place Abilene senior
The University Daily
KANSAN
**USPS 56544)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday and Tuesday, **USPS 56543)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56542)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56541)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56540)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56539)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56538)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56537)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56536)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56535)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56534)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56533)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56532)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56531)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56530)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56529)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56528)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56527)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56526)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56525)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56524)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56523)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56522)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56521)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56520)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56519)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56518)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56517)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56516)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56515)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56514)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56513)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56512)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56511)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56510)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56519)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56518)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56517)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56516)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56515)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56514)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56513)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday, **USPS 56512
Editor Scott C. Faust Business Manager Larry Lehbergood Managing Editor Robert J. Schaudman Campus Editor Robert Tarney Editorial Editor Katy Brussel Associate Campus Editor Katy Permanick Associate Campus Editors Kate Pound, Gene George Assignment Editor Cynthia L. Currier Air Doubler Scott Looker Head Copy Chief Dunday Head Copy Chief Pinoward, Vanessa Hervon Entertainment Editor Karen Schulmer Trevor Hamilton Associate Sports Editor Ron Baglatt Cindy Campbell, Amy Collins Copy Chefs Jane Bryan, Mary Mag Retail Sales Manager Terry Knobler National Sales Manager Judy Caldwell Clausell Manager Marianne Jacobsen Production Manager Ann Horberger Teenbeets Manager John Egan Staff Artist John Keating Staff Photographer Gey Hoenk Retail Representatives Melissa Rader, Jan Johnson, Kelly McCarthy Leslie Ditch, Reese Youre, Barry Carpenter, Barbara Bodin Howard Shilsky, Brad Leng, Jane Lang John Obernan General Marketing Adviser John Obernan General Marketing and News Advisor
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able the rally ac- ac- from the o at n to ace r
University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
Page 5
Financial
From page 1
nment guaranteed and that Anchor was "going after would-be customers" for the next few
Nevertheless, students will still be able to find other loans available at KU.
7
Government cathckins are putting the squeeze on KU students who attempt to obtain student loans.
The University of Kansas Endowment Association offers short-term loans that must be repaid at the end of the academic year, George Stewart, controller in charge of the loans, said.
He said, with the new restrictions on the guaranteed loans, there would be a greater decrease in loan costs.
AT THE FINANCIAL aid office, Rogers said there were two grants, Supplemental Grants and the BEGO (Foll Grants), and another loan, the National Direct Loan, also available.
These programs, however, are already based on a need basis.
The two grants and two loans totaled more than £20 million this year.
The irony of the entire guaranteed loan changes is that students who do prove a basis basis may get a better deal with the National Direct Student Loans, Dorsons said.
He said because both loan programs would require a need basis, a student could be eligible too for the direct loan program, which has a lower interest rate than the guaranteed loans.
"I assume that would be the natural response to "I for the National Direct loan, if they qualify."
WHATEVER THE LOAN, the recent changes in Congress begin to be felt by the nation's school leaders.
"We have reached a point in history" T.H. Bell, U.S. Education Secretary, recently said, "The control of education stops flowing toward Washington to flow back to the states and communities."
BY LISA BOLTON Staff Reporter
Inmates preserving library furniture
Sawing out of jail has new meaning these days, as inmates of the Kansas State Pentitientary at Lansing use saws and sandpaper on bookshelves instead of on iron bars. And while learning a trade, inmates are saving Watson Library nearly $500,000.
Kansas Correctional Industries, a two-year-old program, employs inmates at the penitentiary to refinish and re-upholster furniture and to perform other services for state agencies. Immines in the program are currently restoring book-shelves, tables, chairs and 1,250 card catalogs at Watson, Ron Baggett, K.C.I. sales manager, said yesterday.
The Watson project, which was started in January, is now the only one the 85 inmates are住着.
"We think we have established a long-standing love affair with Watson Library," Baggat said.
He expects work on the furniture to be completed about the first of November, but, he added, "Watson keeps saying, 'We've found some more tables to do'."
JOHN GLINKA, associate dean of the library, said that most of the furniture in Watson was purchased in the early 1980s; when the last adornments were completed. A few pieces date back to 1925, he said.
"We're trying to preserve the older pieces because they have some meaning for the history of our culture."
"It didn't seem right to pass it off as surpure or dump it on another department." Clinke said.
quality of the heavy, solid wooden furniture was unmatched today.
He added that buying new furniture would be expensive. Glinka estimated that a new table made of particle board and plastic would cost $150,000. He could refinish a wooden table for about $150 he said.
ASIDE FROM STRIPPING, sanding and refinishing furniture, the inmates cut some of the larger tables down to make them more functional in their new modular settings. The rooms must be fitted out more than 100-60 drawer card catalogs to polish the brass corners of the drawers, Glindaika.
Baggett said the project would cost about $400, which will come from Watson renovation money.
Glinka said the private companies he had checked with were charging much higher prices because their restoration work was done on a smaller scale than was that of K C L.
"I was rather surprised to learn that the prisoners don't have to work." Glinka said.
Last fall, Glinka and Jim Ranz, dean of the library, visited the plants at Lansing.
K. C.I. HAS an accounting department and delivery service as well as production plants. The company is located in the following cities:
have to work," Gimka said. Both minimum-and maximum-security inmates who want to work may get on the job training in the program at a day or day, which goes into the inmates' accounts for cigarettes and other small purchases, Baggett said.
security for 24 hours before leaving Lansing to ensure that no inmates are on board, Glinda
He said that there are other minor drawbacks to the arrangement, such as work being delayed until replacements could be found for inmates who dropped out of the program. However, Glinka said that he was pleased with the arrangement.
"It's been kind of a harmonious relationship since it started," he said.
"The project represents a real savings to the state."
SenEx
From page 1
piano teacher requiring his students to attend a concert.
At a Faculty executive committee meeting that followed the SenEx meeting, members discussed a letter from Don Marquis, associate vice president of the expo, who suggested a way to allow more faculty to present.
University policy states that only 4 percent of the faculty may be on sabbatical during a semester.
He said that professors teaching at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., rarely went on leave and that if the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses could be counted as one, more Lawrence campus professors could take leave.
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Inside
Page 6 University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
Praying
Meg Robie Howard, Lawrence, raises her arms in praise of God at the Word of Faith Evangelist Tent Revival.
"The Lord
C
Brother Ricley delivers his message (top photo) from the scriptures during a revival this week in Lenceau. The Love of God is evident in all aspects of life, including the message on the musical instrument case (bottom). Ricley's son Gary, 13, is moved by the Holy Spirit after his father, a self-described "bellfire and bristonite preacher" delivered his sermon.
JESUS IS LORD
Photos by
Photos by:
EARL RICHARDSON
Story by:
PENNI CRABTREE
told me just now to annoint you," the heavy-set evangelist with the boyish face told the young man before him. "You have great work to do; you must carry the message.//
As the self-described "hellfire and brimstone preacher" moved throughout his audience, touching them and praying, the participants watched with obvious admiration.
Then Brother Riley walked on stage. In his blue, vested suit, Riley was unimposing. But his audience knew better.
Instantly dozens of black vinyl Bibles appeared from beneath chairs. Children were shushed. The audience, visibly moved, waited for the harangue of hellfire and forgiveness that many of them had returned to hear.
The Word of Faith Evangelist Tent Revival had begun. What followed was a brand of raw evangelism brought to Lawrence for 10 nights, beginning last week
The message was simple—repent, reform and strive.
"You can't listen with a carnal ear and hear spiritual truth," Ricley told his audience. "Ask for the truth, reach out with your heart for the truth. I bring you the Spirit."
As Ricley spoke, his voice grew harsh and his words quickened. He slashed the air with a sweep of his arm and pointed at his audience.
"Where did we get this sleazy idea of 'laid back?' " Ricley asked through a mournful din of "Praise God" and "Help us Jesus."
Rickley brings his message to towns throughout the Midwest, traveling in a tiny camper with his wife Pam and son Gary. His collection plate, when passed, is usually more empty than not, Rickley said.
Sitting in his camper before Tuesday night's revival began, Ricley spoke quietly of his evangelistic calling. A battered child who went through a succession of psychologists, Ricley said that he was contemplating suicide when, at 12, he was "born again in the Spirit of the Lord."
"When I was 12, I had a vision from the Lord. I saw a church covered in ice, and I heard Jesus say 'I cannot come or leave.' The windows and doors were barred by ice, the people couldn't get in or out."
Ricley, a 32-year-old Lead Hill, Ark, evangelist, doesn't settle for a half-way job. Mixing sincere religious fervor and a little shrewd showmanship under a 60-by-90-foot stretch of weather-beaten canvas, Ricley prods his audience into a frenzy of religious worship.
Men and women wept, arms outstretched and eyes closed in prayer. Many began to talk in tongues or to convulse in religious ecstasy. Ricley's 13-year-old son Gary collapsed on the ground, writhing in the arms of a friend.
SHEPHERD
University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
Page 7
Phone bills ring up less with MCI rates to cities
BY CINDY HRENCHIR
Staff Recruiter
Staff Reporter
If Ma Bell's tab for your last wave of homesickness left you gasping, MCI Telecommunications might be able to cut your next phone bill.
Calling Washington, D.C., using the Bell System from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. costs 64 cents for the first minute, Bell officials said. Microwave Communications Inc., however, charges 38 cents for the first minute of a call to Wichita costs 25 cents. The Bell System charges 53 cents for the same call.
If you are more than a Sunday afternoon long-distance caller, the system may cut your bill. But with the Bell system's weekend rates, the average caller would not save much with the MCI system.
For someone calling Wichita, MCI costs 23 cents for the first minute at 3 p.m. Sunday. With the weekend offered by Bell that call costs 18 cents for the first minute and 13 cents for each additional minute.
MCI began as a network between Chicago and St. Louis in 1968. Since then, it has spread to more than 125 large and medium-sized cities
DAVID LONGHURST, owner of the House of Usher printing company, began using the service earlier this month.
"We saw one of their ads on the television," said Longhurst. "That's how we found out about them. We found MCI rates to be a significant savings."
The Bell system has worked with MCI, allowing them to lease lines for residential service. But controversy has developed.
AT&T, of which Bell is a subsidiary, is governed by the Federal Communications Commission. MCI is not regulated. The FCC requires that the Bell system provide service to everyone.
MCI, on the other hand, is not required to do so, and provides service.
According to Pauline Knight, district manager for the Bell system here in Lawrence, Bell must provide service to sparsely populated areas.
"It would cost too much to charge these customers what expenses were created by giving them service," she said.
SO THE CHARGES are spread out, and long-distance is one of the ways of taking care of these expenses. MCI, meanwhile, has cut heavily into this
This has created tensions between the two companies.
While ignoring smaller areas such as Colby, MCI is able to offer three types of services for metropolitan areas such as Kansas City.
Excunet is a 24-hour service offered by MCI for businesses. It costs $10 a month plus charges for calls. The 24-hour additional service also cost $15 plus calls.
The Super-Saver is the company's economy package. The service costs $5 a month plus charges for calls. It offers free Wi-Fi, and all day on weekends and holidays.
THE SIGNAL is carried by microwave towers that are spaced at 28-mile intervals between major cities. The phone's receiver is the subscriber's phone must be touch-tone.
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Pam Robinson, a fifth-year architecture student, is the winner of the KLZR Scholarship. Pictured with KLZR Music Director Tom Hollday (left) and Program Director John Conrad (right). Pam registered with KLZR during a live broadcast in front of the Kansas Union during enrollment. She wins a $500.00 cash scholarship, $150.00 for textbooks from the KU Bookstore, a Jayhawk throw rug from Bud Jennings & Sons Carpet and an end-of-semester ski trip from the Travel Center of Lawrence. Many other KU students who registered won other prizes.
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For more information contact the administration of justice coordinator in room 4C of Lippincott Hall (old Green Hall).
Associate, bachelor's and master's degree programs offered include college bound students also welcome.
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University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
1
Student fees give KUAC a lift
By EILEEN MARKEY Staff Reporter
The Kansas University Athletic Corporation has raised $180,000 in additional revenue by doubling this year's budget. The spokesman for the department reports.
"We haven't received the money from enrollment, but when it comes down here, it will be used for women's athletics and men's non-revenue sports," Susan Wachter, athletic business manager, said yesterday.
When full-time students paid their special activities fees at enrollment last week, the amount included a $3 athletic fee. Last year, the fee was $1.50.
DAVID ADKINS, Student Executive Committee chairman, said the athletic fee was imposed on students over Student Senate objections.
"Our student members opposed that
increase at every point along the way," Adkins said.
Marcum and members of the Kansas University Athletic Corporation board approved a proposed increase in the athletic fee last spring. The proposal was sent to Acting Chancellor Del Shankel for approval. Shankel accepted the recommendation and sent it to the Board of Resents, which approved it.
Adkins said the student members of the KUAC board voted against the proposes and, after being overruling, he saw there would be in effect only for one year.
"They told us it was a one-shot deal." Adrian complained, the issue very closely aligned with his own.
A COPY OF the KUAC projected budget for 1981-82 showed that revenue from the student fee would contribute $670,000 to the school and $140,000 to men's non-revenue fees.
The $179,544 generated from students will account for only 4 percent of a projected $3.9 million budget. The
budget also depends on $1.2 million in contributions from the Williams Educational Fund. Money from the fund is donated by alumni and others, and it finances almost all of KU's athletic scholarships.
The KUAC budget also projected $288,448 in aid appropriated by the Legislature, but Wachter said those sports would be used only for women's sports.
KU will be playing seven home football games this season, as opposed to five last year, and according to the team's plan, the gate is projected to increase by $250,000.
KU could also generate an added $1 million in football revenue if the University agreed to ratify a contract with the College Football Association.
LAST FRIDAY, KU and 32 other CFA member schools ratified four-year law school requirements would guarantee each school $1 million for two television appearances on NBC.
By CATHY BEHAN Staff Reporter
President Reagan's proclamation that yesterday would be Women's Equality Day caused surprise and among women' groups in Lawrence.
Women use day to stump for ERA
"The fact that there was an 'equality day' without any preparation makes me wonder what the point was supposed to be," said Elizabeth Taylor, whose Emily Taylor Women's Resource and Career Center, 218 High Hall.
Yesterday was the 61st anniversary of the date women won the right to vote through the 19th Amendment. Only three more states ratified the amendment to obtain the required for the ERA to become the 27th amendment to the Constitution. The deadline for ratification is June 30, 1982.
Area women's groups' representatives said they wondered if the proclamation was supposed to be an indication that if it was meant to belittle the EFA.
Reagan could have an effect on state legislators by supporting ERA and showing the effect his tax cuts would have on women. Boaz said.
GAIL BOAZ, president of KU's Commission on the Status of Women, said, "It seems like the Reagan administration is trying to appease women through a press case against women who come through on the concrete issues like ERA, then Women's Equality Day is just a slap in the face."
"I think it's ironic that Reagan made this proclamation in the same book with his proposals for weakening Affirmative Action guidelines," said Ballard.
Groups who really support ERA
will probably come back harder than ever, according to Ballard.
Powers said Affirmative Action losing power could possibly "wake a few more people up in the 11th hour" to fight for the ERA
Denny Powers, 2430 W. 25th St., a member of the National Organization for Women, said, "They might not get the support they once did, but people will realize that it's a giant step backwards if affirmative action is weakened, as well as the ERA not being ratified."
TERRI WARRINER, co-ordinator for NOW, said that the weakening of affirmative action had already brought on a backlash and that NOW was being deluged with new volunteers and contributions.
Lawrence Mayor Marci Francisco said she proclaimed yesterday to be Women's Equality Day in Lawrence a week ago.
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Leach Beginners Swinger Racquetts NOW $19.95 Reg. $24.50
- Wilson Extra Duty Orange Tennis Balls ONLY $2.99-can of 3
- Plain colored 100% cotton champion T-shirts $3.99 will print to please team discounts!
●Dodger shorts—All colors NOW $4.99 Reg. $6.50
All sweat suits in stock 20%-40% off regular price
- Wilson Nylon Tote Bags $14.50
Converse Arizona Running Shoe $34.95
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Big 8 Team Caps $4.95
- Converse Leather Hi-tops—natural trim ONLY $38.95 while supply lasts
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University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
Page 9
SUMMER'S HAD IT!
Whether you're headed back to class or back to work, make the best of it with BIG SAVINGS on stereo gear!
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| 1. Sanyo M-9975 AM/FM stereo cassette with automatic music select, digital tape counter, metal tape, two-way speakers, LED power meters and mic-mixing | $249.95 | $219.00 |
| Sanyo M-9982 AM/FM stereo cassette with all the above plus record music auto-stop variable monitor system, soft elect and wide-world power capability | $279.95 | $249.00 |
| 2. Audiovox 3000 in-dash AM/FM cassette stereo system with Audiovox COSC-26/6" 20 oz coaxial door speakers | $179.90 | $119.00 |
| 3. Panasonic RQ-2107A portable cassette recorder with built-in mic and tone control | $ 39.95 | $ 29.00 |
| 4. Fisher PH-490K portable high fidelity system with 4 band stereo radio cassette recorder with Dolby, soft-touch controls, gratic EQ with 5 level controls and detachable 2-way speaker systems | $699.95 | $599.00 |
| 5. JVC RS-11/50 watt receiver features LED indicators and the system includes the JVC LA-21 semi-automatic belt drive turntable complete with uniradiant magnetic cart plus JVC SK-101 80 watt speakers | $749.80 | $499.00 |
| 6. Panasonic RF-590 AM/FM portable radio with full range tone control and carry case | $ 54.95 | $ 40.00 |
| 7. Sanyo FT-645 in-dash AM/FM cassette stereo with auto-reverse and digital time and station display with Sanyo SP-40 30 watchtone柜 door speakers | $259.90 | $199.00 |
| 8. Texas Instruments Student Math Kit includes the Ti-30 scientific calculator, 224 page calculator math book and carry case | $ 21.95 | $ 14.00 |
| 9. Fisher MT-6410 belt drive turntable with strobe and speed controls, automatic return and shut-off. Complete with uni-radial magnetic cart. Can be added to the PH-490K | $169.95 | $119.00 |
| 10. Fisher RS-2002/40 watt receiver has built-in five band equalizer and the system includes the MT-6410 belt drive turntable with uniradiant magnetic cartridge plus Fisher's DS-126 30 watt 3-way speakers | $649.80 | $449.00 |
| 11. Sanyo RP-5445 AM/FM portable radio with tone control and AC adapter | $ 39.95 | $ 29.00 |
| 12. Panasonic RQ-335A mini-cassette recorder with cue, review, pause, tape counter and AC/DC adapter charger | $ 69.95 | $ 59.00 |
| Panasonic RQ-337 top of the line mini-cassette recorder with all the above plus variable speed control and carry case | $ 99.95 | $ 79.00 |
| 13. Sanyo M-5021 AM/FM digital clock radio with wake-to-music system Sanyo M-5100 deluxe AM/FM digital clock radio with buzzer or wake-to-music capability in walnut style cabinet | $ 39.95 | $ 29.00 |
| 14. Sanyo M-2402 3-AM FM cassette with ADC adapter and powerful full-range 4" speaker | $ 59.95 | $ 49.00 |
| 15. Sanyo FT-C2 mini-chassis in-dash AM/FM cassette stereo with Sanyo SP-700 6"/" door speakers | $ 99.90 | $ 79.00 |
| VR-3 audio rack is optional with systems shown (#5, #10, #17) | $ 79.95 | $ 39.00 |
| 17. Sony STR-V15 30 watt receiver with station presets, plus Sony PS-LX-2 semi-automatic drive turntable with uniradiant magnetic cart and Sony SSU-45 60 watt 3-way speakers | $649.80 | $499.00 |
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B. Mura Redset Headphones.
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C. Discwasher or Soundsaver
Record Cleaning System ... $12⁹⁰
D. Audio-Technica AT-10
Phono Cartridge ... $20⁹⁰
E. Marantz SR-2000
38 W. Channel Receiver ... $249⁹⁰
F. Sony SSU-45 H.
8" 3-way 60 watt Loudspeaker ... $199⁹⁰/pair
G. Panasonic EAB-940
6x9 100 watt car speakers ... $99ºº/pair
H. Ploneer PL-100
Belt drive semi-automatic turntable ... $99ºº
I. Pioneer CT-4
Cassette Deck with Dolby B + C
metal tape ready ... $199ºº
J. Fisher STD-200
wood speaker stands. ... $20ºº/pair
K. Sound tripper ST-1
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master charge
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Limited to in-store stock. Some items may not be displayed in all stores.
NELSON'S
TEAM ELECTRONICS
/
Page 10 University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
Office helps foreign students
By PAM ALLOWAY Staff Reporter
An "advocate and intermediary" is how Judy Woolf describes the office of foreign student services.
The office, in Strong Hall is more than 20 years old and grew out of the dean of men's office. It is now a part of the office of student affairs.
According to Woelfe, the office deals with a variety of everyday problems, but "for foreign students, these problems seem much larger."
Rattikombooavenatya, a Bangkok,
Thailand student, said foreign student
services was "the first place I had to
go."
She said the office helped her with travel problems.
"They were helpful and helped me settle down." she said.
Boyoavatana said she wished the office would help acquaint students with other students from their own countries.
Woolfe, office assistant director, said the office coordinated programs to ease the "cultural shock" of students from home countries to the United States.
Tonight is Ladies Night at The Hawk
Woelfel said the office picked up new students at Lawrence Memorial Airport upon their arrival if the students needed transportation.
At the orientation sessions foreign student services hold each year, different nationality groups set up an orientation center to the various campus organizations.
"Foreign students have the same concerns as U.S. students have, but for foreign students these problems seem much larger." Woehl felt said.
for example, Fatma Salem, a
Benghaz, Libya student, is moving
Programs that are designed for community interaction include a Lawrence Host Family Program, which assigns foreign students to an academic program. According to Woolfel, last year 100 Lawrence families hosted 250 students.
THE OFFICE WILL help an
nurses who
participated in the fall, she said.
TO FURTHER assist students, foreign student services tries to have the community interact with them as much as possible.
OVERLAND PHOTO
4 x 6
35 mm Prints
from Lawrence to St. Louis and the office has helped her notify the federal government of her move. Under immigration laws, registered aliens must notify the government of a move from one state to another.
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PUBLIC NOTICE...STEREO LIQUIDATION
California Stereo Liquidators, Federal No. 95-3531037, will dispose of, for a manufacturer's representative, their inventory surplus of new stereo equipment. The items listed below will be sold on a first-come first-served basis at . . . 7/C MOTEL
9:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.
ONLY WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
For Muscular Dystrophy
70 Kegs
Saturday, August 29th—8:00 p.m.
Delta Upsilon Parking Lot
Tickets available at party
Party concludes the
DU 1st Annual M.D.A. Football Tournament
Games Thursday and Friday at 4 p.m.
Championship games on Saturday at 3:00 and 4:30 p.m.
23rd and Iowa
| | Value | Disposal Price | Value | Disposal Price |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 5 Only AM/FM Cassette Car Stereos, In Dash | $159. | $29 each | $89 | $29 pair |
| 5 Only AM/FM 8 Trk Car Stereo In Dash | $139 | $29 each | $119 | $49 pair |
| 20 Only 8 Track Car Stereos, Underdash | $69 | $19 each | $159 | $39 each |
| 20 Only Cassette Car Stereos, Underdash | $75 | $25 each | $49 | $19 pair |
| 32 Only AM/FM/8 track Car Stereos In Dash (Best) | $165 | $59 each | $225 | $89 each |
| 30 Only AM/FM Cassette Car Stereos In Dash (Best) | $189 | $59 each | $225 | $89 each |
| 20 Pair Only Modular 4-Way Speakers | $179 | $89 pair | $89 | $29 each |
| | | | | |
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Intramural soccer managers meeting will be at 7 tonight in 202 Robinson
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1981
University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981 Page 11
Integrated Humanities enjoys revival
By MARK ZIEMAN Staff Reporter
Partly because of the work of a group of students, the Integrated Humanities program, a four-course-sequence based on the reading of classic works of literature, has ensured its enrollment this semester after years of controversy and student neglect.
The program, team-taught by Dennis Quinn, professor of English, and John Schroder, professor of classes, has attracted the faculty almost since its inception in 1970.
Quinn said that he was not quite sure caused the increased enrollment, but he
"We had an exceptionally energetic group of students last year," he said, "and some of them formed the Students for the Integrated Humanities."
THE GROUP raised money for a detailed brown-and-red brochure to explain the program to prospective students.
"It appears that the brochure the students put together and distributed
has somewhat overcome the mailing prohibition, "Quinn said. 'We're not a
Opponents have labeled the program "a form of inductation" and have accused the instructors of being instructors converting students to Roman Catholicism.
In one instance, the father of a past IBST student accused the instructors of persuading his son to join a secluded monastery along with other students.
In the spring of 1976, the program was dealt another blow when two students participating in an HHP semester in North Carolina were being trapped by an incoming tide.
After the incident, the program suffered a large drop in enrollment, but Quinn said at the time that the drop was caused by an administrative decision. Quinn said she had emailing brochures to incoming freshmen and not because of the controversy.
"That prohibition made it impossible to teach the students," Quinn said yesterday.
laryngeal day:
WHEN REMINDED of the past
controversy surrounding the course. Quinn said, "The last thing I want is controversy."
Quinn said he didn't know if the controversy would resume because of the increased enrollment. But he said he wouldn't worry about a new administration at the University.
represent," he said. "We're optimistic about some of the things the new vice chancellor of academic affairs, Deanell Tacha, has said.
"They seem to be more interested in the kind of academic program we
"She has shown an interest in the promotion of excellence in undergraduate teaching and in a close tutorial relationship between faculty and students.
KU fraternity awarded Harvard Trophy
The Phi Delta Theta fraternity at the University of Kansas has won the highest award given by its national authority, the Haskell Trophy, for the second consecutive year.
The fraternity received the trophy this fall for outstanding achievement in service, community service, academics and involvement during the 1980-'81 school year.
To qualify for the trophy, the fraternity had to receive one of the 25 awards in the NI-M-Excellence Awards given for overall philanthropic and campus activities.
In the last 56 years, the KU chapter has won the award 12 times, according to a report of students of KU's chapter. There are 160 chapters in the United States and Canada.
"It's quite an honor and the men here at the house are striving for it next year," Hall said.
The chapter also won the Paul C. Beam Award for an outstanding single-day basketball tournament to benefit Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Society America. The chapter awarded $6,000 raised from the tournament to the society.
TODAY
On Campus
THE EPIISCOPAL EUCHARISTIC
FESTIVAL will meet at noon in
Danforth Church
ENTRY DEADLINE AND MAGERS MEETING for Reception Services soccer will be at 7 p.m. in Gymnastium 1, Robinson Center.
A PLANNING SESSION FOR U.N.
DAY will be held at 4:30 p.m. in
the Main Lounge, Satellite Union.
A REPRESENTATIVE FROM THE ILIFF SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY will meet with students interested in graduate theological education at 4:30 p.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
SATURDAY
THE KU SOCCER CLUB will hold an organizational meeting for men and women interested in joining at 10 a.m. in the pool lobby, Robinson Center.
THE EPISCOPAL EUCHARISTIC FELLOWSHIP will meet at 5 p.m. in the Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana St.
SUNDAY
A NEW BEGINNING IN THE
NATIONAL ECUMENICAL STUDENT MOVEMENT will be the discussion topic at the evening supper at 5:30 in Center. Worship takes place at 7 p.m.
AUDRIUS ROZUKAHNS, organist,
will perform a student recital at 8 p.m.
in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy
Hall.
Inquisition into murder implicates woman
Yesterday's inquisition into the Aug. 12 murder of a Topeka woman substantiated evidence implicating an assistant prosecutor in arranging to District Attorney Mike Malea.
Three witnesses, all from Topeka, were subpoenaed to the inquisition.
Charged with first-degree murder and aggravated robbery in the case Wgendwyn McNair, 23, also of Topeka. McNair was arrested 24 hours after the woman, Terry L. Brown, was found dead of multiple gunshot wounds to the head and upper body along a county road six miles northwest of Lawrence.
JUST PURCHASED!
85 Desks and Chests.
See at Emerald City Antiques
415 N. 2nd Daily 9-5
NOW OPEN
--forms and return them to 208 Robinson by
LAWRENCE VETERINARY CLINIC
841-9956
James N. Kraft D.V.M.
Practice limited to Small Animals & Horses
1100 W. 23rd
Leaving Town?
---
ATTENTION SPORTS CLUBS
Buy your Thanksgiving and Christmas airline tickets now.
Get the best prices and availability.
Maupintour travel service K.U. Union 749-0700 800 Mass
1981-82 Budget Request Forms are available in 208 Robinson. All Sports Clubs interested in Student Senate Funding Allocations need to complete the request
KOA
Budget hearings will begin the week of
Sept. 7th.
Sept. 4 at 5:00 p.m.
TRY OUR
FREE DRYING WITH WASH
Laundromat
- Sandwich & Salad Bar
Make your own
Games
Hours
- Coffee 35°
- Take out beer
- Coffee 35° 7 a.m.-2 a.m.
free refills
Come in for $1.00 pitchers on Thurs.between 6:00-8:00
842-3877
Time Out
2408 Iowa
- Self Serve Copies 3 $ ^{c} $
T
Behind the teepees
THE ATHLETE'S WAY
Featuring Converse, Brooks, Puma. Adidas, Dodger & many, many, more.
discount on anything in the store.
Clip this coupon, bring it into the store and get a 10%
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Introducing Lawrence's Newest Sporting Goods Store
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Holiday Plaza
Store hours; Mon-Sat 10-6 Sun 1-5
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15% Discount on all security hardware through the month of September.
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HAVE YOURS DELIVERED!
TWITCHING AIRPLANE
THE KANSAS CITY STAR The Kansas City Times FALL STUDENT DISCOUNT
$16^{56}
- Morning
- Evening
- Sunday
I agree to subscribe to the Kansas City Star and Times for the Fall 1981 semester at the above special rate and will pay in advance of delivery. I understand that the offer is effective beginning the first day of registration and expires the last day of finals. This offer is only made to areas serviced by a carrier or delivery agent of the Kansas City Star.
DATE ___ 1
NAME
ADDRESS
PHONE ___ APT. ___
STUDENT ID
CHECK IF PAPERS ARE TO BE DELIVERED
DURING THANKGIVING BREAK
Got a question? Call the Star/Times at 843-1617
SIGNED
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KS 66044
Page 12 University Dally Kansan, August 27, 1981
---
1.
Bluffs area controversy sparks suit against city
By JOE REBEIN Staff Reporter
The already-clouded issues surrounding the Bluffs development became more murky by a lawsuit filed in Douglas County District Court Monday.
The controversial west Lawrence development has prompted city commissioners to go into four closed door sessions, the most recent being held Tuesday night, when commissioners learned that the developer, Raymond Brennan, had ceased to care and its chief building inspector for failing to issue a building permit.
The suit, filed by Richard Zinn, lawyer for the developers named City Commissioners Marci Francisco, Tom Gleason, Barkley Clark, Nancy Shortz and Donald Binns as defendants. Also listed as a defendant was Gene Shaughnessy, the city's head building inspector.
The Bluffs in a hilly area just east of the intersection of Sixth and Iowa streets. Area residents have protested against the proposal to build two 10-room townhouses in the area.
THE LAW SUIT is the latest in a series of events that have stalled the development.
Commissioners had approved a building permit in May, but it later was rescinded when Shontz, Gleason and Sanders to deny the final plot of the development.
At Tuesday night's City Commission meeting, commissioners deferred action on the suit until Sept. 15, when they would for both sides could be present.
The suit asks the City Commission be forced to reinstate the building permit it rewoked in July. It also seeks more damage to the developer says it has submitted by the delay in the 0.8-acre development on Fifth and California streets.
Commissioner Clark said the suit, which is scheduled to be assigned to a district judge Friday, was a legislative tool against the Commission.
"I think the reason for filing the suit was that they (Vangard Corporation) rights before the site plan was discussed by the Commission's meeting," Clark said.
GERALD COOLEY, lawyer for the case, said he not responded to the Vanguard petition.
"We have received a copy of the petition, but I haven't had time to make any modifications made," Cookey says. "But we have taken a timely and appropriate response."
Cooley said the Commission would not hold another public hearing on the disagreements. He said the pending suit did not keep the Commission from making a decision on the site plan for the development at their Sept. meeting.
Mayor Francisco saw the suit as a way to bring the issues to the forefront.
so the law is as a signal that we have our position "clear" Francisco said.
"There is some concern on the part of the Commission over the legalities of the plating process used at the development.
"If the developer is unwilling to remedy what we feel are procedural errors, then the court may be the appropriate place to settle it."
RESIDENTS NEAR the development are concerned about the increase in traffic and the increased water runoff that would occur from the hard surfaces of the development, said Robert the attorney for the protecting residents.
"Step by step, there has been a constant effort to diminish the rights of the public and owners," he said. "We are opposed to the development because we feel the change of zoning was contrary to the plan the city has made for this area—one of the most beautiful in Lawrence."
Courses using computers offered at the University of Kansas since 1978 have nearly tripled, causing overcrowding at existing terminals, the director of the Academic Computing Service said yesterday.
Students find crowds a terminal problem
"It is clear that we are doing a task," said director Jerry Niaumba, putting, "and Director Jerry Niaumba."
The number of courses using computers offered at KU has skyrocketed since 1978, when only 460 such courses were offered in all disciplines. The number of courses jumped to 1,273 in 1980, but the number of terminals has not kept pace with the increase in course offerings. Niebaum said.
COMPLIANTS FROM time-pressed students are common. George de Medina, Lawrence junior in chemical engineering, said that it was hard to get into the engineering computer center, especially when course deadlines were near. The best time was late at night, she said.
"A good way to get computer time is to get into the center computer just
before midnight and stay until 2 or 3 in the morning," she said.
"Every man, woman and child is in computer time," she said.
People who don't have cars are more restricted in the times they can work with the computer terminals because they walk home alone, de Medina said.
Jane Bacon, Overland Park senior in business, also mentioned the virtues of nocturnal computer work.
"It all depends on when your
p院ms are due, when you work and
when you retire."
"As long as you're in before midnight, we almost stay overnight there," she said.
She mentioned the ease of getting on the computers during summer session as compared to the spring and fall semesters.
DAVID FILE, Beloit sophomore in aerospace engineering, said that hour breaks between classes could be used but that they were not practical except
for typing programs into the terminals.
Letting a program run between classes translates into an inevitable break in the student's train of thought when he stops working with the program to attend his next class.
"It's said that 10 percent of a population is debugging it," he said.
The bigger the block of time available for searching for mistakes, the less total time it takes to find them. So the minimal time available between classes is best spent doing something else, he explained.
"Computer time is valuable, and n'g
is valuable when it gets scarce,
he said.
Working with computers in the evening or late at night also takes up large blocks of study time, he said. The computer systems are under peak use, the response times the time it takes for a computer to print a program, is much longer.
"Waiting for the printouts can be a hassle," he said.
...museum affirmed File's remarks.
"Our activity is very peakish," he said.
He compared the peak usage of the computers to the peak power usage of a utility company. Inadequate planning concentrated usage can result in a brown, he said. Under peak demand, computer response time becomes slower.
THE ACADEMIC computing center has hired a billing programmer to provide usage statistics to help the center manage for the purchase of more terminals.
To explore possibilities for alleviating the problem, the academic computer center has launched a 90-day trial of two different types of computer services in September. The center intends to serve that most improves servies, be said.
The new systems would not let any more than the allotted 1400 people call in simultaneously, but they would speed up the computers' response time, Nordland said.
XEROX COPIES
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749-1501
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Nautilus FITNESS CENTERS
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on:
Sweaters Twills
Blouses Wools
Cords Blazers
Jeans Coats
Lawrence Book Welcomed.
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821 Mass
Performance
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ALTRA
ALL ALTRA DOWN KITS
Thursday-Friday-Saturday
Sarah's Fabrics 925 Massachusetts
Suds·n·Duds
WHERE K.U. CLEANS UP
New facilities
Coors on tap
Cheers
- Happy Hour — 4 to 6
40° draws—$1.25 pitchers
*Sat. Nite Special
— $1.25 if you bring your laundry.
*Mon. thru Fri.
—General Hospital Hour—$1.25 pitchers.
Located on 25th St. In the Holiday Plaza.
Open 10am to 12pm 749-1575
PRING
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University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
Page 13
Gura leads Royals to victory
By United Press International
DETROIT—Larry Gura pitched a seven-hitter last night and Cesar Geronimo triggered a five-run fifth inning with a two-r runner to help the Kansas City Royals to a 6-1 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
Gura raised his record to 8-5 with his fourth straight post-strike victory and was helped in the first two innings by a single pitch. He walked three and struck out four.
Geronimo singled and stole second in the second lining and scored on a single by Rance Mullinicks off starter and loser Aurelio Lopez 5-2.
Darryl Motie walked to start the
seventh inning and Geronimo followed
with his second horner of the season.
Singles by Willie Wilson and Frank White brought on George Capazzellio.
He gave up an RBI single to George Brett, hit Willie Akens to lend the bases and yielded a single to Hal McRae before completing the inning by walking Mottley with the bases loaded.
Ron Jackson had an RBI triple in the moment of the ninth for Detroit's only run.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Los Angeles 18, Pittsburgh 6
San Francisco 7, Chicago 4
San Diego 9, San Jose
Atlanta 5, Philadelphia 3
Minnesota 2, Houston 3, New York 3
California 5
Kansas City 6, Detroit 1
Miami 7, Chicago 5
Maryland 10, pail, rain
Detroit A AB B H H1
Cleveland, cf 4 0 1 0
Toronto, ss 4 0 1 0
Kemp, if 3 0 1 0
Portland, f 3 0 1 0
Gibson, ff 4 0 1 0
Jackson, lb 6 0 0 1
Park, pl 6 0 0 1
Wash. thfs, b 6 0 0 0
Brooklyn, kb 6 0 0 0
Whalike, 2b 3 1 1 0
Toledo 2 1 1 0
Kansas City 010 000 000 0
Kansas City
Bryn, b
White, b2
G. Brett
James, b
McFae, dh
Quirk, c
Wilson, rf
Moley, rf
Geronimo, lf
Mullinka, ss
Twain
AB R H B1
4 1 1 0
4 1 1 0
4 1 1 0
4 0 1 1
4 0 1 1
2 0 0 0
3 0 1 0
3 0 1 0
4 2 0 0
4 2 2 2
4 2 2 2
4 0 2 1
MIAMI—Delvin Williams' agent informed the Miami Dolphins yesterday that the veteran running back planned to report to camp, but Coach Don Shula told him not to bother because he would be cut.
Randals City 010 060 000
Detroit 000 000 001
Williams' agents, Greg Lustig, said he had finally convinced Williams, a former KU running back, to report after arguing for six months with Williams had refused to report because he was mistreated in Miami last year.
When Shula was called yesterday, the reaction was frigid.
DP-Kansas City, 3. LOB-Kansas City 9. Detroit 7. B2-Cawson, b3-B Jackson, HG-gerion 6.
Shula planning to waive Williams
"We will make our decisions on the people here in training camp. I am going to put Delvin Williams on wavers tomorrow," Shula said.
advise Delvin that he could save himself the trip." Shula said. "We have continued to try to trade Delvin for a job, and we have been unable to work out any deal.
"I TOLD THE representative to
Williams had charged during the off season that coaches, players and fans at Miami had made him ex-convict unhappy. He demanded to be traded.
He said he received a death threat from a fan, a threat from another player demanding he play harder than usual rumors claiming that he used drugs.
contract, which is presumably part of the reason there was little interest in a trade from clubs on the West Coast, where he wants to play. His contract would be negotiable if he were nicked up on wavers.
Williams is under a $270,000
By United Press International
If Williams reported to the Dolphins and were accepted, he would face 7,500 in fines for reporting late to summer training carr.
WILLIAMS CAME to Miami in 1978 in a trade with the San Francisco 48ers and gained 1,258 yards that year. But his production dropped to 703 yards in 1979 and 671 last year.
This week, Lustig was quoted as saying that Williams' ineffectiveness last year was the result of an inepft offensive line.
The University Daily
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one ten one two three four five six seven eight nine eleven
15 words or fewer $2.25 $2.30 $2.40 $2.50 $2.60 $2.70 $2.80 $2.90 $3.00
Each additional word $0.50 $0.50
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 9 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 9 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday 9 p.m.
Thursday 9 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 9 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 843-5308.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
The Kanisan 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.
Gung Fu classes Monday & Wednesday
ming at 7:30 in Robinson Center
beginning August 24. For information call
ibai at 841-2028.
9-2
Cinemax
Did you know that Sunflower Cablevision has a brand new, 24-hour-a-day movie channel?
sunflower cablevision
644 N. Magnolia St. 911-2308
it's called Cinema. This September you can see movies like Cousin Louise "It," "My Bodyguard." The movie is free to watch, but if you like foreign films, movie classics, action-adventure films or cult chessics, you'll love Cinema. And Cinema映客 is half price for 100,000 or come by Sunflower Cablevision.
ENTERTAINMENT
Vail访 The Book End in Quantrill's Flea
Market. Save on prizes, able prizes,
please N. New Hampshire, weekends
ATTENTION CHICAGO AREA STUDENTS!
Sunflower Cablevision carries WGN-TV on cable Channel 22. Call 841-2100 for more information.
8-31
FOR RENT
Single room for rent, new wiring,
electrical, new fire alarm system, new locks,
10' minute walk from campus. $90/mo.
Call between 8-5 843-2228
Moving out of town. Need to place in bedroom unfurnished apartment. Rent $290, water paid. $150.00 bonus offered. 841-8056 3d.
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect for roommates, features wood burning fireplace, large windows, water closet, waterproof/ dry hookup fully-equipped kitchen.
en quiet surroundings. Open house 1-5
daily at 2208 Princeton Bld. or phone
842-2575 for additional Information. tf
Bachelor Pad, Grad Students, Profs. 2 BHR
Modular home, appliances, washer/ dryer.
C/A on 40 acres 9 miles S. of Lawrent,
Co. Lake 1 mile. $250/month. 1-87
$208
SHARE bottom floor of house at 920 New
Hampshire. Spacitions. Very nice. Only $112.
no. + ul. Call John 843-8655. 9-1
Towers. Two pharmacy students need roommate. We'll pay September. Only $135.00/
mo. 749-4751, Doug. 9-2
Sublease 1 bedroom apt. fully furnished.
325s month + electricity. Call 841-6829.
1114 D Miss.
Two blocks to campus 3 bedrooms, off
parking, very clean, no pets,
5704
Single rooms and two bedroom apartments for rent within 10 minute walk of campus.
Call between 8-5. 843-3228. tf
Apartments 10 minute walk to Student
Union. On bus route $225/mo. (includes
citizens) $43-0579.
8-31
2 bedroom duplex, quiet neighborhood, A/C; 3-story duplex, less than $75. Call 719-458-0160 at 8 p.m.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNHOUSES
1208 W. 66th St., 9th Flr., bedroom 1, 11b rooms, attached garage, attic bedrooms, 11b rooms, attached garage, attic and drains Super duplex with quiet quiet exterior cedent references required. Call 749-1507.
2 & 1 HR Apt $270 & $225, walking dis-
kinesis
2 HR Mall Hall $249 & $269,
for more information
8-31
Fitted room for matric students in m or
f, phone John 864-4539, 861-8480 after 6 a.m.
Subsuite 2 Bd Apr. Park 25 $277/50月
water paid. John Call 0-238-5120. 8-28
FOR SALE
Sublet 1-br apartment Rent $217.50/mo.
Deposit 12$0 Call 749-0288. 9-1
1971 Triumph 720 motorcycle Original
Manufacturer: HYUNDAI 841-3000 (944-3655) v. 8-28
Stock No.: FN023016
Fujita 35mm camera w/strap, UV-filter. C2 close-up lens $125.00. Kingston Folk K2 close-up lens $2.00. New Dolby component $8.00. Airequil ad projector $4.00. Scott's 8-28 8739.
Tenura Racquets: New/Used Fischer power-glass plus, Head Vitalis, Head Graphite G-6.5 Head Composite Maxxagger G-6.5 Head Composite Maxxagger racecars for good condition. 844-3643 junctions. 9-30 good condition. 844-3643 junctions. 9-30
EVERYTHING BUT ICE-Buy uncalled or
buildings, goods building—neat old junk and
goods, building materials a bundle
bundle! 601 and Vermont (in the ice
box) 9-7 weekdays, Saturday and
Sunday $0.00
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 2900 W.
tf
2-15" Mug wheelchair; GS 400 1078 Suzuki
motorcycle, 10,000 miles, $700.00; living
room furniture best offer. Call 842-0326
now.
Honda Encept Moped over 700 miles
Perfect running order. Offers over $200.
Contact Ashton Mooney, 816 Hayward
phone (864-5157) 8-28
1775 Subaru 4-speed low mileage runs good.
$1700.00. Call 842-6447. 8-27
Wide, variety items. Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont.
KZ600 motorcycle 1975, extra clean, low
price $895.00 The Boat Deck 18-82
23rd.
Optimaite integrated amplifier. 65 watts/-
cubic foot. Inverter. 8-28 movable coil. 615. 843-3098 After A. 8-28
movable coil. 615. 843-3098 After A.
Tables, chairs, dressers, stereo outfits and speakers, lamps, ping pong tables, rear wall mirrors, large mirrors, graphic wall murals, large mirrors, bifoid door—Everything from the wonderful to the terrific. **THING BUT ICE** up 9-7 weekdays; Saturdays until 5-10. Corner of 8-9 and 8-28
replacement at this moving sale. Housewares: sweeper, toaster, slow cooker, microwave, dishwasher, food prep supplies, two beds, folding chairs and tables, cast iron side table for 80-100 full length white fake fur coat. 2400 Aibanez. Apartments: Nine, Five to Night. Saturday, August 29th.
Lentar BW enlarge, print frame, lamps,
equipment for $100.00. Call 643-8194-3288
or visit www.lentar.com
Leaving country, must sell two snow tires with rims (5.60-15). Very good condition.
$40 841-4051. 8-27
New Stereo speakers 125 watts-3 way Studio speakers Hickory cabinets. $150 each. 8-31
Schwinn 10-speed bicycle. Just tuned up. 8-pipe. Tire 464-838 after 5. 8-31
1971 Torino - $400, 1978 Hondamatic Hawk
400, low mileage. Honda Moped. Call 843-
1737 after 6.
Stereo speaker sale, 10" base, 5" midrange,
8" bass, $39. Everything But Chevy
Vermont. 8-28
Technics RS-631 Stero cassette deck, like
new Newtunion, 843-1772. 8-28
Olympus OM 1 body black, $195. Olympus brand new, and with Olympiciller, 845-7175, 9-1
For sale one twin bed—box spring and patagrap., in good condition.
Pacer 1976, 43,000 miles. 6 cylinder, automatic, AM FM stereo, new tires, many new parts, call (864-1211) 9-1
CUTLASS **68**, blue, AC. AM, $345, 842-
4372 after 4 pm.
109
1979 BS Carr in excellent condition, 19.000 m
*PS*, MS. PC, AC Surcom, 4 up, AM FM
8 track, trick: m4-841-621, 841-554, 8-31
Allman Brothers 2 tickets. Bottom 19
POTS SAVE THE TWIN BED-BOX spring and mattress. In good condition. Call 841-1826.
1872 Pontiac Grand Safari, redwood hall
1890 Pontiac Gagliano, GAGLIANO Saturday,
1892 Pontiac Gagliano, GAGLIANO Saturday,
1894 Pontiac Gagliano, GAGLIANO Saturday.
8x24 gold/rust shag carpet remnant. Excel-
lation-ridden - 330 Perfect for dorm rooms.
842-221
Buckl Rivera, 107. Only $750. A real cream pump one owner car. Has had tender loving care, green color, new, excellent condition. R. S. Raymond, 2004, Ohio, 481, #3-9-3
King size bed, box springs, mattress, frame,
like new $220. Also vinyl chair, 842-192-9.
105" x 76" x 32".
English lightweight 3-speed bicycle, excel-
lent for road saddle, sweet handle, 9-2
842 - 964 866.
1971 Capril, AM-FM radio cassette player
included, $450, 814-4643. 8-28
Toyota 4x4 pickup. Blue with white steel spoke tires. Power steering. Low mileage.
$6500. Call 842-8870, 1-862-9580. 8-28
Staedler drawing set. Like new. Great for ME 108. 325. 842-1397. 8-31
JUST PURCHASED! 83 Desks and chests.
Just north of downtown bridge 415
Just north of downtown bridge 415
1643 Triumph TR 4. Era Sharp Convertible;
1643 Triumph TR 4. Era Sharp Convertible;
red/w/black Interior. Good school car;
good performance.
Men's & Women's vintage clothing for your wardrobe and costing needs at reason-ful retailers in Quantitri's Flea Market invite you to the 10-3, 811 New Hampshire.
FOUND
HELP WANTED
A pair of men's jeans found on Nalsmith Drive. Call 843-9215 evenings. 8-28
Help wanted with light housecleaning & cleaning up cars on Fridays or Wednesdays. Just get your car! Transportation Services are available.
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications
10-5. Bucky's Drive-In, 2120 W. 8th St.
9:28 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Wanted. X-ray tech to cover some vagation
training on a DXR system. Weds and Frid
and Wed and Frid, 9-12, Thee and Frid,
9-12, Thee
have an extra hour? Volunteer as a girl
rewarding Cali Tailors and Wednesday
Student help needed. Part-time for Fall and Spring. Must be able to work a full 40-hour day, 5:00-10:00. General labor and skilled trades assistant. Contact Hazel. Housing Department. Req. Bachelor's degree or 844-3094 as soon as possible with your employer to earn equal opportunities. Affirmative Action Emplois. 828
LEGAL RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Office of Affirmative Action. Must be eligible for work/study. Required: ability to research and present information in a comprehensive way either in written form or as a presentation. Contact: Justiana Research either through coursework or paraconservation. Phone: 212-798-5837. Deadline: August 31, 5:00 p.m. 8-28
Dearfelt Mom needs all-day care Wed. &
Fri., 9am-5pm, age 1½ year; Older
Your name or email
Dearfelt Mom needs all-day care Wed. &
Fri., 9am-5pm, age 1½ year; Older
Your name or email
The Infant Toddler Centers are now Riding
the Infant Bicycle. Students are provided with
inhibitors. In apply in person at 103 S. 46th St.
2nd Floor, 17th Street.
EXECUTIVE Coordinator, KU Graduate School of Education. Will be responsible for knowledge of KU academic programs and governance structure. Will be responsible for a seven member committee. Half-time graduate assistant funded by theGraduate School of Education, eligibility for staff month appointment, eligibility for staff position and cover letter (including two references) to graduate student Council Kansas Union Bristol 1 by 5 students. Interviews will be held August 24th. Interview schedule will be available at Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.
Engineering/Drafting Part-time immediate position for design, management and equipment in progress for dams, plant and equipment laboratory. Job location: capitile (12) Martin Machin Plant, K-10 Hewlett-Deskos. K 6601 858-1184
Student for after school child care 2-6.30
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a
haup plus mileage O'Brien, O'Brien
and Mason.
Wanted: Person to teach Spanish. You learn English, I learn Spanish. 841-7915. 9-1
Part-time work on campus; stapling posts to bulletin boards at 12 pm, 15 hours weekly. No selling your pay is based on the amount of man-hours you earn $4-$7 per hour. This work without supervise. For information see www.washington.edu/revision.
88119, (001) 262-8374, Washington, Washingto
Food service worker position available 9-30
Food service Work. Study Prefer.
Hillpill - 864-4904
Campus representative wanted to order and deliver pens, pencils and supplies. Flexible student preferred. Call 1-800-325-9118 or visit www.ben.danvers.com 1-91
Persons willing to stay evenings and nights with a disabled student. Schedule varies.
Evening meal, call 749-0288.
9-1
Student will with, agricultural background
Resume details of experience to: PO Box 109,
Send resume of experience to: PO Box 109.
Need clerk to work in afternoons in retail Store, see Mr. Dudaly in 9-3 Store, see Mr. Dudaly in 9-3
REWARD--LOSS 8 no. make Brindle Boxer named junior shiped out of collar. call 843-5009 or Pam at 864-3790 with 8-28
Reliable babystarter most Friday evenings
baby showers at 10:30am. 9-Day
snacks provided. 842-8960.
LOST—Blue wallet with rainbow across it.
At Lindley, $25 reward. Call Tiff Pemberton
864-5770.
LOST
A tearful little girl and her moan mum live in the heart of a new south park. Tank car with rabies tans to help them.
NOTICE
EPISCOPALIANS
Holy Eucharist 12 noon every Thursday at Danforth Chapel
Sundays at 5pm at Canterbury House.
Business Opportunity $250 weekly in your spare time, 50 representatives need. Write Rick Young, P.O. Box 514, Stillwater, 9-97406-0514
PERSONAL
Spectacular Specials for Senior class card holders. Cards available at the BCOC office in the Union. 8-27
Corns and brows in Barbs'S Second Hand
House, 515 Indiana. We have quality clothes,
household items, jewelry & gifts for all
ages. 824-4746. 9-30
The Mofet-Beers Band has an immediate
opening for female singers. Please be
qualified. 749-3649 or 841-9797. 8-28
Feel good about yourself. Ballet, exercise,
jazz, and modern dance classes for adults
begin Sept. 8. Lawrence School of Ballet.
842-4505.
9-4
Silk Screen, printing 1-shirts, etc. 1-1,000 group discount's. Shirt art by Swells. 749-
1611. 9-4
Reuse & por-poio, photographs, instant
images, colorful prints
color, black, white, Swett's Studio,
704-369-1255.
If your mind drifts when you study or its
dizziness, learn new ways to concentrate and
learn some new ways to concentrate and
work on campus. August 27 at 6:30-10:00 pm,
Workshop. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong
Street.
FREE INFORMATION on easy way to move
in to the office. 604-572-3891
ASSOCIATES. Box 654, Paintville, KY
27306
--necessary priority in preserving the quality and value of your property. For your general maintenance needs, give me a call. I can help you save on material and labor costs while providing quality work to your satisfaction.
KEY the KEY and POOLHEAD
want you to Launch Your Self Impact
January, August 2018 Bish
KEY Y KY WALKER
KEY WALKER. Be there or be □
The Gator still reigns! King Izod and his crew are back in the city, everything (everything) are waiting at Alkamar to welcome you back to another school. We will be here for 7 hours and 10 minutes. ID_ come to either the Reefer Club or Club_; i_mile away from Kasalon or Club_; i_mile away from Reefer Club. Open 8 am to 9 am on 6th, 7 day a week.
Lost—Several very important anyone. Anyone knowing information regarding Becky Shim, Kim Koon, Kim Warrior, Cathy Korsak, or Jo Money, please call 764-1794.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT, 843-4821.
tf
GOLD! 14 kt Add-a-beads & chains.
GOLD! 14 kt Other jewelry also available.
843-360-391
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Gauze Ring
Buy - Shell - Trade
Gold - Silver - Coins
731 New Hampshire
Hampton, MA 02744
914-814-8771
Hope you enjoy your summer, we've curated a menu. The staff & management of Hawk Crest Cooking shared the good times with us. We are look-see and want to see you! The cook which has been approved by the Lawrence Hotel by votes of 10,685 abstentions. Our kitchen hour, pm. also open Sunday 11 until 8. Watch for our specials, great food. Hope to see you, one block from our house. Covering up Hunger? Try our red beer. 9-1
It late, your home and you’re really
bit late, something delivered better,
but big, delicious, & beautiful.
Man 841-3258 for a YELLOW SUITE delivery.
midnight. Sunday through Thursday.
9-11 midnight. Sunday through Thursday.
One 16 kilogram kg equals $7 \frac{1}{2}$ cases of beer.
Keg beer; if kept cold, is fresher Galyardy
Retail Liquor, 912 Iowa, 843-7029, 3-25
Sunday, afternoon? Playing golf, friends them then the Alvamar Grant Prize is for you. It includes Hawkjack and Sunflower courses. Call 842-189-3570 or put a little golf in your Great Prize and put it a little golf in your
Wanted Quarterback for hard-nosed INDEPENDENT football team to play in trophy league, good arm, mobility a must. Good defense, good greensk need you. Call Jon 842-3807. 9-828
WINTSURFING-I've got boards to rent or sell- and use them. 843-258-96, 3-9
To our AOX plabs: *Happy! Intimidation!* 8-27
Oh Mother, dear mother, what have I done?
Oh Mother, happened to your only son I'm caught in the wall of the walls. WALMERS who party hard and loud! THE
Dear Charles, It's not a joke. Love, J.A.M.
8.27
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Ouyen men's support/discussion group in La
Cruz. Men's support/discussion group in La
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tia
FREE KITTENS, 7 wks, trained, 842-3609
8-31
ATTENTION Cal Hoover: Pinky loves you!!
Have a great day!
8-27
Ih Brad and Dave from Derby! And you
that I wouldn't remember Sherry.
Feasible. After 1½ yrs, you have the num-
ber of hours to watch a video on YouTube,
no shoulder brace or skateboard wipers.
You didn't even stop to chat. What's
the deal? Kelly before, Cahry now. *8-27*
*
COME WALMERS ONE, COME WALMERS ALL,
CALL this bach and have a ball. Now's the time.
Take your pick of pinch the Reverend's burns, it kevs. Birthday to; be the best making water bed waterbirth suit for your morals we will pool Your morals need not know you're square. Meet Ota, Bernadette, and assorted Bash, August 20, GITMBU, 8-28
Bash, August 20, GITMBU, 8-28
SHOKOTON KARATE Club, Great physical conditioning. Learn self-defense and self defense on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday 5:30-7:30, Room 120 and Beginners beginners. 8:2-9
Topeka physician, 30, smart, wishes to meet bright, sensitive, attractive young lady. Box 383, Lawrence. 9-9
Attention. Freshman, Sophomores, Juniors &
Seniors!!! Class cards may be purchased at
the BOCO offices in the Union. 8-27
SERVICES OFFERED
FURSTRATED? Come and visit the graphics arts shop at Stronge Office Systems, 140 Vermont. For the finest quality graphic architecture and engineering supplies.
ANNOUNCING - EDUCADI A computer rete
mounting will be with up to 25 sources of financial aid. Re-
lationship will also only cost $25. For information and name
Lawrence, KS 60044. 204 Atchison,
Lawrence, KS 60044.
THE BIKE GARAGE complete professional specializing in Tux-Ups and Total-Ovation garments. Officially named, sapphire price. 841-721-781. Commuters: Kansas Union Main Lobby. Exchange. Kansas Union Main Lobby.
Maintenance is an unavoidable but
Brad Whittaker
Thank you,
Wilkinson Maintenance
841-0178
841-0178
MATH TUTOR, student and experienced ed
grad with math MA. Algebra. Tig. Calcul.
culus, and Stat. $7/hour. Boh. 841-7293.
14
How to improve your concentration? Or
to improve your performance? Come to
GOLD START on the seminar! Come to
GOLD START on the seminar!
August 27, 6:00-10:00 pm, room 300 Strong
Assistance, Center 121, Strong Hall, H84-
Assistance, Center 121, Strong Hall, H84-.
Need A Ride/Rider? See the Self-Serve Car Pool Exchange. Kansas Union, Main Lobby. 8-28
Babysitting—After 4 daily; weekends all day. Would like steady position. Call 864-1139. 8-27
The New York Times can be delivered to
Toronto and Montreal. To start delivery
to Start delivery to Sun Call 841-7037.
TYPING
Experienced typist will type letters, thesis,
and dissertations. IBM correcting selectric.
Call Donna at 842-2744. **tf**
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Call Myrn.
841-4980.
Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience.
IBM. Before 9 p.m. 749-2647.
Tip Top Typing experienced ttypist IBM
Slectic 843-5675. 9-18
Experienced typist - thesis, dissertations.
Experienced librarian - selective selection, if
Barb. off 5 pm. 842-310-3961
Experienced typist, term papers,thees, all micromessional, the慧 correcting electic, elite or pile, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-954-065. Mrs.Wright. tf
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
granites, editing, self-correcting Selectric.
Call Ellen or Jeannann 841-2172.
tt
It's a Fact. Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing.
843-5820
it
WANTED
Female roommate for two bedroom, two bath apartment. Call 841-8856 for details. 9.99
Female wants to share apartment or house with other female(s) students *Call 913-232-5279 (Tocka) Ask for Judy.
Roommate wanted to share apartment 2-
bdrm. close to campus. Call Pete 843-6523
8.29
ROOMMATE WANTED. Must be studious
& non-smoking. 3 bdr.; modern acad.
closes; to campus. Call 749-2811. Early
mornings or late evenings. Keep trying.
Female to pay 1/3 rent and 1/3 electric.
Closest to campus. Harvard Square Apts.
841-1458. 8-28
Wanted male Christian roommates larger quiet house close to campus. Dishwashers, laundry, microwave. UTILITIES PAID. MAINTENANCE Call Darryl Ott 841-607-1407 Kentucky.
Female Roommate nice 4 bdm house. Fully furnished kitchen, laundry. On bus route.
Call 841-7788. 8-28
Apartment to share; Freshman needs two or three male students to share an apartment in Jayhawk Tower. Non-drinkers/smokers preferred. (912) 754-2811. 8-31
JOURNALISTS: The Goodland Daily News (KS) needs a reporter immediately. Direct any inquires to Tom Dreiling at 913-859-6186 or 899-5444.
9-8
Roommate wanted large 3 bedroom duplex. mile from campus. Call Dave at 841-8066 for information. 8-23
M female roommate to share 2 bdr. apt. $135/
student + 1/2 utilities. Call 643-3277. Secretion
Student welcome. 9-1
Wanted female non-smoker roommate to share a 2 bdr. apart, on bus route, beautiful location. Call 749-3612. 9-2
Looking for one person to share a 3 bedroom house with 2 other people. Only 5 blocks from campus, 1/3 of rent, plus 1/3 of utilities, call 843-2049. 8-28
Female non-smoking housemate to share 2
stores. 2 hr, country home in Leptonem.
Prefer quiet but liberal thinker. $150, mo
+ 1/2 utilities. 87-61711 6:00.
Female roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom 2 bath Malls Apt. 1/3 rent and 1/3 electricity. Phone 843-3948. 9-2
CLASSIFIEDS
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. Own room. $135 month plus ½ utilities. 841-9603.
Share spacious 3 BR gut, near campus. Only $135/month util. pd. Non-smoking females preferred. Call 841-1844. 8-31
Non-smoking female to share large to
bus route. Rent $125 + 1% installment. Every call can
842-1434, mornings 844-4223
Girls to tend must Bail. Must be 18.
Bus routes not listed.
Girls to ten bar. Must be 18. Call Time
out after 2:00. Ask for Terrery. 842-9533.
KANSAN
People read the Kansan classifieds to find homes, jobs, cars, typing services etc. You can use the Kansan classifieds to sell anything from A to Z Just mail in this form with a check or money
order payable to the Kansan to: University
Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS
66045. Use the rates below to figure costs and
watch the results. Now you've got selling power!
Classified Heading:
Writ Ad Hare:
Name:___ Classified Display:
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Dates to Pursue:___
1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times
15 words or less $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25
Additional words .02 .03 .04 .05 .06
Ad Deadline to run Monday Thursday 3 p.m.
Page 14 University Daily Kansan, August 27, 1981
2014 Kentucky football defensive Willis
Running back Kerwin Bell draws a crowd off the field during the Big Eight Skywriters tour yesterday
Skywriters
Fambrough shares anger, optimism
By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Editor
Don Fambrough's mood is as changeable as the Kansas weather.
The head coach joked yesterday with writers from across the Midwest taking part in the Big Eight Skywriters tour. He said his team wouldn't underestimate Tulsa the way it had underestimated Louisville a year ago.
But after yesterday's practice,
Fernbaugh spoke again of Tulsa, and
Fernbaugh spoke again of Tulsa, and
"IF THIS IS any indication of what will happen when we open against this team is in for a rude awakening," Fambrigh said of the workout.
"This was the worst practice we've had all year," he said. "We were working on situation scrimmages and it was just a bad situation
"You should never have a bad practice. There are no excuses."
Earlier in the afternoon, Fambrough could say that his team would be ready for Tulsa.
"The coach, John Cooper, and I are good friends," he said. "He'd rather beat me than anybody. They thought he was a villain, but they'd better read it to be buried!"
Fambrough spoke then as though his team was, indeed, ready for the season a little over a week away. He said the Jayhawks' strong points on offense were the quarterbacks and the receivers.
Fambrough named his quarterbacks and receivers as the most ready of his offensive unit, which will come as a tailback and a tailback to Kearwin Bell in the backfield.
"KERWIN IS an outstanding running back," Fambrough said. "He's got that great instinct that you don't coach."
"But fullback is a position that is really unsettled. It's the position I'm concerned about. We don't have the big backfull I'd like."
The big fullback Fambrough would like is a healthy Chris Emerson. But Emerson, 6-4foot-2, 25-pound junior college transfer, has been redshirted.
"He's definitely out," Mambrough said. "He's a half speed right now and his schoolwork to make up. But he's what you're looking for."
To fill the fullback gap, Fambrigh will use a variety of players, including Walter Mack, who will make the transition from tailback to fullback.
"Mack weighs 185 pounds," Farm brought said. "He's a good blocker,but
"If this is any indication of what will happen when we open against Tulsa, this team is in for a rude awakening."
—Don Fambrough
not the type that can play 60 minutes. We'll use him sparingly."
While Mack is taking a breather, Brad Butts and E. J. Jones will carry the ball.
"BUTT'S IS THE TYPE that will give 100 percent effort," Fambrough said. "If you keep 10 pounds is strong but doesn't have any speed. But he's a really good blocker."
Backing Bell at tailback will be Garfield Taylor, 6-1, 205-pound running back.
"He's got great skill, speed and size," fambroud said. "It bothers me that he doesn't that mental toughness. I bolt he'll be out." If he does, he could be outlandish.
One reason for Fambrough's high
quality is that it is a junior
Russia Bowl, 6-2, 200 pounds.
He's really so much better than anyone knows," Fambrough said. "Injuries kept him from performing the way he can."
"We made a change and moved Greg Smith to noseguard," he said. "We had lost Stan Gardner and didn't have anyone else. So we took Smith from one of the best moves we've made in the last two years.
Defensively, Fambrough said that a position change made in the spring was not unusual.
"It's obvious to us as coaches," he said. "I wasn't afraid to scrimmage a few years ago. We weren't going to hurt anybody. The situation has changed."
"HE HAS NO 'give up' in him. He's tremendously strong and a good pass rusher."
Fambrough said that as a whole, the defense would be greatly improved this year.
"A year ago we were depending on freshmen. It's much tougher for freshmen to make the team now than a year ago."
Fambrough said that he knew expectations were high for the Jayhawks this season and that he knew where to place the blame.
"It's my own fault," he said. "I'm really optimistic and too damn old to change."
JAYHAWK NOTES: Strong safety Ray Evans was reported in satisfactory condition yesterday after surgery on his left knee. The junior was hurt during the scrimmage Sunday afternoon.
The Kansas City, Mo., native will have to wear a cast eight weeks and Head Coach Dou Fambrough said he would be out for the season.
SURVIVAL SKILL EXTRAVAGANZA
Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop
Designed to enhance a student's time management and improve concentration with reading, listening, and notetaking.
August 27
6:30-10:00 p.m. 300 Strong Hall No Registration Required.
Rapid Reading Series
September 3,8,10,15,and 17 Registration Required.
Effective Listening Series
Starting Series September 24 and 29 7:00-9:00 p.m. Registration Required.
For more information or to register, call or come by the Student Assistance Center, 864-4064, 121 Strong Hall.
THE RIGHT WAY TO RUN IS TO LEAVE YOUR HEels BEhind.
10000
1983
THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY
we at Mister Guy believe in style . . .
not fashion . . . fashion changes with
every whim . . .
style is permanent and enduring
fall '81 begins at Mister Guy . . .
for MEN and WOMEN . .
a KU tradition since '69
hours:
M-T-W-F-Sat.
9:30-6:00
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9:30-8:30
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, August 28, 1981 Vol. 92, No.6 USPS 650-640
A
A professional clown from the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Crown demonstrated his flair in front of an audience during clown tryouts yesterday at Kemper Arena. See related page 6.
Budgeting changes draw fire
A Student Senate bill designed to streamline the Senate budget process by creating a budget committee has come under heavy fire from several senators, including one of the bill's sponsors.
By MIKE ROBINSON Staff Reporter
Loren Busby, Financing and Auditing Committee chairman and a co- sponsor of the bill, said he had reservations about its content and relevance. "I'm not sure if I'd vote for it or not," he said. "I'm still not sure if I'd vote for it or not," he said.
"I'm still not sure if I'd vote for it or not," he said.
The bill would amend the Student Senate rules and regulations by creating a budget committee. All allocations would be made by that committee.
Each of the present seven standing committees allocates money in its own area.
The bill went to the Student Senate Rights and Responsibilities Committee last spring after an unsuccessful attempt by Bren Abbott, student representative, to submit the bill directly to the full Senate.
Busby said he objected to the bill because it limited the number of non-student senators on the committee.
Because the funding of groups is probably Student Senate's most important function, Busby said, limiting non-students to 10 positions would close a major part of the student government
He said that for many non-senators, their only opportunity for participation was to join a
See COMMITTEE page 5
Weather
Today will be mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of precipitation, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka.
Today's high will be in the mid 78,
and tonight's low will be around 60.
Tomorrow and Sunday will be partly cloudy with highs both days between 80 and 100 degrees.
KU to study pre-enrollment
BY SHARON APPELBAUM Staff Reporter
Calling KU's present enrollment system archaic, Chancellor Gene A. Budig said yesterday he would examine pre-enrollment as an alternative.
Staff Reporter
"The present system of enrollment is inadequate," Budig said. "It needs to be modernized. The students at KU deserve better."
Budig asked Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, to review enrollment methods and to talk to faculty and staff. Budig said he expected a report by January.
The question of pre-enrollment has been debated for about a decade, with various committees reviewing the process.
out David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said this time might be different.
He said that former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes didn't support pre-enrollment the way Budig did.
"I believe there is more support for this kind of system than there was in the past," Amlerd said.
A few years ago, pre-enrolment was impeded because the University didn't own the proper computer. Amber said a new computer now stored the records and could handle enrollment, too.
The new system would allow students to enroll in the fall for the fall semester and in November for the spring.
Ambler cited several reasons for using preenrollment. First, from a management point of view, he said, scheduling would be easier.
"We do not know until Friday at the end of enrollment the number of students enrolled," he said. Sometimes an unexpected number of students enroll in a class.
"We have between Friday and Monday morning to find the money and the instructor."
He said that instructors who were called on at the last minute had no time to prepare and that instructors would have to wait.
With pre-enrollment, Amber said, students would be able to stay at summer jobs longer because the first day of classes would be moved closer to Labor Day.
"I know students who miss the first week or so of class. They're in a terrible dilemma."
Ambler said the system would help catch students who thought about dropping out of school.
He said advising would be improved because advisers would have more time to talk to students.
"We'll know who isn't coming back and we
will ask the other person, we reason they
didn't on their enrollment," he said.
See PRE-ENROLLMENT page 5
County seesaws in state redistricting
BY STEVE ROBRAHN
Staff Reporter
Douglas County may find itself in any one of three congressional districts after a decision on redistricting is made by the 1982 Kansas Legislature.
Hay's plan
Places Douglas County in 2nd District
1
Garden City
4
Wichita
5
Coffeyville
Kansas House and Senate committees are expected to decide by January on where to draw the lines to equalize populations in the state's five districts.
But, no matter what happens, 3rd district Congressman Larry Winn, R-Overland Park, will continue his support of the University of Illinois's Jimin's administrative assistant, said yesterday.
"Mr. Winn is a graduate of KU and his support for the University will continue, that's for sure." Bond said. "He would hate to give up Douglas County with the close friends and ties he has there, but it's not his decision—it's the Kansas Legislature's decision."
Bond said the 3rd district had 20,000 more people in it than it should, which meant the city would have to grow.
Sebelius' plan
Places Douglas County in 5th District
1
Garden City
2
Topeka ★
Lawrence
3
4
Wichita ★
5
Coffeyville ★
The problem is compounded because two counties are divided between districts, and people in those counties want to be in one district or another, said State Senate Dan. Dan Thessen, R-Independence, who heads the Senate Legislative and Congressional Apportionment Committee.
Sedgwick and Wyandotte counties have been split by congressional district lines.
No decision has been made about redistricting, Thiessen said, adding that meetings were conducted this summer in different areas of the state to get citizen opinions on the redistricting issue.
Douglas County would end up in the 5th district if a plan proposed by former Congressman Keshia Keith were adopted.
That plan is supported by the entire Kansas congressional delegation, the former congressman said in an interview yesterday from his Norton law office.
"I know Sedgwick and Wyandotte counties were holering to be put back together and this was about the only way I knew to do it," Sebelius said.
His plan hasn't gained a lot of support in other circles yet, Sebelius said, but it is about the only way to equalize populations in the districts and avoid splitting counties between districts.
The Sebellius plan would place Wyandotte, Johnson, Miami and Linn counties in the 3rd district.
Another redistricting plan, proposed in July by an Ottawa banker, would put Douglas County in the 2nd district.
"If we have, a geographically sound redistricting, that's the only place Douglas Hoye, vice president of the First National Bank in Kwaiza, who drafted the alternate redistricting plan."
"It does the best job of rapportment that I've seen yet," he said. "I was objective and didn't think about Democrats or Republicans as I did it."
Hay said his plan had an overall population variance of 75 percent, although the legislative committees have called for a variance of 15 percent. The Sebelius plan has similar population differences from one district to another.
"But. 15 percent absolutely can't be done without splitting counties," Hay said. "I like the geographies of my proposal because it doesn't have any impact like the congressional (Seibelian) plan does."
See REAPPORTIONMENT page 5
Top tennies Joggers say running shoes worth their weight in gold
By MARK ZIEMAN Staff Reporter
Only Dorothy has ruby slippers, but anyone may wear a pink Dash Shoe," according to a recent magazine survey.
Running Times, a magazine for joggers and running enthusiasts, has released its fourth annual shoe survey, which rates the per-owner satisfaction of running shoes available to the American consumer.
In the category of men's jogging shoes, Gold Shoe awards went out to the Adidas Marathon Trainer, Adidas Oregon, Addidas TRX Trainer, New Balance 680, New Balance 730 and the Nike Colorado.
All that's gold may not glitter, however. The magazine also reported that prices for top shoes had risen. Still, to some runners, price may not be a factor.
For women, the Gold Shoes were the Brooks Lady Vantage. New Balance 420, New Balance 525
"It kills you to think that the shoes are going to wear in out a few months or so and you're going to have to plow down another 50 bucks, but that's not what we want," she said. "You need quality. You need the support."
"If you're going to be a serious runner, you don't worry about price," Craig Nausta, a coach for the United States, said.
Nuta, who runs six miles a day, said he wore Brooke Vaught. He was pleased to learn that his coach had been very helpful.
rankings and four out of 57 in the rankings of motion control.
Candyce Wainley, owner of the Running Racquet, W2. 3rd St. said her store had many of the rated shoes in stock, but she didn't have them on sale. Gold Shoe might not give them a leash to stand on.
"That's great," he said. "but I've been showing for a N Balance 660 anaway."
For other area joggers in search of Gold Shoe status, a good place to start may be the local
"We don't say, 'Hey, this is a good shoe, wear it.'" Waitley said. "You have to look how each individual is wearing his shoe and see if there is any problem."
Watley said that she chose the shoes she sells by reading about them and that she and her employees wore the shoes to see how they performed.
For runners aspiring to use their gold shoes for a gold medal, Robert Timmons, KU head track coach, said that Nikes were the shoes most often tracked on the track.
"We don't sell shoes just for the sake of selling them, and we want it. We try to base our sales on our own knowledge."
"We're in Nike shoes right now." Timmona said, "put in the past we used Puma. Addias
Once again, however, it all comes down to the feet.
"We really don't recommend any certain item," Timmons said. "It all depends on the guy's tenor."
Jane Gorham
JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staff
Debra Fredrickson, a clerk at In Season Sporting Goods, displays many styles of athletic shoes that the store stocks.
Committee report tries to untangle red tape snarls
Staff Reporte
By SHARON APPELBAUM Staff Reporter
A University committee on red tape has submitted a report to the executive vice chancellor ways to avoid the bureaucratic problems faculty and staff must deal with.
"It's becoming less and less attractive to be a faculty member. We do what we can to reduce the frustration," said Ernest Angio, chairman of the University Senate executive committee.
The red tape committee, officially named the Committee on Policy/Procedures, has been talking to University directors and researchers since March 1980.
The solutions are designed to save time and money.
Some of the problems identified by the committee include;
- Departments and researchers are forced to purchase items through Topeka, and the time required is 42 days. Purchasing through the department is not there aren't enough workers to handle the flow.
- A state statute requires universities to state permission before buying computer equipment.
- The report states, "With wider use being made of microcomputers and the availability of lower priced software packages, the number of small workstations resulting—thus the paperwork becomes a burden."
- When ordering materials, departments use catalog prices that are much higher than actual prices.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
Aides kept missile incident from Reagan for 81/2 hours
SANTA BARBARA, Calif.—President Reagan was not told that Norman Korea fired on an U.S. spty plane until eight and a half hours after the incident, a spokesman said yesterday, but officials stressed that early reports lacked enough information to evaluate the situation.
It was the second time in a week Reagan was not informed for several hours after a shooting incident occurred involving U.S. aircraft.
The North Korean surface-to-air missile exploded several miles from the Soviets' reconnaissance jet early Wednesday morning and posed no threat to the U.S.
Reagan was vacationing in nearby mountains, but a White House spokesman said the president was being kept abreast of the situation in Iraq.
The spokesman told reporters the North Korea missile fire occurred at 10 Wednesday and "the president was informed in his morning briefing, which is not available."
Edwin Meese, presidential counselor, learned of the incident at about the same time as Reagan.
"There really weren't enough details from the Defense Department to tell me the situation," Meese said, explaining the delay in informing the president.
Last week, aides waited six hours before awakening the president to tell him two Navy F-35 fighters had shot down a pair of Soviet-made Libyan jets on Sunday.
the matter was routinely handled by the military, and no presidential decision were required. The same explanation was offered after the L iberian incident.
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt - Egyptian and Israeli officials yesterday agreed on blans for Israel's final military pullout from the Sinai desert next April.
The countries' ministers reached agreement after this week's two-day summit between Egyptian President Anwar沙拉和 Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. At their meeting this week, the two leaders agreed to renew efforts to break the deadlock on the issue of Palestinian autonomy.
Israelis to leave Sinai next April
Israel is scheduled to evacuate the remaining third of the Sinai in April 1982 and return it to Egypt. Egyptian Defense Minister Gen. Abdel Halim Abu Ghazala said several thousand peacekeeping troops would monitor the Sinai while Israel completed its evacuation.
Begin and Sadat will meet Sept. 23 and 24 to discuss the West Bank and Gaza Strip Palestinians, who have been under Israeli rule since 1967.
Israel said it would offer the Palestinians 80 percent of self-administration. But one Palestinian leader scuffed at the offer, charging that Israel was merely "offering a different name for occupation . . . autonomy."
California objects to Sirhan parole
SACRAMENTO, Calif.-The state Senate yesterday overwhelmingly approved a resolution asking the state Board of Prison Terms to cancel the 1984 parole date of Sirhan Sirhan, convicted assassin of Sen. Robert Kennedy.
"His act was intended to kill more than a man," said Sen. Ruben Ayala, D-Chino, author of the measure. "It was intended to kill a vital and living part of our democracy."
The resolution was approved 35-0.
Sirhan murdered Kennedy in June 1968, hours after the senator won the California primary. In an interview broadcast last night on ABC, Sirhan said he was a "changed man."
Sirhan, who is scheduled for parole on Sept. 1, 1984, said he wanted a "second chance."
"I'm a changed man," he said. "All I want to do is to go back to the Arab world and just melt away in the anonymity of its masses . . . and just live out my life as peaceably as I can."
Kansas wheat crop drops in 1981
TOPEKA—Disappointing August estimates reveal the 1981 Kansas wheat crop was 305 million bushels, or 27 percent, lower than the 420-million bushel crop harvested last year, the Kansas Crop and Livestock Reporting Service said yesterday.
The service said about 200,000 more acres of wheat were harvested this year in Kansas, reaching a 12.2 million total. But at the same time, 1.8 million acres of wheat were abandoned, compared to 1 million abandoned acres last year.
"Drought and insects beset the wheat crop in the early stages, while a May freeze, hail and flooding plagued producers during later stages," the service said.
Relatively warm spring weather allowed wheat fields to develop about two weeks after the service said, but the young wheat plants were severely damaged during that period.
The service also reported that Summer County remained the state's top wheat harvest, harvesting 15.5 million bushels this year.
Airlines aim for regular schedules
nines, flying reduced schedules ordered by the Federal Aviation Administration and scheduled to the publishers of the Official Guide, the air travel information
The U.S. airline industry yesterday tried to assemble standard schedules of reduced flights that the flying public could rely on, while Canadian air traffic controllers asked for a suspension of flights to and from America.
"The objective is to give the public some confidence in schedules," an FAA spokesman said. The revisions will be in effect from Sept. 9 to Oct. 24. Meanwhile, the 2,100-member Canadian Air Traffic Controlers Association claimed that the U.S. government's
William Robertson, president of the association, charged that there had been 118 breaches of air safety regulations since U.S. controllers went on strike.
The Canadian transport ministry said none of the safety violations had created "hazardous situations." The FAA, which maintains that its system is safe, had no comment on the Canadian air controllers' claim.
"We believe more than ever that the U.S. system is unsafe and poses a hazard to all air travelers affected by it," he said.
Air Force court-martial postponed
Cooke, 25, of Richmond, Va., has been in custody since Air Force investigators followed him to the Soviet Embassy in Washington on May 2. Cooke was a deputy commander of a Titan 2 launch near McConnell.
Cooke, who has been confined at McConnell Air Force Base, will be able to Andrews Air Force Base new Washington, D.C., where his court-martial was adjudicated.
WICHTA—The court-martial of Air Force 2nd Lt. Christopher M. Cooke, who is charged with passing Titan missile secrets to the Soviet Union, will be postponed two days, an Air Force spokesman said yesterday.
Cooke's attorney, F. Lee Bailey, will push for dismissal of espionage charges against Cooke when the court-martial opens. Bailey will argue that the charges should be thrown out because the Air Force reneged on a promise of immunity.
The U.S. Court of Military Appeals earlier this week rejected Cooke's request that the charges against him be dropped.
State Rep. Joe Hoagland, R-Overland Park, was incorrectly identified as a Democrat in Kathy Kase's Aug. 25 column on Chancellor Gene A. Budig. The Kansan regrets the error.
Correction
Girl saved from burning trailer
Two fires, one that involved a dramatic rescue and one that fire officials tagged as suspicious, occurred early yesterday morning.
Two blazes fought Girl ;
A neighbor pulled Laura Vandhelan, 17, from her burning trailer home at 1045 E. 23rd St, as other neighbors, fearful of gas explosions, fled the area, said Margaret Traphagen, Vandhelan's cousin and neighbor.
Vanhandel apparently had been asleep in the living room when the fire broke out in the bedroom, Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain said.
"I woke up when I heard the bedroom mirror crack," Vanhandel said. Then I heard someone yelling that the trailer was on fire and for me to get up."
McSwain said he did not know the name of the truck. He said the trailer where Vandanheld lived above.
that her first instinct was to head toward the fire.
She said that she was confused and
Vanhandale said she was able to see the door only after the kitchen curtains caught fire. But because she was unable to unlock, Vanhandale said she was unable to unlock it.
With tears in her eyes she said, "I was very thankful. Thank God no one else was in the trailer."
"I burned the tips of my fingers on everything I touched, so I made fists and pounded on the walls to find the windows."
"He saved my life," Vanhandel said. The only injury Vanhandel sustained
happened when another man grabbed her legs to help pull her through. The glass gashed the top of her foot, she said.
She said she had lived in the trailer only a short while, having moved from Raleigh, Mo., three weeks ago. She is now living with her sister in Lawrence.
Vandhanbeal was treated and released at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
While Vanhandel was being pulled from the trailer, fire officials were answering another call at 729 Connecticut St.
McSwain, calling the fire suspicious,
said burglaries apparently had stolen
more than $3,000 worth of furniture
that could have been saved before it
caught fire early westerday.
Various items of furniture, including a sofa and several tables, were missing from the building.
"There appears to have been a
burglary, but we don't know when it occurred," McSwain said.
Damage to the house, which was vacant at the time, totaled $15,000, with the front portion receiving the brunt of the damage. McSwain said.
Both the Lawrence police and fire departments are involved in the investigation.
McSwan said he planned to interview Ramsay, who was the first person formation about the fire and burglary.
Rachelle Patterson, owner of the house, was not living in it at the time of the fire. She had bought the house recently but then she went on vacation, Lawrence police officer James White said.
White said Patterson told police she had been at the house Monday to pick up her husband, Sam. Patterson told police that she looked in the window and everything seemed intact.
Tie In With Us Recreation Services
Fall Racquetball Challenge Ladder
- Play different opponents, make new friends
- Ladder play for men and women
- Compete in a semester-end Challenge Ladder Championship Tournament
- Play begins Aug. 31
- Entry forms and more information available in Rec Services office, 208 Robinson, 864-3546
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Plus: Will (DINOSAUR) Vinton's
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The Topeka Capital Journal
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FOR HOME DELIVERY SERVICE CONTACT
East of Iowa A.E. Hall 843-2276
West of Iowa N. of 15th Randy Fryer 842-8727
West of Iowa S. of 15th Burton Pontius 842-1661
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It is no accident that we call ourselves 'The Excitement Store'...we've purposefully set our minds to bring you the most innovative, the most adventuresome fashion ideas you've ever seen in the midwest. Not for everyone, true. But you'll ind a new delight, a new joy, in the fun things we have gathered for you.
Fashions for men and women. Designer fabrics. Cosmetics and gifts. Maternity fashions. Be sure to stop in soon and get acquainted with J. Michael's. Lawrence's newest and most unique store . . . A store to reflect your lifestyle.
The Southern Hills Shopping Center
Hours: Monday thru Saturday 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sunday 12 p.m.-5 p.m.
University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981
Page 3
when it
which was 000, with brunt of
interview had inglary. and fire the in-
of the time of house vacation. White
lice she to pick in. Patched in the l intact.
On Campus
TODAY
SUNDAY
SATURDAY
A REPRESENTATIVE FROM THE ILIEF SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY will meet with students interested in graduate theological education at 4:30 p.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center.
THE KU SOCCER CLUB will hold an organizational meeting for men and women interested in joining, at a pool lobby, Robinson Center.
THE EPISCOPAL EUCARISTIC FELLOWSHIP will meet p.s.p.m. in the Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana St.
A NEW BEGINNING IN THE NATIONAL ECUEMENICAL STUDENT MOVEMENT will be the discussion topic at the evening supper, at 5:30 in the Ecuemenical Christian Minneapolis Center. Worship follows at 7 pm.
THE HILLTOP TWIRLERS SQUARE DANCE CLUB will hold a beginners square dance class at 8 AM the ceremonial Christian Ministries Center.
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HAWKS CROSSING
GOOD TIMES
Periodicals pinch hits library
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR Staff Reporter
YELLO SUB DELIVERS 841-3268
It's the final flurry before term papers are due. Searching through microfilm and piles of Reader's Guides, archives, and databases containing the necessary information.
But, after stacks of periodicals, the student can't find the issue needed. All that greets him is a green slip saying "Janeine's subscription has been canceled."
According to Clinton Howard of Library Aquisitions, this incident may be occurring more and more to KU students.
"We met the budget this year through administrative reallocation," he said.
"But we can't depend on that for next year."
According to Keith Mitcher, director of business affairs, this money was made available by the increase in student fees.
The problem the University's library system is facing is the same one all departments are afflicted with—inflation. Book and periodical prices have increased 19.4 percent, according to figures published by the Resources Section Library Price Index Committee.
"The Legislature at the last minute increased student fees. Nicher said.
The library system's budget increased only 10.65 percent last year, while the inflation rate was 15 percent. The reallocation gave the 5 percent needed to keep up with the inflationary rate.
The aquisitions department of the KU library system had already begun to identify dollars that had to be cut before the money was reallocated.
"We planned to cut in proportion." Howard said. "The science department gets 15 percent of the periodicals budget; out of the amount we cannot
John Davidson, chairman of the department of physics and astronomy, also had begun plans for the budget cut, before the reallocation was announced.
get, they would have received a 15 percent cut."
"I was going to make a transfer in funds, reducing the supply budget that goes for equipment and paper," he said.
Reallocation saved the day, but the year before, the library was not as fortunate. In summer 1980, 800 titles uncancelled during the budget crunch.
"During the earlier cut, we had already looked very carefully at the periodicals," Davidson said. "We dropped those that professed did not use or those available at Linda Hall Library in Kansas City."
Another frustration besides cancellations accompanied a continually shrinking budget. There is no room for expansion.
ATTENTION SPORTS CLUBS
1981-82 Budget Request Forms are available in 208 Robinson. All Sports Clubs interested in Student Senate Funding Allocations need to complete the request forms and return them to 208 Robinson by Sept.4 at 5:00 p.m.
Budget hearings will begin the week of Sept. 7th.
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Coupons available in
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South side of Opera House Building 841-1117
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Presents the KU 1981 season premier of Sunburst
JOHN PARKER
Friday, August 28 9-1 a.m.
SPECIAL: $ ^{1} 10^{0}$ Margaritas all night!
700 New Hampshire
Next Week!
Just tell us what you want.
Your ArtCarped representative will be on campus soon to show you the latest in class ring designs. With dozens of styles to choose from, you'll be proud to select your one-of-a-kind design. Just tell us what you want. And be on the lookout for posters on campus to get you where you want.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981
Opinion
Giving credit where due
That's what we like to see, a student body president who actually thinks about the everyday problems of his fellow Jayhawks and tries to find practical solutions.
Bert Coleman has announced he is working on a proposal for a KU student credit union that would provide free checking and possibly low-interest loans. As he points out, no Lawrence bank offers free checking unless the depositor has a minimum of $300 to $500 in a regular account. In other words, we let banks keep our money, using it for investments and loans, then we have to pay them whenever we want any of it. At 20 or 25 cents a check, that adds up.
So a student credit union makes sense and is at least as valid a cause for Student Senate funding as some of the obscure groups that come before that body during each year's budget hearings. If Coleman and the Senate went just a step further, they would see that a very real possibility is waiting to be stumbled upon.
According to Janet Price, manager-
treasurer of the KU Federal Credit Union.
getting a charter for a new credit union would be "next to impossible," given the current economic situation and high interest rates. However, the KU Credit Union already grants limited privileges to all students.
Every student is eligible to open a savings account and to take out a loan against his savings. The catch comes when we talk checking accounts and borrowing without collateral—only students who work at least 20 hours a week for the University are allowed access to those services.
But chances are, Price says, that the credit union's Board of Directors would be receptive to the idea of changing union policy and allowing all students to be full members. The only conditions would be that the union have firm control over accounts and loans and that students not abuse their privileges. That would mean a boon for students with checking accounts—no charges, no minimum and dividends of 5 percent.
Price suggests Coleman write a letter to the Board of Directors and explore these possibilities. So do we.
Southern hospitality lingers on, but so do long-held prejudices
The Southern half of the United States is a different country. The sky is blue. White-tailed mockingbirds sail through the damp morning air. In the South, the summer saunters in early and stays late and the trees are a lush, dark green.
Southern people are different, too. Most draw out their vowels as though it were too hot to talk. Southern women wear crisp, cotton sundresses, and they hold out unit cigarettes until Southern gentlemen offer them lights. They usually don't wait long.
And southern hospitality really exists south of the Mason-Dixon line. One afternoon, in a
1964
VANESSA HERRON
crowded restaurant in Kingfisher, Okla., a girl motioned me to her table, just at the moment it was seriously considering sitting on the floor. We talked, and by the time we finished our hamburgers, the girl had invited me to her family's farm. First, she wanted to convince me that there actually were black farmers—her father and brothers were living proof. But she also invited me because being friendly to newcomers was just her way.
Southern hospitality does exist in the bottom half of the United States, but like many other Southern institutions—night clubs, private neighborhoods—hospitality is segregated.
Living three months in Dallas taught me that there were places blacks could not expect to find many of the best jobs. "Papa Guayo" night club in north Dallas, or any country and western bar in any part of Dallas.
Of course, segregation is not a written policy, but in many parts of the South it is a very quiet, civil understanding. And it isn't hard for Northerners, even those from a tenuous northern state such as Kansas, to run afoul of this Southern understanding. For example, one black petroleum engineer says whenever he wears his work clothes—usually a neatly tailored suit—to men's clothing stores in Midland, Texas, other shoppers assume he works there. Why else would a well-dressed black person browse in a swanky clothing store?
And two years ago, another black KU student learned a lesson about the difference between North and South. While on vacation in New Orleans, the student ducked into a red-carpeted grand hotel on Bourbon Street. In the hotel's ladies room, which was dripping with marble and chrome, the student met a few hard stares. The waiter came from the washroom attendant, a middle-aged woman. "You don't belong here," the attendant hissed after her well-coiled customers had stalked out.
The student hurried back into the crowds on Bourbon Street, embarrassed and strangely ashamed. She couldn't forget the attendant's face, or the way she held out towels for the students. The teacher, she remembered the tip the women tossed into a porcelain dish on the sink—about 35 cents.
"I remember thinking," That woman sold out,
just as she could work in their bathroom and take
it home.
During her week in the South, the student said, she watched blacks who worked in stores or carried her baggage, or bussed the tables after she ate. And she says she almost believed they accepted the preconceptions of where they belonged and where they did not.
But another, more plausible explanation is that most Southern blacks don't accept that they are inferior; they simply ignore the people who think they are, and live their lives.
Blacks in every part of the country have adjusted to their region's own set of problems. In the Midwest, for example, open hostility is uncommon. But blacks also have to adjust to being a rarity; the only black student in class, or the only white student in class, is some Western Kansas village. And every black woman in Kansas has friends who continually ask why she needs to straighten her hair.
In the Southern states, in which blacks make up from 17 to 36 percent of the population, they usually don't have to worry about being African-American. Prejudice is more overt in the South. But in spite of that, Blacks perhaps because of it—Southern blacks have learned to ignore prejudice, and to rise above it.
Mary Townsend, director of KU's minority affairs office, said she discovered a good piece of the special resilience many Southern blacks had developed when she visited a Houston restaurant.
Townsend she watched she disbelief when the waiter pacified his customers by running through the room with fresh drinks. On his way across the room, he shuffled steps and cried out "yah-huh, yah-huh."
That day, two corpulent, slightly drunk businessmen were complaining loudly at a lawyer who did not good 'wasn't hot enough, their drinks weren't cold, their waiter, an aging black man, wasn't fast enough.
Soon, thewalk waister stiffly to Townsend's and speaking normally when she was enacting the show and being
"I didn't know that was going to happen, but the tears just started behind my eyes and I couldn't stop them," she said. "That waiter could have been my mcle, or my brother."
Townsend said the waiter told her not to cry. At a businessmen were gone, said he, would he find someone else?
To be sure, not all Southern blacks are poor and not all are waiters. In fact, the U.S. Bureau of the Census estimated that about 14 percent earned more than $23,000 in 1978. And more than a half million Southern blacks have college degrees. There also are countless others who never make it to college, but are smart enough to hold onto their self respect.
“But I’ve since realized that waiter had something that I don’t have—happened I almost envy,” she said. “He can take the indigency, then forget it and go on to home for his family.”
Townsend said the memory of that restaurant still disturbed her. And she still does not believe that a man should be forced to play "step n fetcit" for any other man.
The ability to shrug off indignity and still retain a feeling of self worth, is a lesson that the South teaches. Because in that half of the country, the idea that skin color determines personal worth fills the air, right along with the scent of wildflowers and the hum of cicadas.
The South is a different country. And the black people who live there are different too. They
KANSAN
The University Daily
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scott C. Fount ... Business Manager
Managing Editor ... Larry Leibengood
Campus Editor ... Robert J. Schaud
Editorial Editor ... Tammany Ternberg
Associate Campus Editor .. Katrina Brunsew
Associate Campus Editor .. Kay Permaness
Retail Sales Manager ... Kate Found, Gene George
Campus Sales Manager .. Terry Knobelbrue
National Sales Manager .. Josh Koehler
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General Manager and News Advisor .. John Oberban
Rick Munsen
...HEH, HEH... ILL BETCHA
DIDN'T THINK OL' RONNIE
WOULD PROSECUTE YOU
PATCO FELLAS,
DIDJA?
Stand on air strike hides hypocrisy
Shield the rockets red glare, tone down the din of Americans triumphantly parading the victories of the Polish works over their task-masterly Socialist system and find the ideological dichotomy that exists in America today.
It is wonderful, the fanfare suggests, to see the Warsaw of the Warsaw Pact shaking internally as workers, farmers and mothers unite to show Communism that they really don't have to fear the West. It is a worry of the creeping advance of the Red Peril, the thought of Communism, especially Soviet
MOROCCO
BRAD
STERTZ
Communism, on the brink of disaster is welcome indeed.
Fine, I say, do all that can be done to further the Polish workers' cause and simultaneously lessen the threat of the Soviet invasion. But for the sake of consistency, let us find a quick solution to the American strike that has left the skyways crippled and has found a group of workers initiating their own illegal action for what they believe.
Yet this is where the contradiction takes now. Yes, it is fine to encourage the Poles, unhappy with a regime that cannot deliver bread to the table, to find a system that will work freedom into the Eastern Bloc. But as all eyes eagerly lay labor reaching for a better way in Poland, these nations ignore a similar, but no less bandit, development found in the air traffic controllers' strike.
After all, isn't this the stuff that made Pravida famous? I can see the headlines now as the Soviet press parades the strike by the
Professional Air Traffic Controller's Organization as the latest example of American
What should be important to the Reagan administration as it maintains its hard-line stand with the air traffic controllers is not the Pandora's box of other illegal strikes that a quick compromise could open. No, what should matter to the White House is the hypocrisy inherent in the two-faced encouragement of the Poles and denunciation of the PATCO strike.
Recent surveys have shown that over 60 percent of the public thinks Regan's stand on the strike is appropriate. Americans, it seems, are against a strike that illegally strikes against the federal government. Yet, they encourage the Poles.
"Sure, we support the Poles," they say, "but it's different over here. After all, it says in black and white that PATCO cannot strike against the enemy. They knew that when they signed their contract."
all," they say, "the Polish workers are striking out against a government that is oppressive, that couldn't function."
In Poland, the constitution used to say in black and white that all strikes were illegal. But today that has changed. Polish workers, after their world-shaking strikes last summer, have now become able to form independent unions and the right to bargain with and strike against the government.
Granted, PATCO's strike is hardly an effort to shake the foundations of our republic. But where the two strikes do strike common ground is in their defiance of a rigid government.
What we need to ask ourselves in this contradictory bind is, are the underlying philosophies here any different? Is it different for the Poles to stick up for what they believe than it is for the air traffic controllers to stand up for what they believe? I think not.
And Americans make other arguments. "After
What also should concern the Reagan administration is how the outside world is viewing our stand. In the world of credibility, when the Third World nations seem to be shifting more to the right, couldn't a protracted hypocrisy such as persists prove our unreliability and a lack of dedication to the cause of freedom and justice for all?
Certainly the air traffic controllers' strike cannot be fully commended, for it is indeed an illegal action. And equally certain, the cause of the Polish workers has to be heralded as a crusade for the meaning of freedom. But what does this as a nation is to end this curious schizophrenia of nature of condemnation and approval for two causes that in essence are the same.
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 address and phone number. If the writer wants permission to use the letter should include the class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters.
Samuel Morse wouldn't believe it. As the inventor of the telegraph in 1832, I'm sure he'd be amazed at the evolution of the ordinary Western Union telegram.
Today, city dwellers have their choice of todays telegrams, balloon-a-gram and now, on the mobile, SMS. But they don't know what to do with them.
vidicheny
Pot Shots
where the recipient gets more than a slip of paper with "Happy Birthday" on it.
While some folks here in River City might enjoy these advanced announcement, I propose that other mutations would sell far better. For example:
- Research paper-a-gram. Imagine the thrill of opening your door the week after Thanksgiving vacation to be handed a 20-page typewritten report on "The History of Blacksmithing in South Central Kansas," complete with footnotes and free of charge.
- Grass-a-gram. Just right for those post mid-
blue blues, one ounce of the finest Colombian
camibis is delivered in a complimentary Zip Loc
box and labeled "Of The Best of the Greatest
Dead" is optional.
- Clam-a-gram. Remember the last erudite AT or special roommate? Try this personalized, custom-fitting muzzle applied by our delivery boy (with longa Italian name).
- Class notes-a-gram. This one is perfect for early lectures that are just too tough to handle on for winter mornings. For an additional fee, you can obtain and outline, organized in a loose-leaf binder.
DAVID HENRY
The battle is over. It's a sad day for Kansas rock-and-rollers. We fought long, and we fought hard, but the Rolling Stones passed us by, opting instead to perform in St. Louis.
Personally, I'm outraged. Surely there's an explanation. The Checkerdome holds several thousand more people than Kansas City's
Cindy Campbell
Kemper Arena, but that seems like a petty reason to deny us loyal Stones fans a performance. Sure, the Checkerdome has never caved in, but Kemper's roof has held for over a year now. Besides, what are the chances of something like that happening again?
Besides, Kansas City is in the middle of a concert boon. Journey had to announce a second performance in September because the first one sold out so quickly. Even Old Blue Eyes, yes. Frank Sinatra himself, has set an Oct. 12 concert date in Kansas City.
I mean, what does Cedar Falls, Iowa, have that Kansas City doesn't have? We have plenty of multi-million dollar hotels for a big rock band and a million-dollar hotel for a million-dollar hotel that are already destroyed.
CINDY CAMPBELL
Let's be reasonable. Los Angeles gets the Stones for five days, Cleveland for two and Chicago for at least three. Won't one of these fair cities give us even a hand-me-down Tuesday if we get to play at home? Can we be expected to thrive on Kelly Hunt and the Kinetics and the Blue Riddim Band?
What I hate most about college is dealing with pens. Like most males, I don't carry a purse and hence, I have no safe place to store my writing between classes. I'll leave the house in the morning or evening. I'll six in my pockets, three in my mouth since I smoke, but rare is the noon-hour that finds me
Kevin Halliken
with even one. I cannot further expound; the pens simply disappear. I once tried tying one pen, and it got caught in a Xerox machine and nearly pulled with it. One of me, I decided, is more than enough with it.
This problem with pens, I once thought, would be solved if teachers toed a healthy supply to class. But then came Reagan and the realization that there's no such thing as a free pen. And well there shouldn't be. For pens, I've decided, are harmful as well as elusive.
This conviction fully became mine just yesterday at the store shoe when a saleswoman, while fitting me with sandals, studied my bare foot and said, "You're a writer?"
My toes commenced wriggling in her hands, so tickled was I. She's heard I've planned a novel, I thought. But, to be modest, I said, "You read feet, do you?"
"Son," she said, "you've ink dribbling down your ankle."
I had sat on a pen in my back pocket and now my pants, as well as my pride and the chair at the shoe store, were ruined. I'm glad I don't carry guns.
KEVIN HELLIKER
University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981
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ort to
where
con-
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and in up
ad- do-
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the re to
such
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trike
the an
se of
se of
inous and
and
Committee
From page one
committee and help in the money allocation process.
Busy also complained of the manner in which those non-sentators would be chosen.
Busy said that process would further close the system.
According to the bill as it stands, the nonsenators would be picked by Abbott, Student Body President Bert Coleman and David Adkins, chairman of the Student Senate executive committee, from among applications submitted. Bush said that process would further close
"It's putting the control of funds into a pretty elite group." he said.
Miki Gordon, former Rights and Finance and auditing Committee chairman, was more than $10 million.
"This bill is ugly," he said. "It takes away student input into the budget making process."
Gordon said that currently, non-seniors could get onto any committee simply by applying and attending meetings. The numerical limit on the committee would prevent non-seniors from doing so.
Abbott defended the bill saying that it would
cut the length of budget hearings and make them more efficient.
"Budget hearings constitute two-thirds of Student Senate's time," he said. "By the time they roll around and are over, students are really bummed out on Senate."
"What we're trying to do is take the burden off the Student Senate committees," Coleman said. "We're trying to streamline the budget process."
Coleman said that students interested in government were always free to run for Senate and that there should be some limit to the number of non-senators on committees.
Adkins said the bill also was an attempt to iron out inconsistencies between the different committees and how they allocate their money.
Some committees allowed certain expenditures, such as long distance telephone calls, while others favored money spent in other activities, he said.
He said that some groups had members of the organizations join a certain committee while the group was up for funding and then quit the committee after the group received its funds.
The "dogleg" Hay complained about is a section of land in the Sebelius plan that extends northward into Douglas and Franklin counties and is part of the 5th district.
From page one
The 9th district in Sebelius' plan would extend from Douglas County on the north to Harper County, south of Wichita on the Oklahoma border, on the southwest.
Reapportionment
Both plans call for a geographically smaller 4th district, including all of Sedgwick County.
The composition of the 2nd district differs the most between the two proposals. Hay's proposal would divide central Kansas counties between the 1st and 5th districts, while Sebelius' proposal would have more of those counties included in the 2nd district.
Several central central counties will move from either the 4th districts to the 1st district.
Neither plan has been adopted or even favored by the legislative committees, said state Rep. Robert G. Frey, R-Liberal, at the House Committee and Congressional Apportionment Committee.
Frey said he would favor Douglas County
remaining in the 3rd district, with Wyandotte County possibly being included in the 2nd district.
After one plan is decided upon by the apportionment committees, he said, a bill to change the district boundaries would be introduced in the Legislature next spring.
Red tape
costs. If the vendor is called, the prices may be lower and shipping cost not included.
- A University rule bans faculty members from receiving 12 months of pay. The depart- ment of geology offers a three-month summer camp. Students must be working during the school year cannot be hired.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, will review the report with KU vice chancellors on Monday to decide which suggestions, if any, should be implemented.
Pre-enrollment
From page one
"At the beginning of the school year the advisers are extremely busy. The middle of the school year is even more stressful."
Ambler said the University could choose from a number of systems. For example, the University of Iowa allows students to work on a schedule with an operator at a computer terminal. Ambler likes that system but he said it would cost about $65,000.
The system used at Kansas State University does not allow students to pick the times for their classes. They submit a list of courses, and a computer determines the schedule.
Bert Coleman, KU student body president,
didn't mind the drawback.
"It has its problems, but it's a lot better than what we have to go through now," Coleman said.
"If you want a class, you should be able to get it."
Coleman thought most students would agree with him.
Ambler said he had heard of a few scattered protests about pre-enrollment. He said some teachers have complained that they would have to plan their courses earlier than they would like.
Leaving Town?
Buy your Thanksgiving and Christmas airline tickets now.
Get the best prices and availability.
Maupintour travel service
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749-0700
JUST PURCHASED! 85 Desks and Chests.
E
See at Emerald City Antiques
Tie In With Us Recreation Services
415 N. 2nd Daily 9-5
Find-A-Racquetball-Partner-Service
- Find a racquetball partner of your same level of racquetball ability
- Come Into Rec Services office, 208 Robinson,
and complete a Racquetball Ability form.
- A card file grouping persons of similar ability will then be available in the Rec Services office so you can contact potential partners.
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842-3877
A Few Thoughts About Enclosed Shopping Malls
The last two decades have seen a national proliferation of enclosed shopping malls. The tenants of these structures usually pay their rent to an alien corporation — a relationship which underlies a local's independence and self-sufficiency. These malls invariably contain not a few of its noise-pollinating, inherently worthless pinball and video machines into which many grade schools and adolescent minors pour both their money and time. Considerable energy is wasted controlling the climate in each of these enclosed cavers of sterility. Yet when shopping mall developers lay siege to a local governing unit they frequently prevail with their own domain both acquiring for the desired property and exercising its right of enforcement domain, and helping pay for the property's development with public funds.
Eminent domain is the governmental right to take private property for public use while Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution limits the use of tax revenues to paying debts and providing "for the common defense and general welfare of the United States." ... Black's Law Dictionary tells us that "One does not devote his property or business to a public use or cloth with a public interest." ...ily because he ... sells to the public." Therefore it follows that these governmental acts are clearly beyond the Constitutional pale when undertaken in behalf of a privately-owned business. However, the financial success of these accursed mails has forced many local governments to ignore these Constitutional limitations on governmental behavior in order to maintain the health of their communities. It is only at the national level that decisive action can be taken to stop the advance of money laundering and terrorist financing by a burden of fraud occurring among the Social Darwinists now at the helm is almost nil. Former Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandles put it this way: "The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding. Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or ill, it teaches the whole people by its example."
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17
University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981
Spare time
Ringling Brothers send in the clowns
BY JANICE GUNN Staff Reporter
DAGWOOD SANDWICH
Staff Reporter
If a clown wants to be in "The Greatest Show
In Earth's history he must be his amazing genius.
Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., turned into a three-ring circus yesterday as the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Ballie Circus held trophies for clowns. Four-year-old Eric Kearney of Shawnee, right, watches the auditions of Clown College candidates. In the top photo, Ringling Brothers clowns demonstrate how to clown around.
on Earth, "he has to take his clowning seriously.
All Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey
circum clowns are well-trained clowns with
degrees. They are graduates of Clown College, where they "make
clowning a career," as their school slogan
claims.
Amateur clowns, ranging in age from four to 33, came to Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., yesterday to audition for a chance to attend Clown College.
The circus will be in Kansas City from Friday through Saturday for afternoon and evening
The Venice, Fla., college, which offers a nine-week program, teaches its students how to act slyly, but with skill. They take classes such as French and Spanish, study unicycles and roll globes to paint their acts.
The amateurs were told to enter ring Two, tell their names, give their reasons for wanting to be clowns and then act as if they split their pants. They were not acting this way solely for amusement. They were competing among themselves and with the 5,000 other applicants to college that lining Bingham receives each year. The circus accepts only 60 clowning students.
One contestant, Kim Hawkins, 18, said that she had tried out last year in her hometown, St. Louis, where she works as a clown in a restaurant. She made a six-hour drive yesterday for another chance to become a professional clown.
"I'll try out every year until I'm 90 years old."
Bawnski said. "If you think the wiresight is tight,
Hawkins has also done birthday parties, singing telegrams and a toga party where she jugged an olive, a wreath and a martini all at the same time.
Like Hawkins, the other clowns in the arena have a background of clowning and making people laugh.
Tammy and Tom Parish, a husband and wife clowning team in charge of the auditions, together have been making people laugh since junior high school in Neodesha.
A group of about 12 children would ride unicycles around the neighborhood, Tammy Pike.
A friend's parent used to take them to the court, and the clowns were always her favorite parties.
A 1979 graduate of Clown College, she said, "I don't think I could do more rewarding job. I always want to work."
The director of clowns, Frosty Little, said that most of the people who auditioned for the circus had stars in their eyes and failed to realize how hard Ringling Brothers' clowns worked.
"No matter what you tell them, they see starlight and cotton candy spangles," Frosty said. "They want to be in the Greatest Show on Earth."
Frosty has been in circuses in 1955 and had his own carnival show for four years. He said that it took him four or five years as an apprentice to develop his own act.
He has been with the Ringling Brothers for 14 years and said it was by far the most hardworking and demanding show he has ever done.
The circus does 13 performances a week, and in each show the clown change their costumes
"I'm looking for physically fit people who are quick to adapt to anything," he said.
"Good timing and an excellent attitude also are necessary. I broke four rihs one because of her pain."
As he motioned toward the crowd of circus actors, he said, "These people live on a train.
like to have them all 21 years old or older. It
someone who won't be crying out for
mother.
After the auditions, Frosty was pleased with the attorneys who tried out. He said it was a gd cd crown.
He said that he might use a few of them next week in Florida, when he would join the other 21 players.
"They sleep light and eat a lot of junk food. We
He planned to leave Kansas City Sunday night after the circus' last show, but he said he would fly, not take the train.
1980
Arts calendar
Music
The Clocks, a rock band, will perform at the Lawrence Opera House tonight and tomorrow at 10:15 p.m. Tonight's admission is $2.00 for students and students and $2.50 general admission.
and from 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Sunday. No admission charge.
The Kansas State Fiddling and Picking
States will begin at noon Sunday,
in South Carolina.
Art
Joseph Pennell's collection of photographs depicting life in Junction City between 1894 and 1930 on display through Sept. 20 in the White Gallery at the Spencer Museum. No admission charities.
A collection of paintings by feminist artist Miriam Schaprio will be on display in the Press Gallery of the Spencer Museum of Art at 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday
Fiddlers, pickers to compete in South Park this Sunday
The Neon Man, a display of abstract neon sculptures by William Shipman, will be on display in the Kansas Union Gallery through Sept. 7. No admission charge.
The Kansan invites announcements of local entertainment events to be included in the weekly Arts Calendar. Announcements should be submitted to the entertainment editor by noon on the Wednesday before they are to run.
By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR
Staff Reporter
A little bit of Arkansas will be in Lawrence's South Park Sunday when the fiddles, banjos and bluegrass bands of local musicians will host the State Fiddling and Picking Championships.
"We expect 70 to 80 people to compete," said Jack Armstrong, the championship's master of ceremonies. "And a lot of people come. Last year we had an audience of 500."
The competition will begin at noon and will include traditional fidding, guitar and banjo playing and folk singing. For the first time, the competition will be introduced into the championships.
This year the name was changed from the Douglas County Championships to Kansas State College.
bit," said Armstrong. "There are other state competitions, like the Old Fiddlers' state championship. But to compete in them you have to belong to the organization."
There is no fee to enter this championship and no prior registration.
"We thought we would open the competition a
"Everyone registers at noon before the championships begin," Armstrong said. "The money for the contest was raised by individual and commercial contributions."
Judging will be done "blind." That means that judges will not see who is playing or singing until they are ready.
Most contestants will perform two songs. Fiddlers perform three selections: a waltz, a hoedown and a song of their choice.
Contestants in the folk singing competition will have a six-minute time limit.
DRINK UP
For Muscular Dvstrophy
70 Kegs
Saturday, August 29th—8:00 p.m.
Delta Upsilon Parking Lot
Tickets available at party
Party concludes the
DU 1st Annual M.D.A. Football Tournament
Games Thursday and Friday at 4 p.m.
Championship games on Saturday at 3:00 and 4:30 p.m.
23rd and Iowa
Need a solution to the career mystery?
telephone
864-4758
It's elementary, my dear Watson.
Find out about the Administration of Justice Program offered by Wichita State University.
It offers the perfect solution to your dilemma:
• Major areas include general administration of justice, agency administration, corrections services, investigation, prevention programs, deployment, and security services.
• Associate, bachelor's and master's degree programs offered—and nondegree board-related staffs also welcome.
• All necessary courses offered on the University of Kansas campus.
For more information, contact the administration of justice coordinator in room 4C of Lippincott Hall (oil Green Hall)
SPEEDWAY
If you think "pads and rollers"are just a California craze, you're not ready for New Memorex.
Pads and rollers are key components of a cassette's tape transport system
This system guides the tape past your deck's tape head. It must do so with unerring accuracy.
And no cassette does it more accurately than totally new Memorex
Roller precision is critical.
The new Memorex tape transport system is precision engineered to exacting tolerances.
Flanged, seamless rollers guide the tape effortlessly and exactly. An oversize pad hubs the tape to the tape head with critical pressure firm enough for precise alignment, gentle enough to
dramatically reduce wear.
Our unique ultra-low-friction pollywheel paints help precision-crafting and gather tape silently and uniformly, play after play. Even after 1,000
In fact, our new
Memorex cas-
setter will always
produce delivery,
or we'll
replace it. Free.
of course, he production that true and that enduring. For her Per macapus "i our extraor-inary new binding process. It even owes a little to our unique fumble-free storage album
But when you record on new Memorex, whether it's HIGH BIAS, it normalizes MRX I or
And remember, getting it there is half the fun.
METAL IV, don't forget the importance of those pads and rollers. Enjoy the music as the tape glides unerringly across the head.
MEMOREX
MEMOREX II 90
HIGH Bias II 90
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WE ASK; IS IT LIVE, OR IS IT
MEMOREX
University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981
Page 7
SUA advisers hoping calendar will succeed
By DIANE MAKOVSKY Staff Reporter
Student Union Activities has introduced what it hopes will become an annual planner calendar for use by students and faculty.
According to Blair Tinkle, public relations committee chairman for SUA, the idea for the planner came from University of Wichita State University's planner.
The SUA Board then found out that Kansas State University also published a yearly calendar for its students. SUA followed a layout similar to K-State's calendar and received much cooperation and information from the Kansas State Union Program Council. Tinkle said.
SUA discussed ideas to name the planner something like the Jayhawker but named it the Planner because it could readily identify what it.
The calendar includes an explanation of SUA's departments, including events and special events, the upfronts of Tosh concert and outdoor recreation.
An interesting or amusing quotation is found on every two pages of this book, and its includes, "A camel looks like a horse that was planned by a
committee from Vogue Magazine,
and, "I share no man's opinions;
I have my own," by Ivan Sergeyevich
Tursenew.
The quotations are enhanced by drawings done by KU graphics student Leanne Mebust. Mebust also designed the cover, which shows a selection of colorful numbers 1981 and 1982, holding in his hand a copy of the planer calendar.
The planner was created, according to Irene Carr, one of three SUA advisers, because 'we thought it would be a useful tool for students.
It includes pages to write down class schedules, information about features of the Kansas Union and the hours of operation, floor plans of the Union and Satellite Union, telephone directory of emergency numbers, KU office numbers and numbers of the sororities and fraternities.
There is also a list of trivia. There is the space below some dates there is a question. To find the answer, one just turns to the back of the planner.
For April 18 it asks, "What is the phone number of the White House?" Answer: 202-456-1414.
The cost of the planer is $2.50.The price was fixed to break even on the project this year, Tinkle said.
"It's really an experimental thing," said Tinkle. "'I'd like it to be a permanent thing.'
CAROLINA
Wild Bill, a Lawrence resident, enjoys entertaining students in front of Wesley playing a guitar and harmonica at the same time. JOHN EIBELDFDXMAN Staff
One man band
S
Subjects for Cloning.
At House of Usher we'll 'clone' your class notes, term papers, etc. for 3 $ \frac{1}{2} $ per copy.
While our limited supply lasts – bring in your KU I.D. and with a 5 order we'll give you a house of Oshar iron on tee shoe. We will have enough! Will be good for future discounts.
Service Beyond Duplication
HOUSE OF USHER
638 MASSACHUSETTS STREET • LAWRENCE KANSAS 60044 • PHONE (913) 842-3910
Find it in Kansan classified advertising Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
FUN & GAMES
LEGOS
1002 Mass.
SCHWINN®
1820 W. 6th
842-6363
Hours: Mon-Sat. 9-6 We service all makes.
K.U.—INDIA CLUB
WILL HAVE A
POTLUCK MEAL/PICNIC/MEETING
Centennial Park
Sat., August 29, 1981
at 6:00 p.m.
Members-Guests Welcome
Please bring a potluck meal
NIC/MEETING
6th JD
ROCKLEDGE
CENTRAL PARK
9th JD
ZOOMA ->
$100 Off
Weekend Admission
pogo's • 75th &
1-35
Kansas City
Featuring Modern Music · Fridays
Listen to KLZR for details
expires 9-30-81
BACK TO SCHOOL
SPECIALS!
AT MINGLES 9-12
BOTH DAYS
FRIDAY
all the draft beer
you can drink
$400/PERSON
SATURDAY
all well brand
drinks 95¢
Mingles
2222 W. 6th St.
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
COME IN AND ENJOY OUR SPECIALS EACH NIGHT NEXT WEEK
PUBLIC NOTICE...STEREO LIQUIDATION
ALL BRAND NEW MERCHANDISE WITH FULL 2 YEAR WARRANTIES!
Buy one or all of the above quantities listed—The Public is Invited
VISA, MASTERCARD, CASH or PERSONAL CHECKS WELCOMED
ONE DAY ONLY SUNDAY, AUG. 30, 1981 ONLY WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!
bud
JENNINGS CARPETS
AND
SONS INC.
KU
REMNANTS
California Stereo Liquidators, Federal No. 95-3531037, will dispose of, for a manufacturer's representative, their inventory surplus of new stereo equipment. The items listed below will be sold on a first-come first-served basis at . . . 7/C MOTEL
9:00 A. M. to 2:00 P. M.
ONLY WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
Student Room Rugs SAVE UP TO 50%
over 1000 rug remnants
SUNDAY, AUG. 30, 1981 ONLY WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
| Value | Disposal Price |
| :--- | :--- |
| $159. | $29 each |
| $139 | $29 each |
| Value | Disposal Price |
| :--- | :--- |
| $89 | $29 pair |
| $119 | $49 pair |
| $159 | $39 each |
| $49 | $19 pair |
| $225 | $89 each |
| $225 | $89 each |
| $89 | $29 each |
5 Only AM/FM Cassette Car Stereos, In Dash
$159.
5 Only AM/FM 8 Trk Car Stereo In Dash
$139.
20 Only 8 Track Car Stereos, Underdash
$69.
20 Only Cassette Car Stereos, Underdash
$75.
23 Pair Only 2 Way Car Speakers, Dual Cone
$49.
18 Only Graphic Equalizers For Car, High Wattage
$159.
10 Only AM/FM in Dash Cassettes For Small Cars
$225.
22 Only AM/FM Cassettes For Car with Auto Reverse
$225.
27 Only Power Boosters For Stereo, High Wattage
$89.
20 Only 8 Track Car Stereos, Underdash
$69.
20 Only Cassette Car Stereos, Underdash
$75.
23 Pair Only 2 Way Car Speakers, Dual Cone
$4
2831 FAIRLAWN ROAD, TOPEKA
SUNDAY AUG 30 1981
Open Aug. Weeknights 'til 8pm Sat.'til 4pm
GOT YOURS?
GET IT ORDERED TODAY!!
THE KANSAS CITY STAR The Kansas City Times FALL STUDENT DISCOUNT
$16^{56}
Morning Evening Sunday
I agree to subscribe to the Kansas City Star and Times for the Fall 1981 semester at the above special rate and will pay in advance of delivery, understand that the offer is effective beginning the first day of registration and expires the last day of finals. This offer is only made to services provided by a carrier or delivery agent of the Kansas City Star.
DATE ___ 1
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
PHONE ___ APT.
STUDENT ID
CHECK IF PAPERS ARE TO BE DELIVERED
DURING THANKSGIVING BREAK
Got a question? Call the Star/Times at 843-1611...
932 Massachusetts. Lawrence KS 66044
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981
On the Record
For the second time in less than two weeks, a worker at Asphalt Improvement Co., Inc. received second-burn fire burns after being sprayed with hot oil Asphalt oil.
Claude Summerville, 66, of Perry, received second-degree burns to his head and neck Wednesday when the hose he was using to unload not asHPastall forks to a tank broke, a spokesman for Lawrence Memorial Hospital said.
Gene Springer, part owner of the company, said the accident was minor and that such things very rarely happened.
Summerville's wife said her husband declined to comment further on his plane.
A similar accident occurred at Asphalt Improvement Aug. 15 when a transport truck driver began loading asphalt oil into his truck.
William Wilfred Aubuchon, 56, of Kansas City, Kan., received second-
degree burns on his stomach and legs. He remains in serious condition at the University of Kansas Medical Center
A rash of thefts occurred Tuesday and Wednesday -involving stereo systems stolen from parked vehicles.
Thieves stole $1,120 worth of equipment. Four of the cars belonged to KU students.
Many of the cars were parked in empty lots and were unlocked or had windows partially open. The five cars broken into were within an eight-block area, from 1700 Louisiana Si. to 908 Indiana, according to police.
Nebraska police Wednesday found a stolen Lawrence car driven by two juveniles. The car, stolen from 301 California St., also carried two men and a fishing pole and some tapes belonging to the owner, said officer James White.
White said the two male suspects were in the custody of Auburn, Neb. police.
TWO FOR ONE ~SALE~
It's the sweetest buy in town! Chocolate Unlimited is having a Two For One Sale on our delicious Ice Cream Sodas and Mr. Pibb. Buy one at regular price and get the second one free! Bring a friend along or treat yourself to two. While you're here, we hope you'll discover the delights of our gourmet candy counter. It's all here for you at Chocolate Unlimited!!
Sale good through September 13th
Open til 11 Mon-Thur
11 fri 11 Fr-Sat-Sun
Chocolate Unlimited
1601 W. 23rd • Southern Hills Center • 749-1100
Foreign students will find a touch of home at the Prairie Schooner
FISH IS BRAIN FOOD
SHRIMP
Get your "SEA"-mester off to a good start with a little help from your local fishmonger. Our best prices ever.
Reg. Sale Save an additional 10%
on Sib. box purchases
You pay only.
$750 $9⁹ lb. $5⁴ lb. $27²⁵
$695 $7⁵ lb. $5²³ lb. $26¹⁴
$595 $4⁹ lb. $4⁵ lb. $22⁶⁸
$565 $4⁵ lb. $4⁹ lb. $20⁴⁶
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Fresh Swordfish & Scallops Live Lobsters & Steamer Clams
PRAIRIE SCHOONER SEAFOOD & INDO-ASIAN PROVISIONS
935 Iowa, Lawrence, Ks Ph. 841-6610 Open 10.6, Mon Sat
Foreign students will find a touch of home at the Prairie Schooner.
(1)
Faculty upset with Robinson family plan
Melsner-Milstead Liquor
Next to Kief's 842-4499
Families of KU students, faculty and staff may use the facilities at Robinson Center—if they purchase a family plan pass.
The passes, now on sale in 104 Robinson, enable family use of Robinson Center on Tuesday and Thursday from 5 to 10:30 p.m., Saturday from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 10:30 p.m.
The family plan policy, which was instituted last fall, caused a problem because it was put into effect before it became by the University administration.
The passes are $5 for students and $15 for faculty and staff.
Under the old policy, faculty and staff were able to use the facilities free of charge.
Cold Kegs
Laurence M. Rose, professor of law and member of the University Senate executive committee, many of whom members didn't like the new Robinson having to pay to use the new Robinson
Center because they were able to use the old facilities free.
"From the faculty perspective, it's another dig in the side for those who feel they are losing many benefits," Rose said.
He also said that the money collected from family passes probably was not enough to pay for the security needed to check for the passes.
Security also has to check students for valid KU identification cards.
Tom Wilkerson, director of recreation services in Robinson Center, said he had sold 72 passes in the first week of school. Last year he sold about 350.
The family plan cards list the name, age and sex of each family member included in the plan. The pass allows the families to use the gymnasium, swimming pools, racquetball and handball courts.
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
When a family visits Robinson, the person having the valid KU ID does not
"Our intent is to provide a recreational opportunity for families, not a baby-sitting service," Wilkerson said.
have to accompany his family, but no children under 18 are allowed in the building without a parental supervision.
Linda Bevillle has been named assistant to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs at the University of Kansas.
Beginning Sept. 1, Beville will replace Joan Sherwood, assistant vice chancellor, who has been hired at the University of Missouri in Kansas City, Mo., as vice chancellor for student affairs.
develop the student records system and the computerized administrative systems.
An admissions and records employee since 1968, Beville became assistant to Dil Gyck, dean of admissions and records, three years ago. She helped
Student affairs assistant hired
As Amber's assistant, Beville will be responsible for the personnel program and the budget for the division of student affairs.
'WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?'
Included in that division are such student services as financial aid, housing and residential programs, organizations and activities, health and counseling, and women and minority services.
Psalm 2:1 and Acts 4:25
the children of Israel left the bondage of Egypt there went up with them a "mixed multitude." Later this "mixed multitude" fell a lusting and caused much trouble — their "lust" appeared to be very contagious. In our judgment the Church today is badly afflicted with a "mixed multitude which have fallen a lusting!" Instead of using "discipline" and getting rid of them it appears we are trying to keep them contented by "feeding their lust!")
Christ ordered "discipline" in His Church and gave grounds for excommunication. Christ exercised "discipline" when He made a whip of cords and drove some wristouts out of His Father's House! . . . God’s wrath on account of corruption in the city of Jerusalem was indeed terrible: no mercy or pity shown to old or young, maids, little children, and women! It Ezekiel: "AND THE LORD SAW FROM GOD’S Word in the 9th chapter of Ezekiel: “
Doubtless among the conservatives there will BE FOOKED "THE HOUSE" multitude. In spite of this we think there is good cause for encouragement in the conservative and rightists camps. There is still great cause for "sighing and crying" and getting God's Mark on you in view of the abominations that be done in the midst of our cities, land, and world, beginning at the House of God, yet there is reason for gladness and comfort when the number of organizations that have arisen in recent time whose object is to please Jerusalem 6:16: "THIS SAINT THE LORD, STAND IN THE WAYS, AND SEE, AND ASK FOR THE OLD PATH, WHERE IS THE GOOD Way, AND WALK THEREIN, AND YE SHALL FIND REST FOR YOUR SOULS."
P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
WHERE K.U. CLEANS UP
Suds·n·Duds WHERE K.U.CLEANS UP
- Mon. thru Fri.
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Coors on tap
cheers
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- Happy Hour —4 to 6
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- Mon. thru Fri.
- Happy Hour — 4 to 6
40° draws = $1.25 pitchers
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842-1811
1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Mall Lawrence
Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, Ks.
KIEF'S
GRAMOPHONE
Nautilus FITNESS CENTERS
Phone today for FREE TRIAL VISIT 749-1501
Clip and Save
Also tonight at 12:30
Saturday—Double Feature
ROCKY HORROR—8:45 & The Clocks—10:00
Plus light show
- Sauna & Whirlpool
* Supervised Kiddie Corral
* Maximum Exercise Minimum Minutes
* Diet Counseling
* Personal Supervision
* Tanning Booth
* Indoor Track
* Exercise Classes
NO EXTRA CHARGE FO ANY OF THE ABOVE SERVICES
Cheap pitchers and drinks 8-9 both nights
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
Monday—BLUE RIDDIM BAND
Last Lawrence appearance before extended west coast tour.
Tuesday—Direct from Chicago.
Monday—BLUE RIDDIM BAND
Tuesday—Direct from Chicago.
THE BATHS
WILLIAM HENRY
the CLOCKS
Opening
act:
Idol
GREAT ROCK and 60's Psychedelic Light Show!
Free Mushrooms!
Limited Number of Charter Memberships Special Student, Faculty, and Staff Rate
Tonight
Phone today
SON Where the stars are
SEALS 1th & Mass. 842-6930
BLUES 842-6930
BAND Jawrence
Opera House
---
Pence's Greenhouse
15th and New York A Greenhouse larger than a football field
PLANT SALE
- 40% off all tropical plants
- *16 quart-20 lb. potting soil only $1.49
- 30% off all Ingrid pots ranging from 4" to 20" In size—very decorative
- over 500 hanging baskets in stock
OPEN:
Mon-Sat 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Sunday p.m.
Massachusetts N
E. 15th New York
Pences
searmard
843-2004
University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981
Page 9
Ankle injury sidelines Wright
Sophomore tight end Ernie Wright
was redshirted by the KU
football star
divide a families, ilkerson
Wright broke an ankle last spring, and because it has not healed quickly, he will sit out the 1981 season.
"WE'RE AT A Place where we can't lose anybody, but you have to expect those things." Head Coach Don Fambrough said. "We've been very fortunate with injuries the last two years.
"Sure, we'll miss him, but there are other people who can stee in."
Fambrough was pleased with
being disappointed after being
disappointed with Tuesday.
"It was as good this afternoon as it
was bad yesterday," Fambrough said. "We had a regular practice. We're trying to perfect what we've been doing and eliminating mistakes.
"THOSE THINGS happen, but we can't let them happen," he said. "It was just two or three players, it was the entire squad."
"I don't expect any more bad practices."
Fambrough's Jayhawks have few practices left before their first game Sept. 5 against Tulaa, and the team is preparing for the Golden Hurricane,
"It's important in the first ballgame to keep mistakes at a minimum."
TORONTO—Wille Alkens belted a two-run homer to cap a five-run fourth inning and drove in two other runs yesterday to lead the Kansas Royals to an 11-8 victory over Toronto. The Blue Jays fifth straight loss.
Fambridge said there was no one reason Tuesday's workout went badly.
THE ROYALS, who shelled five Toronto pitches for 14 hits, broke a-1 tie with their fourth innings spree. After Darryl Motley and Caesar Geronimo led off with back-to-back singles off Toronto starter Jim Clancy, 3-8, Rance Mullinicks doubled to right for one run and
Aikens leads Royals past Toronto
Garth Iorg threw the bail into left field, allowing Geronom to score and Mullinks to reach third.
One out later Frank White singled but was caught on George Brett's grounder. Alkens then clabbed a 2-and-9 pitch over the right field fence in the middle of the season, chasing Clancy and giving Kansas City a 1-lead.
"Tulsa has a fine quarterback, Kenny Jackson, who can run and throw," Farnbrough said. "The offense is built in. We expect the option and the sprint."
Toronto took a 1-0 lead in the second on Otoe Vezel's 10th homer off Ailee Hammaker, who was making his first major league start. Kansas City tied it 1-1 in the third on Hal McAse's sacrifice flv.
which finished with an 8-3 mark last season.
JAHYHAWK NOTES: Former KU trackster Cliff Wiley also will compete in the Rome World Cup games in the 400 meters.
In the fifth, Mulliniks had a run-
scoring double, and in the sixth Alkens added an RBI double. The Royals scored two more times in the eighth when Alkens, who went 3-for-5, singled in a run and scored on Geronimo's fielder's choice.
The University Daily
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Kansas City 11, Toronto 5
Boston 7, Chicago 6, California 2
Cleveland 9, Seattle 7
Milwaukee 8, Minneapolis 4
Chicago 9, New York 1, 13 innings, Minnesota 4, Detroit 5
New York 3, Houston 2
New York 3, Chicago 6
St. Louis 3, San Diego 13, innings 3
San Francisco 5, Pittsburgh 13, 13 innings
By United Press International
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 words to fewer $2.00 $2.00 $2.75 $3.25 $3.25 $3.55 $4.55 $5.85
Each additional word $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 $1.00
AD DEADLINES
G run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ERRORS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 864-1538.
Gung Fu classes Monday & Wednesday
gong at 7:30 in Robinson Center
beginning August 24. For information call
bob at 814-2928.
9-2
Cinemax
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4258
Did you know that Sunflower Cablevision has a brand new, 24-hour-a-day movie above?
It's called CinemaX. This September you can see movies like Cousin Coulis, "If..." My Bodyguard, the Emigration and the Conformity. You'll love these classicics, action adventure films or cult classics, you'll love CinemaX. And CinemaX installation is just half price (85 cents) or 100 cents or code by Sunflower Cabellisation.
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.
---
sunflower cablevision
AMI New York 51204 31106
AIRPORT MOTEL
Water Beds
843-9803
Color TV
Refrigerator in room
East of Teppee Junction
...
Visit the Book End in Quantrill's Flea
Market, for quality used books at reasonable
prices. 811 New Hampshire, weekends
10-5 8-29
ENTERTAINMENT
The Willow Wind Band will play dancable
songs at $25 per person with $29 or
Susan 814-508 for bookings.
ATTENTION CHICAGO ACADEMY STUDENTS:
Channel 25 Call 841-9200 for more information.
SOUTHERN PARKWAY TOWNOUNKS
Bedroom, 1/2 baths, attached garage, office,
bathroom, 1/4 bath, covered porch and draps. Super duplexes with quiet apartments. Perfect for reference references. Call 749-1807.
Middle Eastern extravaganza featuring
Center, 7.30 pm. $25 limited sale. 9-28
Apartmentts 10 minute walk to Student
route $25/mo included
utilities) #43-0579
Single room for rent, new wiring, new
furniture, free Wi-Fi, 30 minute walk from
campus $90/month, 30 minute walk from
campus $90/month
FOR RENT
1 & 2 BR Antti $270 & $225, walking distance from KU. Call Rick Hall at #82-9703 for more information.
8-31
Moving out of town. Need to unbleach bedroom unfurnished apartment. Rent $200 water paid. $150.00 bonus offered. Bid #81-866 4-4
Sublease 1 bedroom apt. fully furnished.
$255/month + electricity. Call 841-8629.
2114 D Miss.
SHARE bottom floor of house at 920 New
Hampshire. Spacious. Very nice. Only $112/
mo. + utl. Call John 843-8645. 9-1
Single rooms and two bedroom apartments for rent within 10 minute walk of campus.
Call between 8-5 843-3228. tf
Two blocks to campus 3 bedrooms, off-street parking, very clean, no pets, 9-2
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect rooms. features wood burning fireplace, waterproof dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen, surroundings. Dup house 1-5 daily at 2000 and 2004. Phone 842-575 for additional information.
BOMB-93M *utilities paid* $ deposit,
$ deposit, $ deposit;
feminists only; Share house, washier/dryer,
washing house.
Furnished rooms for mature students m or f. phone John 864-4329, 841-8480 after 6.00. 8:31
Towers. Two pharmacy students need room-
mate. We'll pay September. Only $135.00/
mo. 749-4751, 9-2
Sublease 2 Bdr Apt. Park 25 $277.50/month
water paid. Call John 0-236-5188. 8-24
Sublet 1-br apartment. Rent $217.50./mo.
Deposit $200. Call 749-0288. 9-1
FURNISHED BOOM: Only 2 blocks from campus. $95.mo, includes utilities. No lease.
Call Bill at 843-6720. 9-4
Nice 3 nbr. brom, fenced yard, C/A, $/390
mo. with deposit. 842-563-790
9-4
2 bedroom duplex, quiet neighborhood, A/C,
garage, 9-month lease, $275, Call 749-2045
after 5 p.m.
8-28
House for rent or sale. Eudora 3 bedrooms,
fireplace garage. Rent $265 buy $31,500. 84-2
8306. 9-1
For rent duplex 2 bdfm. apt., AC. carpeted-
-8745 mk. Gas & water paid. Both on bus
route. 842-5974, 842-4461.
9-3
FOR SALE
1971 Triumph 750 motorcycle. Original English (factory); low mileage. Good condition. 841-3600 (days) 584-3603. E-28
Película 35mm camera w/UV filter, UV filter,
close-up lens $125.00, Kington Folk
Kong $7.50 New Doby component
projector $129.00 slide projector $329.00 Seath $84-
8729
Rim Acquires: New Used Fiecher power-glass plus, Head Vials, Trebert Power C-G6, also Aircraft (also aggressively, plus more). Will also Buy Trade for good condition. 864-391-9433
www.redmine.com
EVERYTHING BUT ICE-Buy unclaimed or unused children' s household goods, building supplies, kitchenware and any other large or small and save a bundle. Apply your large and save a bundle! Open 9-7 weekdays, Saturday until Sunday.
1967 MGB For Sale
really sharp
- Newly rebuilt engine
- Newly rebuilt engine
- Like new tires
- Like new tires
- Completely new interio
- Completely new interior
- New clutch
- 4 Tops—hard top,2 soft tops,tapem cover
- Pioneer AM/FM cassette
- w/Jensen Speakers
- Absolutely everything
media like power better
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3900 W.
tf
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Saleb
Makes sense to use them. As study
makes sense to use them. For exam
preparation, New Analysis of
the City, New Analysis of the
Town Crier, The Bookhouse and
Grounds.
appreciate in value
All this for only $3500.
or view at 1610 W. 23rd.
- Since MG's are no longer made, this car can only works like new or better.
- Since MG's are no long made, this car can only appreciate in value.
2-15* Mug weigel 600 G9-1578 Suzuki
130x130mm room furniture hot off Call 845-937-690
room furniture hot off Call 845-937-690
Honda Expresed Mopup under 700 miles.
Perfect running order. Offers over $300.
Contact Ashton Money, 816 Hayworth
phone 864-5157-318
8-28
Did you leave it at home? Pick up a rice decanter, scoop a sweeper, looser, slow cooker, blender and other small appliances; housewares; tables, dishes, cast iron kitchens, kitchen ovens, white fake fur coat. 420 Alabama. Apartment 30. Nine to Five, Saturday, August 15.
All this for only $3500.
Call 749-4414
Optomics integrated amplifier, 65 watt/s.
moving coil, 114.7 x 83.2 mm. Moving coil,
moving coil, 114.7 x 83.2 mm. After 5, 8-28
Tables, chaise dresses, stereo outfits and speakers, lamps, ping pong tables, rear chairs with cushions, carpets, graphic wall murals, large rugs, door—Everything from the wonderful to the disturbing. THING BUT ICE open 8-7 weekdays, Saturdays until 5:00 $60 for 6th and Vernier.
Unlabeled freight and damaged merchant-
ware. Of items Everything
But Ice 616 Vernon
K2400 motorcycle 1876, extra clean, low
weight. The Boat Dock (Buddle
23rd. 843-2973
8-28
Lentar BW enwiler, print frame, lamps,
lighting equipment for $100.00. Call 843-519-8.
1971 Torino -$400, 1970 Hondastamica Hawk
of Houston -$400, Honda Mobil. Called
1727 after 6.
New Nierco speaker ropes 125 watts-4 way Studio speakers Hickory cabinets. $150 each. 8-31 Schimm 10-speed bicycle. Just tuned up. Tire call 843-4386 after 8. 8-29
Olympus OM 1 body black, $195, Olympus
21 mm F3-5 $195, Both brand new,
and with Olympus filter, #62-7175. 9-1
For sale one twin bed-box spring and
mattress. In good condition. 841-182-862
3" tweeter $39. Everything But Ice 616
Nintendo speaker sales 10", base 5, 8-28
mid-85
CUTLASS '68, blue. AC, AM, $345, 84-
4372 after 4 pm.
8-31
1979 RS Capr in excellent condition. 19,000
track, must train up to 25,000. Track,
must train up to 6111-8211, 8154-8391.
8-304. Allman Brothers 2 tickets, 8th row center
main floor - buy 41-8742. 8-28
1973 Pontiac Grand Safari, redwood burl table, parting out 1963 pick-up truck/2838.
King size bed, box springs, mattress, frame,
like new 820. Also vinyl chair, 842-192-91.
English lightweight 3-speed bicycle, excellent
shape. Avoeet sleeve, many extraRS.
$475.
matt. AM/FM stereo, new tires, many new parts, call (864-1214) make offer. 9-1 6'x9" gold rust carpet renantn Excellent condition –350 Perfect for dorm room. $100-$150
cassette deck **GARAG** play **funk/2k**
cassette deck **GARAG** play **SUN** 9:29,
19th. 1429 Kentucky. 743-0223.
Sun 9:29
Technics RS-631 Stereo cassette deck, like
new Tunion. 843-1772.
8-28
1971 Capri, AM-FM radio cassette player
included, $450, 411-6453. 8-28
Pacer 1976. 43,000 miles. 6 cylinders. automatic. AM.FM stereo, new tires, many more.
Toyota 4x4 pickup. Blue with white steel spoke rims. Power steering. Low mileage.
Toyota 4x4 pluck Blue with white steel
Toyota 4x4 pluck Blue with white steel
8500 Call 842-887-901 1-862-958-008 8-26
Stadium drawing set. Like new. Great for
ME $10. 165, 843-1937.
8-31
JUST PACHED! **82** Desks and chefsets.
Just north of downtown bridge 415.
Just north of downtown bridge 415.
164 Triumph T4 Extra Sharp Convertible:
red/black interior. Good school car
guard. red/w black Interior. Good school car
guard.
Men's & Women's vintage clothing for your wardrobe, and costing needs at reasonable prices. Qualify by Quiz! Market invite you to browse Sat & Sun 10-5, 811 New Hampshire. 8-28
Study chairs—we have several in stock
Office Systems, Office Management,
843-3644. 10:49
Desks - we now have in stock several used
desks from the Office System
1040 Vermont, 843-644-364.
Bed-Tired. 14 of sleeping w someone else?
Call 351-841-2600. Box spring plus bedding.
Call 351-841-2600. Box spring plus bedding.
Moving-Must-坚 78 Olds Cutlass (Deluxe condition). Soundstage signer. B41-801-024.
67 Mustang 6 cyl. auto, Real sharp $2.225.
River City Radio, 1110 W. 12th W. 23rd F.
N.J. 889-420-1000.
GUITAR AND AMP-Pre-CBS Fender Musi-
master with hardshell case. Gibson 305
amplifier with reverb. Nine 12-inch
sound both in excellent shape. $982-9
842-8210
SALE- Everything from furniture to dishes
Aug. 29, 2015 Clayton店
8:28
8306
A pair of men's jeans found on Naismith
Drillc. Call: 843-9215, avenues
8-28
HELP WANTED
FOUND
Student help needed. Part-time for Fall and Spring. Must be able to work a full hour 8:00 or a half afternoon at 5:00. Requires a Master's degree as assistant. Contact Hazel. Huegel Department of Psychology or 864-3097 as soon as possible with your class schedule. Equal opportunity for employment. Enroll online.
LEGAL RESEARCH ASSISTANT Office of
work/study. Required: ability to research
information in a close and present information in a close and
oratory. Preferred: experience in legal
professional work. Contact: Justana
Deadline: August 31, 5:00 pm.
8-229
Help wanted with light housecleaning &
some sewing 4 to 5 hours per week. Thurs.
or Friday. $3.35 per hour. Transportation
necessary. Call 843-1247 for appointment
Have an extra hour? Volunteer as a girl
rewarding Cally Tuesday and Wednesday.
Wanted. X-ray tech to cover some vegetation in wetlands. To be in LS, -15. Thurs., 9-8, 9-125; Fr., 9-8, 9-125; Isaac for Pauls.
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications
10-5. Bucky's Drive-In, 2120 W. Street,
8-29
EXECUTIVE Coordinator, KU Graduate Applicant should have knowledge of KU graduate governance structure. Will be responsible for coordination of programs developed by the graduate assistance fund by the graduation month appointment, eligibility for staff month appointment, eligibility for staff cover letter (including two resources) to Graduate Student Council, Kansas Union, 4914 N. Main Street, Kansas City, 64114. Interviews will be held August 29-31. Interview success is key to Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.
Campus representative wanted to order and deliver pens, pencils and supplies. Flexible hours, business student preferred. Call 212-537-9008 or visit dani.pm.4.only. www.dani.mm.tactan.Dani Stevena.
Student with, agricultural background
Sending resume of experience to: PG Box 109,
Beijing Post Office, Beijing, China.
Medical device company has immediate approval to develop medical equipment. Current development of medical equipment. Current Martin Medical, 56270 W, 10840 (12) 853-919-1900 Hwy (19) Kews, KG 6018, 581-184-
Part-time work on campus, stapling posters
and documents. 4-15 hours weekly. No selling
schedule. 4-15 hours weekly. No selling
schedule. 4-15 hours weekly. No selling
schedule. Our average amount of material
distributed per hour. Our average amount of material
distributed per hour. This position requires
$44-$77 per hour. This position requires
$44-$77 per hour. This position requires
$44-$77 per hour. For information, contact Jeanne
Lefebvre for information. Contact Jeanne
Lefebvre for information. Contact Jeanne
88119. (206) 282-8111. 8-28
Wanted: Person to teach Spanish You learn english, I learn spanish 841-791. 9-1
Dearfield Mom needs all-day care Wed. & Thurs. for girls, P.M. kinder, and 2½ year-old. Your home or girls. 843-7802. 8-28
Reliable babywinter most Friday evenings from approximately 5.30 to 12. Dinner and snacks provided, 843-8969 9-3
Need clerk to work in afternoons in retail liquor store. 1906. Mass. Skilliers Liquor Store, see Mr. Eudaly in person. 9-3
Artists (freelance) talented fast workers, need for magazine & promotional work. needed by Director,介导 of Communications. GCSA A157 1617 Street. Lawrence, KS. 8-26
Delivery drivers wanted. Must have reliable
flexible hours, good pay. Apply in person at Pyramid Pizza after 4:00 p.m. 9-2
Amplers - Unlimited base shop needs one Ampler for each workshop and a week. Applications must be knowledgeable and able to work 3 to 6 p.m. on Monday through Friday, or 12-14 p.m. on Saturday and 12-14 p.m. on Sunday. 1449 W. 23rd Street
Light housework 4 hours weekly. Must provide own transportation. 842-0507. 8-31
Part-time jobs in banking concessions, and part-time positions at or near 1 o'clock m-F. M-Affix in person—may be on Monday through Friday. Union Blvd. Must be able to work all morning. Great opportunity & affirmative Action Employer.
LOST
A tearful little girl and her mom miss klinny, fuffy Mirror look-alike who lives near south park. Tan collar with rabies tag Blue flae blue. 842-175. 9-1
LOST-Blue wallet with rainbow across n.
At Lindley, $725 reward. Call Tiff Pember-
ton 864-5770 8-28
Labrador puppy 3 months old wearing white braded bladder. Answers to Koenig. Please call 843-690 or 841-751. Reward: 9-4
Ana briskie bruce, lost if, found please
Jave at 842-7721. Lost in 2nd f. bathroom
of Union—not very valuable—but very
sentimental to me. 8-31
Business Opportunity $250 weekly in your spare time. 50 representatives need. Write Rick Young, P.O. Box 514, Stillwater. 9-97406-7514
PERSONAL
Come and bump in Barb's Second Hand Rose, 515 Indiana. We have quality clothes, household items, jewelry & for gifts all ages. 842-4746. 9-30
Feel good about yourself *Ballet, exercise,
jazz, and modern dance classes for adults*
begin Sept. 8 *Lawrence School of Ballet*
842-4395
9-4
The Mofet-Beers Band has an immediate opening for female singers. Please be qualified. 749-3649 or 841-9797. 8-28
Silk Screen printing 1-shirts, etc. 1-1,000 group discounts. Shirt art by Swells. 749-1611. 9-4
Resume & portfolio photography, instant
color passport, Custom made portraits,
black white, Swells Studio, 749-
1611, 9-4
23rd & Louisiana 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
Floa Market
Malls Shopping Center
FREE INFORMATION on how easy to make extra money, Lots of it! Write TERRY ASSOCIATES, Box 854, Paintville, KY 41246.
The Gerrity still reigns! King Izod and his comrade the Wilson-mimosa shorts, arms in a black jacket, welcome you back to another school in the City. Call 911 or enter ID, CDE to either the Rachel Club or Golf Club, is male, well made of Kushan or similar materials. Classes open 8:00 am to 8:00 pm. 7 days a week.
Gay men's support discussion group is currently accepting new members. If interested, contact Headquarters Crisa Center at 841-2346.
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Hope you enjoy your summer, we're ever-moving management of Hawks' Crossing thank you shared the good times with us. We are look-seeing Hawks again which has been approved by the Lawrence City Commission for 4-0-1 albatross笼 club, and am pleased to open Sunday 11 until 8:30 pm, also open Sunday 11 until 8:30 for great food. Hope to see you, one block away. The Crossing F-S-Hangover? You try.
Boyd's Coins-Antique
Caring Rings
Bell & Dial - Trade
Gold - Silver - Coins
Silver - Watchs
319 New Haven Mint
19. Jean Hampeau
Laurence, Kansas 66044 913-842-8773
GOLD! 14 kt. Add-a-beads & chains.
Great price! Other jewelry also available.
843-3601. 8-31
It's late, you're home and you're really hungry. Big hot, big delicious, & darn fast. Call SUM-BAN 841-3286 for a YELLOW SUB delivery at midnight, Sunday through Thursday.
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
tf
843-4821.
Sunday afternoon? Playing golf, friends or family? Then the Alvaram Grant Prize is for you. It will be held on Wednesday, the 12th, Joachwk and Sunflower courts. Call 516-790-8113. Grant Prize and put a little golf in your pocket.
WINDSURFING—I've got boards to rent or sell—new and used Saliriders. 842-2366. 9-3
One 16-liter keg equals 71% of beer
of one 40-liter keg. One 28-liter
Retail Liquor, 912 Iowa, 843-702-909.
$15.99
Wanted: Quarterback for hard-nosed IN-DEPENDANT football team to play in trojan league. good arm, mobility a skill needed. Good chest needs need not applied. Call Joe 842-3807. 8-31
FREE KITTENS, 7 wks, trained, 842-3609, 8-31
Hi Brad and Dave from Derby! And you
might remember that I wouldn't remember
Sharry.
Headache, Backache, Stiff Neck, Leg pain?
Quality Chiropractic Care & its benefits.
Dr Mark Johnson 848-9368 for consultations
Blood Orange Cress & Star护理 plans.
COME WALMERS ONE, COME WALMERS ONE
they have to have some fun, and try to
the tense have to have some fun,
birthday; to be the best making water bed
birthday; to be the best making water bed
birthday suit for your morals we will plenify
things. But if you're not, you'll sure be
sorry. But if you're not, we'll sure be
KU WALMERS at Kav The Key, 'key
The JAYHAWKER Yearbook is now accepting applications for business and writing position open to by the JAYHAWKER office room, room 121 B Kansai Union, and fill out an application.
SHOTOKAN KARATE Club, Great physical condition. Learn self-defense and self-diurning. Wednesday, 7-30 p.m. the 2nd floor. Beginners welcome. 749-1272.
Topka physician, 30, smart, wishes to meet bright, sensitive, attractive young lady. Box 383. Lawrence. 9-9
Welcome back to the reorganized gang of four. Tom's T.V. and taxi service is still operational. 8-31
Meghan Halan Chi is proud to announce, *First marriage* Bill first watered. Finally! Bill can sleep? (in comfort of drivation. Bill can sleep?) in comfort of drivation upon the bed immediately following installation. If you supply the wine, it will undoubtedly come up with cheese. 8-28
Liz. Congratulations on being chosen to go
to Europe. Good Luck and have fun. Love
Alpha Phi.
8-28
SPIRILINA. Have more energy, eat less,
feel better. Most nutritious food on the face of the planet. Distributors available. Bobian 816-735-3588 9-3
Said Ned all he drank with Grace. Those Llamas can som face. Those sisters are nice full of sugar and spice; but I hope they don't carry mace. EMR. Hugl 8-28
SERVICES OFFERED
FRUSTRATED? Come and visit the graphics art shop at Strongs Office Systems, 140 Vermont. For the finest quality graphic architecture and engineering piles. 8-28
THE BIKE GARAGE complete professional
warehouse. Ups and Tapes
+ Total-Ovailability. Fully guaranteed.
sonally printed 841-7281. Commuters:
Bank of America Exchange. Kauai
Union. Main Lobby
HOWELL STUDIOS
1 black south of Capital
Federal Building
PRESENTATIONS *IDS*
NEWSCLIFFS *ETC.*
Up to 18" wide—any length
minimum order—$1.00
afternoons and Sat. morning
WHILE YOU WAIT
PLASTIC LAMINATING
MATH TUTOR, patient and experienced ed
grad with math MA, Algebra, Trig. Calu-
culus, and Stat. $/hour. Bob. 941-7283.
ANNOUNCING: EDUCAID A computer rete-
mined to be up to 25 sources of financial aid. Re-
sidences with up to 25 sources of financial aid are limited to a maximum of two hours time only $2. For information, send name and address to KEEMKO 60044, B-828
Lawrence, KS 60044.
The New York Times can be delivered to
your home every Sunday for only $8 each.
*to start delivery this Sun, call 841-5073*
0.11
RESUMES prepared by local personal manager and experienced campus recruiter. Learn what to say, what not to say at camp interviews. 841-5644. 10-2
TYPING
Most experienced mother offers to do noun
sitting all day without any time limit. Call
Anne 841-1367. 9-30
Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting selftec. Call Donna at 842-2744.
For PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Call Myra,
841-4980.
Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience.
IBM. Before 9 pm. 749-2647.
Tip Top Typing experienced typist IBM
Sulcetric 843-5875. 9-18
Experienced typet - thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mises. IBM correcting selecirt.
Barb, after 5 pm. 842-2310 tf
Experienced typists term papers, these will be written on paper or hardcover or on a blog or on plaques and well correct spelling. Phone numbers for the office are provided.
Experienced typist. Books, termis, term paper, dissertations, etc. IBM correcting Selectric. Terry evenings and weekends. 842-4754 or 843-2671. ff
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For all your typing problems call Laskar at any time. 841-1367. 9-3
**Typing** - fast accurate. Assistance with composition, letters, editing papers, preparing applications. Tutor foreign students in English. 814-6254. tf
WANTED
Female wants to share apartment or house with other female(s) students. Call 913-232-5729 (Topope) Ask for Judy. 8-28
Wanted male Christian roommates large quiet house close to campus. Dishwawker, dishwasher, refrigerator, microwave, $95-$140/month. Call Darryl. Otl 841-8386,
140 Kentucky.
Female roommate for two bedroom, two bath apartment. Call 841-8856 for details. 8:28
Female to pay 1/3 rent and 1/3 electric.
Close to campus. Harvard Square Apts.
841-1458. 8-28
Apartment to share: Freeman needs two- or three male students to share an apartment in Jayhawker Towers. Non-drinkers/ smokers preferred (913) 724-581-8-31
Roommate wanted to share apartment = bdrm. close to campus. Call Pete 843-6523.
8-28
Female Roommate nice 4 bdmr house. Fully furnished kitchen, laundry. On bus route.
Call 841-7788. 8-28
JOURNALISTS: The Goodland Daily News (KS) needs a reporter immediately. Direct any inquests to Tom Drilling at 915-899-6186 or 899-3444. 9-8
Roommate wanted large 3 bedroom duplex,
mile from campus. Call Dave at 841-8066
for information.
8-28
Wanted female non-smoker roommate to share a 2 btd. apart, on bus route, beautiful location. Call 749-3612. 9-2
Female nominate to share 2 bdr. apt. $135/month + 1% utilities. Call 843-3277, Foreign Student welcome 9-11
Looking for a person to share a 3 bed,
2 bath apartment in Chicago, IL without
blocks from campus, 1/2 of rent, plus $750
Female non-smoking housemate to share 2-story, 2 b. country home in Leptonchon. Prefer quiet but liberal thinker, $150; mi-¹/₂ uilties, 877-6171 after 6:00.
Female roommate wanted to share 3 beds,
1 two-bed, and 2 rent- &
electricity. Phone 843-9498.
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment.
Own room: $135 month plus % utilities. 841-9603. 9-7
Share spacious 3 BR apt, near campus. Only $135 month util. pd. Non-smoking female preferred. Call 841-1844. 8-21
Non-smoking female to share large two
bedroom apartment located on bus route.
Rent $120 + 5 utilities. Evenings call Jennifer
843-1434, mornings 844-6223.
Girls to tend bar. Must be 18. Call Time out after 2:00. Ask for Terrey. 842-9533.
Someone to share 2 BR house near campus. $125/mo. + utilities. Preferably graduate student. 841-4060. 9/2
Non-smoking female to share large house be remodeled with 2 other girls, 15 minute walk from campus, 10 minute walk from fire station, 1 fireplaza, 157 + 1.70 millions. Call 841-659-7891.
Roommates wanted to share nice 2-bed. bath apt. bgt rent. plus negleive share of gas electricity, and phone. 842-7164. Keep tyring. 9-2
Kansan
Male roommate wanted, Park 25 Apt. $100 per month + 1/3 gas & elev. Call 841-6768. 9a3
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan, August 28, 1981
2402108X 43
Mitchell quits, returns home
By TRACEE HAMILTON
Sports Editor
Head basketball coach Ted Owens knew he would feel the loss of last year's seniors. He just didn't know how much.
Center Victor Mitchell yesterday joined a growing list of Jawahars who have defaulted from the team. Owens said the 6-foot-9, 250-pound junior forward was returning to his home in Amarillo, Texas, where he played jubilee ball.
"TM DISAPPOINTED that we won't have Victor with us," Owens said. "I had anticipated him having a fine senior year. However, I have to honor his wishes to fulfill his obligation to his family."
Mitchell, who started 23 of 32 contests for the Jayhawks last season, averaged 8.1 points and 5.6 rebounds a game. He was married this past summer.
Two junior college transfers recruited this spring have decided not to attend KU, further thinning the roster.
Tom Sewell, a transfer from Amarillo, Mitchell's old school, backed out on his agreement to come to KU. He was the 6-6 swinger who would do this fall.
"HE EITHER decided to go back or went to another school," Owens said.
Owens said that despite the losses, he did not plan to heavily recruit junior college players this fall.
JEAN SHACK
"He did not qualify," Owens said.
"I'm not sure what his future plans are."
Students get 10% discount with current ID 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Crescent
"I don't want too many, because we only lost three," Owens said before Mitchell's departure was announced. Mitchell to get some high school players."
Jackie Fleury, a 6-3 guard from El Camino Junior College in California, was not qualified to transfer.
1601 W, 23rd Southern Hills Center
However, the Kansan has learned that Owens is recruiting another player, a swingman, and that an announcement can be expected in the
THE LOSS OF Mitchell leaves the Jayhawks with two returning starters, 6-2 guard Tony Guy and 8-7 forward David Magley. Kelly Knight, 6-4 center, has recovered from knee surgery and is expected to fill the gap left by Mitchell.
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Part-time starter Victor Mitchell goes up for a rebound against Pepperdine last week. Owens yesterday announced that Mitchell wouldn't return for his senior year.
Another KU recruit, Tyrk Peacock, will compete in the World Cup III Games in Rome Sept. 4-6 in the high jump. Peacock, also recruited by track coach Bob Timmons, is ranked fifth in the world in that event.
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Monday, August 31, 1981 Vol. 92, No. 7 USPS 650-640
EARL RICHARDSON/Kansan Staff
Weekend washer
With weekend temperatures reaching into the 90's, many people found the time to enjoy the weather and take care of odd jobs. At a car wash in North Lawrence, this man cleaned his motorcycle.
Hit list probed in Fort Scott
By MIKE ROBINSON Staff Reporter
FORT SCOTT—State and local police officials will decide today whether or not to continue an investigation into an alleged assassination "hit list" of city leaders.
Fort Scott City Manager Don Munsel said yesterday that after a week-long investigation, law enforcement officials had been unable to turn up evidence of an assassination plot.
Officials learned of the plot Aug. 22 when Louis Cotton, an inmate in the Bourbon County Regional Correctional Center, told Fort Scott on another plot existed against a local businessman.
Munsell said that the next day Cotton told police the plot also included up to 13 other leading Fort Scott citizens.
Cotton was being held on burglary and theft charges
BUT MUNSELL said that while the first name was confirmed by three psychological stress tests, the other names were not confirmed and details on an extended plot were sketchy.
The list was published last Friday in the Fort Scott Tribune and included Mussell, five city commission members, two judges, two bankers and an insurance company president.
The list also included Tom Eblen, executive editor of the Tribune and a former Gannett professional-in-residence at KU's William Allen White School of Journalism.
Eblen said that he was notified about the
alleged plot by authorities on Wednesday, but that he had not altered his living patterns.
"I'm not behaving differently that I'm aware of." Eben said.
"I was skeptical at first and remain somewhat skeptical that there is real validity about what's done."
See THREATS page 8
C. R. SMITH
Tom Eblen
Students feel effects of cuts in Social Security benefits
By JOE REBEIN Staff Reporter
Social Security benefits are more than just checks that come in the mail every month. For some students they represent the rent, tuition payments or maybe just the food on the table.
But soon these benefits will be only memories, eliminated by the massive fiscal 1982 budget reconciliation bill President Reagan signed Aug. 13.
"No more students will be allowed into the program after May 1982," said Ron Radford, manager of the Lawrence Social Security office. "And beginning in September 1982, and again in October 1983, the amount of the benefits currently being paid will reduced 25 percent of the August 1981 amount."
RADFORD SAID THAT freshmen and sophomores who had just started in the program would be affected most by the cuts.
Benefits are now paid to 18- to 21-year-old students whose parents are dead, disabled or unpaid.
"Seniors will miss the cuts because they will graduate or turn 22 before the phase-out begins."
Radford said. But the younger students will be getting less and less from us the further they go on in their college careers.
The system will save $151 million in 1982 and $10 billion through 1986 by phasing out benefits for the more than 800,000 students who receive monthly checks, he said.
Coupled vilt the yearly 25 percent reductions is the elimination of payments for the months of May through August, regardless of whether the attendance is in full-time attendance. Raafford said
"This cut is especially significant because students attend school during parts of May and August," Radford said. "And some students on Social Security attend summer school.
"The cost-of-living increase is also computed in July, so students will not receive a cost-of-living estimate."
Radford illustrated the often frustrating intricacies of the modified Social Security policy.
"Say you were a 18-year-old freshman who entered school before August 31. Then either your mother or father died in September." Radford explained. "Instead of receiving benefits for the entire time you are in school until you turned 22, you would only receive benefits
through July 1982. Then you would be removed from the program," he said.
RADFORD SAID the cuts were designed to eliminate the overlapping that had occurred when students on Social Security also had loans and grants available for financial aid.
"Unfortunately," he said, "the grant and loan programs are also being cut back."
Most KU students on Social Security are not aware of the extent of the cuts, Radford said. "We received a lot of calls when the cuts were proposed in Congress, but since the legislation has passed we haven't heard from many students."
Jake Murphee, McPherson junior in computer science, said his cuts were cut, but he would not be affected.
Murphure, 20, will continue to receive benefits until he is 22. However, his May through August benefits will be eliminated and in September 1982 benefits will be received for the $270 he is currently receiving each month.
"Social Security has kept me affair," Murphear said. "It pays my tuition, which has gone to almost $1,000 a year, my books and my food. My salary is about $140 a day. Job next year or I won't be able to go to school."
Native says N. Ireland used to riots
By PAM ALLOWAY
See BENEFITS page 5
Staff Reporter
With a thick northern Irish accent and an uncanny resemblance to rock star Rod Stewart, a Londencydery Northern Ireland singer, he is also with an intensity that is impossible to tame.
"If religion has caused this much trouble, it's not worth it," the soft-spoken McClearn said.
'Full of a seriousness and a cool aloofness that is as obvious as his slow smile. McClean
Monday Morning
said that after 12 years of gun-carrying soldiers, bombings and armored military vehicles on constant patrol, the people of Northern Ireland had built up an immunity to the violence that had become a part of their everyday lives.
NORTHERN IRELAND was placed under British rule when the Republic of Ireland became an independent country in 1921. Since 1969 the rolling, green countryside of Northern Ireland has been tainted with frequent violence.
McClean calls himself British and says he doesn't mind being frisked for weapons by him.
the army is there to protect me, so I don't mind it," he said.
McClearn said he was neither Protestant nor Catholic, though his parents were Protestant. He attended Protestant schools as a child.
At 16, McClearn chose not to attend any church.
"Religion is very hypocritical there," he said. "Christianity in Ireland is a political thing—tribal. The people are the most tragic people. They violate their own decrets."
"People don't want to bury the hatchet; it's an inbred hatred."
McCLEAM SAID the Catholic Church was responsible for the continued segregation between Protestants and Catholics. He said Irish Catholicism was mystical and priests were very powerful. Whatever the priests say, the parish does, he said.
Although sporadic violence has been a way of life in Northern Ireland since its separation from the Republic, the explosive situation has been accentuated by hunger strikes by the Irish Republican Front.
McClean angrily accuses Catholic priests or supporting army strikes, which are against him.
"It's suicide and by condoning it, the priests
McCleam's father, a car dealer, has had his business blown up several times but refuses to pay him.
McCleam has two older brothers who live abroad and a younger brother who works with their father. McCleam said he and his older brothers wanted their younger brother to get out of the country to "see what ordinary people live like."
AS A CHILD, McClearn he was in
the fights "just because I was
Protestant."
Schools in Ireland are kept strictly segregated. McClearn attended a Protestant primary school in a Catholic neighborhood. Neighborhood Catholic children verbally abused the Protestant school children every day, McClearn said.
After leaving secondary school, McClearn went to the University of Ulster in North Ireland but left because of the hypocrisy that he said was standard throughout Northern Europe.
He then attended Sterling University in Scotland. After studying English and broadcasting at the University of Kansas this fall, Clem will return to Sterling for his final year.
Segregation has become a way of life in every aspect, including one's social life, he said. Before a night on the town, McCleam said, one must know the "right" places to go. Pubs and discos are segregated along the narrow lines as the schools and churches.
The first thing people will say to you in a pub if they don't recognize you, "What are you?" he said. If your religion is different
TOM MURRAY
Andy McLean, an exchange student from Northern Ireland, relaxes in his room at Stephenson Scholarship Hall.
Weather
Weather
Second blast in 3 months devastates government
Today will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain and a high in the mid-90s, according to the National Weather Service in Toneka.
Explosion kills Iran's president, prime minister
The low tonight will be in the mid-80s with a $3 percent chance for rain. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with the high in the mid-80s.
ANKARA, Turkey—Iranian President Mohammed All Rajai and Prime Minister Mohammed Javad Bahonar were killed in a fire bombing of the prime minister's office yesterday and an emergency presidential council took power in their place, the official Tehran Radio
By United Press International
"President Rajal and Prime Minister Bahonar have joined the army of the revolution's martyrs," Tehran Radio quoted the presidential council as saving.
The blast was the second in less than three months to kill leading members of the country's military.
At an emergency Cabinet meeting, held
following the blast yesterday morning and chaired by the speaker of the Majlis, Iran's parliament, Hashemi Rafsanji, a resolution demanding that he be a "last-ditch effort by American mercenaries."
Tehran Radio reports monitored here did not indicate when the presidential council was formed, but government opponents reached by telephone said Rafsani jianed the provisional ruling body at the Cabinet meeting held 3 hours after the 5 a.m. CDT blast.
The "incendiay bomb at the prime minister's office (ws) ordered by criminal America," the radio quoted the presidential article as saying, "The unholly alliance of left- and right-wing hypocrites has robbed the Iranian nation of these two revolutionary Muslims."
The official Pars News Agency said at least
Funeral services for Rajaj and Bahonar will begin today in Tehran in accordance with Islamic custom, which requires the burial of a "believer" within 24 hours of his death, the radio
four other people were killed and 17 others were wounded in the "powerful explosion" and raging fires.
Rajal and Bohan had assumed power two months ago, shortly after Iran's leadership was devastated by a bomb June 28 at the headquarters of the ruling Islamic Republic.
A revolutionary guard, who was at the scene of yesterday's blast, said Rajal was carried out on
That blast killed 74 people, including Ayatollah Ruhullah孔顺仑's closest ally, Ayatollah Ibrahim Khamenei.
a stretcher. The Times of London reported that Rajal had lost both his legs.
A statement issued by the Mohaidheen Khalq exile headquarters in France, said the latest bombing was a "very natural response of the Iranian people to the crimes of Khomeini and to the executions of the Jojahideen (people)." The group was accused of setting the June explosion.
Former president Abdahassan Bani Sadr, now leading an oposition campaign from exile in Paris, said last week in an interview with the New York Times, that his followers could topple Khomeini's regime by killing five men, including Rajal, Bahonar and Rafsanjani.
Rajai, 48, was elected president July 14 and was sworn in Aug. 3 to replace the ousted Bani-Sadr.
Page 2 ___ University Daily Kansan, August 31, 1981
News Briefs From United Press International
S. Africans leave Angola
WINDHOKE, South West Africa—South African forces yesterday began withdrawing from the Angolan town of Kangango, 60 miles across the South West African border, after a six-day search and destroy mission that left 450 Angolan soldiers and black guerrillas dead.
"We have started a tactical withdrawal," a military spokesman said.
These things take time and we must be careful. We are very vulnerable to an attack.
The spokesman said remnants of the South Africa forces began the trek back to base, hauling with them tons of capture - manufactured weapons.
Despite the withdrawal, Angola claimed new South African strikes against civilian targets in Southern Angola; South Africa denied the claims.
During the six-day incursion, 10 South Africa soldiers died and 450 Angolan soldiers and SWA gupo warriors were killed in a series of artillery and ground attacks.
The withdrawals came as non-aligned nations in the United Nations urged the Governing Council to impose sanctions on South Africa and force it to pay Angola compensation for the loss.
South African military officials termed the incursion aimed at the black guerrillas of the South West African People's Organization a success.
During the fighting, South African fighter-bombers leveled key Angolan missiles and radar installations which Pretoria claimed were to anger gunners.
Brig. Rudi Badenhorst, who led the South African assault, said 60 percent of the casualties were suffered by Angolan troops who ignored warnings not to cross the border.
Sadat might not seek another term
CAIRO, EGYPT—President Anwar Sadat indicated yesterday he would not seek a third term next year and expressed the hope that his people would support the decision.
Sadat's hint came in the third part of his memoirs published in Mayo, the weekly organ of his ruling national Democratic Party, and was contained in a part reflecting on former president Carter's election defeat last November.
"And I thought a lot about Carter," Sadat said. "I thought of how his departure from the White House must have been extremely difficult on him, but I remember saying when I was in prison (in the 1940s) that a strong man would give you a chance to want him, but if his people do not want him then he must go immediately."
"I therefore always say that there are two who must not forget themselves . . . the politician and artist for they must not hold on too tightly on the stage, whether a political or artistic stage, they must know when they should stop and retreat from the lights willingly before setting forced to do so.
"Therefore, I wish that my people would understand this and back me up in my decision next year."
Although he did not elaborate further, it was believed Sadat was referring to his intention of retiring sometime after April. By then, Israel will have completed its military pullout from the entire Sinai Peninsula, prescribed by the Camp David agreements.
Arab terrorists kill 2, wound 19
VIENNA, Austria-Vienna police rounded up 10 Arabs yesterday in the wake of a bloody terrorist attack on a crowded synagogue that left two people dead and 19 wounded and claimed to have uncovered an Arab terrorist network in Austria.
The 10 were seized in a raid on the apartment of one of the terrorists arrested in Saturday's machine-gun and grenade attack on a downtown Vienna synagogue packed with Sabbath worshippers leaving after a Bar Mitzvah ceremony.
"We have apparently discovered a big Arab terrorist network in Austria, but we are still in the dark where their headquarters are and who gave them the information."
Israel, meanwhile, blamed the attack on Austria's allegedly lax policies toward the Palestinian Liberation Organization.
Syria to station troops in Libya
BEIRUT, LEBANON—Some 5.000 Syrian troops will soon be dispatched to Libya to strengthen existing military ties between the two countries, the pro-Libyan magazine Al Moukif Al Arabia said yesterday.
The troops will be grouped in a tank brigade, the magazine said, but it did not say whether Syria would also provide military hardware for its men.
The two countries, which last year announced plans for a political merger, last week agreed to further bolster military ties during talks in Damascus between Syrian president Hafez Assad and Libyan leader Col Moammar Khadafy.
The magazine said some 500 Syrian troops were already in Libya and 5,000 more would be dispatched soon. Syria and Libya, however, have not yet signed an official military agreement.
Syria maintains a fighting force of about 247,500 men and already has 30,000 stationed in Lebanon under the flair of the Arab peacekeeping forces.
Libya's armed forces total $3,000 men, according to the latest edition of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies.
Lightning cuts power in four states
The electric power industry worked yesterday to determine how two lightning strikes in Arizona cut off transmission lines 1,000 miles away in Oregon, disrupting service to 2 million customers in between for up to three hours.
At first, the four-state power outage was blamed on forest fires in Oregon. Then blame for the unusual chain-reaction switched to the Arizona lightning.
Whatever the cause, officials were pleased the outage wasn't worse. They said the episode suggested their automatic backup systems could prevent the kind of overloading that prolonged blackouts in New York in 1965 and 1977
Lightning apparently knocked out two 500,000-watt lines in Arizona Saturday and caused numerous lines in California, Nevada and Oregon as well as Arizona to shut down automatically to prevent an overload.
The Bonneville Water Administration in Portland, Ore., said the Pacific Northwest-Southwest link went out at 11:31 p.m. CDT, cutting off California from the big electricity-producing dams on the Columbia River.
Broadcaster Lowell Thomas dies
PAWLING, N.Y.-Lowell Thomas, the dean of the world's radio news broadcasters whose pioneer feats through more than five decades form one of the most extraordinary chapters in media history, died Saturday. He was 89.
His secretary, Electra Nix, said Thomas died of a heart attack in his sleep at his update New York home in Pawling.
He was the first man to broadcast from a ship, from an airplane, from a boat and from a submarine. His reporting work took him to both poles and almost all places.
As a noted columnist wrote in 1958, "The day will come when a compact man, with piercing blue eyes, wavy salt-and-piper hair, a thin mustache and a brow, will stride briskly toward the pearly gates. The guardian angel will recognize her face. Here comes Lowell Thomas, he will say, 'He's been everywhere else.'"
The longest continually operating voice in radio belonged to the indestructible Ohioan, who first went behind the microphone in 1925 and began broadcasting on Monday through Friday basis in 1380. His last daily broadcast for CBS Broadcasters in 1976, at the age of 64. He continued intermittent broadcasts zeroth time that day.
Armed robbers stole an undetermined amount of cash from the Farmer's Co-op association service station at 23rd and Haskell streets early yesterday morning, Lawrence police reported.
On the Record
Police said a small-caliber automatic weapon was believed to have been used in the robbery.
Police do not have any suspects in the case.
A KU STUDENT'S car was stolen from 1519 Kentucky St. Saturday morning and recovered yesterday, police said. The car, found in Wichita, had damage to the right side and the radio was missing.
man Friday night in connection with the traffic death of a 20-year-old Topeka man earlier this month, District Attorney Mike Malone said Saturday.
Howard Z. Smith, charged with involuntary manslaughter, was freed on a $1,500 recognition bond Friday, officials said.
POLICE ARRESTED a Lawrence
David P. O'Neil was killed Aug. 2, when his motorcycle struck Smith's stalled tractor head-on on U.S. 40, about five miles west of Lawrence.
Smith was traveling west without headlights, the Kansas Highway Patrol said, when the tractor apparently crossed the center line and stalled.
An 18-year old Topeka woman, Karen
E. Thomas, who was riding with O'Neil,
jumping.
If convicted of involuntary man-
whip, the defendant would face one to five years in prison.
suffered two broken ankles and a broken pelvis. She remains hospitalized at Stormont-Vall Hospital in Toneka
A preliminary hearing has been set
to court in 14 Douglas County District
Court.
POLICE ARRESTED a Lawrence man Friday night, charging him with the burglary and subsequent arson of a residence early Thursday morning.
Officer Jack Elder said police were assuring J. D. Austin, 40, had set fire to the house at 729 Connecticut St. in an effort to cover up the burglary.
"We recovered a large portion of the stolen items in Austin's home," said Elder. "So much, in fact, we didn't need it for all in the evidence room."
Police said Friday that $3,000 worth of furniture, including a sofa and several tables had been stolen sometime before the fire.
Fire officials estimated the damage, which was limited mostly to the front portion of the house, at $15,000.
Last Chance!
Austin remained in the Douglas
Country with a bond set at $10,500.
Eldredge.
Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain called the fire "suspicious."
Today at 5 pm is your last chance to take advantage of the cinemax Half-Price Installation Special!
Now showing on Cinemax
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Raintree County Elizabeth Taylor in romantic Civil War drama.
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The jaws of disaster open wide as sea demons threaten a coastal village
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A moving story of the power of love; starring Ellen Burstyn
Les Girls
Gene Kelly stars in merry musical comedy, with a sparkling Cole Porter score.
Joseph Andrews
A robust English romp with lots of baddy fun. Starring Ann-Margaret and Peter Firth
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The Haunting
A nerve-wracker. Starring
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Bloodbrothers Richard Gere stars in this powerful drama of father/son conflict
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Warmhearted comedy/drama of a young boy making his way in a new school!
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ALEXANDRA AND HELEN BARNES
The Prisoner of Second Avenue
A Nel Simon delight starring
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The Prince and the Pauper
Rapual Welf, George C. Scott,
Rex Harrison and more in the
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Straight Time
The man on the run is Dustin Hoffman in this crime drama of an ex-con struggling to go straight
ALEXANDER PARKER
The Emigrants
Oscar-nominated Lui Vollmann in touching portrait of pioneer life.
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Small Circle of Friends A clockwork Orange
Starust Memories Slap Shot
The New Land
© 1981 Home Box Office, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
Cinemax
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4
University Daily Kansan, August 31, 1981 Page 3
Voyager data stored at KU
By SHARON APPELBAUM Staff Reporter
As Voyager II travels farther into the solar system, a library of magnetic tapes in the basement of Malott Hall grows.
The connection is Thomas Armstrong, a KU professor of physics and astronomy, who, with a team of seven students, prepares a partner to study magnetic particles in spaghetti.
Voyager, a one-ton robot explorer, was launched in 1977 to study most of the planets in the solar system beyond Mars. Armstrong helped design and build one of the 11 experiments aboard the probe. Information is transmitted back to Earth and stored on the magnetic tapes.
ARMSTRONG and his co-workers have been toiling over their experiment, called Low-Energy Charged Particles, LECP, since 1972, when they first applied for the grant from the National Onautic and Space Administration.
The apparatus the team developed measures the number and type of charged atoms zipping along the solar system. Armstrong said the study of those particles helped in the understanding of Earth's magnetic radiation.
"All characteristics of the natural environment are related to one another," he said Friday. "In trying to understand how it all works, we gain a tremendous amount by looking at other planets."
Armstrong, a 1982 KU graduate, met his team of scientists as a graduate student at the University of Iowa, where he received his doctorate in 1966.
"Space physics was a very big deal at the University of Iowa," he said. "There were a lot of very involved students, and our professor, Dr. Sputnik and early Kennedy. The people studying there then are now the space physicists around the country."
WHEN ONE OF Armstrong's fellow students proposed the experiment in the early 1970s, Armstrong was included.
"I guess it was the 'good-old-boy' network," he said.
He added, however, that not all his research team was composed of Iowa graduates. For example, one scientist is German.
Armstrong's job was to organize and interpret the data, so he received all the magnetic tapes. Other members served only as the theists, he said.
The team is using the data to study Earth's climatic changes in particular he said. Scientists already know that warming can harm the sun affected the weather, he said.
FOR EXAMPLE, when the sun is disturbed, it emits an abundance of particles that are drawn to the Earth's poles by the magnetic field. That radiation warms the poles and changes thelet stream.
"It has consequences for precipitation, temperature and air pressure," armstrong explained.
"We expect to rather directly apply our experiment to the Earth, to have a
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Data for these studies is collected by a box attached to the space probe, measuring eight inches square at the base and 12 inches high, Armstrong said. The box contains tiny bits of silicon stacked like dimes. Each time a charged particle strikes the silicon, an electrical impulse is released. The signal is amplified inside Voyager and transmitted back to Earth.
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But, Armström added, "There's a great deal more to Voyager's studies than just weather. It's part of the progress of basic science, to enlarge our understanding of how the solar system works."
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Arnastroud said those signals could conceivably, in whole, unlock its speed and the place it came from.
At this point, Armstrong comes into the picture. Those tapes, now numbering more than 1,000, are sent to him and kept in cases in Malott Hall.
SUNSET
10 AM
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RICHARD BULMANN
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13 MURDERERS
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Student Bodies
2006 15:30
THE SIGNAL traveled for an hour and 26 minutes, he said, until it was picked up by one of three antennas placed in California, Spain and Australia. Those locations were equally spaced around the world so that "the
The signal is then broadcast to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., where it is recorded in computer code on magnetic tapes.
He said each tape contained 20 million characters, or the equivalent of 10 million words.
spacecraft is always above the horizon some place," Armstrong said.
Armstrong hopes to continue studying planets' particles. Voyager would reach Uranus in 1986, and although no definite plans had been made, Armstrong hopes the voyager will be able to where magnetic particles would be found. Neptune would be reached in 1989, he said.
In the meantime, he and his team are also working on a similar experiment for Galileo, a probe to be launched in 1986 that will orbit Jupiter.
M. A. M.
EABL RICHARDSON/Kansan Stef
Thomas Armstrong
Fall Floating on the North Fork River
In Mark Twain National Forest
Campus groups & Individuals plan your canoe trip now!
CANOE RIVER
---
Large party groups welcome Music & food catering available.
North Fork River Outfitters
Box 33, Dora, Missouri Ph.(417)261-2259 or 261-2345 A complete outdoor experience
If you are interested in serving in Student government or as a student representative in university governance, applications are now being accepted for the following.
GO FOR IT...
Academic Affairs, Communications Finance and Auditing. Student Rights, Student Services, Cultural Affairs, Sports. Minority Affairs Elections
STUDENT SENATE COMMITTEES
UNIVERSITY SENATE COMMITTEES STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES
2 positions on Computing
3 positions on Calendar
2 positions on Financial Aid
3 positions on Foreign Students
2 positions on Human Relations
3 positions on Libraries
Drop by or call the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union, 864-3710, for more information and for an application form.
KU STUDENT GOVERNMENT IS FOR YOU
Pd. by Student Senate
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PETER TOSH WANTED
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all tickets subject to service charge
Page 4
University Daily Kansan, August 31, 1981
Opinion
Please do not disturb
We're beginning to wonder what it will take to get the president of the United States out of bed.
On Aug. 19, you may recall, two U.S.
Navy F-14 jets shot down a pair of Soviet-
built Libyan fighters about 60 miles from the Libyan coast. The dogfight, which kicked up quite a bit of dust both at home and abroad, occurred about 1:20 a.m.
EDT. Most senior officials in the Reagan administration, including the defense secretary and the secretary of state, were alerted within minutes.
But President Reagan, who was vacationing in California, was not awakened by his White House counselor for another six hours. The president then went back to sleep, according to Larry Speakes, a White House spokesman.
Speakes said it was not necessary to awaken Reagan earlier because the matter already had been resolved and no presidential decisions were needed. Staff decisions, maybe, but no presidential decisions.
Less than a week later, when North
Korea fired a surface-to-air missile at a U.S. spy plane, Reagan was not told of the incident until eight and a half hours later. (That was at the decent hour of 9 a.m. PDT in California.)
Asked if Reagan was satisfied that he was informed soon enough about the Korean incident, Speakes gave an elaborate answer: "Yes." Again, the excuse was that the matter was handled routinely by the military and no top-rung decisions were required.
Funny, presidents are usually very concerned about the military. All those guns and planes and ships. Makes most people nervous, we suppose, if Reagan doesn't lose sleep over air attacks, more power to him.
It's not clear what sort of event would justify waking the president out of a sound slumber. Perhaps something really important, such as Soviet subs cruising up the Potomac or one of the family mares about to give birth or an impending strike by jellybean makers.
Those things surely would require "presidential decisions."
'Riding out storm' not easy for those out in the rain
With the first effects of President Reagan's budget cuts and last week's official announcement that double digit inflation is with us once again, it is time to ask the Reagan supporters of last November if they have seen the light yet. Or rather, the lack of it, because it will surely get darker before the star of the silver screen comes up for re-election in 1984.
In the wake of rising consumer expenses and decreasing consumer buying power
CORAL BEACH
Reagan and his supporters are still asking us to help them, but spawn our belts and storm the outcrop from here.
The only problem with the request is that the president won't be the one without electricity during that storm, and he won't have to scrounge for supplies during the bad weather. You can think that Nancy would consider macaroni and hot dogs for dinner more than once a week.
The storm worsened last week when the latest inflation figures were released. Ronnie smiled and said that they didn't mean anything and that we shouldn't worry.
But the new figures do mean something, specifically that after taxes and inflation adjustments, the earnings of an average worker with three dependents dropped by 8 percent in July. This figure alone may appear insignificant.
However, when coupled with a steadily rising Consumer Price Index, the figures add up against the consumer, Goods and services that cost Americans in 1987 now cost £2.44.
In an attempt to reassure the American people, our benevolent leader continues to insist that if we accept his plan and lower our already declining standard of living, then all Americans will live a longer time. But acceptance and adherence to Reason is not sure about our problems because the plan is not sound.
In compliance with the budget cut plan, many people have already been removed
from the social-aid roles. Yet instead of decreasing, the nation's annual inflation rate jumped to 15.2 percent in July. Obviously the plan is not working, supposedly because of congressional meddling with the president's original proposal.
Reagan and his advisers contended that too many people were receiving government handouts, so the administration slashed social programs such as Aid to Dependent Children in an attempt to save the country. The government didn't take into account the working children who could afford to work only because the government paid for their children's day care.
Many of these aid recipients were cut from the programs and are now finding it financially impossible to continue working. Consequently, such parents must resort to total government support for themselves and their families. Reagan is defeating his own purpose by placing an even greater financial burden on the government.
This is only one example of the basic flaws in the president's economic plan, but it represents the lack of logic throughout. No president is active if it works against itself as this one does.
Other social programs, including Social Security, federally subsidized school lunches and foster care, have also felt the blow of the sharpened budget knife. Similar to the ADC in foster care, outfits, especially those in foster care, will ultimately result in increased government spending.
Many foster children will become the total financial responsibility of the government and their cuts will increase the expenses of foster care, making them unable to provide foster care.
Certainly there is no easy solution to this country's economic problems, and it will understandably take some time for the situation to be corrected. It took double digit inflation more than four years to develop and it is ridiculous to think it could be effectively dealt with during one presidential term, as Reagan has suggested.
The most workable solution would be a long-term, carefully thought-out economic plan that would span several presidential terms. Such a plan would avoid drastic moves and the possibility of them backfiring, as many of Reagan's proposals may.
MX
M
MX
© JORHAM NEWS
Scaled-down MX program best bet
On the threshold of his second year of administration, Ronald Reagan is learning the hard way how difficult a task he has assigned himself: balance the federal budget by 1984 while decreasing taxes and increasing defense spending.
His tax cuts have been approved by Congress and Reagan himself has said he considered a tax cut to be necessary.
Thus, any cuts still to be made to ensure the success of his economic program must come from the Department of Defense. Between $20-40 cents must be trimmed, according to recent estimates.
Such defense cuts may require that Reagan renge on campaign to increase the number of government loans.
Such a change of position seems justified. Reagan is in a far better position to judge economic and defense conditions as president than he was while campaigning for office.
Far less justifiable is the alternative to making defense cuts—an unbalanced budget.
If defense expenditures are not trimmed, a White House aide told Newsweek recently. We're not going to be able to balance the budget without making it more visible, and we can always blame it on Congress."
Congress will appreciate that
Reagan has said he will not announce any final decisions until mid-Mep September, but White House officials have indicated throughout the pest week that defense cuts are likely and that a prime candidate for the cutbacks is the controversial MX missile program.
The original MX missile system, developed by the Ford administration and recommended by Carter's, included 200 missiles to be shuttled from the deserts of Nevada and Utah among 4,600 sites.
According to the plan, the Soviets would be forced to play Russian roulette in deciding which silos might house a missile. According to proponents of the system, any attack on the silos would require far more firepower than the United States would lose even if a hit were made.
So much for the advantages. Yet careful examination of the facts indicates that of all the available alternatives, Reagan's best choice, budgetary and otherwise, may be reversing another campaign position and approving a scaled-down MX program.
By cutting the number of missiles in halo by the number of silos by nearly 80 percent, tremendous savings over the original plan are possible.
Although this "compromise" would leave factions on both sides of the issue angry and
---
REBECCA
CHANEY
dissatisfied, evidence distinguishes the scaled-
reasonable alternative in an unreasonable situat
ion.
It's a little late to be wishing that nuclear warheads had never been invented. And contrary to popular belief, scrapping the MX would not encourage detente.
In fact, nuclear escalation would probably be encouraged by dropping the MX program.
Secretary of Defense Defense Weinberger has already announced that if the MX is scrapped, it will be replaced by another nuclear warhead program featuring smaller, allegedly less costly D-5 "common missiles" and new Trident submarines.
Although appearing more palatable—the D-5s would require no special missile carriers or desert roads, would weigh only two-thirds as much as MX missiles and would be more easily adaptable to existing silo bases—the substitute program has hidden barbs.
First, these new missiles incorporate the very flaw the MX was designed to eliminate: the "sitting duck" vulnerability of stationary land-based missiles.
Second, the D-6s are still three years of research and development (R and D) away. Aside from the fact that they may be just as unworkable as the MX is popularly thought to be, experience also suggests that projected costs are likely to spiral during those three years.
In addition, the president and the Department of Defense have already decided the amount of firepower they are determined to add to present nuclear capabilities.
Because the D-6s would carry three to four fewer nuclear warheads than the MXs, considerably more of the "common missiles" would be built, adding more cost.
Fourth, although three years of R and D would delay the expense of full-scale production of D-5s until after the 1984 budget deadline and the next presidential election, someone will pay the price.
Either this administration pays for wasted R and D on a D-5 program that is eventually the next administration assumes the financial burdens to cut more B-5. Both reduce budget cuts to mere illusion.
Research and development is far more costly than critics of the MX seem to acknowledge, whether used for a D-5 program already known or effective for or a further delay in the MX program.
A recently published article in the Los Angeles Times even went so far as to suggest that the MX "can and should remain under study—preferably forever."
That is insane. A decision must be made.
But rest assured that nuclear weapons are not going to suddenly disappear from the scenario. Delaying the MX or scrapping it altogether can only lead to more vehement demands by defense officials and citizens for alternative weapons, perhaps more costly or dangerous.
If defense officials believe it is so critically important that the United States have an operational missile program as soon as possible, they should consider that a smaller MX program could be ready far sooner than the expanded version, D-5s or new submarines.
Indeed, it would be foolish to continue the grandiose, full-scale plans recommended by Carter, somewhat like buying a car that is of being a lemon before taking it for a test drive.
If Nevada and Utah residents are worried about environmental impact, the smaller vener
Why do we need to be capable of a first strike, of initiating nuclear war, at all? No answer can be given.
Also of importance, European allies who are now being pressured by the United States to allow deployment of tactical nuclear weapons and cruise missiles on their soil have made it known they will protest any U.S. retreat from the ground-based MX.
in a situation that is clearly bad, a closely trimmed MX program is clearly the best answer.
CLEAN AIR ACT
Richardson
University Daily KansaN
Letters to the Editor
Mayor gives mixed reviews
Thanks for including me in your back-to-school issue (Aug. 20); the press can provide a good way to introduce new faculty and students to Lawrence. But as I read the articles, I was disappointed to find so much inaccurate reporting of old news.
To the Editor:
I do understand the necessity for a summer deadline, and didn't expect the reporter to know that my front porch has been jacked up, or that I am no longer teaching in the School of Architecture. But the article about "Opposition, animosity plague Macron Francisco's job" seemed full of parable and speculative language about controversies that took place long before the commission elected me as mayor last April.
I read with interest your goal of a superb, responsible publication. I hope you reach it. Good communication can help us build a better community.
There have been disagreements on the commission, just as there are different points of view in town. I hope that these disagreements will be resolved promptly, and we should misunderstandings reinforced by bad reporting.
Marci Francisco
Mayor, City of Lawrence
Thanks, KU students
One for you, KU students! You are so nice.
This is my first time here, and you have been
so helpful. I will be very grateful.
To the Editor:
helpful during registration and gladly answered my inquiries. I am glad to be part of KU.
Already we are a couple of days into the semester. I look around and I see that everybody is so bubbly and cheerful; but there are the zingy types, too. Apparently some of the boredom that goes with a long term like this one has yet to set in. However, I know that behind all the exuberance, you have all made the resolve to make this academically your best semester ever. I capably agree with you. Don't let anything wing your determination.
Good luck to you and keep on being your brother's keeper.
Abiriba, Nigeria, graduate student
KANSAN
(UPS$ 560 460). Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May at the Mary and Monday through June and July into April at Saturday, Sunday and holiday June through May. Subscribes at Kansas, Kansas 66045. Subscriptions are for $12 per month a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months a $2 a semester. Subscribes are for $2 a semester, pass through the student library.
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Editor Business Manager
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Sales and Marketing Advisor John Oberman
John Decker
University Daily Kamsan, August 31, 1981
Page 5
Benefits
From page one
Other students said they could survive without social security, but they said the cuts could have negative effects.
"The Social Security benefits allowed me to attend KU rather than a junior college," said Loren Busy, 20, Hutchinson junior in political science. "It also has given me the chance to get involved in other things instead of working 30 or 40 hours a week."
KRIS DANNENBERG, 20, Wichita junior in interior design, said she had talked about the long-range effects of the cuts with her father this week. Her son had lost his right leg in disability benefits since he was 19 years old.
"Yes, I think I could have gone to school without Social Security, but I would have had to take out loans, which is not compatible to what he gave me if my father had not been disabled."
Barb King, 20, Dodge City senior in journe-
dle management. Five players played a
major role in keeping her in school.
"When I first started junior college, my checks were turned over to my father since I was living at home," she said. "But when I transferred to a college with my $114 benefit went toward paying my rent.
"I don't think I could afford KU without it. I
know my dad could not afford to send me to school by himself."
KING, HOWEVER, saw some need for making Social Security more financially stable.
"Social Security is in trouble," she said. "The cuts have to start somewhere. I think it is better to cut back on youths than to cut the benefits to older people, according to the program all of their working lives."
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said no plan had been made to advise the people being treated.
"We don't have anything planned to segregate these people from the rest of the students applying for financial aid," Rogers said. "I don't think Social Security benefits to student families are needed, and education benefits Rather, they probably were given to help the student with living expenses.
"Now they will have to find other resources. A lot of students have come into our office with no money to go to school on, while others have saved or made money during the summer. The Social Security students will just have to make the adjustment."
Busy summed up many of the students' feelings about having their program phased out.
"Unless I get my relatives to come through, which does not look too promising, then I don't know what to do."
Beville promoted to new post
What began as a campus job during her undergraduate years unfolded as a career for Linda Beville, who will replace Joan Sherwood as assistant vice chancellor for student affairs.
By LISA BOLTON
Staff Reporter
Beville has worked for 13 years in the admissions and records department and most recently has been the assistant to Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records. In that office, Beville, 35, manages personnel and budget systems at the student department, which is part of the student affairs department.
In her new position, effective Sept. 1, she will
invoke the budget and personnel for an entire
dance team.
"There are similar activities in both positions, but I'll be working on a larger scale," she said.
"Budget and personnel activities are a daily concern."
HER LONG-TERM projects in admissions and records included computerizing the record-keeping system in the financial aid department, which is also part of student affairs division. The system was already programmed from another institution and modified for the University's needs.
"I think it has been beneficial in getting faster notification of financial aid out to students," she said, adding that a similar system is being developed in the department, another part of student affairs.
Bevile came to the University of Kansas in 1863 after two years at Hutchinson Community College. He became a professor of physical
She continued working in admissions and records after earning a bachelor's degree in English, then decided to get a master's degree in public administration. Bevillie said.
"I wanted something that was a combination of business administration, but which would be more efficient."
EXPLAINING THAT the budget goals of a business are different from those of a non-profit operation, she said. "You're spending other expenses and you want to be careful how you spend it."
Public service personnel management is different, too, because of stronger affirmative action policies.
"There is much more restraint and much more restriction in a civil service system than in a private system," she said.
A. R. B.
In her new job, Bevillle will continue to serve on the Summerfield-Watkins-Berger scholarship
Linda Beville
selection committee that she joined after being named Dyck's assistant.
The committee chooses scholarship recipients each December, when academically outstanding high school seniors are invited to the campus for a weekend of tests and interviews.
KARATE
The K.U. Karate Club will present a FREE karate demonstration Tuesday, September 1, 7:30 pm in 207 Robinson.
The demonstration will feature board and brick breaking.
--self defense techniques, kata and sparring.
Information about joining the club as a beginning or advanced student will be available.
kata and sparring.
--kansas
Pence's Greenhouse 15th and New York A Greenhouse larger than a football field PLANT SALE
- 40% off all tropical plants
- 30% all ingrid pots ranging from
4" to 20" in size—very decorative
- *16 quart-20 lb. potting soil only $1.49
- over 500 hanging baskets in stock
OPEN:
Mon-Sat 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Sunday p.m.
843-2004
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Pences
ear
FEATURING
TONIGHT
Reggae Dance Party
Featuring
BLUE
RIDDIM
BAND
Last Lawrence
appearance
before extended
west coast tour
--kansas
Tuesday
Direct from
Chicago:
SON SEALS
BLUES BAND
Wed—Whitemound
Thurs—Black Pearl
Fri—Caribie
Sat—Paul Gray and the
Gaslight Gang
featuring Tommy Johns
and Doug Talley
Advance Tickets
Sept 14—The GO GO'S
Sept 26—MUDDY
WATERS
SINCE 1970
Where the stars are
7th & Mass.
842-6930
Lawrence
Opera House
THE '81 KU JAYHAWKS ONE STEP CLOSER!
The University of Kansas
K. U. STUDENT SEASON FOOTBALL TICKETS ARE STILL ON SALE AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS
K. U. Ticket Office, Allan Field House
8:30-5:00 Mon.-Fri. Aug. 31-Sep. 11
SUA Office-Ks. Union
8:30-5:00 Mon.-Fri. Aug. 31-Sept. 11
Satellite 8:30-6:30 Mon.-Fri. Aug. 31-Sept. 11
SUA Office-K.U. Med Contor 8:30:4:00 Mon-Fri Aug 31-Sep 11
Oliver Hall 4:00-7:00 Tues. & Wed. Sept. 1 & 2
Ellsworth Hall 4:00-7:00 Tues. & Wed. Sept. 1 & 2
Tomplin Hall 4:00-7:00 Tues. & Wed. Sept. 1 & 2
McCollum Hall 4:00-7:00 Thurs. & Fri. Sept. 3 & 4
JRP 4:00-7:00 Thurs. & Fri. Sept. 3 & 4
GSP 4:00-7:00 Thurs. & Fri. Sept. 3 & 4
Hashingor 4:00-7:00 Tues. & Wed. Sept. 8 & 9
Lewis 4:00-7:00 Tu&c. & Wed. Sept. 8 & 9
Corbin 4:00-7:00 Tues. & Wed. Sept. 8 & 9
Naismith 4:00-7:00 Tues. & Wed. Sept. 8 & 9
reform
TECHNICAL PEN
DEMONSTRATION
DAY
Wednesday
Sept. 2
Main Union
Level 2
9 am-4 pm
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70
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4 Pen Set Reg. $24.95 Sale $18.95
THE NEW SYSTEM FOR AMERICAN AND METRIC STANDARDS
union bookstores
KU
main union level 2, satellite shop
Page 6 University Daily Kansan. August 31, 1981
Getting to class is first test for disabled
By CATHY BEHAN Staff Reporter
Getting to class is no problem for the average student on the hill, but for more than 130 identified disabled students on campus, it can be a daily question.
These are all questions a disabled person must consider every day.
Will the elevator work? Will someone be at the door to let me in? Will my teacher understand if I'm late for class or getting an assignment in?
Bob Turvey, associate director of the Student Assistance Center, said there had been a 700 percent increase in disabled students since the center opened in 1977. When the center opened, there were only 15 identified disabled students on campus. There are now more than 130.
"I sent a memorandum to the faculty to inform them of the increase and assist them in making arrangements with the disabled person," he said.
In the memorandum, Turvey suggested teachers put a statement in the syllabus asking disabled students to instructors to discuss class requirements.
"Putting this in the syllabus puts the responsibility very definitely on the student for contacting the teacher to make special arrangements." he said.
The teacher must accommodate the disabled student and work out a program that helps the student fulfill the requirements in a slightly different way than the traditional student, according to Turvey.
"We've had limited response to the memorandum. Most of the teachers we have heard from think it's a good idea to write a statement in the syllabus," said Tarvey.
"Some professors have taught a class for two or five or 20 years and it's hard
for them to think of the impact to the disabled student," he said.
"It has always been up to me to
befriend the teacher about my disability."
Kowalik said.
"One time a teacher showed a movie in class without announcing it to students, a chance to get someone to come in and tell me what was in the film," he said.
However, Tom Kowalski, a blind Kansas City, Kan., law student, said that no teacher has ever put anything in his classroom to teach in class about setting up a meeting.
Kowalski said he spent about $1,200 per semester on readers solely for schoolwork. The Law School does not have any books on tape or in Braille.
Some disabled students have had teachers who were not understanding, but Sisay Cousins, a Stanley sophomore with disabilities, had had no problems with her teachers.
"My teachers have been really understanding about letting me hand things in late because I have trouble taking care of them. All my teachers have been pretty good."
She pointed out that the biggest problem was the elevator in Strong Bldg.
OVERLAND PHOTO
"It's got two big heavy doors. It's not sure how a person with good hands can open it."
Turvey said the renovation of the elevator was scheduled to be funded this year. The work might start late this year.
One way KU has helped make the campus accessible to disabled students is the two vans equipped with wheelchair ramps that are funded by the Student Activity Fund.
A handcapped student pays $30 to be picked up at home and brought to camp.
"The disabled students on campus are not looking for handouts from the community," she said. "All these people will try, then fall on their faces 30,000 times before coming to see us for help."
Independence, Inc. is a link between the school and the outside community, said Moore.
"We try to help people with disabilities have real control over their lives," she said. "These people want assistance as much as you and I do."
THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION PROGRAM FILM FESTIVAL will present three films, "Darrow vs. Bryan: The Monkey Trial," "Evolution and the Origin of Life" and "Lower than the Angels: Parts I and II" beginning at 7:30 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium.
THE INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room, Kansas Union. Association topic will be "Corporate Prayer."
THE RENAISSANCE DANCERS AND STUDENT SOCIETY FOR CREATIVE ANACHRONISM will meet at 6:30 p.m., 600 Ohio St.
AN ART HISTORY SLIDE LEC TURE on "Chinese Paintings of the Ming and Ching Dynasties," will be held at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Australia, at 8 p.m. in the Spencer Museum Auditorium.
One reason why Lawrence is a good place for a disabled person is Independence, Inc., a service that gives him the care and counseling support to the disabled.
Laura Moore, a social worker for Independence, Inc. said disabled students are all on a trial and error basis when they go to school.
"That's what makes a lot of people able to go here," said Chris Curtis, an Irving, Texas, graduate student who is now working at the University as a good place for a disabled person."
TODAY
On Campus
Monday, Aug. 31
Shane
(1983)
One of the great nemesis, a gunman (Alan Ladd) joins up with a family trying to protect his homestead and becomes the herof of his kind son, but knows that the of his kind are almost over. An extreme well-defined, beautifully photographed western, directed by George Stevens, with Jean Arthur, Brandon dwidle, Jack Balance, Van Hefflin. (118 mm. Coco; 730)
Tuesday, Sept. 1
Patton
(1970)
George C. Scott won (and refused) the Oscar for his brilliant portrayal of Gen. George S. Patton in the continually amiguous war film, it seems anti-war, yet the day after Nixon saw it he sent troops into Cambodia. Francis Cocola wrote the miniature as Omar Bradley, directed by Franklin Schaffner. Winner of eight Oscars including Best Picture (169 min). Color.
Ultimately other notes all will be
--no easy ways to maintain the underground tunnels. Wiechert said.
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Bring in this coupon and something dirty and get a
THE KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH AFRICA will present a film, "The Fire at Kansas University" 6 p.m. the Council Room, Kansas University will be a brief meeting after the film.
THE KU KARATE CLUB will present a karate demonstration at 7:30 in the Center. Information about joining the club will be available at the demonstration.
FREE BEER
WEDNESDAY
THE NEW LIFE STUDENT FELLOWSHIP will hold a Bible study at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room, Kansas Union.
"You will notice that there are no overhead utility lines on campus," Wiechert said. "This is mostly for beauty reasons."
THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union Parlores.
The underground utility tunnels keep unsightly overhead lines out of sight on campus.
Although the lines are to be out of sight, they won't be out of the minds of maintenance workers. There are
FREE NACHOS
The project will cost $986,500, Wiechert said, and construction should include basketball season. The underground lines overhead lines out of
THE STEAM LINES will be replaced by new tunnels which would carry not only steam, but also electricity, telephone, cable television and live terminal hookups to the computer center, Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, said Friday.
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Monday, Aug. 31
Shane
(1963)
One of the great westerns; a gunman (Alan Ladd) joins up with a family trying to protect... air homestead and becomes the hero of their life, but knows that the days of his kind are almost over. An extremely well-acted, beautifully photographed western, directed by George Stevens, with Jean Arthur, Brandon deWilde, Jack Falance, Van Heflin. (118 min.) Color, 7:30.
Tuesday, Sept. 1
Patton
(1970)
George C. Scott won (and refused) the Oscar for his brilliant portrayal of Gen. George S. Patton in this curiously am biguous war film... it seems anti-war, yet the day after Nikon saw it he sent troops into Cambodia, Francis Coopola wrote the sceneplay. With that Jackson as Omar Bradley, directed by Franklin Schaffner. Winner of eight Oscars including Best Picture. (169 min.) Color, 7:30.
Unless otherwise noted, all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Midnight Movies are $2.00, all other films and $3.00. Tickets are available at the SUA office, Kansas Union, 4th Level, Kansas Union, information desk, 242-247. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
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THE ALUMNI PLACE lines were replaced years ago, but failed shortly after they were installed,塑ches said. The University of Kansas was against the contractor, which was settled by the Kansas attorney general.
The steam comes out of the ground because the heating lines running from Robinson Center to Allen Field House, and from behind Summerfield Hall to Murphy Hall, have worn out and need to be replaced.
The steam lines on the south part of campus have not been the only trouble lines. The lines serving the scholarship halls on Alumni Place needed to be replaced also, Wiechert said.
The suit was settled in KU's favor, Wiechert said. He then had to go back to the Legislature to ap- pply for the damages on the lines, because the price went up.
The power and heating plant, in the Facilities and Operations complex south of Flint Hall, heats all the buildings on the main carcous.
Well, just as you are about to find out, it is disappearing.
Have you ever wondered what that column of steam swirling out of the ground south of Murphy Hall was?
"If there is a major break, we might have to dig up a lot of ground to find it," he said.
"It is energy-inefficient because we are losing steam out of the ground, he said. "We have to pump water from our wells and we are serving he outside world."
By LISA MASSOTH Staff Reporter
The new scholarship hall steam lines would be designed this fall, with construction scheduled to start in the spring. Wiechert said.
Steam, power tunnels to be repaired soon
As director of facilities planning, Wiechert oversees all the major construction on campus and is in charge of all but routine maintenance.
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Fall Classes forming Soon!
"Send your kids to school to lower property taxes." Jack Steineger Senate Minority Leader The Kansas Senate
You paid 22% more tuition this year than last year. 3.5% of that didn't even go to KU.
That's right. The state legislature gave $3.5\%$ of your tuition increase to the counties for property tax relief. Property tax relief. Senator Steineger, who opposed the move, was being ironic, but, in essence, it's the truth. They needed to come up with the money somewhere. Why not make students pay it? They're an easy target.
We shouldn't be, at least we with ASK don't think so. And we don't believe our state's universities should be tossed around as a source of tax revenue every time the legislature gets in a bind. But we can't get the message across alone. We're looking for good, quality students interested in research, campus organizing, and direct lobbying. Applications for the KU delegation are being taken now.
Contact: Dan Cunningham
Student Senate Office
105-B, Kansas Union
864-3710
The KU Delegation of THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF KANSAS
Paid for by the KU Student Senate
University Daily Kansas, August 31, 1981
Page
No beer sales at football games during '81 season By EILEEN MARKEY Staff Reporter
KU football fans will have to wet their whistles with something other than beer when they watch games at Memorial Stadium this fall.
flat, but only for the present.
"The issue isn't dead, I'd just say it is closed for this term," Coleman said.
Coleman tabled the issue when it was under consideration last April at the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board meeting.
At the time, administrators reacted negatively to the proposal, and Coleman said he thought it was unfair. The board had the board voted on it then.
Because the issue was tabled rather than rejected, it can be brought before KUAC again.
"This gives somebody else a chance to work for it in the future," Coleman said.
SUSANNE SHAW, associate dean of the School of Journalism and chairman of the KUAC board, said the issue was closed for the present but would be reconsidered if students brought it up again.
Shaw said the issue was not discussed extensively last April because other items, such as the phone and greater consideration at the time.
A student lobbying group, Concerned Students for Higher Education, initiated the stadium beer sale proposal in September 1979. The group folded when the University of Kansas joined another lobbying group, the Associated Students of Kansas.
However, the beer issue was kept afloat when the Student Senate formed a seven-member task force to continue researching the advantages and disadvantages of selling beer in Memorial Stadium.
The task force gathered information indicating that potential profits from beer sales could add $40 to $10,000 to the KUAC budget.
COLEMAN SAID administrators argued that the risk of injuries resulting from beer consumption in outweighed the potential profits.
OVERLAND PHOTO
No. 1 In Lawrence
YOU TAKE IT...WE MAKE IT
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"SHANE"
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Monday, Aug. 31
7:30p.m. $1.50
Woodruff Aud.
no refurbishment allowed
Center receives federal grant
The KU Center for East Asian Studies has been awarded $162,720 from the department of Education for the support of a National Resource Center and for student fellowships, the co-director for the center said Friday.
Four students received a $4,000 stipend for nine months, plus tuition for postgraduate work in the KU program as part of the award, Chae-Jin Lee, the co-director said. The scholarships were awarded to Sheree Wheel, Overland Park park student; Jeffrey Willis, Lawrence graduate student; Richard Wills, Park Hawaii; graduate student; and Donald Wood, Lawrence graduate student.
Lee said that the center received the award after participating in a law clinic.
"The Department of Education
"This shows the recognition of our center. We are the only one among the Big 8 schools, and probably one of a very few in the entire Midwest region. Most are on the East and West coasts and in the Ivy League," Lee said.
selected about 15 centers and
National Resource
Centers, "Lea said."
Center activities supported by the grant include workshops and outreach programs, Lee said. The center also sponsors conferences, curriculum development, library acquisitions and a summer language institute.
The award is divided into $130,000 for the award at the center and $23,720 for fellowships to graduate students in East Asian Studies. The award is only for the first year of a two-year sequence, but Lee said that it was
"almost automatic" that the center would get another grant for next year.
"The most important thing is our strong faculty," Lee said. "We have more than 25 good solid faculty in international institutional and international reputations."
Shortened Greek Week starts Sept. 9
By JANICE GUNN Staff Reporter
"We are quite confident that we'll continue to be successful," he siad.
In an effort to get more people involved, the Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic Association have organized a series of week of activities for four days, Sept. 12-18
Originally Greek Week had been scheduled for a full week last spring, but because of bad timing and a lack of preparation it was postponed until Sept. 9.
He said the fellowships were designed specifically for "students interested in eight weeks of intensive language study, even at a beginning level."
Lee said the center would also give more than 10 summer fellowships to graduate students.
Two Greek Week chairmen said that a survey was given to all the fraternities and sororites after the cancellation last spring. The survey showed that more people would participate if Greek Week were in the fall, if it were shorter and if the activities were more exciting.
Donna Meeker, Panhellenic vice president and a Greek Week chairman, said that in the past three years, Greeks attended a Greek week with some Greek Weeks at other Skippeals.
"I think the problem with Greek
The fellowships, to be announced sometime in the spring, will provide the students with stipends and full tuition, Lee said.
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Week last spring was having it on the last week of classes and having activities that were not the most in-ten that could be planned." Meek said.
LAST SEMEHTER officers from all the fraternities and sororites were helping with Greek Week, Meeker said, and the group was too large to organize. This year only four chairmen, two men and two women, planned the events.
Another chairman, Tim Powell, IFC vice president, said that Greek Week in October was because too many fraternities and sororites have charity projects in the spring.
He said that it was hard to organize the Greek system at the University of Kansas, since it involved more than 30 students. The university's security and sorority had activities of its own.
The activities set for Greek Week include a "Big Brother-Big Sister Picnic" on Wednesday, when disadvantaged Lawrence children and members of each fraternity and sorority will eat hot dogs and play games. That night will be "Greek Night at the Drive-In"; Thursday, "Greek Week Banquet," a dinner for the presidents, housemothers, IFC representatives and Panhellenic delegates. Following the dinner there is a Greek Sing," a musical competition between the fraternities and sororites, which is open to the public; Friday, an informal "T.G.F.L." outing at the Lawrence Bars with a few bars having special prices for Greeks; Saturday, the "Stewart Street Block Party," featuring the Lawrence band "Horizon."
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Dave Hirschbuehler, St. Louis junior, takes on a pained and somewhat puzzled look as he sketches from the trunk of his car a building in the 700 block of Massachusetts St. Hirschbuehler, an architecture major, said he was sketching the storefront for a design class project.
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EAGLE
HIS FIRST YEAR OUT OF COLLEGE, FRANK QUACKENBUSH RENOVATED THREE BUILDINGS, WORKED ON A DAM,PAVED A ROAD AND BUILT TWO CHOPPER PADS.
"Most of the engineers I graduated with probably wound up as an assistant engineer to somebody else. Maybe doing the details for somebody else's design or supervising some small aspect of construction."
But my first year as an Engineer Lt. I designed many of my projects, from construction on everything from baseball dugouts to the concrete work on a dam. Earthmoving, grading, filling, paving, concrete work, masonry and more.
"Whether I stay in the Army or go into civilian construction work later, Ive got experience that Ive learned Iwantho I have when they are 30."
2nd Lt. Frank Quackenbush majored in civil engineering at the University of Arizona and was a member of Army ROTC
TOM BURRICK
And begin your future as an officer
**Army ROTC got**
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field. It can do the same for you
whether you are a civil engineer or an
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the Army ROTC office on campus
At University of Kansas ROTC Dept.
See Captain Claudia Akroyd
Military Science Bldg.
864-3311
ARMY ROTC.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, August 31, 1981
From nage one
Ireland
from theirs, you're generally informed you have five minutes to leave, he said Not many Irish Catholics have blood hair, and the tall, slender, blood McCleam is instantly marked as a Protestant.
A TYPICAL Saturday night includes pints of ale at a little country pub and then a run into Londonderoy. The city is divided into the Waterside and the Bayside, with the Waterside bologne to Protestants and the Bayside is Catholic territory, he said.
McClearn said he had been to the Bogside with Catholic friends, but it was dangerous now and he stayed clear of it.
Sometimes after a few rounds at local pubs, McClearn goes to Port Rush, a town on the north coast of Northern Ireland that has Protestant discos. Though the majority of the people in Northern Ireland are of Protestant, the majority of Catholics are of 20 percent Protestant. The discos are predominantly Catholic.
Londonderry is sometimes shortened to "Derry" but even what an individual calls the city, either Londondery or Derry, tell what religion that individual is. McClea said. Londonderry was named in honor of London. Southern Irish use only the name Derry, avoiding reference to London.
THE EMUMPYMENT rate in Northern Ireland is nearly 20 percent. McClearn said trouble came when he and his wife went streets with nothing to do, so they rooted.
The British army breaks up rips by firing three-inch plastic bullets that leave big bruises.
Northern Ireland youths become accidental accomplices by threat, McCleaand说 sternly. Young men are given packages by the IRA and to put them at a specific location. If the youth question the contents of the package, they're told, "Don't ask, just do it."
Reluctance to follow instructions is rewarded with threats of knee-capping—having a knee shot to bits with a high powered pistol. The Uster Volunteer Force, a Northern Irish Protestant militant group opposing the IRA, uses an electric drill for the same effect.
"It ita a fear in other guys to see a guy limp around and know why." McCleam said. "What can you do but what they say? Most bombings are done by blokes who don't know anything."
AS MCLEAM describes the IRA, his face sets into a solid expression.
"The IRA are thugs everybody hates, Catholics and Protestants," he said. "They're scum, professional criminals."
McCleason said the IRA received no support from ordinary Catholics, even though they were sympathizers. He says they are Marxists who want to take over the island and put the whole thing under Marxist rule. By making it easier for those in England, the IRA hopes to push out the British arm, he said.
Another result of the violence, is the use of "control zones" in major cities. Control zones are usually business districts barricaded so cars cannot be
McClearn said he learned first hand the consequences of violating this restriction. An innocent trip downtown was a hair cut nearly resulted in disaster.
McClearn said he parked in front of the barber shop on a street that hadn't been a control zone but had been changed while he was abused. Consequently, the group found such a convenient parking place, he went inside to have his hair cut.
An hour later he came out of the barber shop to see several military vehicles around his car. A military vehicle with a large robot arm that rips through the concrete and warfare within six inches of making McCleary car a convertible. After a few frantic minutes and much shouting, McClearn said he convinced authorities there was no bomb in the car. He then inched forward, causing $1,300 imposed on violators. Later, his father knew the chief of police, and he didn't have to pay the fine, he said.
Despite the strife, travel between the north and the Republic is normal. Going from the north to the south, one drives past the border station and passes into the north to the north, though, cars are stopped, and guards check identification.
MANY NORTHERNERS frequently go into the Republic, McClemaid said, because it is relaxed and there is not the pressure of bombs.
Northern Ireland and the republic combined are about one-third the size of Kansas. Northern Ireland has most of the industry, and the Republic is most rural. McCain said the Republic was about 9 years behind Northern Ireland.
Although violence has become a way of life, McClea said he considered U.S. towns much more dangerous because almost anyone can own a gun.
"Some bloke can just start shooting at anybody, anywhere," he said.
Although he doesn't consider it his fight, McCleam said the conflict between Catholics and Protestants was a traditional rivalry.
"People don't even think about it," he said. "It's so old; it's a feeling."
Threats
He said that he was not on the list by name but that the threat was against the editor or publisher of the newspaper.
From page one
Frank and Sara Marble Emery are the co-publishers of the Tribune. They live in Springfield, Mo, Eblen said.
ALTHOUGH THE police said they had assigned undercover protection to all people on the list, Eblen said that he had not seen any such protection.
But he did not express concern about the lack of protection.
"I haven't lost any sleep," he said. "but," he added, "I don't stand in front of any lightened windows."
Another person named on the list,
Magistrate Judge Sam Mason, said that
he had been unaware of the list until he
read it in Friary's Tribute.
"I think I first heard about it by reading it in the paper," he said. "I'm really in the dark."
Mason said that he only holds court in Fort Scott one or two days a week and did not hold court this week until Friday.
"No, I don't think I'm being any more (cautious) than if this wasn't going on," he said.
FUN & GAMES SMURFS 1002 Mass.
CHARLES BRIGGS, Cotton's lawyer, said yesterday that Cotton named city leaders at the urging of questioners during the third stress test.
"Mr. Cotton himself swears that he only named one person," Briggs said. According to Briggs, that man was Toussaint. Mr. Cotton insisted the insurance companies, Mussel's, said
According to the Tribute, the other people named on the list are Mussell; City Commissioners John Baker, R. C. Coyan, Robin Reeves, Carolyn Sinn, and Ava Weber; Public Works Director Chuck Elliott; District Judge Charles M. Warren; and bank president Ray Roberts and Steve Buerge.
"He (Cotton) didn't name the judges or either one of the bankers," Briggs said.
that police would release none of the names on the list.
He said that he came to his conclusions after talking to Cotton and reading the stress test reports.
OVERLAND PHOTO
4 x 6
35 mm Printé
Briggs said that Cotton didn't mention the city commission until the third stress test. He said that the other names and titles on the list were "filled in gratuitously" by officials giving the test.
MUNSELL SAID that although the other names were not verified by a stress test, police placed all the people on the list under police protection.
However, Munsell said that Cotton asked to speak to the police the day after the stress tests and told them of the other names on the list.
"We need to be cautious," he said. Mussell said that during the week, four men were brought in for questioning, but that none were charged. He said that as of yesterday, there were no suspects.
Friday, Cotton refused to submit to a detection test for the Kansas Bureau of Inspection. The KBI has been siding Fort Scott authorities in the investigation.
Frank Gaines, who was then the state Senate Ways and Means Committee chairman, said his committee had granted money for the renovation because it would create revenue for the Med Center.
JW
The rooms that will be opened this fall are in a 50-year-old section of the hospital that is being renovated. Funds for the renovation were granted in 1980 by the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee.
Although the renovation is proceeding on schedule, the Med Center lost about $180,000 in patient revenue when 60 renovated rooms that were supposed to have opened July 1, 1980 did not open until Jan. 1, 1981.
KUMC adds beds to boost revenue
"Hopefully, we'll open up about another 40 beds in October," David Waxman, Med Center executive vice chancellor, said Friday.
The University of Kansas Medical Center will be opening additional rooms this fall, a move that may bring in needed patient revenue.
That and other losses prompted Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, to predict last spring that the Med Center would have a $2.4 million deficit by June 30, the end of the fiscal year.
Nitcher yesterday said that the Med Center had been able to reduce expenditures so that it almost broke even financially in June.
The exact figures were not available. The new rooms that will open this fall, however, will not help forestall more stringent budgetary cutbacks unless patients can be found to fill them.
The exact figures were not available.
JEAN SHACK
If you tried before and failed, this program is for you . . . Now you can learn to
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7:00 pm AUDITORIUM
LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY
7th & Vermont
Sponsored by
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Drive Above
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Handbags
Travel Bags
Briefcases
Book Bags
Back Packs
Billfolds
Jewelry
Knee Socks
Panty Hose
Key Rings
Scarfs
Belts
And More
BAG SHOP
Holiday Plaza
25th & Iowa
KOA
FREE DRYING WITH WASH Laundromat
TRY OUR
- Sandwich & Salad Bar
Make your own
- Games
- *Take out beer
- Coffee 35° free refills
- Coffee 35° 7 a.m.-2 a.m.
Hours
- Self Serve Copies 3t
Behind the teepees
842-3877
The price of style has just come down!
Save $20 or more on SILADIUM College Rings ...now only $89.95.
SILADIUM rings produce the brilliant lustre of a fine jeweler's stainless.
Men's and women's Siladium rings are on sale this week only through your ArtCarved representative. A visit to the ArtCarved
NILS GUELPH
58 6
College Ring table will give you the chance to see the full collection of rings for the fall. But hurry on over... this sale runs for a limited time only.
time only.
ArtCarved representative.
A visit to the ArtCarved
ARTCARVED
CLASS RINGS, INC.
BAYCROFT
CENTRAL PURTE UNIVERSITY
Date: August 31-September 2
Time: 9:00am-4:00pm
Place:
KU
Kansas Union Bookstores
Deposit required. MasterCharge or Visa accepted.
©1981 ArtCarved Class Rings
Level 2, Kansas Union
There will be a meeting Wednesday September 2 at 7 p.m. in the Council Room at the Kansas Union for women transfer students who are interested in participating in sorority open rush.
Panhellenic Assoc.
864-4643.
1
University Daily Kansan, August 31, 1981
Page 9
Harriers coach optimistic about season
BY TIM PARKER Sports Writer
Coach Bob Timmon's cross country roster was not printed in Who's Who Among Collegiate Track Stars. But it might as well have been.
Once the results of a Sept. 11 time trial trims the squad to seven, the names remaining in Timmons' qualifier qualify for a preseason all-star team
And the veteran KU coach, now in his 16th season, couldn't be happier.
"WE REALLY feel good about our chances," he said. "I think we have the potential to be one of the top 10 teams in the NCAA."
One of the reasons behind this optimism is freshman Brent Steiner. The Overland Park native was the 1980 National High School Cross Country Champion, Kansas high school coaches say his state record of 8:46.8 in the two mile is in no danger of being broken in the immediate future.
Other hopefuls include Paul Schultz, Omaha, Neb., senior, who was Big Eight steele chase champ in 1980, but was redshirted last year. While in high school at Eisenhower High School, Olympic Cross Country team, which competed in the World Championships.
THE THERE is Tim Tays,
Albuquerque, N.M., senior, who sat out
last year, but was Big Eight champ in
Timmons said the intense competition for the seven positions was having a positive effect on early team performances.
the indoor two mile in '80 and was a high school All-American.
"Everyone's running well in practice," he said. "There is a lot of excitement, and speculating going on and going to make it. It's wide open now."
The squand's goal is to win the Big
Bend, and Timmons says that's
reality.
"BUT LAST YEAR, we didn't have
Most of the freshmen or transfer runners have a barrage of state or national accomplishments behind their careers. But they may be the key to KU's success this fall.
Tays, Schultz, Steiner or any of our outstanding new people, "Timmons"
Senior Tim Gundy and sophomore Steve Wright finished 10th and 14th respectively in last year's Big Eight meet.
A host of other top-notch retunees, including proven Big Eight competitors and high school All-Americans, will be pressing for the top seven roles, but Timmons won't hazard a guess as to which athletes will make the squad.
NFL to investigate Stabler's link to convicted bookmaker
By United Press International
HOUSTON—The National Football League will investigate a publicized report linking Ken Skabier to a convicted New Jersey bookmaker to determine whether the league has violated the NFL constitution has violated the NFL constitution.
According to a New York Times story published yesterday, Stabler continued to associate with well-known gambler Nicholas Dudich of Perth Ambo, N.J., despite warnings from Stabler's former club,
the oakland Raiders. The Times report quotes Oakland owner Al Davis as saying he "must have reported it" (Stabler's off-field associations) to the league 15 times" since 1976.
"We're following up on the story and we're aware of some of the details in it," said NFL spokesman Jim Heferman yesterday. "We have heard from the Raiders regarding this matter, I think back in 1978, but not many times. As the story said, nothing definitive has been turned up and we stepped our pursuit of the matter."
NOW OPEN
LAWRENCE VETERINARY CLINIC
James N. Kraft D.V.M.
841-9956
1100 W. 23rd
841 0950
Practice limited to Small Animals & Horses
415 N.2nd Daily 9-5
See at Emerald City Antiques
JUST PURCHASED! 85 Desks and Chests.
The University Daily
KANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
one time two three four five six seven eight nine ten
10th word lower $1.20 $2.30 $2.75 $3.25 $3.65 $4.55 $5.85 $6.55
10th word additional word $1.20 $2.30 $2.75 $3.25 $3.65 $4.55 $5.85 $6.55
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 3 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
Maupintour travel service K.U. Union 749-0700 900 Mass
ERRORS
The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
Flint Hall 864-4358
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 41-4506.
invites you to a
Gung Fu classes Monday & Wednesday
giving at 7:30 in Robinson Center
beginning August 24. For information call
bob at 811-209-288.
ENTERTAINMENT
Buy your Thanksgiving and Christmas airline tickets now
Get the best prices and availability.
The Willow Wind Band will play danceable music for your party. Call Karen 225-1608 or Suan KL-0328 for bookings. 9-2
Hillel
the Jewish
student organization
GENERAL ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
FOR RENT
ATTENTION CHICAGO AREA STUDENTS
Sunflower Cabledriver carries GWN-TV on
cable Channel 2. Call 841-2100 for more
information.
8-31
refreshments will be served
Single room for rent, new wiring, new
electrical, new fire alarm system, new locks,
minute walk from campus. $90;mo.
Call between 8-543-2328.
Wanted: male, Christian roommates, large groom house close to campus, dillwater, laundry, nursery. Utilities账务 $150-$380. Car Dairy账务 $64-$84, 407 Krukey.
Cinemax
Did you know that Sunflower Cablevision has a brand new, 24-hour-a-day movie channel?
Visit the Book End in Quantrill's Flea
Market, 131 New Hampshire, weekends
at $15.00.
Tuesday, Sept. 1
7:00pm
Kansas Union
Walnut Room
sunflower cablevision
444 W. Neptune Blvd. #310
New York, NY 10024
It's called Cinema. This September you can see movies like Cousin Coulin, "My Bodyguard," the Eminent, and The Conform. You also like films from classic classics, action adventure films or cut classics, you'll love Cinema. And Cinema installation is just half price or 100% of our 100 or can be by Sunflower Cablevision.
Leaving Town?
PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS.
Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect for roommate sharing or burning fire alarm. Secure and fireproof. Washer/dryer hookups fully-equipped kitchen. quiet surroundings. Open house 1-8 am and 7 pm. Call (843) 842-575 for additional information. ff
SABAH front floor of house at 920 New
Shapiro Street NY, NJ $115,000.
Shapiro John 643-896-1000.
Single rooms and two bedroom apartments
of dormitories with walk of campus
Call between 8.5- 843-3228
Two blocks to campus 3 bedrooms, off street parking, very clean, no pets, 842-5704. 9-2
Moving out of town. Need to sublease a bedroom 1 bedroom furnished apartment. Rent $250. $1600.
Apartments 10 minute walk to Student
building. Route $25; no bus
utilities. A$34 - $579
8-31
1 & 2 BR Appli $270 & $225, walking dis-
cussion $400. Rick Hall at Rick Hall for
more information.
8-31
ROOMS-833) utilities paid + deposit
ROOMS-841) utilities charged only. Shore house, water-dryer.
Extra room $40 more; 841-5434, evenings-9
f. phone 841-6238, weekdays-9
f. phone 841-6238, weekdays-8 after 6:00
Towers. Two pharmacy students need room-mate. We'll pay September. Only $135.00.
mo49-4751. Doug. 9-2
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Makes sense to use the notes.
A quick guide for *For Class preparation* 3. For exam
preparation 4. For exam preparation
Civilization is available now at Town Crier,
Civilization.
Autolith, starter and generator specials.
Autolith, starter and generator specials.
AUTOLOGY ELECTRIC, #5-9069. 3900 W.
AUTOLOGY ELECTRIC, #5-9069. 3900 W.
Subtit 1-br apartment. Rent $217.50.mo.
Deposit $200. Call 749-0288. 9-1
Raquette Acquisitions: New/Used Traflic Power-
glass plate. Head Vlad. Hills; Traflic Graphite C-6,
which has a micron texture that is must.
Also will Buy, Trade for use in good con-
dition. 864-3941 evenings. 9-30
FURNISHED RUNNING: Only 2 blocks from campus. $85 insures. includes No lease. No taxes. No fees.
For rent repiues 2 bdmr, apt. AC, carpeted
route, 842-5974, 842-4616.
Route 842-5974, 842-4616.
for rent or sale. Eudora 3 bedrooms
floorplan. Hertz $265 to $1,500.
8236 - 8246
Unclaimed freight and damaged merchandise
Variety of items of items Everything
with货 168 $49.00
Nice 3 bdr home, fenced yard. C/A. $990-
mo. with deposit .423-5039
***
1971 Torino—$400, 1978 Hondamatic Hawk
160, low mileage. Honda Moped. Call 843-
1737 after 6.
1979 HS Capil in excellent condition. 19,000
hours. Includes fuel. HS capil must
track, mount, suit 811-2430 811-581-38
811-630-811-38
FOR SALE
4 bedroom unfurnished house, close to campus,
fireplace, fireplace, $40 per month, car
$250 per month.
NEW Stereo speakers 125 watts-3 way Studio
speakers Hickory cabinets $150 each. 8-31
Schwinn books, bleachers
1 bedroom apt. AC steam heat 2 Blocks
843-1586, available Sept. 15 843-1586,
865-5500
Olympus OM 1 body black, $185, Olympus
21 mm F3.5-19S Both brand new, and
with Olympus filter, #62-7175.
9-1
CUTLASS 88, blue. AC, AM. $345. 8s-
4372 after 4 pm.
new tires Call 432-4986 after 5. 8-29
Olympus OM 1 body black $1499 Olympus
Saddleback drawing set Like New Great for
ME10 825, 849-1397, 8-31
1972, Pontiac Grand Safari, redwood wall,
tableting, part out of 1963, pick-up truck/283,
business car/294, LILY Saturn S-200,
292, 1429, Kentucky 749-0223. . . . .
JUST FACHSEHAD' $82 Desk and chess.
JUST FACHSEHAD' $124 Desk and chess.
Just north of downtown bridge 35.
1967 MGB For Sale
really sharp
- Newly rebuilt engine
- Like new tires
- Like new tires
- Completely new interior
- 4 Tops—hard top, 2 soft
- New clutch
- Pioneer AM/FM cassette
w/Lyssen Speakers
tops, tanem cover
• Pioneer AM/EM cassette
w/Jensen Speakers
• Absolutely everything
- Absolutely everything works like new or better.
- Since MG's are no longer made, this car can only appreciate in value. All it for only $3500.
or view at 1610 W.23rd.
1964 Triumph TR 4. Extra Sharp Convertible,
with black front grille and red-black interior. Good school car.
$3,500. (Auction #282)
Study chairs—we have several in stock
Office System, Office Management,
843-3644 9-04
843-3644
Deskx - We now have in stock several use-
ful desk setups. Our Office System is
1040 Vermont, 843-364-344.
9-4
843-364-344
Bed-Tied for *alarming* w/someone else?
$33. Call 811-2400. Box spring plus mattress.
9-11
Call 811-2400.
67 Mustang 6 cvl. auto, Real sharp $2,225
River City Radio, 110th W. 123rd, W. 224th
$2,225
GUTAR AND AMP-Pre-CBS Bender Musi-
master with hardshell case, Gibson 500-
atmp ampifier with reverb. New 120 w-
inch in excellent shape. **920-** 842-6210.
REFRIGERATOR: 5.5 cu ft, locking door,
perfect for dorm room. Call 841-9490-4.
Nikko, Alpha II Amp, amp 110 wt/ch
01% dist. Call 843-8874-8.
8-4
LeBlance Clarineti wood and newly reblaced. Also apt-sized refrigerator, 8-4
HELP WANTED
HP-3C4 programmable, constant memory
diameter Almost new call 814-524 evenings
of Dell computer
Campus representative wanted to order and deliver pens, pencils and supplies. Flexible student preferred. Call 1-800-352-9131 at 1-5 p.m. only. Dan Stevens. 9-1
TELECASTER: Custom Colors map neck.
70's model, excellent condition. Also guitar
sound on board. 3500 series. (95) 866-2100.
Anglers Unlimited bass shop needs one
Angler. Applications must be knowledge-
able, and a week. Applications must be know-
ledgeable a p.m. on Monday and Wednesday. Apply in
the morning. 1449 W. 23rd Street. No phone calls.
Reliable babyshower most Friday evenings
and Saturday nights. 12 Dinner客
speeds provide 843-869-896
Delivery drivers wanted. Must have reliable
department at Paramay Pizza after 4 p.m.
9-5:25 a.m.
EASTERN KINGDOM 1 learn spanish 84-179 (5-2)
JUNE 2014 BRAZIL JULY 2014 SAN FRANCISCO JUNE
2014 DAMASKED CANADA SEPTEMBER 2014 SCOTTISH NEW
YORK JANUARY 2014 MALTA APRIL 2014 TORONTO AUGUST
2014 SAN FRANCISCO JULY 2014 SANTA CRISTINA DE
MADRID JUNE 2014 BRUNSWICK JULY 2014 SANTA
CRISTINA DE MADRID JUNE 2014 BRUNSWICK JULY 2014
SANTA
Medical device company has immedate development of medical equipment. Current development of medical equipment. Current development of medical equipment. Martin Medical, 36570 Wiley (12 min) Martin Medical, 36570 Wiley (12 min) Martin Medical, 36570 Wiley (12 min) Martin Medical, K-10 Whey). DESK, KoS 658-1184. 658-1184.
partial-time jobs in banking concessions, and
partial-time jobs with a need to noon or i. p. m.-M. F-Apply in person.
Partial-time jobs Level 4 Main Union Bldg. must be able to operate
Equal opportunity Affirmative Action
Wanted: Person to teach Spanish. You learn
English. I learn Spanish. B45-794.
Need clerk in afternoons in retail stores. Need clerk in retail stores. Need clerk in retail stores. Store see Mr. Budaly in person.
Labrador puppy 3 months old wearing white shirt Answers to Koenig: 843-860-7122 843-860-7123
Engineering/Drafting Part-time
LOST
Light housework 4 hours weekly. Must provide own transportation. 842-0070. 8-31
A tearful little girl and her mom miss
Nook, Tom look-alike who lives near
north side of park with rabbit with tabel
Blue fla color. 842-1753. 91-4
Ankle bracelet. if found, please call
NOTICE
Business Opportunity $250 weekly in your spare time. 50 representatives need. Write Rick Young, P.O. Box 514, Stillwater, 9-9740-6754-013
THE CONSUMER AFFAIRS ASSOCIATION
ANNOUNCES the annual election of its
selection committee on June 14, according to unctd until Septembr 18, 1981. Conferences were held in April at the University 819 Vermont. For more information visit www.consumeraffairs.org.
PERSONAL
Come and browse in Barb's Second Hand
House. We have a wide selection of
household jewelry & gifts for all
you need.
Feel good about yourself! Bailor exercise,
Ballet practice,
Sept. 9 - Sept. 14
Sept. 15 - Lawn School of Bailor
Exercise, Ballet Practice, Sept. 15 - Lawn School of Bailor
Silk Screen print - t-shirts. et al. 1-1000
group discounts. Shirt art by swells 71
55x39. $69.95.
Beaume & portfolio photographs, instant
collection of black, white, colorful
photos. Wietsu, Studio. 79-281
3640.
FREE INFORMATION on easy way to make
makes your home safer.
ASSOCIATES Box 54, Paintney, KY
210-762-5399
Boyd's Coins-Antiques
Cases Rings
Day - Valid
Void - Valid
Grades Silver - Coins
Value - Nails
73) New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kanaa 66044 913-842-877
Gay men's support discussion group in curated online network. Headquarters Crisis Center. Contact Headquarters Crisis Center.
GOLD* 14 kt. Add-a-beads & chains.
Great prices! Other jewelry also available.
843-3801
8-31
Hope you enjoyed your summer, we’ve everly enjoyed ours. The staff & management shared the good times with us. We are look-arounders of this beautiful kitchen which has been approved by the Lawrence County Fire Department. Our kitchen hours are now 4 am until 9 pm. also open Sunday 11 until 8. Watch for our special Great food Hours to see you, one block away from the front entrance of Humgee? Try Our red beer. 9-11
It's late, you're home and you're really
delicious, you’re delicious, dazzling, call SUM-
BAN 841-258 for a FELLOW SUITE delivery.
midnight. Sunday through the third.
9:14
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT. 843-4821
Wanted: Quarterback for team-nosed INDEPENDENT football to play in league league, good arm, mobility a good must-have skill. Call Joe 842-387-61
6-31
Too many studies? No time for exercise?
Consequences: flab, low energy. Try rebounding—while you're studying! For demonstration call 842-8870.
9-11
WINSURDSIFINE - Ive got boats to rent or
sell-now and used Sailers 842-368-9-3
Headache, Backache, Stiff Neck, Leg pain?
Quality Chiropractic Care & its benefits.
Johnson K94-938 for consultation,
accepting Blue Cross & Lone Star insurance.
plants.
The JAYHAWKER Yearbook is now accepting applications for business and writing staff positions. Stop by the JAYHAWKER office at Kansas Union, Inc., out an application. 8-31
Topica physician, 20, smart, wishes to meet bright, sensitive, attractive young lady. Box 383, Lawrence. 9-9
Welcome back to the reorganized gang of four. Tom's T.V. and taxi service is still operational. 8-31
SPIRULINA. Have more energy, eat less,
fed better. Most nutrition food on the face
of the planet. Distributors available. Bob
Fabian 816-756-3958
9-5
Plan your weekend now! Complete outfitting for canoe runs on the North Fork of the Mistake River. Fill in information call 417-2258 or write North Fork Outfitters. Box 30, Dura 8697 or 6067
FREE KITTENS, 7 wks, trained, 842-3609 0.7
Dinner food and exotic foods: Use SLENDER-
and DUMP balanceers—and if you work, Call
Kristine. B
LC—Get ready for another 15 rounds of calculating, programming, scheduling, late lab reports, Pinches on the rock and S夺婶尾. Run Your a VSP - Love, Tom
GOLD! 14 kt Add-a-beads & chains. Great prices! Other jewelry also available. 843-3601. 9,8
PREE, Caller Torr. Brit 749-852. 91-93
A M-thurray contains all the champagne
B 8 circular size bottles. Ed Macdonald once
came up with a way to use it. Gayland Rt Liquor 912 Iowa.
Gayland Rt Liquor 912 Iowa.
L-Welcome back to school and to the amaritoa sours. Delta, dawns. Travelers standard and standard shift driving school. Prepares students for a special friend. Love, Tom. 8-21
THE GATOR still reigns! King Iod and his family, everything around them are shirts, shorts, hats, everything they wear is from welcome to another school in Nassau. The RACIC will have a visit with KU ID. Come to either the RACet and the RACIC at Clinton Parkway. Sale ends September 6th. Open 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., 7 days a week.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR, patient and experienced,
grad with math MA. Algebra, Trig.
Calculus, and Stat. $7 \text{ hour}, 8 \text{ hours}, 41-7293$
The New York Times can be delivered to your home every Sunday for only $3 week.
To start delivery this call, sign 841-5073.
12/30/94
1 block east Capital
Federal Building
PRESENTATIONS * IDS
NEWSCLIWS PETTS, ETC.
Up to 18" wide—any length
minimum order—$1.00
afternoons and Sat. morning
HOWELL STUDIOS
PLASTIC LAMINATING
PALMIST
Charles Hamilton For appt call 841-4309 B-4
RESUME prepared by local personnel man-
agement. Learn what to say, what not to say at earl-
en. Learn what to do with an item that may be
most experienced mother off to do baby
sitting at days without any time limit. Gain
the skills and knowledge you need.
Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 1-94 High Stall
Tutoring available for Math 002 $5.94
Call 864-6543. And leave message. 9-14
TYPING
Experienced typist will type letters, theses, or
calligraphy according to selective
Call Notes on am24 8274-274
Experienced typist - thesis, dissertations,
examining the effects of selective selective
inhibition & pen 842-233
Fast, efficient typing. Many years expert-
ing in professional work.
PROFESSIONAL HAIRING - Gel Moths
841-4980 TECHNICAL TITING. CAN BE USED
if
Tip Top Typing—experienced typist—IBM
Selectric 843-5675. 9-18
It's a Scoot. Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing.
48,520
Experienced typist, used paper, theses, all
letters and envelopes, correct spelling, or
pics, and will correct spelling. Phone:
(212) 697-3880.
Expertise typed books, thesis, term papers
Experience book cover design, promotional
sciences; Terry evenings and weekends
of travel.
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms
Records, case files, press releases, Selectors,
Call Eilen or Jeannan 841-2172
*Typing - first accurate. Assistance with comp-
putation is needed. Req. Bachelor's in Eng-
gnece, sophomore, Tuor foreign students in Eng-
gnece.
WANTED
Wanted male Christian roommates large quiet house close to campus. Dishwasher, microwave, UTILITIES PARK $89-$140 K$89-$140 Call Darryl. Ott $141-8f 140 Kentucky
Apartment to share. Preaksham news-
room. 5th floor. Flat for rent in Jaipur-
Akashway Towers, Nim-drinker-
house. 430 sqm. 150 kms. 85% off.
ROOMMATE WANTED. Must be studious &
non-smoking. 3 bdt. apt, modern acco-
nclose to campus. Call 749-2811 Early
mornings or late evening. Keep tryin-
Female roommate to share 2 bpt. abr. $135
U.S. citizenship | Call 844-3277 | Foreign student welcome
JOUNIALSTES. The Goodland Daily News
and Journal of Tom Dreiling at 913-859-
8246 or tom.dreiling@nwdl.com
Female non-smoking housemate to share 2-
story, 2 br. country home in Lecompton.
Prefer quiet but liberal thinker. $50-mi
+ 1) utilities. 87-617-4100. 6:00-9:00.
Wanted female non-smoker to tour
bout route.
Location 749-3612. 9-2
Female romancemate will share 3 bed-
room accommodations, 2 baths,
electricity. Phone 842-5948.
9-2
Female roommate to share 2 bedrooms apart-
ment; room size is $185 month plus. 1–9
wall units. 843–9602
Share spacetops 3 BR bpt. near campus. Only
smoking female. Call 641-854-2844.
Call 641-854-2844.
Non-matching students to share large two
bags of $120.00 - c utitures Events call J
Rent $120.00 - c utitures Events call J
Rent $120.00 - c utitures Events call J
Someone to share 2 BR, house near campus.
$125 mo. - utilities. Preferably graduate student.
841-4060. 9-2
Non-smoking girls to share large house be remoded with 2 other girls. 15 minute walk from campus to 10 minute walk from campus. Students $150 + 1.7 utilities. Call 841-699- 92
Roommates wanted to share two bdr. 2-room,
electricity, and phone 842-7164. Keep up with
them.
Male roommate wanted. Park SS Apt. $100
per month. 1.3 gas & clinic. B147-6196
or 814-7525.
Female roommate for one bedroom Apt. with big Salon in Southridge place. Call *ttermoon* 841-9642 9-3-8
KANSAN
Roosevelt Institute for foreign Indian student from New York City and United States, applied English courses. All utilisées par les étudiants.
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Page 10 University Dally Kansan, August 31, 1981
Confident senior setter relaxes KU volleyball team with trivia
By JAN BOUTTE Sports Writer
As the volleyball team prepares for practice, Shelly Fox begins her daily trivia contest.
"What was the name of Roy Rogers'?
The answer comes quickly, but
Fox's."
"What about Dale Evans' horse?" The squad jogs along in silence for awhile. "Okay then, who can hum the theme from 'Family Affair?'."
Fox, a 5-foot-2 senior setter, works hard to keep the team relaxed. As one of two seniors on the squad, the younger players look to Fox for leadership.
IN THE MIDST of a complex spiking drill. Fox stands at center net, facing her team with an open hand raised as if waving hello—a picture of relaxed confidence. The play begins and three spikers converge on Fox as she calmly directs the ball into perfect position for them to send to rocketing over the net.
Fox, who will be setting the ball for
her four year at Kansas, has good reason to be confident in her skills. She was named the top server at an elite Super Camp held at Pepperdine Fox, appearing confident is another important aspect being a good leader.
"By seeing that I'm confident, that's one less thing for my teammates to worry about on the court. They need to know that they are in my ability but in theirs." Fox said.
The on-court leadership that stems from the setter's quarterback role of calling plays follows Fox off the court. Her younger teammates look to her to organize their morning a2.5 mile cross-country races, clear their jersey numbers through her.
COACH BOB LOCKWOOD said that having Fox on the team was like being assisted by a veteran coach. Fox plans to make a career of coaching and has put in much time helping Lockwood run summer volleyball camps.
Fox, a Kersey, Colo., native, said she
was expected to work in the
psychology department when
she graduated.
physical education degree. She was awarded the Earl Falkenstein Award as outstanding junior in the physical department by the faculty last year.
Fox acted please about Lockwood's comments, but said, "Don't make me a mistake."
As the team prepares for its first matches this weekend in Tulsa, Fox faces a week that proved critical to her season last year. Three days before the season opener, she suffered a serious ankle strain. But Fox fought back and was able to play a major part of the season.
Playing with pain was nothing new to Fox, who has ignored the pain of an arthritic hip for most of her athletic years.
FOX SHRUGGED the pain, saying, "The pain of playing was nothing compared to the mental pain not playing."
Fox considers the high point of her Jayhawk years to be trips to Colorado, where she plays before her hometown fans.
Kansas City rained out; Yankees win
By United Press International
CHICAGO—Rudy May snapped a personal seven-game losing streak with a five-hitter yesterday in pitching the Chicago Sox 5-1 triumph over the Chicago White Sox.
The Kansas City Royals game, rained out in Toronto, won't be made up unless necessary. The teams are not scheduled to face each other the season. If a makeup is necessary, the game will be played Oct. 5 in Toronto.
THE YANKEES jumped to a quick lead off loser Dennis Lamp, 5-2, by scoring three runs in the first inning.
Larry Milbourne singled to left and took second when Oscar Gamble grounded out. Reggie Jackson then singled in Barrine and Netties sliced a triple into the bottom to score Jackson. Dave Winfield followed with a bunt single to score Nettles.
Milbourne opened the third with a single and stole second. Two outs later, Lamp walked Nettles and Winfield to load the bases. Dave Reverting then grounded sharply to first baseman Mike Squires behind first base, but Lamp dropped the throw to first, allowing two runs to score.
Almon leading off the sixth. Ron LeFlore drew a walk and both runners advanced when pinch hitter Lamar Johnson grounded out. Carlton Fisk then hit a sacrifice fly for Chicago's lone run.
May, 5-8, gave up singles in the first and second innings, then retired 11 in a single.
American League
Kansas City at Toronto, pdc, rain
Milwaukee at Philadelphia, rain
California 1 Baltimore 1
Cleveland 1 Seattle 11
Minnesota 1 Miami 1
New York 3 Chicago 1
Toronto 7 Texas 2
National League
Atlanta 5 Montreal 12 innings
San Francisco 6 Pittsburgh 0
San Diego 8 St. Louis 6
Tampa Bay 10 Houston 5, Philadelphia 14, 10 innings
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Need a solution to the career mystery?
For more information contact the administration of justice coordinator in room 4C of Lippincott Hall (old Green Hall).
It's elementary, my dear Watson.
Find out about the Administration of Justice Program offered by Wichita State University.
It offers the perfect solution to your dilemma:
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● Associate, bachelor's and master's degree programs — and nondegree bound students also welcome.
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CLOSE ENOUGH
KU volleyballer Shelly Fox, senior setter, enlivens practice by posing trivia questions to her teammates.
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