we wear, we d. "After felt that court, it to work to work Pitts. 64 Goran 60 61 62 32 67 68 56 57 36 57 37 32 42 44 42 26 72 48 37 37 **GB** $l_{12}$ $1^{12}$ $4^{12}$ $6^{12}$ $8$ — 4 $5^{12}$ $6^{12}$ 9 12 hought it Snider playing thing I've " Snider did playing as a lot of ang point the ball offense. the floor to worry court." g able to st t, d is. hn and isetes the keep their goal this make it. Even a chance but she seriously realized comfortable but she at point hink she he said. V out and t." most im- ill right e game. y greatly great you feel you would you love so have i buy a and you living this Monday, February 1, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 86 USPS 650-640 KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Loans to students' parents possible Bill would provide GSLs alternative ByCOLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Help may be on the way for students who are no longer eligible for Guaranteed Student Loans. A state legislative interim committee has introduced a bill that would allow parents, as well as students, to be eligible for low-interest, federally guaranteed loans. The House Ways and Means Committee began hearings on the bill Friday. It would amend Kansas law to allow the Higher Education Loan Program of Kansas to make loans available to parents for no more than the cost of their child's college education. State Rep. Don Crumbraker, R-Brewster, a member of the Legislative Educational Planning Committee that recommended the bill, said the measure will help ensure that is important because of restrictions placed on GSAs. Dr. Richard Hawk, president of the Higher Education Loan Program, said parent loans were used to cover some of the costs. "Any parent who has a son or daughter at an eligible institution can borrow long as the loan is made to an unregistered student." education," he said. "Income is not a factor with parent loans." STUDENTS applying for GSLS, as of Oct. 1, 1981, must file a family income report. If family income is more than $30,000, the student must undergo a financial needs analysis. Hawk said. The change is the introduction of the requirement that the expected family contribution be deducted from the amount the student is eligible, he told the committee. "The education, minus any other financial aid, minus the expected family contribution." Hawk said the expected family contribution would not be taken into account for parent loans. He added that if both a student and his parent had the same educational background, he would not exceed the cost of the college education. The expected family contribution is the estimated amount of financial aid a student's parents will be able to provide, and it applies to students who must file a needs analysis. He said the maximum parent loan would be $3,000 a year. The interest rate on parent loans would be 14 percent, higher than the 9 percent rate on student loans. Also, interest would be applied to parent loans as soon as they were taken out, but the federal government would pay interest on student loans while the student was in school. FOR THIS reason, parent loans are more attractive to the federal government, Steve Linenbergh legislative director of the University of Kansas, said. ASK is a student lobbying group. "This is one of the few pieces of national legislation that not only helps the federal government but also helps students," Linenherer said. Lienberger, who spoke in favor of the bill at the hearing, pressed that it would pass in the court. It could easily be "I see really no problems. It's a fairly uncontroversial bill," he said. "It won't cost the state a cent. And in today's market, 14 percent is a very low interest rate." Linenberger said the guaranteed loans were available as a last resort. If an applicant cannot get a loan through a bank, the Higher Education Loan Program will lend him the money. SenEx calls parking decision bad idea Hawk said the money for the loans came from the sale of revenue bonds that the Higher Education Assistance Foundation sold to inducers. The bonds are exempt from federal and state taxes. By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter The money used for paying the justices probably would increase parking fees, according to Ernest Angino, SenEx chairman and professor of geology and civil engineering. Paying the justices cost about $7,000 a year. Loren Busby, vice chairman of SenEx and Co-Chairman of Senate, said Busy is a member of the Parking and Traffic board at the meeting when the board decided to pay it. The University Senate executive committee Friday decided to advise the Parking and Traffic Board that its recent decision to pay 15 student traffic court justices was a bad idea and a bad The justices, who are law students, serve on the KU Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals and review parking and traffic tickets at the request of people who receive tickets. THE PARKING and Traffic Board decided to pay the justices at a meeting last week after Kent Frobish, traffic court justice and Lawrence second-year law student, suggested it. Frobish said the justice worked three to 10 hours a week and could make at least $4 an hour at other law-related jobs, either on- or off-campus. Laurence Rose, SenEx member and professor of law, disagreed. "I have trouble with the payment of people who we appoint to boards," Rose said. "They put money down." SenEx members agreed that paying the justices was a bad precedent, because other University governance members might decide they also deserved nav. Governance members who might request payment for their services include SenEx members, University Council members, Student Senate and Library Committee members, Bussy said. - we'd wind up having to pay at least 100 people, probably," Busy said. "Logically, we'd have to pay everyone else because they serve about the same function." In other business, SenEx discussed the use of University computers for word processing. Some students use the computers to process theses, Angino said. This usually costs a department between $250 and $350 a thesis, and has cost as much as $500 a thesis, he said. "If you get 10 theses every year at $500 per, that's $5,000." Angino said. That could use a department's entire computer budget, he said. Word processing is especially a problem in science departments, he said. SenEx will discuss a policy to address this problem at its next meeting, Angino said. Senate group to push sale of beer in Memorial Stadium SenEx also decided to continue using the entire name of a class in the University timetable. Course names are now shortened to 18 characters on grade sheets. The Student Senate has formed a task force to push for permission to sell beer in Memorial Square. Beer sales could raise $40,000 to $45,000 and decrease the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation's $18,000 deficit, the senator, Jeff Silvester said. Silverstein is the task force's coordinator. Silverstein said beer sales could also cut drunkenness from the hard liquor that fans like to drink. Another Senate group proposed beer in the stadium to the Senate, KU administrators and managers. "They're going to get drunk faster drinking Jack Daniels than 3.2 beer," Silverstein said. "Last year, the only problem was with alums" Silverstein said. Alums were concerned that students would become unruly in the stands. SILVERSTEIN said the economic benefits could make a favorable impression this year. "People are realizing we're in a bad economic situation." Silverstein said. "They're kind of half-yes and half-no," he said. The task force has been contacting other universities that allow beer in their stadiums and field houses. So far, he said, the administration's reaction had been positive and not all alumni had been on course. Weather SNOW There is a winter storm watch for today with a 70 percent chance of snow, according to the National Weather Servi- tation. A cumulative accumulation of up to four inches is likely. The high today will be in the mid-20s, low tonight around 10 to 15 degrees. PETE WILSON Sam Rittmaster, Kansas City, Mo., special student, reaches for a volley in a semifinal match of the SUA/Recreation Services table tennis tournament Saturday in Robinson Center. Rittmaster ended up winning the tournament. JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Staff Community involvement vital to Reagan plan, officials say By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Some Kansans will be devastated by President Reagan's "new federalism" unless local communities forge and fund their own social programs, Robert Harder, Secretary of the state department of Social and Rehabilitative Services said yesterday. Harder told an audience at the Lawrence Public Library that local communities in Kansas would have to help support the more than 40 federal programs that Reagan advocated shifting to the states in his first State of the Union message last Tuesday. If Congress approves Reagan's recommendations, the state SRS staff could competently take over such programs as food stamps, community development and services for the handicapped and others, but that would be incomprehensible if these programs were incomprehensible without adequate funding. "From the standpoint of human suffering and misery, if there aren't people in the local communities stepping forward to help out the state, it will be devastating by these changes," Harder said. *We are in a position to carry out the new federalism only if the money is available." Harder said. "The key issue is the raising of state money." HARDER suggested that local communities highlight areas of need and send representatives to those areas. The state's ability to fund these services still is uncertain, he said, but as much as $30 million could be required to maintain the programs as they now are run by the federal government. If that much money is needed, the situation could be bleak, he said. But State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, said the president's plan represented a long-awaited opportunity for more freedom in Kangas. "I think this is an exciting time," she said. "We've long saked for more control over our world." Eldridge said that a recent survey by the Wall Street Journal marked Kansas as one of the richest states in the nation in its surplus wealth and policies against deficit spending "We've always sent more money to the federal government," she said. "I say that we are going to do very well." HOWEVER, State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D- SEE MEEFTING page 5 HERS DORITOS JAN BRYAN '82 Snacking on the go leaves students with sweet tastes By KIM NEWTON Staff Reporter It was midmorning at the Wescoe Hall vending area. Students who had slept through breakfast, or needed a snack before lunch, carried cups of coffee and packages of powdered-sugar doughnuts to empty tables. One student clutched a book bag in one hand and a milk carton and a package of chocolate cupcakes in the other. Another woman willed doughnuts, drinks, bags of potato chips and a honey bun on a tray. A cookie is on the plate. Monday Morning schedules fed coins into soft drink and candy machines before dashing off to classes. CANDY IS one of the most frequently purchased items from KU's vending services. Snacking is one of America's favorite and most versatile pastimes. Snackers' preferences vary, ranging from hot, glazed doughnuts, ice cream cones and candy bars to potato chips and popcorn. Some people indulge occasionally, while others consume sugary confections and salty snacks regularly. Georgine Larsen, dietitian at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, attributed snacking to boredom, depression, habit and social conditioning. College students are perhaps the most "As a little child, if you cried, you were fed. At birthday parties you were given cake," she About 65,000 candy bars and 130,000 soft drinks are sold each month, compared with 1,000 apples and oranges, 1,000 packets of cheese and crackers and 800 containers of peanut butter to Porsche Jelly, assistant manager of concessions, who is in charge of vending services. susceptible to snacking, if vending statistics are any indication. Vending services include about 280 campus machines and Wescos Hall's vending machine. Jolly attributed the use of vending services to convenience. You grant me a concession. Jolly said candy wasn't bad in itself. "You're in a hurry, it's around lunch time, and you can't make it to the dorn," he said, smiling. "I'll just wait." "It's the frequency that makes the misuse, not the quality of the item," he said. The frequency of such high-calorie consumption often can put extra pounds on a person, Larsen said. She said that Americans were some of the most obese people in the world and that snacks probably contributed to that. STUDENTS LOOKING for a convenient and inexpensive late-night diversion from their studies often go to Joe's Bakery, 616 W. Ninth St. Joe's has supplied students with sandwiches and doughnuts during study breaks for 28 years. Although former owner Joe Smith retired See JUNK page 3 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Reports allege CIA agent attempted to hire Bani-Sadr WASHINGTON-A CIA agent, using the cover of a Philadelphia firm, tried to enlist Abulhassan Bani-Sadr as a paid consultant before he became president of Iran, published reports quoting alleged captured secret documents said yesterday. The reports were based on papers purported to have been pieced together by Iranian revolutionaries who seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran in 1979. The documents were said to have been used to depose Bani-Sadr from power. p The Washington Post and the Boston Globe carried similar accounts of the reports yesterday. The CIA had no comment on the reports. The CIA had no complaints in the report. Bani-Sadr, now living in exile in France, confirmed to the Post that he had met with an American who proposed paying him $5,000 per month. "I told him to go away," he said. The documents were reported to be included in volumes of alleged secrets the militants put back together, which are now for sale at corner newspaper stands in Iran. U.S. authorities seized volumes being brought into the United States by three journalists. Reacting to the reports, Rajai Khorassani, Iranian ambassador to the United Nations, Bani-Siand "had some involvement with foreign intelligence." Khorassani said he would not comment on whether Bani-Sadr received money from the CIA, or whether any other Iranian revolutionary leaders had contacts with the agency. Prices. violence surge in Gdansk WARSAW—More than 200 people were arrested and 14 injured in violent, weekend clashes after the city's official appeals for calm on Monday with new increases. Warsaw ruled. there have been repeated calls from underground resistance groups during the past week for strikes and protests against the higher prices, payouts and fracking. The military council, reacting to prevent further outbreaks of violence, ordered a stricter curfew in Gdańsk, which will clear the streets from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. They also suspended all types of public entertainment and sports and banned private cars from the roads. Meanwhile, in Washington, President Reagan ran an appeal for an end to "the dark night of tyranny" in Poland. He said in a world wide broadcast yesterday that the Solidarity labor movement and its spirit would never be crushed by mere physical force. The broadcast was denounced by the Soviet Union and Polish authorities as an "open act of propaganda aggression." Snowstorm shuts down St. Louis ST. LOUIS—A major winter storm cloaked St. Louis with nearly 19 inches of snow yesterday and virtually shut down the city. Carl Officer, East St. Louis, IL, mayor, issued an executive order banning all travel on the city streets until 6 a.m. in CST today. Four emergency shelters are closed at the corner of 27th Street and 43rd Avenue. Police reported that two buildings collapsed under the weight of snow and ice. No injuries were reported. "It's a horrendous situation," said Cpl. Tony Bailley of the Missouri Highway Patrol. "With all the wind and blowing snow, we're not making any headway. They clean the roads and then five to ten minutes after they clean a nashdrifts are completely covering the road." Up to two feet of snow also fell on southern Illinois, Indiana and Michigan in a storm that stretched in a narrow band from St. Louis through Detroit. The storm pushed across Ohio and was expected to veer into northeast New York State, Maine and southern New England late last night. Austrian avalanche kills at least 12 SALBURG, ZURUG—At least 12 people died yesterday in an avalanche that buried a group of German students on a ski trip near Salzburg, police said. rive people were rescued and at least one was still missing, a police spokesman said. Rescue workers called off the search in the evening fearing The avalanche rolled down a ski slope at about 5 p.m. near the small village of Werfen. 12 miles south of Salzburg. Sudden mild weather in Austria in the past two days, coupled with a steady downpour of heavy rain, was believed to have touched off the avalanche. Violence erupts at Belfast march BELFAST, Northern Ireland—A march commemorating the 10th anniversary of "Bloody Sunday" ended in violence when a group of about 200 youths broke away from the procession yesterday and attacked police with gasoline and acid bombs. At least 80 homemade gasoline bombs and several sulfuric acid bombs were hurled at security forces. They in turn fired plastic bullets to disperse them. There were no serious injuries and the troublemakers dispersed after about an hour, police said. Ten years ago yesterday, on what is now known as "Bloody Sunday," British troops shad to death 13 demonstrators at the Rossville Apartments, in Manchester. Derailment blast forces evacuation LOCKBOURNE, Ohio—A Norfolk and Western Train duly yesterday and a tank rail car carrying a toxic chemical exploded, forcing the train to stop. Fire officials said 17 cars, five of them chemical tankers, derailed at 1:40 p.m. in Lockbourne, a village 10 miles southeast of Columbus. Law enforcement officials and firefighters combed the village and evacuated residents, some whose homes were one-quarter mile from the tracks. Those evacuated went to a nearby school. Some stayed with friends and relatives. Black toxic smoke was visible five miles from the deraliment site. Firefighters, wearing full gear and air tanks, used foam to contain the fire to the one burning car and waited two hours for it to burn before attacking it. Salvadoran troops gundown 17 The cause of the derailment is under investigation. An army communique reported yesterday that troops killed 202 infantry guerrillas in an "action of search and elimination of subversive cells in the country." SAN SALVADOR—Government troops yanked 17 civilians out of their homes and shot them in cold blood during pre-dawn raids here yesterday. The report gave no other details but said surviving rebels carried away the dead and wounded. Blues performer dies of cancer HOUSTON-Songwriter, singer and guitarist Sam "Lightin'in" Hopkins, often called the last of the old-time country blues musicians, died of cancer on December 23, 2016. Hopkins, a contemporary of blues artists as Muddy Waters, B. B. King and John Lee Hooker died at 9:02 a.m. Saturday in St. Joseph's. Hopkins, who was still favored with folk and blues audiences in the 1970s, had considerable impact on the development of young rock musicians in the 1960s and early 1970s. He was one of the most extensively recorded blues artists of the 1940s and 1960s. Med official calls scholarship cut untimely University of Kansas Medical Center officials reacted sedately to Gov. John Carlin's proposal last week to reduce scholarships to medical students. A. J. Yarmat, associate director for the Division of Health Care Outreach and Continuing Education, called Carlin's intention to cut the scholarships premature. The scholarships are designed to alleviate doctor shortages. "The Legislature seems to feel this is an old and expensive program, but we are yet to realize the effects," Yarmat said. The program now pays tuition expenses for students who agree to practice in Kansas after graduation. Medical students who agree to work in areas designated as medically underserved, mostly western Kansas counties, receive tuition and $500 a year. Carlin's 1983 budget proposal recommended that 563接待 behaviors be the Meet. "It really too early to tell about the effect of this program," Yarmat said. "The first trickle of physicians will not be until this summer." Saman said that the first recipients of the program, students beginning medical school in the fall of 1978, won't be taught internships until early this summer. "In 1979, there were 105 students on the plan and 60 entered three-year residency programs," Yarmat said. In the past, the scholarship program was unlimited in the amount of students who received scholarships in return for their graduation. In the future, the program will be limited to 100 new Yarmat said there was no way of knowing if the legislative program would help alleviate the lack of doctors in rural areas. Yarmat said that approximately 75 to 80 percent of the Med Center's 800 students had been applying for the scholarships in recent years. applications for students entering medical school. "This program affects an awful lot of students and we have no way of knowing how long they will stay here—it's really too early to tell." he said. 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STAEDTLER marsmatic700 Bring us this coupon & $1.00 and get a marsmatic 700 pen. *2x0 only (one pen per customer) coupon name address phone --- kansas KU The Grinder Man union bookstores main union level 2, satellite shop Place a want ad in the Kansan Call 864-4358 27th & Iowa 842-2480 Delivers to all campus living groups Sun.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m. st t, id is. hn $5.00 min. Delivery Charge: 10 $ ^{\circ} $ /mini, 25 $ ^{\circ} $ /maxi No Coupons ● No Checks University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1982 Page 3 ely 75 to er's 800 for the way of program doctors ful lot of way of here aid. st t. d s. hn Blacks to celebrate heritage By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter A talk by Carl Stokes, the first black mayor of a major American city, will be one of the highlights in the Black History Month this February. "Over the past few years," she said, "the University itself has been resisted in putting on its own activities toribute to black Americans. The national theme for the celebration is "Recognizing Afro-American History; a blueprint for the Future," Vernell Spearman, assistant director of Minority Affairs, said recently. "We may be the only Big Eight school using the whole month to observe black history." Spearman said she was pleased that University groups other than black organizations were involved in sponsoring events during Black History Month. For example, SUA has planned for activities in its budget. STOKES, former mayor of Cleveland, will be on campus Feb. 18. His presentation is sponsored by Templin Hall. The Cosaan Dance Troupe will perform Feb. 21. This nationally known group, originally from Chicago, Africa, now performs out of New York. Other events planned are an African Night, a gospel extravaganza and presentations on challenges in law and Haitain problems. The month will culminate in a soul-feed dinner sponsored by the Ellsworth Hall Black Caucus. The idea for observing black history came from the late Carter G. Woodson, Spearman said. Woodson, an educator and the son of a former slave, started the national observance of Negro History Week in the 1920s. He wanted it to coincide with the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln, Feb. 12, and black abolitionist Frederick Douglass, Feb. 14. The observance was later expanded to a month. In 1915, he founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History and produced the Journal of Negro History. He was a prolific writer of books and articles on black history. Spearman said the office of minority affairs became involved in celebrating Black History Month in 1969, although black students earlier had observed the month in some ways. She said the office has had calls from other colleges and universities asking about the events and planning of KU's Black History Month. There will be an admission charge for some events, Spearman said. Police reported an assault Saturday morning at the Country Kitchen Restaurant, 1503 W. 23rd St. On the record Pice said that at 1:45 a.m. a.m. female suspect struck Kathyn Harris, 1950 Cadet S.t., in the right side and pushed him around in the restaurant's parking lot. The suspect caused $500 worth of damage to Harris' eyeglasses and the hearing aid attached to them, police said. Earlier that evening, the suspect had run a stop sign at 23rd and Harper streets, scratching the Hairies car. Police said the suspect and two friends followed the Hairies to the Country Kitchen. The suspect and her friends were asked to leave for causing a disturbance in the restaurant. The suspect was waiting at the Harrises' car when they left the restaurant. As the Harrises approached their car, the suspect blamed the accident on Kathryn Harris and pushed her to the ground. At the Loving Glove DIET CENTER It Is a Natural! 503 W. 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Bell's injuries included a cut to his right hip, a six-inch cut on his left side and a small cut on his right arm, police said. A friend took Bell to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he was admitted. There have been no arrests police said. TIME: 7:00 p.m. DATE: THURSDAY, Feb. 4 PLACE: INTERNATIONAL ROOM (UNION) TIME: 7:00 p.m. VANDALS CAUSED $300 to $500 worth of damage to the Jayhawk Motel, POLICE ALSO reported an aggravated assault at 8th and New Hampshire streets at 2:30 a.m. Yesterdays the police said he was struck by St. reported that he was cut when he bumped into two men who were arguing outside Red's Place Bar. After her friends restrained the suspect, the three left in a small brown car with Oklahoma license plates. There have been no arrests, police said. SPONSORED BY THE STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES ADVISORY BOARD CO PAID FOR BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE Police said there have been no arrests because the owner and several KU students are negotiating how the students would pay for the damage. Kanti Patel, owner of Jayhawk Motel, reported that the room was covered with glass and plastic lamps. The rooms were also beeping when the drains in the room were destroyed. POLICE ARRESTED a 24-year-old KU student Friday and charged with larceny for stealing a book from the Jayhawk Bookstore. She was taken to Nigeria junior, put the book under his coat and carried it out of the U.S. Balloon-a-Gram "Rise to the Oceaan" SEND A BALLON-A GRAM! P.O. Box 2122 Lafayette, KS 65004 913084158488 Mackenzie Avenue Mackenzie Avenue --- DID YOU KNOW? The term "separation of church and state" is not in the first amendment. The amendment says, "The Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the American COVENANT, page 4. Marsh's shall Foster 1981, (Foundation for Christian Self Government) --- SUA FILMS SUA FILMS Presents TONIGHT Bette Davis and Joan Crawford Sister states on so fair, why is there such a lack of your birth? "WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE?" HE LEASER BY MARTHA BRNO 7:30 p.m. WOODRUFF $1.50 COMMON FALLS GRANADA TOWNHOUSE 7450 N. CITY LINE PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG X COLUMBIA INTERNATIONAL Ever 7-15 & 8-20 Mar. Sat. Sun. 2-90 VARSITY TOWNHOUSE TELEPHONE 587-1665 the Selection R 7:30 & 9:20 MAT. SAT SUN. 2:15 HILLCREST 1 TOWNHOUSE AND IOWA HEART LAND MAT. SAT SUN. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 TOWNHOUSE AND IOWA The mystery of "The Birds" The danger of "Psycho" Ever 7-40 & 8-25 Mar. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 This school is our home... TAPS Ever 7-40 & 8-25 Mar. Sat. Sun. 2:15 CINEMA 1 Whose life is it anyway? PG CINEMA 2 TOWNHOUSE AND IOWA PRINCE OF THE CITY R Ever 7-20 & 8-30 Mar. Sat. Sun. 2-90 CINEMA 3 TOWNHOUSE AND IOWA PRINCE OF THE CITY R Ever 7-20 & 8-30 Monday, February 1 The University of Kansas Black History Month February 1982 Afro-American History Blueprint for Survival "DYNAMITE CHICKEN," starring Richard Pyro, 7:00 p.m., Ray Brewster Auditorium, 300 Strong Hall Sponsored by Office of Minority Affairs Wednesday, February 3 "HAITI AND THE HAITIAN PROBLEM." AFRICAN STUDIES LUNCH TABLE. 11:30 a.m.; 12:30 p.m., Meadowlark Room, Kansas Union. Sponsored by African Studies Department Thursday, February 4 "BLACK HISTORY: LOST, STOLEN, OR STRAYED," with lecture by William Tuttle, 8:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union. Sponsored by Student Union Activities "BEAUTY EXTRAVAGANZA", sponsored by Sigma Gamma Rho. See paper. Sunday, February 7 "THE BLACK WOMAN: LIBERATED OR EX-POLETED", by Barbara Bailand, 7:30 p.m., INTERNAL Room, Kansas Union. Sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs AFRICAN NIGHT. 5:00 p.m. Community building, Vermont St. $2, Sponsored by African Students Association. Saturday, February 13 Tuesday, February 16 REW. OMMIE L. NELMS, NAACP 8:00 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union. Sponsored by Student Union "NIGERIAN MUSIC OF ENTERTAINMENT." AFRICAN STUDIES LUNCH TABLE, 11:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Meadowlark Room, Kansas Union, Sponsored by African Studies Department GOSPEL EXTRAVAGANZA, with Black Student 0.0 k.m. kansas Inside, Kansas Union Sponsored by the BLAIR Foundation Wednesday, February 17 Thursday, February 18 CARL STOKES, 8:00 p.m., Templin Hall. Sponsored by Templin Hall, Templin Hall Black Caucus, GSP Black Caucus, Black Student Union and the Office of Minority Affairs "MINORITIES AND THE LAW" CONFERENCE, with Annette Hubbard. 8:30 a.m. registration and conference in Green Hall. 12:30 p.m. luncheon in Kansas Union. Sponsored by BALS4/BALS4-LSD Saturday. February 20 "TRIBUTE TO THE BLACK WOMAN." Ebony Silhouettes. Forum Room, Kansas Union, 7:00-8:00 p.m. Sponsored by Ebony Silhouettes and Office of Minority Affairs COSAAN DANCE TROUPE, 8:00 p.m., Swarthwout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, $ Funded in part by Kansas Arts Commission. Sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs and International Theater Friday, February 26 Thursday, February 25 Sunday, February 21 "BLACK AND BLUE," Kansas State Ebony Theatres Company, Sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs This ad paid for by the Black Student Union, funded in part from Student Activity Fees. SOUL FOOD DINNER, 6:00 p.m. Ellsworth Hall, $ Sponsored by the Ellsworth Hall Black Caucus Saturday, February 27 $—Admission Charge. For more information, contact the KU Office of, Minority Affairs, 324 Strong Hall, 864-4351. Win a FREE! Spring Break Bahamas Cruise March 15-19, 1982 From Miami Aboard Costa Cruises "Party Ship" the FLAVIA* Stop in Nassau and Freoport . . . Sun and Fun! *Italian Registry NOTE: Cruise prize is for one person. Design a T-shirt for Maupintour Contest The rules are simple . . . 1. The T-shirt design must pertain to travel. Contest open to everyone 2. The design must be for one color printing. 3. T-shirt design must be something you would want to wear. 4. Deadline for entries is February 12th 1982. Use this T-shirt or send in your idea on a separate sheet Enter as many times as you want! Be Original . . . Let Your Imagination Go! Send in your T-Shirt entries to: Contest editor Maupintour travel service P.O. Box 807, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 1. 1982 Opinion A chance for reform Last week, the governor and members of the Kansas Legislature decided to stop playing politics and do the job they were intended to do—help people. At the tail end of nearly two weeks of committee infighting, two Republican lawmakers introduced a $70 million program to improve the state prison system. And the plan almost immediately won the support of both Republican and Democratic leaders. The plan's most important provision is the construction of two new prisons that will offer a total of 1200 beds. And it could not have been introduced at a better time. Kansas prisons are overcrowded, and the state predicts that it will need more than a thousand more prison beds within five years. To relieve the overcrowding, the state plans to make it harder to convict criminals and easier to parole them. At the Kansas State Penitentiary at Lansing last week, nine prisoners sought to improve their living conditions in another way—they refused to eat for six days. One hunger striker said inmates were treated like animals. He joined the other strikers in demanding more exercise, cleaner cells and better medical attention. Another striker wrote this to his wife: "We only want what we feel we should have as people." the strikers said officials probably would ignore their demands. But last week, members of the Special Committee to Study Prison Construction may have proved them wrong. Of course, the proposal has a long way to go. Neither the committee, the Legislature, the governor nor the state's voters have yet had time to approve it. The plan will surely face opposition from those who object to paying $70 million for prison reform and from those who think penitentiaries should only be houses of penance. But at least the plan's introduction shows that someone in Topeka is trying. So far, so good. Hopeably, FDR's experiment wasn't presidential precedent It's amazing how far we've come in the post-Watergate era. We have had revelations about several presidents allegedly using bugs and malware and we don't seem to be surprised anymore. In the midst of the commemorations of the 100th anniversary of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's birth, an article in American Heritage magazine revealed that Roosevelt had bugged his office for 11 weeks during the 1940 presidential campaign. So what do we have here? Franklinge? Does this hospital Niron at Niron 'fir' education? Probably not. The news was interesting, but hardly inflammatory. There are some ethical DAN TORCHIA questions raised, but until we can determine the historical value, there is no way to judge Roosevelt. These primitive tape were made by an experimental "continuous-film" recording machine" used to make soundtracks for films. RCA Corp., through its president, David Sarnoff, lent the machine to the White House between August and November 1940. Roosevelt wanted to use the machine to record his press conferences in the Oval Office as protection against being misquoted by the press. The microphone was hidden in a desk lamp or a drawer, with the recorder in the White House basement. These particular tapes were recorded when aides turned the machine on early, before a press conference began, or when it was accidentally left on after a conference. Eventually these snatches of conversation were transferred to masters and forbidden. The tapes were resurrected in 1978 by R.J.C. Butow, a professor at the University of Washington at Seattle this article in the *Journal of American Heritage* details the eight hours of tapes. And what do these tapes reveal? A president concerned about the European war, Japanese troops in Syria, and China are all During one conversation, Roosevelt listed some of the Japanese demands to avoid war. "There will be no war with the United States," he said, repeating the Japanese demands, "on one condition, and one condition only . . . The United States (must) demilitarize all of its naval and air and army bases in Wake, Midway and Pearl Harbor. "God! That's the first time that any damn Jap has told us to eat out of Hawaii!" The most damaging revelation, one that approaches Nixon's smear tactics, concerns Roosevelt's presidential opponent, Wendell Willke. Willke was involved with Irita Van Doren, a writer, and Roosevelt considered spreading tales of their relationship. There is a big difference between these tapes and Nikon's tapes made over 30 years later—intent. Being misquotted could have been a real issue because recorders were not used to quote authors. "If they want to play dirty politics in the end, we've got our own people . . . Spread it as a word-of-mouth thing," he said. The suggestion was never carried out. I'm not condaining what Roosevelt did. But at least the machine was returned after the election. Roosevelt said no reason to continue. The machine would be fine, nor was there any plotting to cover up crimes. Though the degree of tolerance may be greater, there is still the ethical question to consider: Is it appropriate to 'ticipants' knowledge is unethical, and this presents a problem for historical scholars. When do ethics conflict with historical value? If something is a true value, does the way it was intended matter? Although the FDR tapes don't seem to be historically important now, they do offer private glimpses of a man whose life has become so public. It may be worth having this additional information, but we may not know for many years. As technology becomes more sophisticated, important ethical questions will be raised about methods of gathering history. In the past, it was written memos and records. Now we are getting tapes. Video may well be used one day. Would a president be right in wiring the Oval Office for both sight and sound? Where do you draw the line? If the FDR tapes offer nothing particularly significant in the years to come, then the ethical cost is low. However, if it legitimizes the use of force, as a precedent, then it may not have been worth it. 2013/3/4 10:09 We have only our McChains to lose Saturday night at work, at cookup a pizza place off 23rd Street, had dragged on through about three to many rushes into midnight. Felt nounded, rolled, baked, baked and sliced. Chugging for home through the chilly night, I turned down 23rd Street for a bite before bed. I gurned my knocking '67 Camaro into the Parking perk lot. As I pressed down on the gas pedal, I imagined I was stomping my boss' heavy foot beneath mine. Chuck, the boss man, Ungrateful. Exploitive. Small-minded. I crossed the parking lot and was two steps from the door when a charged, male voice bellowed from the back corner of the building, "Halt citizen." I turned to see a stout old man with his feet planted on the concrete, one foot a step ahead of the other. He jerked up one arm, pointed at me and said firmly, "Declare your class allegiance, citizen. The people await your example." Who . . . class allegiance? "Asinine schoolboy, foolish child of American capitalism." he answered. capitalism, to the capitalism. He hurled the words like a boy pitching a curve with his oldest baseball; the man was familiar with his weapons. He walked toward me into the brighter light. Seeing his burtly tumple of wiry, gray hair, his face, I knew him; I shivered as if he'd slid an icicle down my spine. Karl Marx was supposed to be buried in London under a 2-foot granite gravestone. He'd heard rumors that his spirit had been causing trouble in Poland. But to find him wandering the dark streets of Lawrence, he'd been standing in front of me was another story. “You're wrong there, sir” I said. “Just a thought myself. Have I got a story for you.” His grizzly face was now only an arm's length from mine. "Blind, uncaring student, during the days you pretend to study political theory, and during the nights, you sweat like fleshy machines in meaningless jobs. You, student employee, are exploited by the fast food empire, and you cover before it." I dropped to sit on one of the wooden benches. He followed. And that's how I found myself sitting with Karl Marx on a chilly January night outside Paul Schuster's apartment. One of the cooks didn't show for work, I told Marx. That left me rolling pizza dough, saucing and chewing for the two cooks tapping pizzas. Plus I pulled pizzas out of the oven and answered the telephone. I toiled for hours, doing the work of two cooks. Then I remembered that those were still JEFF THOMAS I took Chuck aside after we closed and asked for a raise. Of course, Karr, he refused. hours at minimum wage. I'd been working there for more than one year. "You lack common sense for a college student," Chuck told me. He was saying this to the same employee he had offered a position as assistant manager last summer. I suspected that the real story was that he knew I couldn't afford to quit, or even to take the time to look for another job. He had me by the utility bills. Ungrateful. Exploitive. Small-minded. And stingy. "You one good." Karl said, facing me, "look down this road. Perkins has about 60 employees; one half are KU students. The same numbers are true at Wendy's. Pizza Hut has 15 employees and 11 are students. Now is the time for student employees to join together." "Are you talking about a union, a strike?" I asked cautiously. "Don't wilt before the fight, comrade," he commanded, clincing my arm as if strengthening me. "I've heard you damn the whole fast food phenomenon under your breath. You know it reduces people to mindless machines, rolling, squeezing, poking, slicing, frying and bagging this or that like an assembly line." He carried himself away with his language, I thought, but he was right to a point. the gorgeousse employers oppress you far as law will allow," he said. "You are young adults sweating even when eagle regulators talk of taking that much away from you." Karl was right on one point: many student employees are like links in a conveyor belt moving cars, food and dollars down 23rd Street. I AM NOT A CROOK. At least as long as we're in school, the spirit of job dissatisfaction probably won't haunt our lives too seriously. Our lives and our jobs are already scheduled to change. It is Maureen and those like her in restaurants and factories who could take the troubling apportion more seriously. Karl may yet appear again. Lawrence has many like Maureen, restaurant workers in transience. They seem to have found their niche and given up on it, because they are not a good restaurant. they make it different for a while. While the strip may be the crass side of American culinary success, we're only stationed there as students, not professionals. We're there for a year or two, not for a career. Karl had been giving me his silent attention for the last few minutes. It was as if he had been listening to my thoughts, I'd told him, "No." He gave my arm another squeeze, rose and walked slowly back in the direction he'd come. A sharp breeze blew through the parking lot, and Karl faded. I sat recovering for a few minutes. Then for some reason, I thought of Maureen, a middle-aged waitress at the pizza place. Since marrying when she was 20, she'd wandered among Lawrence restaurants as a waitress and cashier. KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom--864-4810 Business Office--864-4358 USS (656-46) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except September. Student pay is $20 for each session at Lawrence, Kansas for an hour or $62 for a day in Douglas County and $183 for a year outside the county. Student instruction are $1 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily School, Flint Haitu. The University of Kansas Lawrence Business Manager Vanessa Herron Nataleen Julie Managing Editor Educational Editor Karen Schlumberger Campus Editor Gene George Associate Campaign Editor Gene George Assistant Campaign Editors Jobe Rebein, Rebecca Chaney Assignment Editor Reinobrahn Sports Editor Ron Maggerton Associates Sports Editor Gimli Stripeltaintenance Editor Garal Beach Training Editor Lia Massey, Lincoln Davis, Shari Applegate Wors Worrs Eileen Markey, Teresa Riordan, Lia Massey Bigger Wors Worrs Connectors Jon Hardkey, John Hardkey, John Estlebe Bob Greenquan, Treacy Thompson, Jane Beany Head Copy Chief Copy Chiefs Cindy Campbell, Chris Color, George Pollock Columnists Bren Abbott, Dan Bowley, Chris Colder,丹 Torcia,Jolyn WA Lisa贝莎 Tom Bnontrager, Jeff Thomas, Kevin Williams, John Willeman Editorial Cartons Staff Artists Joe Barton, John Richardson, Bill Wyll Jan Bryan, John Reed, Loretta Laughain Staff Writers John Harrington, Jam Carol Licht, Catty Belan, Elizabeth Morgan Retail Sales Manager Ann Horberger National Sales Manager Perry Shallowy Campus Sales Manager Perry Brew Classified Manager Susan Booth Production Manager Larry Lehmann Staff Writers John Egan Retail Sales Representatives Kirk Bruni Larry Burmander, Sam Gookey, Richard Dagan, Amy Jones, Matthew Langue, Phillip Macnabarla, Li McMahon, Mindy Jerwin Kattyn Myers, Obi Bianny, Mike Pearl, Sesse Jandre, Wenderson Chuck Blumberg, Kadiy Daggan, Denise A. Popovich, Vivien Campus Interiors Marketing and Advertising Rick Mancher Advertiser Rick Mancher University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1982 Page 5 at t, id s. bn Group backs women's sports By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter Kansas Women's Sports Inc. is growing stronger and speaking louder in its support of women's athletics at the University of Kansas, according to the president of KWSL. Marilyn Ainsworth, KU law professor and president of KWSI, said the group targeted its first membership drive toward unclassified women faculty and staff members, parents of women athletes and alumni athletes and unclassified faculty and staff are University employees who are made part hourly basis but are under different contract agreements. NOT ALL the members are women. Wes Santee, former Olympic runner and Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, and Athetic Corporation are members. Smith said. The Kansas Union Bookstore has KWSI membership forms and a box for purchase at the Kansas Union Bookstore. profit" dividends. Each semester the bookstore redeems about six percent of the total amount of receipts from the previous semester. The retired wing winger of KOK. Mike Reid, assistant manager of the bookstore, announced last week that $800 had been collected so far. KWSI was started three years ago by Carol Shankel, public information coordinator at Spencer Art Museum, and Carryl Smith, dean of KWSI who directs its efforts on behalf of KWR women athletes. "We knew a lot of people who were interested in women's sports and we tried to get information out to support the athletes and coaches." Smith said. SINCE THEN, KWSI has become incorporated, has gained tax-exempt status from the Internal Revenue Service and has received a bulk-mail permit from the nost office. Ainsworth said that at a luncheon last spring, Bob Marcum, former KU athletic director, requested suggestions for the athletic department to work on improving the ticketing and timing arrangements for the doubleheader men's and women's basketball games She never received an answer to or acknowledgment of the letter, she said. "We made the suggestions initially at his request," she said. It makes you wonder if the invitation simply empty. A copy of the letter was sent to the University of Kangas Athletic Corporation. THE WOMEN's games begin at 5:15 p.m., too early for many people, especially those who work, to get to Lawrence during the week to watch them, she said. "Some fans have suggested that the men's games be moved to 8:30 p.m. or 9 p.m., with women's games then starting at 6:30 p.m. or 7 p.m." she wrote. Brinkman said KUAC did not put the item on its agenda because it was not a decision under its control. He said KUAC was a policy-making body and did not set times for the games. ALTHOUGH KUAC received a copy of the letter, it did not respond because members thought the letter was purely informational, Brinkman said. Junk From page 1 two years ago, his son Ralph and daughter-in-law Melody have continued the tradition. "We get a lot of locals, but 75 percent of our customers are college kids." Melody Smith One Sunday evening, the Joe's patrons—college girl in sweat suits—ordered sandwiches and lemonade. "Tomorrow we diet," said one, her mouth full. "At night is when we really run people through, after people have been studying or out drinking," Ralph Smith said, as he rolled out cinnampt twists. At Baskin-Robins 31 Flavors Ice Cream Store, 1524 W. 23rd St., people in sweat pants and suits pressed to the glass counter to place their orders. ONE COLLEGE student ordered a double dip cone with chocolate chip and dijon ice cream, topped with salt. Todd Martin, an employee at the store, said the busiest time was from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. "Everybody's just finished dinner. We make our own ice cream pies and people come in and buy it to eat for dessert at the end of the day or to 9 p.m. students are taking a study break." In 1979, 819 million gallons of ice cream, 297 million gallons of ice milk and 45 million gallons of sherbet were produced in the U.S. according to the U.S. Statistical Abstract. The average American consumed 17.6 pounds of ice cream that year. The average American also consumed 91.3 pounds of sugar and 3.3 pounds of cocoa beans. "Dark chocolate is nutritious because it gives you a lift and stimulates your muscles," John Bowen, co-owner of Chocolate Unlimited Inc., 1601 W. 29th St., said. Chocolate is perhaps the most craved and controversial snack item. BUT BOWEN doesn't let his children have chocolate because "the sugar content winds However, most people, unless they're diabetic or hypoglycemic, have blood sugar levels that stay about the same, regardless of whether they are taking the same medication. Pan Manerum, dietitian at Watkins Hospital. "it's more of a psychological high than a physical one," Mangrum said. "It's not like a locomotive. If you add coal, a locomotive will go faster. Bodies aren't like that. "There's only so much sugar your body can use at a given point. The extra fuel will go to you," she said. In a pamphlet issued to nutritionists and dietitians, the Chocolate Manufacturers Association of the United States said that studies had not borne out accusations that "chocolate causes acne, contributes to obesity, or promotes tooth decay in children." Lee Bittenbender, Lawrence dermatologist, said that there was no scientific evidence to support restricting a diet for the treatment. So such action was "unnecessarily punitive." "Just because Joe Blow eats candy bars and gets zits doesn't mean who who eats cany will get acne." Bittenbender said. SOME PEOPLE have switched to eating carab instead of chocolate because it doesn't contain caffeine and has been purported to be more nutritious. The Chocolate Manufacturers Association—and carab was introduced—from 19 to 39 percent—and lower in nutritional value than chocolate. "Granola bars and nut mixes with carob are not bad as a snack for someone who needs to gain weight or for active people, but they're not a good way to diet." "Carob had been glorified as a health food. It's really not," Mangrum said, "as a matter of tradition." Jolly said manufacturers advertised differences between candy bars and granola bars "to reach out and sell you something ana take your money." However, Jolly, Larsen and Mangrum agreed that snacking in moderation was fine as long as snacks were included in a well-balanced diet. MANGRUM recommended snacking on raw vegetables, fruits and whole grains as well. Jolly said people should take advantage of coffee breaks, but should eat cheese and bread. "Once you start people with that nutritional knowledge, you give them an awareness so they don't eat three candy bars and drink three colas while they're studying," he said. on campus THE UNDERGRADEM ART AND CABINET INSTRUCTIONS at 8:30 p.m. in the Art Design Building Gallery. TODAY THE DISABILITIES DISCUSSION GROUP, sponsored by the Students Concerned with Disabilities, will meet at 4 p.m. in 7-D. Lippincott Hall. A WOMEN'S SUPPORT GROUP, sponsored by the Emily Taylor's Women's Resource Center, will meet from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in the Regionalists Room of the Kansas Union. THE MINORITY AFFAIRS BLACK BREED will be shown in 400 (3rd Stem Hall) THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a DUTCH LUNCH for members from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union A MASTERS RECITAL will be performed by the orchestra on clarinet at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. TOMORROW THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. There will be a HILLEL LUNCH from 12:15 to 1:15 p.m. in Cork if I of the Kansas Union. Morris Kleiner, associate professor of business, will speak on "Ethical Ethics and Business." There will be a FACULTY RECITAL per- formance on MONOCHON on saxophone at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Rockefeller. There will be a STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES LEADERS WORKSHOP at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union Patrons enjoy quieter Watson library The sign in Watson Library that reads "Ignore the jackhammer"" is gone. "The major part of renovation is finished." Cliff Haka, circulation librarian, said recently. Students no longer have to study amidst the noise, dust and moisture in renovation areas, which began in May 1980. high-use service areas are concentrated on the main entrance floor and one floor up from them, so patrons don't have to wander around as much." "It is a lot better than before." Rich Meadow, D.J., N.J. junior, "It's cleaner and quieter." "The key difference," Haka said, "is that the Students can sign up for tours of the renovated library in the main entrance of the library. Haka said the library now had central heating and air-conditioning to maintain constant temperature and humidity levels for book preservation. Meeting From page 1 Lawrence, said Kansas' wealth could turn against the state under Reagan's plan. lving these programs back to the states is a question of national unity. Some states are just weak. "The president said you could vote with your feet by moving to another state," she said. "Kansas could draw the unemployed and the poor from other states." Charlton said federal control of social programs "has bound us into a nation, rather than into a system." Harder said federal law prohibited SRS from withholding aid to non-residents. But he said he did not think Reagan's plan would bring a surge of newcomers to Kansas. UNEMPLOYMENT is the key factor in welfare issues, Harder said. And he is not optimistic about the ability of Reaganismics to create new jobs and decrease the need for social support. "The people in Detroit are moving to Houston in hordes," he said. "But Houston's a boom town. We don't have anything like a boom town happening in Kansas." unemployment recently," he said. "But often they unwilling to accept any new services that are suitable for social services." "We've seen a nudge of improvement in State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said Reagan's plan would create further need for welfare because federal taxes were more considerable of the poor than state taxes, which would have to be raised substantially to implement the new federalism. "The fairest tax we have is the federal income tax," he said. "It doesn't hurt the poor disproportionately heavier than the rich. Every day Kansas is regressive by the poor by nature." Although the new federalism would throw many programs for the aging into a state of uncertainty, a retired Lawrence grade school teacher, who is one of the senior citizens of Lawrence were worried. "We're here, and we're going to have to be faced," said the teacher, Cecelia Pearson. "There's so many more elderly now than there are young people, and 10 years from now they will be even more." "It's something we're going to have to do something about. I don't know that the federal programs can do it all. I'm willing to see what Kansas can do." VALID ID CARDS Instantly Laminated Color available at I - DENT SYSTEMS Room 1146 Bandalal Room 841-5905 LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley 842 7870 843 8772 Prudential Health Care Insurance Boyd's Coins-Antiques Class Rarity: Bull-Metal - Trade Gold - Silver - Coins 731 New Hampshire 91-814-2673 91-814-2773 SAVE ON This Week! STYLE UP TO $25 OFF! SILADIUM COLLEGE RINGS NOW ONLY $9995 We've got what you want—a handsomely styled selection of college rings at a price you can afford. SILADIUM® College Rings carefully crafted in the ArtCarved tradition from a fine and durable jeweler's metal. Add your choice of custom options to the design you select and you'll have a ring you'll want to wear for years to come. But don't delay, Visit the ArtCarved Ring Table and get your ring at a price that's too good to last! ARTCARVED CLASS RINGS INC ThisWeek! UVERSITY • LACROSSE 19 COLLEGE CENTER COLLEGE DATE: TIME February 1-3 PLACE: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. DEPOSIT REQUIRED, MASTERCARD OR VIS ACCEPTED Kansas Union Bookstores ©1982 ART CARVED CLASS RING5. INC monday madness Fast...Free Delivery 841-7900 1445 W. 23rd St. 841-8002 610 Florida Hours: 4:30 - 1:00 Sun. • Thurs. 4:30 - 2:00 Fri. & Sat. Limited delivery area. ©1982 Domino's Pizza, Inc. DOMINO'S PIZZA Good Mondays only... ice cream 1G 1 item Pizza plus 2 free cups of Pepsi Price includes tax. One coupon per pizza 3.00/pi $6.50 Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations. Our drivers carry less than $10.00. 19985/6301-2 University-Community Service Scholarship Award As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift. Qualifications - Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term). - *Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community - Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. Applications "Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Tuesday, February 16, 1982 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held February 23, 1982. *More information and applications available in the SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477. Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1982 Support groups start tonight The Emily Taylor Women's Resource and Career Center is sponsoring women's support groups, which begin tonight. Elise Pinney, graduate assistant at the Center, and Paula Seikel, teaching assistant in psychology, will coordinate the support groups. Pinney said the reason for organizing the groups was support, not necessarily consciousness-raising. "We want women to respond to each other in an accepting, nonjudgmental atmosphere so that we can connect on in each others' lives." she said. SHE SAID they hoped to encourage camaraderie among women and acceptance of other women's values. They plan to bring together women of varied backgrounds and political persuasions in groups of eight to 10. Pre-registration is required. More information may be obtained by calling the Women's Resource Center at 864-3552. Pinney said the first meeting would include an initial assessment to see what topics and issues women want to work on. The sessions will run for 12 weeks, 6:30:30 p.m. on Mondays in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. The support groups are jointly sponsored by the Resource Center and the KU Psychological Clinic. 50% off cover price *********************************************************** OREAD BOOK SHOP Moonwatch Club Quality Paperback Book Sale. V25A Come join us at our extraordinary Outstanding current and backlist items from level 3. Kansas University. R-30'5 Wenkfurt 10-4 Saturdays 864-4431 that they have a lot of support from the national (organization)." Collins said. ********************************************************** McDowell, who has been in Lawrence for a month preparing for the special rush, said, "It was in the air that it started with the girls, you knew that it would work." Carol DeSelm, KU Sigma Kapu president, said the members were realistic about the membership problems. "We all understand that something had to be done. If we had it to do on our own, we probably would have picked the same people," Deelim said. Tie InWithUs Recreation Services One-On-One Basketball Tournament One of the new pledges, Erin McCree Olathe the freshman, said, "I like the challenges. It'll be tough getting the back on its feet. I think we can do it." to understand what was going on," Collins said of the present members, who were excluded from the process of selecting new members. PURITAN-BENNETT, progressive leader of design, manufacture and marketing of state-of-the-art medical respiratory and pulmonary equipment is interested in you One-On-One Basketball Tournament will begin Saturday February 6 at 10:00 a.m. In the Robinson Gyms. Entry deadline is 5:00 p.m. Wednesday, February 3 in 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546. Friday, February 5 We are medium sized with steady growth patterns and net sales of $133 million. Positions are available in California, Kansas and Massachusetts for prospective positions in ANALIC AND INDUSTRIAL DESIGN ENGINEERING. Carol McDowell, a traveling consultant for Sigma Kappa, will stay at the house for the spring semester to advise the chapter. Pledge Brenda Darrow, Salina junior, said she also was challenged by the opportunity to rebuild the house. R Sign up now for an interview with us. See the BANNET-BENNITT file in your College Planning & Placement Center. It interview not convenient send resume to Personnel Manager/College Recruiting PURITAN-BENNETT CORPORATION Exciting Careers For BS/MS Engineering Graduates... General Offices Dale at Thirteenth Streets Kansas City, Mo. 64106 On Campus Interviews P "I could walk in and share my leadership experiences," she said. "We get to make what we want here." Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer "We'll be very careful about seeing FIND OUT ABOUT THE NEW HP-IL PRODUCTS MEET WITH THE HEWLETT-PACKARD EXPERT! SPECIAL SALE PRICE ON HP 4IC CALCULATOR $199.95 Sorority gains 48 pledges in special rush PLACE: KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES MAIN UNION, LEVEL 2 The entire rush was conducted by representatives from the national organization without the participation of present members of the house. TIME: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. √ DATE: FEB. 3 THE SIGMA KAPPA special rush began last Monday. Interested students were interviewed throughout the week and those who responded were interviewed were asked to sign pledge cards and were formally pledged at a Saturday morning ceremony. A reception in their honor was held early afternoon at the SIGma Kappa house. Ernestine Collins, Sigma Kappa national president, said Saturday that the KU chapter would become active again in campus activities. HEWLETT PACKARD √ The Sigma Kappa security more than doubled its membership when it pledged 48 new members Saturday morning at the end of a week-long special rush conducted by its national officers. union bookstores main union level 2, satellite shop "They're right back in it as of now," Collins said. kansas Colins said that nearly half the new pledge class were freshmen, and most of the remainder were sophomores. The decision to hold a special rush was made by national officers last summer after membership at the KU chapter had dwindled to 29 active members, Collins said. The house has a capacity of 67. KU Cold Beer Bud, Coors and Miller At Your KM Store 9th and Illinois Use Kansan Classified RALEIGH·FUJI·PUCH One Day Repair Service We Service All Bikes 841-6642 RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 Vermont Lawrence, KS 66044 SST PRESTONS OF THE NORTH DON'T MISS CALVIN COOLIDGE K. C.'s Top Comedian Tuos. Feb. 2 Show Starts at 9:00 Plus --you can buy ... $1.75 White and Black Russians $2.00 cover 815 N Hampshire Tuesday Night Special Buy One Corn Dog GET ONE FREE Feb 2 only 4 pm to close 1527 W. 6th Vista RESTAURANTS For 50¢ *crotchless underwear at the Salvation Army *a shoe lace *5 packs of ketchup *a half deck of cards *edential laces TUESDAY 10' draws for everyone from 9:00-12:00 Ladies night 50' for a glass of champagne from 9:00-12:00 and on MONDAY NIGHTS 50° PITCHERS from 7 p.m.-Midnight $1.00 Bar Drinks Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. WEDNESDAY "hooker" in the house for 75℃ 1401 West 7th 843-0540 2 the SANCTUARY ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS If you have at least four semesters remaining at KU, you may be eligible. Air Force ROTC is filling pilot, navigator, nurse, and science and engineering positions right now. Remember: Joe Engle started the career that led to command of the Columbia with Air Force ROTC here at KU. You too can start on the road to a rewarding, exciting career there. Check it out. But hurry, our quotas in some fields fill quickly. Room 108, Military Science Building, Phone 864-4676. AIR FORCE ROTC Gateway to a great way of life. MARCH 13-19 TAOS . . . A world of its own: vast uncrowded, powder slopes under a brilliant blue sky; slopes for all levels of skiing; the historic town of Taos . . . $303 includes transportation, 4 nights lodging, ski rental & 4 days lift tickets. SKI TAOS SKI TAOS Last day to sign up: Mon., Feb. 8th, at the SUA office, Kansas Union 864-3477 WE KNOW SOME SURPRISE FACTS ABOUT THINNING HAIR. --- We can't stop thinning hair. But we can make the most of the hair you have, because we have the latest scientific data on thinning hair. For instance, we know ways to cut and style thinning hair so it looks better. We also know that as hair thins, it becomes finer. So building it up is essential. Then too, as hair thiners, the scalp often secretes more oil, which holds hair down, makes it even thinner. So controlling oil is important, too. Now there's a scientific system to deal with these problems. First, we design the right style. Then we use and prescribe the new RK Thinning Hair System by Redkern", a lineup of proven products created specifically to give a man's thinning hair more fullness, control and predictability. Stop by today and let us show you just how full thinning hair can really look You may be very pleasantly surprised. REDKEN Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her. ast et, id. is. hn Gentleman's Quarters GQ 611 West 9th * 843-2138 * Lawrence University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1982 st t. d. s. Page 7 from the said. awrence special that it e girls, Men's track team takes third By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer McCree like the ting the e can do The KU men's track team took third place at the Missouri Invitational indoor track meet in Columbia, Mo., last weekend. The Jayhawks were edged out of second place by Missouri, who out-scored KU 45-43. 5. Oklahoma State won the meet with 57.5 points. Salina angled by use. WHILE THE Jayhaws failed to qualify anyone else for the NCAA indoor meet in March, they did get several good performances. Pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham tied his personal indoor best with a 17-4 vault to take second. Sprinter John Sease won the 60-yard hurdles with a 7.14 time. Rodney Bullock, who has already qualified for nationals in three events, won the 440-yard dash in 48.46 and Kevin Graham won the triple jump with a 48.34-mar Besides Buckingham's vault, the Jayhawks took first in three events. Despite being topped by two other Big Eight teams, KU head coach track Bob Timmons said he didn't rule the Jayhawks out of the conference indoor championship. KU is the defending Big Eight indoor championship. "I'M NOT at all discouraged." The Kansas women's swim team picked up a pair of victories this weekend as it defeated Southern Illinois and Missouri while the men's team, also in Columbia, lost to Missouri 89-44. The women's team beat SIU 76-73 and Missouri 104-45. "AS LONG as I've been here we've never defeated anyone in a dual meet who had beat us in the tournament and that was important," Kernfad said. JAYHAWK NOTES: KU high jumper and basketball player Tyke Peacock was named the number one high jumper in the world by Track and Field magazine recently, Peacock, who won the high jump at the World Cup Games in Rome last September, set an Allen Field House record when he jumped a new height against Kansas State. The magazine also named former KU sprinter Clifford Wiley number one in the world in the 400-meter run. "The women didn't swim very fast, but they swam competitive. When we had to swim well, we did." Women swimmers win; men lose "We knew whoever won the 400 individual medley would win the meet." Coach Gary Kempf said it was important for the Jayhawks to win. Timmons said. "I'm disappointed that we lost, but I don't think we're out of it at all. Jenny Wagstaff won the third in 4:31.3 and Kelly Burke placed third to put KU ahead. Wagstaff earlier won the 200 freestyle. Tammy Thomas won the 50 and 100 freestyle for K11. Bv MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer IN THE men's meet, KU was only able to place one swimmer in most events. Nou Renulent set an all-time Big Eight record in the 1,000 freestyle with a time of 9:22.7. He also won the 500 freestyle at 4:38.1. The men's team has three dual meets left. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one twenty $2.50 four twenty $3.00 four five twenty $4.00 four six twenty $5.00 six seven eight nine十二十九 eleven twenty $6.00 twenty twelve twenty十三 twenty十四 twenty十五 twenty十六 twenty十七 twenty十八 twenty十九 ten twenty十九 eleven twenty十九 eleven二 AD DEADLINES to run Monday Friday 2 p.m. Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m. Wednesday Friday 2 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996. ff KOA Laundromat. Free dry with $75 wash By the Airport. East highway 24. 842-3877. ERRORS The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. THE ETC SHOP 10 WEST 9th (West of The Candy Store) Vintage and classic contemporary clothing—wool skirts, sweaters, sport coats, lacey blouses, coasts, hats, gloves, formal wear. Prepare for LSAT exam. 2-day seminar. Prepare for SAT math. 3-day seminar. From Stanford. Lectures, practice exams. From Oxford. Practice exams. wisely Preparatory School. 211, Charlotte. Kansas City. 363-1283. Cost in $75. Register www.lsat.org. *Must see to believe.* Furnished rooms with new university & downstairs. No pets. Phone 843-525-7601. Applications for Foundation Foundation school-mission for 1983-1984 are being accepted from July 20th to August 5th will be March 1, 1982. Contact Ally Allen, Press, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone 625-1234. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864.4358 For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. tt HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished, bedroom, bath, laundry and kitchen. 18th & 18th on Mass. Only 2 blocks from SUNY College. Available for delivery to DON'T DELIVER by air. A month - water park. 84129 or 842-4450. PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS, for somnithats, wood burning fireplace, for somnithats, wood burning fireplace, water dryer, hookup, fully equipped @20-50 3-10 day at 2080 Princeton Dr. or 2075 Princeton Blvd. room for rent. $90. New fire alarm system, plumbing & electrical. C18-3228 between 8-5. Also efficiency building, newly re- corded. $178 a month all utilities paid. Studiosia atmosphere, international meals, supplies, equipment and training for six cooperative group unit staff. UFILITIES INCLUDE: Large house and laundry, Call 811-7692. Call them Good room in large furnished house block from Union. Utilities paid. 843-5308 after 5-24 No pets. Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt. unfurnished, carpeted & drapery. Call for details. to enquire. Expand to cuship. and on bus route. $35 per month. no. pet. MEDBADOWRHOOK 11th & Crestall. 925-850-2367 Two-bedroom duplex with garage and deck. 24th and Ousdaul. $250, 841-8667 or 1-782- 3716. **tf** Acme lease, unfurnished 8th Apt. App. to university. $250/mo plus utilities. Call 816-587-9596 or 842-8696 6:3 pm. New two bedroom apartment, low utilities, two blocks KU, central air, equipped kitchen, carpet and draps. 1104 Tenn. Call 92-2- 4242 Brand new 3-bedroom houses, $245 and $450, 81-471-397 or 81-472-751 2-11 Victoria Capira Prats, 1 & 2 BR apts, also have studios in lit. away from tennis and basketball courts. Within walking distance of KU campus. Call 420-7033. 2-4 ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished townhouses available immediately. Flexible rentals available upon request. See! Located on 13th & Ohio. Only two bedrooms. Call 841-255-8142. 841-255-8146. Available anytime 2 bdm. apt. Dispax. & dishwasher. Water paid. Good location. Call numbers: 749-2835 2-3 Luxury display on bus route; all appliances reasonable rent. Call 842-0361. 2-3 For female. A small apt with kitchenette for rent. Just 2 blocks from campus. $125 per month includes utilities. Call 842-6731. 2-1 Roommate need for 3 bedroom house. 1329 Kentucky St. $116 + 1/3 utilities. Call 841-0557 anytime 2-9 Amy Croft, Apta. Quint, Speacial, fully carpeted and dressed 2 bedroom Apt for garages for families or groups. Pool, dishwasher. A-Circulation in $15 per month. Call 648-309-8075. 2 Br aid on bus route, convenience to shop. Complete kitchen computer drape, air-air heat garage available. Shown by appointment. Call 841-664-212 - 12 For second semester, bedroom; bath in quiet home. Private entrance: 843-9213 after 6 pm. 2-3 Sub-lease 2 Br. ant. complete kitchen carpet-drapes, central air-heat. Call 841-6866 2-12 1 br. apt. $180 a month + utilities, walking distance from campus 483-6725 2-9 Sublease nice two bedroom apt, low utilities, on bus route, convenient to shopping Call 842-4461. 2-3 Large studio. Carpeted, newly remodeled. Wash-dery衣 in basement. 2 blocks from campus. Rent negotiable. 749-270 or 913- 488-3611 2-5 $200 month起_2 bedroom apt. Near new apartments, close to campus. Normally rent for $300. 1st come. 1st nerve basis. No Pta. 843-1798. 2-5 1. dbm. apt. for sub-lease until July 31, 2012. $825.45 mow, bus route note. Feb 15. Receive rent for Feb. 15. L. Avation Rd. Call 842-7531 or 841-6069-5-25 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Made sense out of Western Civilization (Mike) Made sense out of Western Civilization 2 For class preparation, 3 For exam preparation 4 For exam preparation, 5 For exam preparation available at town CTown. The rest available at town CTown. Alternator, starter and generator specialists, Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-3069, 3800 W. 6th. Alter-Lanting Series Nine speakers, rated 250 watts, adjustable crossers. Make offer. Call 841-4765 anytime. 2-3 19" Sony color TV. Slightly damaged in shipment. Reduced for clearance. Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass. 2-3 G. E. portable cassette recorders. 3 free tapes with every unit purchased before 2-10-82 Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 2-3 73 VW Bug, Good condition $1500 More 2-3rms 电话: 864-2238 weekdays FARFISA ORGAN two keyboard in great condition. Get that "96 tears" sound. Under $160. 843-1052 2-1 1979 Mazda Hatchback, clean, A.C., Automatic, 25,000 miles, $3900, 843-4295. trying 2-4 Nordica Comp Ski skis size 9 Only used for 7 days of 15k charges $150. Compaired 4-28. 2 Must saerifice, 1977 Camaro Z-28 black. Cragars, detailed completely. Must see $430.00, 749-4410. 3-11 1972 Chevelle. New paint, Mags, Pioneer AM/FM/Cass, Many extra parts, Beautiful Jim, Jimm, 842-1583. 2-3 Booksauce and stereo cabinet of solid woods with 247 booksauces $3 each. I also make music CDs with a variety of music. Tables. Kansas hardwoods available. Michael 503 West 10th. Mint Sat.; 843-892-892 Realistic Minimus 7 miniature speakers. Realistic Minius 7 great sound for car, or car 843-1540 2-2 Car Stereo Pioneer Super Tuner and Pioneer Power Amplifier. 749-2374. 2-5 1976 Triumph TRY. Very low mileage, AM-FM 8-track, Michelens, very sharp. Most see 749-3728, 749-4676. Keep trying, please. 2.3 Blue gloves left in Lawrence Memorial Emergency Room by man who helped woman after accident on Wellman Rd on January 19, 2008. So weary he gleaned your name. LAB SERIES guitar amp, 2-12" skrps., 100 watts, cover, excellent condition, $325, 842, 1617. 2-4 Energic personable waitresses wanted. Must be hard work and able to perform all job duties including hourly wage plus tip, commission plus travel and Southern Hills Shopping Center-2-8. HELP WANTED Found contact lenses in 119 Haworth, before Christmas. Call 4-3446 to claim. 2-1 FOUND, near Pteradactyl. Holmer harmonica 749-2625. evenings: Describe to claim. 2-3 FOUND CRUISERS, RESORTS SAILING EXPEDITIONS Counries Europe, Canada Worldwide Business International WORLD OFFICES GUIDE to CRUISE OPENINGS 153 Box 60129 Sacramento, CA Found, a medium sized English Setter type dog. While with black spots. West Hills area, 841-4872 after 5. 2-1 Blue ski gloves in 312 South (Strong), 749- 0874, 2-1 Stockbroker trainee. College grad—Exciting opportunity for hard working, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individual. Rep P.O. B.O. 157 Red Bank, N.J. 07018. Use your spare time to earn money for those "extra." Aggressive self-starters, only Field of total health and fitness. For appointment. Call 842-8870. Part time opportunity distributing literature. Call collect after 6:00 - 1-501-935-4679. 2-4 Bureau of Child Research has student scores in the "appropriate typing ability required." Prefer previous employment. Requires 1st year education. Mildly Disabled. 11, Howitz Law for application to federal job. Firmative Action Employer. Closing deadline is August 25, 2013. ART-TIME INCOME. Earn $10 for 10 minute demonstration. Unique, high quality materials and equipment required. Requires. send $2 R. George Rm. $2736 Evergreen Drive. Edgewater Rm. 2736 The University of Kansas Libraries is seek- ing a full student vaccinations in a number of lat- titude daytime evening and weekend hours. For part-time job (Wilson 511) Walton Library or the Library Building, please contact Adrian --call or stop by the Want to be a Stuffer for the Kansan? If you are free on Wed. morns. 9:00-12:00 Wed. morns. 9:00-12:00 Kansan Business office. ask for John Oberzon or Howard Shalinsky POSITION OPENINGS: K.U. Residence Hall and School Directors. Must be sophomore, junior, or graduate assistant Residence Hall Directors. must be granting year Scholarship Hall Directors. Must be a graduate scholar. All applicants should evidence above group-living experience, and availability for job descriptions and job applications available now Strong Hall. Application deadline: February 18th. Opportunity affirmative action employs Student in hotel to help with housekeeping and dining. Must have own transportation. Must have a valid driver's license. Person interested in doing a house job in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, adaptable, have own house and ability to live in co-operative living. Call Darryl 841-836-3986 GREAT OPPORTUNITY - Commission sales person wanted part-time. Must have car and be able to work 15 hrs/week during holiday. Call Lafayette, 748-7429 for interview. **2-5** LOST Saito watch, brown leather hand. Reward! Call 864-2317 or 842-5646. Sentimental value. Ask for Ed. 2-1 Lost. Canon AE1 camera on Jan 26 in Miami, Florida. Please return. Reward: $418-3295 Prescription sunglasses in brown case, possibly near Carrorth or Flint. Reward. Call 864-4109 or 864-4755. 2-1 PERSONAL Grab to the Boogle in your own style of music. Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and theory lessons. All levels, freshness, versatility. Call Kurt Armstrong 814-841-8176 814-841-8176 2-16 Red and blue USA speedskating hat. Re- ward 841-8661 2-3 NOTICE Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screening 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swella 749-1611. if Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Compton stores. Wilford Skillet & Co., 206 E. 54th St., 843-818-866. MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. ¥f SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, WINTERKAMP, DILLON AND OTHERS Economical packages every weekday and school breaks. Call Ski Ec. 841-8388 www. skisports.com Instant passport, visa, ID, and resume photos. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. **tf** Hurt your back or neck when you slippes on the ice? Don't delay proper treatment. For modern chiropractic care drill Dr. Johnson's technique is keeping Lone Sage Blue Cross Insurance. 2-5 A sweetheart portrait for Valentines Day turns a simple thought into a lasting memory. Swells Studio 749-1611. 2-12 If you can't belong with that special person this Valentine's Day send the next best thing, a life size blow-up doll from FOOT-LIGHTS—25 & iowa, Holiday Plaza 3-4 TUTUNING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 641-9096 anytime b.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics, or call 864-1751 (ank) for Robert. tf PENTE sets at FOOTLIGHTS. Mention this pentetique in my Ponte purchase. Foottleights 25&tharpoons; and Foottleights 15&tharpoons; PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-4821. Valentine Parties—50% formula, tuxes, tuques, tailcoats. $399.00. Put together your outfit. Bags' second Hand Roses 111 Indiana. 842-7446. 2-11 Rangers—Weekly sessions on Kegs! $399.00. Put together your outfit. Bags' second Hand Roses 111 Indiana. 842-7446. 2-11 Select your party parties early. Barb's Second hand Rose 842-4765 511 Indiana. Brighten that special someone's birthday with a personalized birthday cake. Phone 841-6245. 2-5 Mary-Ellen Rodgers was so mad when she had her x-rated Valentines Day card she took the Beaver. FOOTLIGHTS, 25th & Iowa, 2-9 K.S.U.- Where Men are Men and Sheeets are Sheeets UMC M.O. Ibuz 1025 Lawrence UMC P.O. Box 1025 VAIL SKIING is now no-crowds or lines. Our 3-bedroom, 2-bathroom townhouse sleeps 6. Convenient to Beaver, Creek Skis 8 and Tahoe. March 21 (Wednesday) 9:45-7:15, March 31 (Friday) 9:45-7:15. TRAVEL CENTER ENTERTAINMENT - Worlds of Fun - Worlds of Fun - Kansas City Ch - Tiffany's Attic - Tiffany's Attic - Waldo Astorig - Waldo Astoria * Silver Dollar City - Silver Dollar City THE TRAVEL CENTER Travelina Near or Far Is For You! 841-7117 'HOME OF THE NEON PALM TREE' 1601 West 23rd St. Southern Hills Center 9-5:30 Mon-Fri • 9:30-2 Sat Tell that special person just what you really think with an X-rated card from FOOT-LIGHTS, 25th & Iowa. 2-9 Exquisite Valentines Day Gift - two Lirao figurines (Spanish porcelain) - "Kissing Boy" and "Girl with Candle" 842-0784. 9 am-10 pm. Discover champions: looking for sharp, ambitious couples together in the real estate world to own a small business. Work at own pace with small investors. Make your financial gains. Call on room to set personal goals. HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO KU'S MR. MAILMAN Double Nickel 2-1-82 Wasted, someone who loves drinking 50-pitcher on Mondays at the Sanctuary 7-90- 12.90 2-1 Begin planning for Valentine's Day early. Call today and arrange for a Valentine's D delivery of a Balloon-a-Gram. 841- 584K 2-5 Tau Sigma Dance Club Bash Friday, Feb 5. 8:00-12:00 pm in the B-8 room. Live band plus all the beer you can drink! 2-5 שְׁמַע Hillel Lunch "Jewish Ethics Morris Kleiner, assoc. prof. school of business Tuesday, February 2, 12:15 to 1:00 Cork 1 Kansas Union Cafeteria BATGHI MEETING scheduled Thursday, February 4th, 6:00 p.m in Baseball Field, second floor. Allen Fieldhouse. For information Call 864-419-196. ALL YOU CAN DRINK, $3.50 AT THE PLADIUM WED. NIGHT, 2-3 KY 102 Nightrocker Night with Randy Raley Wed, night at the Pladium! 2-3 Located at 709. W9: Lease one of our cars, and buy a bure fare now! Reserve your car now. To the CH RHO CH1's: Funchia and Black forever! Moderation is for Monk! From—A DEAD COCKROACH 2-2 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: Math homeworks? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 FUTURING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY, ENGINEERING 时间 (H.S.), in physics, MA in mathematics (2 yrs.), in engineering or related field. Get that job with a professionally prepared team. Work in the latest job building techniques in the field. Get lucky at the Pladium all you can drink $3.50 Wed. night. 2-3 Happy Birthday Betsy. Hope today is filled with love and laughter—Donna. 2-1 3 1/2 $ \textcircled{c} $ self service copies LETRASTER/PANTONE art graphic art products seminar Wed., February 3rd at 11:30 a.m-12 p.m in 31st Art & Design Building, 518 West Office at Systema, Vermont 843-3644. 2-3 now at WOMEN. DO YOU CARE ABOUT YOUR WORK as a team? Collective is a group of campus and community members who are distributing information concerning women's health - 843-904, 844-356, or drop by B11e Uni HOTEL CORPS 25th and Iowa 842-2001 Experienced English teacher will tutor grammar, composition, literature. Domestic or foreign students. 841-0911 evenings. 2-3 WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Stop by The House of Uber and visit us on resume or in house of Uber. 8-Mar 9-Sat. NOON-3-Sun. if you Experience editor (45 xr./grad student) will edit theses, dissertations. All disciplines: 843-8969 after 6. 2-5 Scheider Wine & Keg Shop -The finest selection of wine in Lawrences-largest supplier of strong kegs. 1600 W. 23rd. 843-3212. Beginning voice (singing) students. $5.00 1/2 hr. 812-0638, 2-3 Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Encore 822-2001, Stlw and 1-2-26 LEXTRAN PANTONE graphic art products in wristwear. February 4th at 11:30am - 1:20pm. Art & Design Building - Art & Design Office. Vermont, 843-654-364. 2-3 TYPING it's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820 tt Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. JBM correcting seectric Call Donna at 842-2744. If Experienced typist, Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting, Sleetheir Or Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 840-3554 Mrs. Wright. tf Experienced typist. Theses, term, papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectric. Call Kilen, or Jean Ann Aum 841-2722. tf Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term papers, mime. JIBM correcting selective. Barb, after 5 p.m. #82-2310. tf QUALITY TYPEING Themes, Manuscripts, Dissertations, IBM Selectric, Girt Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 please. TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced trustist-IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-5675. **tf** Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience; IBM. Before 9 p.m. 749-2647. Ann lf Experienced typist, Excellent typing, IBM Experienced Selective, Eller of Pics, 6644 2014 For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4890. tf TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS IBM Corp. selecting Selinet, full-time tilt spelling correction to composition assistance, emergency service service. 841-297. Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, letters, legal, etc. Deb 843-9592 2-10 Professional typing. Dissertation, thesis, term paper, resume, letter, legal, etc. Deb. 843-3592 2-11 GOODBYE FINAL DRAFTS! Papers edited. polished typed No job too large or small. Reasonable 841-0811 evening! 2-3 Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retying your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore. Call 842-2061 for more information: 2-265 Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa. 842-2001. 2-26 WANTED Housemate wanted for rides 3 bedrooms at $120. Applicant must have details- $160, "1/2-Car for details~815", $300, "1/4-Car for details~796". GREAT DEAL 2 roommates needed to share beautiful old house apt 2 blocks from campus. $150/mo. utilities paid. no deposit. not due for Feb. 14th. (468) 845-43-2 not due for May. (468) 845-43-2 Roommate needed nice 2 BR $142.50 + 2-1 utilities Cell to phone 8p 79-279 2-1 Male roommate. No utilities. January rent $98.75 per mo. Call Kent collect (216) 788-0278. 2-23 Honors to students to shape 2 - BR duplex in their own hands. *W*1 = internal, *W*2 = external, *Cash* = 29, 843-1196 or 845-2061. Housemate wanted. Own room in 3-bed- room unit. Enclosed. 1 block from street. stadium. $137, 841-545-620, 2-5 ROOMMATE NEEDED TO SHARE EFACIOUS 4 BEDROOM DUPLX. Includes: - this wizard, furniture, utilities, locations, located for you. - more for call us Rusty 814-2813 - 8281. Roommate to share very nice furnished 2 BR apt 1 start to block on $110 + 1/4 util. 749-0585 or 843-2116 (1-5). 2-2 Roommate to share historic home with owner and two roommates, private bedroom. $100 + utilities. Call Matt 84-840. 2-1 Male roommate wanted to share new 2-8RD corder close to KU. Washer driver, fireplace, garage $175 + 1/2 utilities. 841-2845A. --- Non-smoking male to share fully furnished. bdrum: duplex $75/month + 1.5 utilities Close to campus; call after 7 pm $84-$851 Roommate needed immediately! Nice apartment. Bedroom. 1-2 baths. Utilities. 740 - 249. 2-5 Roommate wanted to share large house with two females. Close to campus and downtown. 841-7785, after 5:00 pm. FEMALE HOOMMATE, easy-eating, proper glice to campus. Very reasonable. BIRTH OR WEDDING RATHTHIR MEEKING SCHEDULED. Thurs- day, Oct 29. All hours. Offered room space. Allen Fieldhouse, Fairbanks. Three roommates to share duplex-three roommate. A small apartment, a smoker okay. 842-5104. 2° Person to share 3-BR home with two others. On bus route. $90/mo. 1/3 util. 841-5461 9.4 3rd female roommate Village Square 841-1903 2-4 Roommate 841-1903 BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan. 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 60405. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading Write Ad Here:___ Name:___ Address:___ Phone:___ Dates to Run Classified Display: 1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00 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 --- Sports Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 1, 1982 Guy, Magley lead KU back into race By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor As go Tony Guy and David Magley so do the Kansas Jayhawks. Once again that was the case Saturday night in the Jayhawks 55-85 victory over the Oklahoma State Cowboys. Guy, who had his second good shooting game in a row and appears to be out of his slump, the Jayhawks with 23 points while Magley, the leading rebounder in Big Eight Conference play, was the only other Jayhawk in double figures, scoring 14 points. He also grabbed 10 rebounds "IT is an absolute necessity that we have their leadership," Coach Ted Owens said. "They did a great job this week after the two losses (Missouri and K-State)." The co-captains have led KU to three straight victories to raise the djahywahs conference trophy. In those three games, Guy went 20 of 37 from the field, and 14 of 21 from the free throw line to score 54 points. Magley went 22 of 40 from the field, and 16 of 21 from the free throw line for 62 points and grabbed 29 rebounds. "When those two are on, it pumps the rest of us up," Brian Martin said. "Their leadership is so The importance of their leadership showed in the first four games of the conference. After those four conference games, KU stood 1-3 and Guy and Magley were struggling. IN THOSE games, Guy shot a meager 32 percent from the field and Magley was hitting only 38 percent, and the two of them did not combine for more than 21 points. "When we were in a slump it wasn't just the Martin. Martin said, 'Everybody was in a slump.' "one of us has to have a good shooting night for us to win." Macvee said. However, since the Jayhawks have returned home it has been a different story for Guy and Magley. One or the other has had a good shooting night, if not both of them. "Hopefully, we're out of our slump." Magley said. "I believe that I'm out of my slump." "I was lacking concentration," Guy said about his slump. "I was thinking about so many things." "Now I'm just being more aggressive when I get the ball." Guy's aggressiveness showed throughout Subplav's game. After the Sooners opened up a 8-0 lead three innings into the game, Guy went to work with the opposing team. THE TWO combined to score 14 of the first 10 points the Jaawks scored in the game. Guy had of the first 12 points, and, before you knew it, KU trailed only 17-16. They went on to score eight more points in the half to give KU a 32-29 lead at intermission. Guy hit a 16-foot jumper to give KU a five-point lead, 34-29. 'Any team that has any success needs leadership. They have to have guys to go to in tough situations. David and Tony are two such players.' —Assistant coach Bob Hill But after Guy's shot, the Sooners offed 10 straight points to open up a five-point lead. After the Jayhawks found themselves down by five, Gus inserts his leadership and ok control He scored the next six points to put the Jahvah背 back on top, 40-39. With the game close the rest of the way, the Jayhawks called upon Guy and Magley down the stretch. They scored the last five KU points and preserved the victory. "WHEN IT gets tough our teammates look to us, "Guay said. "They look up to us." "When they do that you want to come through so bad. That just puts more pressure on you than not." Being in a leadership role is something everybody dreams of. "That's what you work for in your career." Maley said. "You want to be a leader." However, the leadership role is different for the Jayhawks co-captains this year compared to years past. This year, there haven't been the attitude problems that KU has had in the past. "This is a great bunch of guys," Magley said. "There is no dissention," Guy said. "We sincerely care for one another." "This is one team where you can actually say that everybody on the team is a friend." ANOTHER AREA that differs from the years' past is that the newcomers on the team are accepting the leadership provided by Guy and Maley. "You couldn't ask for better captains," freshman guard Tad Boyle said. "They don't put themselves above the younger players on the team." "They lead by example, and they don't try to be authoritative. We are fortunate to have both of them." Hutchinson Junior College transfer Jeff Dishman agreed with Boyle, "I've seen a lot of older guys that put pressure on the younger guys on the team. David and Tony don't do that." "They don't harp on you. They help you." "It's a group effort," said Lance Hill, who transferred from San Diego City College. "The two captains and the rest of the team get together a lot and we talk things out." "If we continue to do this, we'll continue to get a lot better." "Any team that has any success needs leadership," assist coach Bob Hill said. Suspicious that sacrifice things and guys to go to tough situations, David and Tony are two such players." Larry Hendrix MID 27 54 04 TREB A 0 PP 1T David Little MID 27 58 04 TREB A 0 PP 1T Charles Jones MID 32 1.4 04 2 2 1 2 Owen Overton MID 32 1.4 04 2 2 1 2 Overton MID 32 1.4 04 2 2 1 2 Raymond Whitley MID 3 0 04 0 0 0 0 Cain Pierce MID 3 0 04 0 0 0 0 Cain Pierce MID 3 0 04 0 0 0 0 Daryll Allen MID 12 0.2 2.2 0 2 2 3 Ian Pannell MID 12 0.2 2.2 0 2 2 3 290 289 25-4 24 28 8 13 | | MU | MB | TW | FT | REB | A | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | David Maagley | 40 | 7-15 | 0-14 | 19 | 4 | 1 | 21 | 4 | | Michael Furman | 28 | 6-15 | 0-14 | 19 | 4 | 1 | 21 | 4 | | Brian Martin | 33 | 6-13 | 0-14 | 22 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 2 | | Ted Boyle | 10 | 6-13 | 0-14 | 25 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Bill Davis | 10 | 6-13 | 0-14 | 27 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 2 | | Kelly Knight | 21 | 3-23 | 0-14 | 33 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 4 | | Lasha Hill | 20 | 2-34 | 0-14 | 9.13 | 23 | 1 | 4 | 5 | | Total | 290 | 12-47 | 0-13 | 12.13 | 23 | 1 | 10 | 5 | 29 24-53 37 23-55 Jayhawks end 'long' January with loss Associate Sports Editor BvGINO STRIPPOLI On Dec. 19, the women's basketball team ran their record to 7-1, with their only loss coming at the hands of No. 1-ranked Louisiana Tech. Two days later, after most of the students had left for semester break, the ninth-ranked Jayhawks lost to Jackson State in a near-empty Allen Field House. LITTLE DID anyone realize that that loss would prove to be the beginning of a long drought, which has seen the Jayhawks drop 8 of 13 zarnes in January. The Jayhaws ended January as they started it Saturday, with a 64-61 loss to the Oklahoma Sooners in Allen Field House. It was the second time the Sooners have beaten the Jayhawks in January. "We did't play until the second half," Coach Marain Wianholm said. "We haven't been shooting well, and we were a step behind on defense." Kansas' offense was nonexistent in the first half. It took the Jayhawks 2:30 to score their first basket. Twice in the first half they went on a run with four saves, and they trailed 35-22 at the intermission. ONE OF THE main reasons for the Jayhawks' offensive problems was Tracy Claxton. Claxton, who leads Kansas in scoring and rebounding, got in early foul trouble and had to sit out the last 6:52 of the game. He points and 5 rebounds in the first 20 minutes. The rest of the Jayhawks were just as ineffective. Angie Snider and Chris Stewart combined for 4 of 15 shooting from the field in the first half. Their percentage of 27 was slightly higher than the teams', which as 22 percent of the shots hehawks' free throw sniffed wasn't much better, as they made 10 of 17 for 59 percent. Snider led Kansas in scoring with 8 points, and Stewart and Rose Peenies had 5 each. Ladanah Sanders, who scored 21 points in the two teams' first meeting, was once again a thorn in the Jahayhwals' side. She and Carla had both had 8 points for the Sooners in the first half. "We have to realize that we have to find the intensity in the first half," Washington said. "We are young and we are making too many mistakes." "WE ALWAYS talk about starting quick," sander said. It just seems this team takes advantage of it. The Sooners, sensing a blowout, came out and extended their lead to 18 with 8:23 left in the game. Angela Taylor, who played only 15 innings, came out and then came off the bench and sparked Kansas. Daklaoma hit a three-point play with 12 seconds left to ice the victory. "It takes just one person to spark us on defense," Snider said. "Tonight, it was T "The team responded well in the second half," Washington said. "It shows a lot to be behind by that many and make a run at a win." Angie Taylor hit two baskets in a row to start Kansas on its way to a 34-8 spurt. During this stretch, Taylor had 8 points and 7 steals and Suider had 11 points. Free throw shooting doomed the Jayhawks down the stretch. They missed the front end of 9 one-and-one four times. Two other times, they missed. The team finished the game 15 of 28 from the foul line. Kansas closed the gap to two and had the ball with 29 seconds left on the clock. Lenora Taylor took a pass from Angie Taylor at the foul line, but her shot was off the mark and The Jayhawks were led by Snider with 23 points and Angela Taylor with 10. Peeps scored 9 and Claxton, who had her first off 8 points, year, scored 7 points and had 13 rebounds. THE SOONERS were led by center Janet Southard. Southard, who scored just 4 points in the first half, finished the game with 17 points. Jeremy Sanders added 16 points and Jenue Ogle 12. The Jayhawks are still hoping to find out what is wrong and turn the season around before it too late. Snider said that it would probably take 20 victories for the Jayhawks to get into post season action. The Jayhawks now would have to win the rest of their regular season games to end the season with 20 victories. Kansas will attempt to break its slump with three road games this week. They play Missouri tomorrow, Iowa State in a doubleheader with the men's team on Wednesday, and a preliminary game to the Kansas City Kings on Friday against the National College of Education at Kemper Arena. Raphael 3 Raptura 7 JOHN HANKAMMERIKansan Staff After fouling out, Mary Churchel, center, and Tracy Claxton talk about what went wrong in the Jayhawks' loss to Oklahoma, 64-61. It was the Jayhawks fourth straight loss. MAGLEY 35 JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff Tony Gray 100% to pass to teammate David Magny in Saturday's sack victory over Vancouver City and Magley have led the Jayhawks to three straight triumphs. Lowerv kicks AFC to 16-13 victory By United Press International HONOLULU-Nick Lowery of Kansas City kicked a 24-yard field goal with six seconds to play yesterday to give the AFC a 16-13 victory over the NFC in the Pro Bowl. Just before, the NFC, previously unable to generate any kind of offense, had gone 74 yards in a single game. The team was able. With the score tied at 13, the AFC, behind quarterback Dana Fouts of San Diego, marched from its 36 to the NFC's 5 in a span of 2:37 to up Lowery's kick. Fouts hit for 46 yards in passes on the drive to Denver's Steve Watson, Dallas Newsome and San Diego's Kellen Winslow. over from 5 yards out to tie the game with 2:43 left. The AFC, trailing 6-0 at the half, scored twice in the third period with San Diego's Chuck Muncie scoring from 2 yards out and Earl Watson scoring from 1 yard out. The AFC a 13-4 advantage after three quarters. The NFC, after penetrating into AFC territory only twice in its five possessions of the first half, capitalized on Everson Walls' interception to set up the first score of the game. The Dallas cornerback, whose other interception led to the NFC's fourth-quarter touchdown, picked off a pass from Fouts at the FC A13 and returned it to the 4 with 1:16 left before the half. On the next play, Joe Montana hit Jimmy Giles of Tampa Bay for the score. st et, id bs. bn By United Press International Bird leads East in All-Star game 121-108 victory over the West in the 32nd annual NBA All-Star game at the Meadowsland Arena EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.-Larry Bird, rising again to fourth quarter heroes, scored 19 points along with 12 rebounds and 5 assists and Boston teammate Robert Parish added 21 points yesterday, leading the Eastern Conference to a Bird, playing in his third All-Star game in three seasons in the league, was reinserted into the Eastern lineup by Celtics coach Bill Fitch after the West had scored 6 points in a row sird score 12 of his team's final 15 points and was voted the game's Most Valuable Player. Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Dive Shields Team Houston Philadelphia Washington New York Newark W 10 L 14 L 14 L 682 2% 2% 22 29 20 524 453 19 19 24 19 24 Atlantic Division Milwaukee 29 19 674 Atlanta 19 14 674 Indiana 18 34 49 Chicago 18 26 419 Detroit 18 26 499 11% Dallas 18 34 190 20% Scoreboards Western Conference Midwest Division Los Angeles . . . . . San Antonio 28 14 607 Denver 28 14 607 Houston 21 22 71% Kansas City 14 29 328 Utah 14 29 310 Idaho 13 29 310 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS All-Star game Eastern Division 120; Western Division 118 | Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Missouri | 7 | 0 | 1.00 | 2½ | | Kansas State | 7 | 0 | .667 | 3½ | | Oklahoma State | 4 | 2 | .667 | 3½ | | Kansas | 4 | 2 | .667 | 3½ | | North Dakota | 3 | 2 | .500 | 3½ | | Oklahoma | 2 | 1 | .333 | 3½ | | Iowa State | 4 | 1 | .187 | 4 | | Colorado | 1 | 6 | .163 | 6 | UPI TOP 20 RESULT! UPITOP 20 RESULTS Wake Forest (20) 49, Arkansas (11) 48 St. Joseph's 84, Villanova (19) 64 Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. 11 (19) 56 Kansas State (13) 58 Kansas 55, Oklahoma 83 Oklahoma State 69, Iowa State 60 Patrick Division Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Team W L 19 G 26 GA 19 Pts. Nashville 10 13 6 16 64 Philadelphia 15 17 8 14 116 NY Rangers 24 21 7 18 197 Pittsburgh 20 17 7 18 197 Washington 14 29 8 14 126 | | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 29 | 14 | 9 | 205 | 157 | 67 | | 27 | 11 | 12 | 363 | 143 | 66 | | 28 | 16 | 7 | 211 | 180 | 65 | | 29 | 16 | 8 | 211 | 180 | 58 | | 29 | 16 | 7 | 211 | 180 | 58 | Campbell Conference Norris Division Minnesota 21 16 15 13 220 186 171 St. Louis 24 13 12 291 269 521 Wilmington 19 12 19 11 117 125 Oklahoma 16 24 13 125 236 49 Chicago 16 24 13 125 236 49 Houston 14 28 11 177 125 38 | | 13年 | 12年 | 11年 | 10年 | 9年 | 8年 | 7年 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Edmonton | 13 | 12 | 10 | 197 | 207 | 216 | 75 | | Calgary | 19 | 22 | 12 | 296 | 261 | 259 | 80 | | Vancouver | 17 | 24 | 11 | 180 | 190 | 194 | 40 | | Los Angeles | 17 | 24 | 11 | 180 | 190 | 194 | 40 | | San Diego | 14 | 31 | 8 | 151 | 146 | 230 | 40 | YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Soccer Boston 4, Colorado 2 Quebec 4, Hartford 2 Alabama 4, Georgia 3 Toronto 5, Philadelphia 4 Edmonton 7, Philladelphia 4 Los Angeles 5 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W L L Pet. GB Pittsburgh 15 12 478 New York 13 12 900 Baltimore 14 6 190 Buffalo 9 6 450 Cleveland 8 10 444 Philadelphia 9 10 350 New York 13 12 230 1 St. Louis...16 11 842 Wichita...13 11 857 3 Dover...18 8 414 Memphis...10 12 455 7% Phoenix...10 12 466 11% Kansas City...10 12 366 11 TREASURY A SUCCESS St. Louis 8, Murray 5, Buffalo 4, New Jersey 1, Baltimore 6, Phenix 9, Pittsburgh 11, Philadelphia 0 n st t, d s. ho Pts. 66 65 64 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 a. Guy th 2:43 rritory st half, h to set as corto the I off a ed it to twice Chuck Earl AFC annual arena. in ed into atch at theater KANSAN y Giles ents and er. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, February 2, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 87 USPS 650-640 Pre-enrollment outdates pulling cards By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter We have to pull cards oniv one more time. Chancellor Gene A. Budig yesterday approved a computerized on-line pre-enrolment system that will do away with pulling cards at Allen Field House. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that the system would be implemented immediately and would be ready next spring to pre-enroll students for the 1983 spring semester. "IM PLEASED we've done it," Cobb said. "Many people have been here a long time who've found ways to live with the system. But I don't think the students, faculty and staff will be disappointed in forging the Allen Field House process next fall." Richard Mann, director of information systems and chairman of the committee that studied pre-enrollment, likened the new system to an airline reservation system. "You walk up and say, 'Here what I want, here's my authorization,' " Mann said. He said the costs would be minor in comparison to the benefits that would come from it. "This won't solve all their enrolment problems," Mann said, "but it will make it a good one." Under the on-line process, a student will see an adviser during a two to three-week period before pre-employment begins. The adviser will approve a schedule with one or two optional courses. The student will take the approved schedule to the enrolment center at a specific time during another two-to-three-week period. SCHEDULING WILL be similar to the current better scheduling in the present system of palliation. If the full schedule can be implemented, the student will immediately receive a copy of the schedule. If not, the student will have to see his adviser again to set up another schedule. An operator will type the schedule into a computer terminal and immediately will know which courses and sections are open and which are closed. You can also ask another section or one of the optional courses. "It's not that dissimilar to the way we've worked in the Field House," Mann said. "But instead of going to each department where a student will have to go to pull a card, he can go to one terminal operator who will have a whole timetable data base in front of him, and will know instantaneously how many sections are and closed across all possible departments. "WELL BE ABLE to produce reports on a nightly or weekly basis for the various academic departments so they can determine how fast courses are filling up, things like that. We would probably be posting each day what sections remain open." Mann said that regular enrollment would still be held for students who are not able to pre-enroll but would last only one or two days. He has the option of having success be done by the computer system too. "It would be foolish for students not to pre- enroll if they're hoping to get their courses," Mann said. "What will happen is they'll end up on the bottom of the list." Mann said that registration still would take place right before the beginning of a semester, so that students could pay their fees, register their classes and probably receive a final copy of their schedule. He said that a task force would work out the details of the process, such as where the bank of creditors are located. MANN SAID that the on-line system to be used is connected after the one now in use by the University of Pennsylvania. the most recent commission on en-rollment studied it from Sept. 14 through Dec. 22 of last year, answering questions administrators had asked about the system. It was issued January 1979, by an earlier committee. Mann said that Budig expressed interest and that all the administrators encouraged preeminent He said the most recent committee went to the University of Iowa and the University of Illinois, which use the batch system, to study the preenrolment processes they use. 5 traffic judges quit positions See PRE-ENROLLMENT By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Five of the 15 student traffic court judges resigned from their administrative positions last night, in response to a move to block a proposal to pay student judges. "We feel we cannot continue to donate our time as the administrative decisions require." Kent Frobish, chairman of the Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals, said yesterday. Frobish, Eric Johnson, associate chief judge, Kari Schmidt, presiding judge, Carla Stovall-Roitz, presiding judge, and Collin Gage, presiding judge, decided to resign. They handed in their notices last night to the Parking Board. Gage, who was ill, will turn in his car on time. The five will remain on the board but will no longer hold their administrative positions. Their administrative duties included scheduling and presiding over court. Friday, the University Senate executive committee decided a plan to pay the judges, who were suspended on Tuesday. Earlier last week, the Parking Board voted to nav the judges $4 an hour for their services. The judges disagreed with SenE's contention that paying the judges would make it necessary for a judge to have access to a computer. "We do not feel that we are just like other committees," Frohman said, providing a Also, the Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals is one of only a few boards specified in the Kansas Administrative Regulations, Schmidt said. "This is the law of the state of Kansas," she said. Loren Bushy, vice chairman of SenEx and member of the Parking and Traffic Board, "It sounded like a fine idea to me, but I didn't get the sense of mind at the Traffic Board meeting," he said. "They took the job with the understanding that they weren't going to get paid," he said. "I totally agree with (SenEx)." he said. "Everybody should be paid or nobody." Busy was at the meeting where the Traffic Board decided to pay the judges and at the meeting where SenEx said that it was a bad decision. The judges disagreed also with SenEX's statement that paying the judgments would lead to incarceration. "It would more than likely not raise parking 矣," Bobish said. "It's a matter of how you're 住." The judges also responded to SenEx's Pairing Board was an honor to not on their request. "The effect of having traffic court on anyone's resume is negligible." Frobish said. Frobish made a "low" estimate of the time the judges spend on traffic court. He said the chief judge spent 10 hours a week on traffic court, the associate chief judge six, the presiding judges five, and other judges three hours a week on traffic court. The judges heard 1,000 cases this semester. The judges stressed that they weren't resigning their administrative duties because they were not going to be paid for their services. The judges heard 1,050 cases this semester. KU not to gain from loan bill By JANETMURPHY Staff Reporter The parent loan bill now before the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee will have no effect on KU students, an official in KU's financial aid division said yesterday. "Most banks in Kansas will make loans to KU students or their parents." Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said there would be no effect because parent loans already were available to students in students through many adult institutions. "If the bill is enacted," he said, "it will not mean more new money. THE PROPOSED bill would amend Kansas law to allow the Higher Education Loan Program of Kansas (HBLP) to make loans for students and provide awards for the cost of the child's college education. Students who do not qualify for guaranteed loans or bank loans may apply to HELP for financial assistance. Parent loans have been available in the United States for about two years, Weinberg said, but said the program was not attractive to KU students and their parents because of The interest rate for a parent loan is 14 percent while interest on GSLs is only nine percent. The interest rates were only one See LOANS page 5 House okays funds for Med Center utilities By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter TOPEKA-The Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved an emergency supplemental funding bill to carry the University of Kansas Medical Center through "We're now essentially out of money for utilities," Richard von Ende, executive secretary to the University, said at the committee hearing. The bill allocates $3,277,685 to the Med Center for fiscal 1982, which ends in June. The money will pay for increased utility rates and medical scholarships. The program pays tuition for medical students Board of Public Utilities officials discovered a faulty electric meter that recorded only about half of the electricity the Med Center used in 1981, which caused the apparent increase in usage. The University requested, and Gov. John Carlin recommended, a total of $1,700,685 for the utility. The rest of the money requested, $1,307,000, for the medical scholarship program at the Med He said this was because of a 35 percent increase in electric rates and a 66 percent increase in water service rates, as well as more than a 100 percent increase in usage of electricity. VON ENDE said that because of a recently announced hike in gas rates, the Med Center probably would need even more money for utilities this year. But he said if additional requests were necessary, they would be made to utilities for next year, which begin later this month. who practice medicine in Kansas after they graduate. Students who agree to serve in "designated medically underserved areas" will receive $500 for each year they practice in Kansas. "Last year, we assumed that 75 percent of the medical students would be in the program," he said. "Our practice has been to finance it on the level of the number we are able to recruit." Von Ende said the University underestimated the number of students who would participate in the program. HE SAID that last year the Legislature announced that it would pass a bill restricting the number of students who could enter the program to 100 each year, starting next fall. "The Legislature said everyone who was already in the program at the time could stay in it," he said. "So the number of students in it went up." As me late afternoon sun slides down behind the residence halls on Daisy Hill, a bird soars beneath a blanket of clouds. This view is from the southwest corner of Wescock Hall. St. Louis begins digging out from snow that stalls activity Four men died from heart attacks while shoveling snow. By United Press International ST. LOUIS - City crews and National Guardmen teamed up yesterday to clear streets of firefighters knocking down a tree. Public transit buses were unable to leave their garages. "I think we're making some progress," said Mayor Vincent Schoemehl, who went on radio to discuss the city's efforts to dig itself out of the heavy snowfall. HUNDREDS OF abandoned cars and sightseeing drivers drove streets and freeways through the city. "We haven't had anything like this to deal with in four years," said Richard Daykin, St. Louis County highway director. "We've been using whatever equipment we could wear on our hands." Only four-wheel drive vehicles traveled the snow-packed streets. Downtown streets, normally clogged with workers, were silent and white during the rush hour. as residentes began to hope for a thaw, forecasters said none was in sight. The weather service said there was a 70 percent chance of snow and sudden new accumulations of two to four more inches. Weather SNOW A travelers advisory is likely today, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka, with snow accumulation today and tonight of two to four inches. A high of 30 is expected, with winds from the north at 15 to 25 mph and gusting, and temperatures will drop to a low of about 10 tonight. It will be mostly cloudy and cold Wednesday with a high of 10 to 15. JOHN SHEF PIKANEAN STATE Raylene Gerkin, a registered nurse at Watkins Memorial Hospital, demonstrates treatment of a common late-night complaint by peering down the throat of Kristy Kopp, an admissions clerk at Watkins. See related story, page 2. Redistricting map improved, reps sav By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter TOPEKA—Amended congressional redistricting map that a Kansas Senate committee approved yesterday is a little better than before, but not much, according to several The Legislative, Congressional and Judicial Committee endorsed the plan on a participant vote, with six Republicans in favor of it and four Democrats against it. "I still don't think it's a good map in terms of the whole state," State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said yesterday. "But in the final analysis, I had to vote for it." BRANSON WAS THE only Lawnend Democrat to vote for the original plan when it was approved. The map leaves Douglas County in the 3rd Congressional District, and Branson had said that he was not interested in a redistricting. Many Democrats opposed the original bill, "The amended plan does reduce the deviation somewhat but not as far as it could be." State officials say. sponsored by State Sen. Paul Hess, and State Rep. Neal Whitaker, Washington Republicans, because it divided largely Democratic Wyoming into two districts and Sedgewick County into three. "The Constitution requires that we equalize population—a one-man, one-vote decision." Solbach said. "This is not as good as we can come up with. We ought to get in there and do our work." SOLBACH SAID the deviation guideline that the committee decided on earlier was 15-percent. He said a .99 deviation could be challenged in court. Hess introduced the amendments, which put Sedgwick County into only two districts but left Wynandotte County divided. It also divided Sumner County between two districts. The deviation, or the difference in population between the districts with the highest and lowest number of people, was 1.14 percent in the original map. The new map's deviation is .98 State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, agreed. "I would think they could get it (deviation) down more," she said. "The .99 percent is challengeable if other maps offered had less deviation." CHARLTON SAID she was concerned that the redistricting process would drag on the June 21 filing deadline for candidates in the upcoming November election. "The delay makes it bad for all of us," she said. "If the governor vetoes it, that's a delay. If the courts draw the lines that's another delay. All this uncertainty is bad." She said if a new map was not established before the deadline, candidates would have to move to another location. Branson said she thought Gov. John Carlin might veto the plan if it passed the Senate. "It's entirely possible because of the deviation," she said. "I think the governor has a very strong hand in this." Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1962 News Briefs From United Press International Administration pays banks to keep Poland from default WASHINGTON—The Reagan administration has stepped in to repay american banks at least $71 million we owed, avoid having the bank teller say we said yesterday. The action was made secretly last week, after a Department of Agriculture review, which was ordered by the National Security Council, A Treasury Department official said the United States wanted to avoid Polish loan defaults to keep pressure on the Polish government to repay loans. The Agriculture Department's Commodity Credit Corp., which extends credit to foreign nations for purchase of U.S. farm commodities, is the largest provider of agricultural exports. Because the administration did not want to declare Poland in default, the credit corporation is paying the loan principal and interest that were due last month. Under ordinary circumstances, the corporation requires banks to find a foreign nation in default before the U.S. government will cover bad debts. The New York Times reported that the decision could obligate American taxambers to repay $196.5 million in Polish debt owed to banks this year. Teen arraigned for assassination LOS ANGELES—A teenage Armenian, identified by witnesses as one of two gunmen who assassinated Turkish Consul General Kamel Arikan, pleaded not guilty yesterday to a murder charge that could carry the death penalty. Hampi *Harry* "Sassouian, 19, of suburban Pasadena, answered questions during a brief arraignment when he was ordered held without bail" Sassouian may face the death penalty because of "special circumstances" in the murder charge. The circumstances, required for the death penalty under California law, are lying in wait for the victim and murdering someone because of his "We feel the evidence at this time indicates he (Arikan) was killed because he was a Turkish national," said Dennis Choate, the deputy district attorney. Dozier investigators find hideouts ROME-Police investigating the kidnapping of Brig. Gen. James Dozer may have learned where Rise's family lived, before former prime minister Bill Clinton almost four years ago. Interior Minister Virginio Rognoni told the Parliament about former Prime Minister Aldo Moro yesterday while explaining the government's "On the basis of statements made by a terrorist arrested in connection with the Dozer case, investigators have learned where Aldo Moro may have been killed." More, then president of the Christian Democratic Party, was kidnapped by the Red Brigades March 16, 1789, and his bullet-ridden body was found in Rome police said they discovered three Red Brigades hideout in the city and arrested five suspects over the weekend. They said a cache of weapons were inside. Beagan. Mubarak will discuss aid WASHINGTON—President Reagan and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak will discuss U.S. assistance to Egypt. Earlier, said peace envoy for the United Nations officials said peace Mubarak arrives today in Washington on a state visit, but will not begin meetings until tomorrow. The Egyptian leader's entourage is heavily weighted with financial and The Egyptian leader's entourage is heavily weighted with financial and economic advisers, reflecting Mubarak's emphasis on economic issues. Reagan and Mubarak will discuss military as well as economic aid to Europe during the threeday visit, according to officials. One official said Mubarak wanted $1.3 billion in military aid from the United States, an amount he wanted guaranteed for five years. Officials also said Mubarak was "anxious to put his own style and his own stamn on policies," and had a different approach from his predecessor. Iran starts anniversary celebration TEHRAN, Iran—Seven Iranians were put to death and thousands of people marched to cemeteries yesterday during the start of celebrations for the victims. Bazaars closed and universities reopened for the festivities, which were called the "Ibaday dawn." Shortly before the celebration got underway, executioners shot to death five people and hanged two guerrillas accused of attempting to kill Iran's president and chief justice last summer. On Feb. 1, 1979, Khomeini returned to Iran after a 14-year exile imposed by Shahez Abu Pahlavi, and became spiritual leader of the new Islamic republic. Since he was rushed from Gom, his religious seat, to a heart hospital in Tehran in January 1980. Khomeini, 81, has not left the capital. El Salvador gets military supplies WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration announced yesterday it was sinking $5 million more of U.S. military hardware into El Salvador to help Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Enders announced an emergency airlift of aid and said military assistance would also be increased for Honduras where, he said, "the Cubans are trying to unify the left and start another insurgency." In San Francisco yesterday, some 100 demonstrators carrying mock corps protested U.S. shipments of military equipment and helicopters to Iraq. The shipments, from Pentagon emergency stockpiles, are being sent by President Reagan under special authority, which the president can invoke. Reagan used the same powers to send 76 American advisers to El Salvador last March, of whom 49 are still in the country. The president has repeatedly said that Soviet and Cuban-inspired subversion is jeopardizing the entire Caribbean region. Reagan seeks supplemental funds Larry Spoken, White House spokesman, said the additional funds were needed because of the continuum level of unemployment. The current number of unemployed is 68%. WASHINGTON—President Reagan yesterday asked Congress to approve **22.3 billion in supplemental appropriations to aid states in continuing** **speaks said the funds were needed primarily because unemployment rates were expected to be higher in the 1982 fiscal year than when the Under the law, workers receiving unemployment insurance are eligible to receive payments for an extended period if the state's insured unemployment rate exceeds levels set in law for a 13-week period of the prior two years. Ellsberg arrested at demonstration LIVERMORE, Calif.—More than 150 demonstrators, including peace activist Daniel Ellsberg, were arrested yesterday at a nuclear weapons laboratories where Buddhist monks joined in a peaceful human blockade. A private security force at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory arrested 195 people on midmiseron charges of obstructing traffic after they formed a Crash victims' family plans to sue for millions By United Press International Walter Metcalf, 70, and his son Leo, 40, pitched out of the jet after skipped off a runway at Logan International Airport Jan. 23 and belLIED into Boston Harbor. They were not reported missing for 72 hours. BOSTON—The family of a father and son who were "misplaced" and presumed drowned in the Air Ways DC-10 crash will file a lawsuit seeking "millions of dollars" in damages, their lawyer said yesterday. AS OF LATE yesterday, divers searching the waters around the peninsula runway had found no signs of the bodies. "We expect the complaint, when it is filed, will have a claim for damages in the millions of dollars," he said. "We'd be making claims for wrongful death and conscious pain and suffering for each of the estates. Anthony Tarricone, a Boston attorney, said the Metcalf survivors planned to file suit within two to five weeks. Also yesterday, Civil Aeronautics Board Regional Director Joseph W. Mullin said a cab investigation showed the Metalfajs boarded the final leg of Flight 90 after having been apparently listed as "no show" at the gate. MULLIN SAID that was why the Metcalfs were unaccounted for during World War II. "In addition, we expect to make claims for the next of kin for infliction of emotional distress and outrage as a result of what went on after the crash." Mullin concluded, based on a re-check of World's ticket coupons and the passenger list, that no other passengers could have been similarly misplaced. Tarrisco said potential defendants in the suit were World Airways, the Massachusetts Port Authority, McDonnell-Douglas, the DC-10 manufacturer and the Federal Aviation Administration. possible, he said, that they arrived just before the flight took off and "were never removed from the "no-show" list. He said it would not be known until the evidence was gathered whether one or all of the potential defendants would be named in the suit. "Where in the system the Metailfs' names were misplaced is impossible to tell." Mullin said. TARRICONE SAID there was no set damage figure in the suit. MULLIN SAID part of the confusion over the Metcalfals could be attributed to the 20 passengers who boarded in Newark, N.J. While at Newark, one man boarded without a coupon and there were several instances of the planes flying with borrowed luggage labeled with other people's names. KU to start program for juco scholarships Mullin said World Airways complied with an order to turn over all passenger records, was not dilatory or in noncompliance with the unilateralized by the Civil Aeronautics Board. He added, however, that the transportation board might still investigate if "there were any deficiencies in CAB equipment or record keeping" as a result of the mix-up. Chancellor Gene A. Budig announced Friday that KU would start a new community college scholarship program this fall. The program will provide $500 scholarships to two students from each of the state's 20 community colleges for their freshmen and senior years at the University. THE SCHOLARSHIPS will be funded by the Kansas University Endowment Association. Budid said the creation of the $40,000 annual scholarship fund was an important step in attracting highly qualified students to KU and in forging stronger ties with all the state's educational institutions. "THE COMMUNITY college scholarship program assures a broad representation of top students throughout the state and it should promote the state community at all levels between KU and the community colleges," Budig said. Students applying for the scholarships must have at least a 3.5 grade point average, recommendations from community college faculty, and a record of significant participation at the community college. Budig announced the development of the scholarship program at a meeting of presidents of the 20 Kansas community colleges. Evenings at Watkins are always different By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Raylene Gerkin, registered nurse, sat in the emergency room at Watkins Memorial Hospital on a Wednesday night. It was 9:30 and the waiting room outside was silent and empty. "Some nights are quiet," Gerkin said as she glanced at the clock warily, hoping that a sudden rush of wouldn't make her words false. Although a quiet evening may be one in which 10 to 12 people walk into the emergency room, the variety of illnesses and injuries hospital workers see makes each night different. "On this night we had a kidney infection, a dog bite, a knee injury, pneumonia, severe vomiting, injury trauma, bone and a pain in the eye." he said. No night is typical at Watkins. The next night included bronchitis, an ulcer, hives, an ear ache, back pain, a bone stuck between the teeth, a wrist injury, a spontaneous abortion, canker sores, a stiff neck and a burn. Martin Wollmann, director of health services, said that the hospital averaged 714 monthly visits after normal daytime hours from 8am to 6pm. Wollmann read from a list of illnesses recorded for two nights last week. "One particular night is not characteristic of any other night," he said. "Many, many different people come in here with many, many different concerns." The number of people who use Watkins at night is considerably lower than the number who use it during the day, Wollmann said. Two registered nurses watch the emergency room and a nurse and nurse's side work the inpatient section, caring for people who have been admitted to the hospital, she said. Besides the fact that some of the people who use the emergency room at night are seriously ill, many come in simply to alleviate fears and The hospital is available for worried students as well as sick or injured students, Wollmann said. But friends aren't the only people who worry about sick or injured KU students. 317 "People should come in at night if they are injured, but they should also come in if they're concerned," he said. "For those who don't have a life-threatening illness, it's the worry that they might that concerns them. Many people come in by themselves, but it also happens that some come in with two or three friends." "The doctors worry about the students," said Mary Jo Brown, registered nurse who was working the evening shift with Gerkin. "I don't think the students realize it, but they are very fortunate." There is always one doctor on call every night at Watkins to back up the four nurses on duty. Although activity is never constant in the emergency room from night to right, Gorkins said that he would be able to bring wearing were always busier than others. "From 3 to 7 p.m. is fairly busy because the students are still out playing their sports," she said. was usually just a characterization this as human nature. But Gerkin said the busiest time was awaived, just around bedtime. "Somehow, after the sun sets and it gets a little quiet, they notice that they're sick," he said. In the past, the hall kitchens were inspected by University, not state, officials. Under the license, food services in the residence halls would be inspected by the state for health conditions. State inspects food services Ekdahl said that the preliminary The kitchens at KU residence halls were inspected at the end of last week prior to being licenced by the state, and superintendent of food services said. Ekdahl said that food service operations would remain the same, but that they now would be inspected by state officials, as food service operations at Kansas State and Wichita State are. inspections done last week were instructional. "They explained what they are going to inspect us on," she said. "We will be checked just like any commercial restaurant," Ekdahl said. CONOCO INC. SURFACE TRANSPORTATION Management Development Program Conoco is experiencing rapid growth as it expands and develops its operations as a multinational energy company. This rapid growth has created an ever-increasing demand for capable management personnel. Surface Transportation plays an important role in fulfilling this need with a 12-Month Management Development Program designed to produce qualified top management personnel. If interested, come and learn in detail about our Development Program during our Prerecruiting Presentation. All Business Students graduating in May & August are invited to attend. Date: February 3, 1982 Time: 7:00-9:00 p.m. Place: Summerfield Hall, Room 12 $ ^{1 2} $ Refreshments Will Be Provided You've spent four to six years getting your degree; now give Conoco 60 minutes to show you how to use it. An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F conoco University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1982 Page 3 st t. d s. ere in going service ne, but ted by service ichita Schol hall residents diverse By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The scholarship hall selection committee encounters stereotypes and myths in its search for new residents each year, Matt Anderson, Concordia senior and chairman of the selection committee, said yesterday. "A lot of people think you have to be some kind of genius or an egg head to live in a scholarship hall," Anderson said. He said that while most residents maintained at least a 3.0 grade point average, they were anything but bookworms. When choosing residents, the coalition committee looks for a secure sectional grounds and interests. Anderson said. HE **SAID** that another prevalent myth stemmed from the name of the balls. "You don't have to have a scholarship to live in a scholarship hall," he said. Although many of the residents do have scholarships, that is not one of the reasons. that the selection committee sides when choosing residents, or judges. Anderson said. $^{g}$ Academics, the application, financial need and references are evaluated in accordance with new residents for the scholarship halls. Each category is assigned a share of the 40-point scale that each applicant is rated on, with academics and the application carrying most of the weight. Joyce Cliff, assistant director of the office of residential programs, said the average resident scored about 25 points in the selection process. BOTH RESIDENTS and administrators are involved in the evaluation process. After the application deadline March 1, the selection committee will begin processing the applications, Anderson The number of openings will be determined by that time after current residents indicate whether they'll be returning. Cliff said that an average of 125 of the 400 positions in the scholarship halls opened up each year. Three residents and one administrator evaluate the application and references. Cliff said that an even more important role and women evaluate rach application. Anderson said the evaluators looked at the way applicants presented themselves. The written application is important because the selection committee never reviews submissions. He said the questions asked on the application were handled through her the applicant would interact with the living group. "We ask them to discuss their strengths and weaknesses, and how they could affect their ability to live with others." Anderson said. a peer and the other two from any unrelated persons. Anderson said he looked for more than the standard form reference. "Anything that shows you that they thought well enough about the person to take the time to write a good recommendation is important," he said. Current KU students are evaluated on their college records, and incoming students on their high school rank and ACT scores. phrase. "We feel that the confidentiality of that is very important." Anderson said. The administrators in the office of residential programs assign points for the academic and financial categories. Cliff said that these aspects of the application were hended through her office to insure the privacy of the applicant. ONCE ACCEPTED, the applicants are asked to indicate which of the eight scholarship halls they would like to live in. Anderson must get their relatives' choices. Cliff said that the process should be completed by mid-April and that applicants would be notified of the openings in the halls. EACH APPLICANT is asked to have three person write references, one from Anderson said there was more continuity among scholarship halls than residence halls, as many residents return for more than one year. Those not immediately accepted are placed on an alternate list. SUA games near finish "It does a pretty good job of getting a wide variety of people who are motivated to achieve," Anderson said. By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter The SUA All-Campus Days which began last week had their problems, but overall things went as expected. Chris Orlando, SUA indoor recreation chairman, said that despite a lack of workers at the tournament, he thought the games went well. "The only real problem that we had with the campus days was with the billard tournament and ping-pong games, which had conflicting times. "As far as people wanting a refund on their money, they're going to have to have a good reason," Orlando said. Orlando said that as a result of the overlapping games, people had asked for refunds. "We at SUA felt that we were not responsible if someone entered both of these events, because we didn't know how to compete and tournament would last." Orlando said. The games were open to everyone in the Big Eight region. In the billiards tournament, Mark Gunter, Prairie Village junior, was the winner. Jim Conard, Oaklute junior, was the second and Spear, Overland Park junior, was third. Orlando said that all of the games were completed except for the backgammon tournament. He said that qualifiers in each event could compete in an SAU-sponsored all-expense paid trip to Winbucks on Feb, 19 and 20. The players will match their skills with other students from the Midwest. There were 95 people who participated in this year's tournament, which Orlando said was more than last year. In bridge, Yuan Hu, Taiwan graduate student, finished first and Kuang Fu wished him well. The checkers game winner was William Barron, Mission Hills freshman. The chess winner was Brad Blake, Wichita state, and runner-up was Chris Orlando, Shawnee Mission senior. The dart tournament was won by Patrick Hodges; second-place finisher was Dan Mauer; third place was taken in the state finals. Sumyauve, Calif., graduate student. In the football tournament, Greg Wylie, Derby junior, and Darrin Frye, Kingman senior, were the co-winners. The table tennis tournament was won by Sam Ritmitter, Kansas City, Mo., special student. In second place was Kirkman, New York, N.Y., freshman. The Frisbee game was won by Grady Boles, Liberal senior. Richard E. Smith, Topeka freshman, finished second. Boyd's Coins-Antiques Class Ranges Brown - Small Trade Gold - Silver - Coins 1315 New Haven Road Lancaster, CT 07622 91-844-8773 AMERICAN COVENANT, page 5. Marshail Foster, 1981 (Foundation for Christian Self-Government) **QID YOU KNOW?** The Bible was the political and economic textbook of the patriots. To know what the Bible says, note that J. Wingate Thornton in his *The Pulpit of the American Revolution* says, ... in 1777, the Continental Congress declared that the commerce of Commerce to import twenty thousand copies of the Bible, the政治文本book of the patrons. --with the launching of "Sputnik" in 1957. Slavic studies boomed at the University and a larger Slavic book collection was needed. KU's statues reoiled during spring cleaning By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Twice a year, Jimmy Green gets a new coat of oil. So does the old pioneer near Fraser Hall and the Jayhawk in front of Strong Hall. Spring and fall mean maintenance time for the eight sculptures and five fountains on the KU campus. "We don't often do too much to them," Robert Porter, associate director of physical plant management facilities operations, said yesterday. PORTER SAID the statuary was all cast bronze and required only a light coat of oil. "That's the purpose of bronze, to let the weather elements get to them." The eight statues are located at Blake, Lippincott, Fraser, Strong, Nichols and Spooner-Thayer halls and in front of the Spencer Art Center. Porter included the controversial Salina Piece in his list of eight. Porter said that of all the statues and fountains on campus, the Chi Omega fountain probably sustained the most abuse from vandals. "We have problems with the Chi Omega fountain every year," he said. "They do everything from soaping it to putting dye in the fountain." "THAT BIRD over in front of Strong is usually the biggest target for paint," he said. TOURNAMENT As for the statues, Porter said the Jayhawk in front of Strong Hall also got a lot of abuse. In addition to the twice-a-year coats of oil the statues are given, Porter said they were also coated before special functions when large groups of people were anticipated on campus. "When we anticipate highly intense football games, the statues are given a small, thin coat of oil," he said. "Then, if they're sprayed, the paint is more easily removed." But Porter's men have ways of preventing serious damage to the statues. "But we haven't had too many problems with them in past years." Porter recalled an incident that occurred in the mid-70s. Some paint jobs, however, haven't been frowned upon by the men who maintain the statuary. "A GROUP WITH special permission from the proper authority painted the Jimmy Green statue," he said. "He painted everything, his hands, his gloves, even his top hat. It was a super-looking job." KLZR106 - SEE A MOVIE TONIGHT At any Lawrence Commonwealth Theatre early or late show. ONLY $1.06 TUESDAY IS 106 NIGHT DINNER TONIGHT At the Village Inn, 821 Iowa. Huevos Rancheros, 5 p.m.-8 p.m. ONLY $1.06 - PENTE SETS TONIGHT At Footlights in the Holiday Plaza. ONLY $10.06 6 p.m.-9 p.m. KLZR106 JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Staff ALBERTO GARCIA George Jerkovich, professor of Soviet and East Europeanstudies, describes the work he has done as curator of Slavic Collections at Watson Library. Curator helps build Slavic collection By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter Twenty years ago, George Jekovik began working at Watson Library. Today, the University of Kansas is bigger and so is his job. Jerkovich, curator of Slavic Collections and professor of Soviet and East European studies, began working on the study material for Slavic materials Feb. 1, 1983. Originally from Yugoslavia, Jerkovich also began teaching Serbo-Croation and bibliography and methods as an assistant professor. At that time the library was one-tird the size it is now, and Jerkovich was teaching in an army barrack where Spencer Library now stands. "THE SLAVIC BOOK collection was also extremely small then, consisting of six or seven thousand volumes." Jerkovich said recently. Jerkovich said that over the last 20 years the greatest achievement in his job had been building up the Slavic language consists of more than 200,000 volumes. "I would like to stress that the collection an excellent resource for wishing a gift to you." the old and rich cultures of Slavic countries," he said. AS AN EXAMPLE of Americans' lack of language study, he said, there were more teachers of English in the Soviet Union than American students Jerkovich, who has studied 12 languages, said U.S. foreign policy would be a lot better if top officials of the United States were members of the countries they had to deal with. He said this lack of language study strained the relationship between the United States and the rest of the world. "Americans need to learn more about the peoples of other countries, especially a superpower like the Soviet Union," he said. "The more you wish to know, the more you'll understand, and the Slavic library collection has an immense collection of literature, literature and culture to this end." The collection ranks among the 10 best in the country, he said. "We have a lot of Russian pre-revolution materials and also many other rare books that even compete with those by Michigan or Michigan don't have." Jerkwich said. The South Slavic book collection, he said, had more than 35,000 volumes and was second in quality only to the U.S. Library of Congress. KU HAS A strong Polish collection, he said, which includes some 17th- EVERY TUESDAY TACO BELL TACO BELL Burrito Tostada Pintos 'n Cheese 39¢ each 1408 West 23rd St. Sunday-Thursday 10:00 A.M. -1:00 A.M.. Friday and Saturday 10:00 A.M. -2:00 A.M. WITHOUT AN ADVANCED DEGREE The Institute for Paralegal Training 235 S. 17th St. Philadelphia, PA 19103 (215) 732-6600 Approved by the American Bar Association Operated by Para Legal Inc. a The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill MURPHY HILL HOUSE Advancement College seniors. If you plan to get a job after graduation, why not consider a profession? In 3 months, we prepare you for careers in law, management, finance Our 8 intensive courses are designed for high academic quality. Over 90% of our graduates secure jobs in their specialties. Over 5,000 graduates hold positions in law firms, banks and corporations in 110 cities. We provide a substantial tutoring service to secure a job for you in the city of your choice. Guarantee your future. Learn how the Institute can help you advance in a career. Our representative will be on campus February 9. century materials that now do not exist even in Poland. Name ___ Address ___ City, State, Zip College ( ) ( ) Present phone Permanent phone Please send me information about the Institute for Paralegal Training. Jerkovich took his first trip in 1967. He said he was inspired by the late Oswald P. Backus, professor of Russian medieval history, who directed him to important librarians, professors and academicians. I would like to arrange an interview at another time. Please call me at one of the phones noted. Even with good financial support, he said, KU could not have afforded such a large collection if he had not taken book-buying trips to Slavic countries. These contacts, particularly in Lehengad, Moscow, Kiev and Warsaw, in the last decade of the 1980s. BY TRAVELING to Slavic countries, Jerkovich was able to buy books cheaply, and at the same time he found a library in town where books could to have international book catalogs. He also set up book exchange Programmes on important Slavic vocabulary and academic literature. Through these exchanges, he said, the library had been adding many good books to its Slavic Collection. Jerkovich said he had been offered a higher paying job at the State Department in Washington, D.C., seven years after visiting there he turned it down. "I would miss the students and the exchange of ideas in a university atmosphere," he said. LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE ACADEMY CAR RENTAL ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95 / day $60.00 / wk $225.00 / mo FREE mileage allowance 841 101 808 808 W 24th $18.90 (1000 Printed Copies) Service Beyond Duplication HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. — 842-3610 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE NUMBER the Seduction R 202-453-8000 MAY 21 SAT 2:15 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN 642710 WEST 58TH ST. PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG A CLOUSSON INCENTIVE Ever 15-19 & 30 Mat Sat, Sun 2:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 642710 WASHINGTON R THE Seduction 1.30am & 8.20am MAT.SUN 2.15 HILLCREST 1 TELEPHONES BLDG PAID HEART AND LOVE EVE 2:00 & 8:15 MAT SAT SUN 2.15 HILLCREST 2 The masters of "The linda" The danger of "Posey" EVE 2:00 & 8.20 Mat,Sun,2:15 HILLCREST 3 This school is our home... TAPS EVE 7:48 & 8:20 Mat.Sun,2:15 PG CINEMA 1 Whose life is it anyway? EVERNAMES BLDG TELEPHONES BLDG PAID TREAT WILLIAMS PRINCE OF THE CITY EVERNAMES BLDG PAID Evenings at 8:00 only HILLCREST 976 HILLCREST AVE. NW 20TH ST. MAR 14, 1980 MAT SAT SUN 2:15 HEART LAND P111 EMI 3-14, 8-9 MAY 14, SUN 2:15 Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1982 Opinion Setting bad precedents There was a time, not too long ago, when students had to fight for a voice in University governance. Now students are represented on almost all of the University of Kansas' committees and boards. But one group of students doesn't think this is enough. The students—justices on the KU Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals—think that the honor of being appointed to the board, the opportunity to serve their fellow students and the valuable practical experience they gain is not sufficient compensation for their time. following a suggestion by one of the justices, the Parking and Traffic Board recommended that the 15 student justices, who are appointed by the University Senate executive committee, be paid for the time they spend on the board. SenEx decided last Friday to advise the Parking and Traffic Board against this decision. According to Laurence Rose, SenEx member and professor of law, appointment to the board is an honor for the law students. What is more important, SenEx agreed that paying members of University No other members of University governance committees or boards, students and faculty alike, are paid for their service on these groups. governance groups would set a bad precedent. The justices argued that if they did not spend time on the appeals board, they would be able to find law-related jobs that would pay them at least $4 an hour. But the students and faculty members who serve on SenEx, the University Council, the Student Health Advisory Board, the University Events Committee and dozens of other governance groups could make the same argument. Certainly, they could all find more personally profitable ways to spend the time they put in on University work. The justices need to realize that anyone who volunteers for University committee work is asking for a job that is often thankless and unrewarding. As trite as it may sound, rewards must be derived from the chance to serve and improve the University. If the appeals board justices don't understand this, they should take their $4-an-hour jobs and let others gain the experience of University work. The "rhythms" is just a coinage for that inevitable repeat of history that continues to recycle through the 'play' function of the material motion that it all happens over and over again. Ken Kesey was a victim of the rhythms. Kesey's 'Cuckoo's Nest' hatched era The rhythms of the age. I hope it's true. If it is, there are stepping- backs for me and being tied across at this momen- t at this moment. Twenty years ago yesterday a psychedelic-painted bus of "Merry Pranksters" showed up at Viking Press in New York for the publication of their hero's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." The Pranksters were known for hops and jesters, acid-yed and hit on him. The whole crew loaded Kesey's bubble-topped bus with book-advance-built hi-fi equipment, movie gear, and a small refrigerator. The cabin is—Kool-Aid fitted with Owlsy made LSD-25. They—including Kesey-buddies Neal Cassady and Ken Babbs, and Tom Wolf to chronicle the whole thing for "Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test"—drove from California to New York, baffling the public, awing the cops, and enlightening themselves. See, this was 1962. And in some rural areas it was still 1954. It's just a bizarre busull of too-hip kids careening down the street with the Grateful Dead being bull-horned to the world. But inside the Prankster bus it was 1969. Stoningstones. honed innocently by government drug experimenters near Standard, where Kesey was a creative writing fellow. Kesey volunteered and they turned him on to LSD. The cutting edge of Kesey's insight was Ken capped a few tabs and turned on his fellow residents back at the famed Perry Lane cottages. Soon he was working at the police station, and he went on perimetering with various drugs and punching FADRIN ABDULRAFAZ KAHREB W.J. ANDREWS out the first drafts of "Cuckoo's Nest." Chief Bromden came alive there. But Kesey had been a jock, a championship wrestler as an undergraduate at Oregon. Who could say he was disposed to genius. Who could say he'd be ditching the feds down Mexico way, wearing a striped shirt in Marin County, or hanging out with Hells' angels. And who could guess he'd squeeze a retreat to La Honda in there to write his best book, “Notion” is something else. “A work of the new consciousness,” said Charles Reich. It is an interweaving, mystical myth of the decaying American dream and the spirit of America. It is also Kesey's prose. The acid-prompted neural narrative stretches to grasp it all. It is a dialectic of America's breadth and depth. At the time, maybe state of the art. But then Kesey wasn't heard from. He went to Oregon to grow carrots. He's had an article here and there, one on the Grateful Dead in Egypt and another remembering John Lennon. And a friend of mine saw him speak at an arts seminar in Chicago. My friend said Kesey was definitely not all there, he kept skipping off to anecdotes that seemed unrelated. At the end he was just standing in the heights and stepped down when his time was up. If but he had said something, would it have been intriguing or relevant? isn't that the case with Beethoven? With Beethoven? Isn't that the trouble with being the first to reach a stepping stone to an age? You have to stop and turn to the others and say "C'mon, let me go!" You have to say that great" and you stay there and escort the others into that era's cultural nuance—discovered by you—and you get left on that stone. You get trapped into history. Even if you want to leave you out, you get manhandled by time. Cassady and Jack Kerouac didn't last the trip, but Kesey may have been saved for another day. For Devin Deboree must be waiting around somewhere, his funny-filled head bursting with excitement, waiting around somewhere to meet her or lead him 'round to our next steppingstone.' 'New federalism' just shifts burden Few Americans needed the President's address last week to determine the state of the union—economically, it's lousy, as anyone who occasionally reads a newspaper will Federal deficits, Ronald Reagan's chief campaign concern, are expected to rise drastically, even if the President's plans are enacted to the letter. By his own admission, Reagan can, at best, hope to keep the deficit for fiscal 1982 below $100 billion; anything approaching that amount will set a new single-year record. Also, nearly ten million people are out of work. They don't read newspapers, they don't even without reading newspapers. I take the time to point these outs only because Reagan seemed healtent to do so in He was much more eager to discuss the high times ahead for the nation's governmental structure under what has come to be known as the "new federalism." The term TOM BONTRAGER was not used in the speech but was bandied about earlier by Reagarites who hailed it as the bombshield the president would drop on Washington. Where the crucial question of intent is concerned, however, there is nothing novel about what Reagan is proposing. The emphasis on cutting federal programs, particularly in the area of aid to the fortunate, is an essential characteristic of the political philosophy Reagan is determined to carry out, no matter what the cost. the crux of the "new federalism" is to make states responsible for the allotment of welfare checks and food stamps. The federal government would pick up the tab for Medicaid, which is now financed partly by state and local money. There you have the heart of what Reagan hopes will keep Americans' minds off their economic woes. But the "new federalism" is far from placatory. Our foremost criterion in assessing the proposed change should be, of course, human President Reagan?" we ask, "How, in unemployed, will the poor and unemployed be better able to make ends meet as a result of your 'new federalism'? One drawback is the time it will take to become effective. The administration has already let it be known that it will not submit legislation on the matter until spring. Rep. James Jones, D-Okla., chairman of the House Budget Committee, said he foresaw no significant response to Reagan's proposals this year. "Surely your plan is more than a rote enactment of GOP dogma?" Even if these questions can be answered satisfactorily, there remain the many diffi- culties involved. There are no quick fixes, but neither has Reagan demonstrated the plausibility of the "new federalism" in either the short or the long term. You think you can handle it? The House of Representatives will not consider a huge package deal of the sort that proved so convenient during Reagan's first year in office, according to House Speaker Thomas O'Nell Jr., D-Mass. That means the "new federalism" could succumb to paralysis by analysis; dissection and eventual stoppage of its constituent hills in committee. The question of delay itself presupposes that Reagan's policies could be implemented in accordance with his policies. Let's suppose, though, that all "neofederalist" legislation passes. What is the outcome? Quite simply, the states will have taken over the welfare and food stamp You think you can handle it? 47 billion worth of federal social programs STATE STATE Leonard Quinn '82 programs. Why should that be more effective? For that matter, why is it more appropriate? Poverty is, after all, a problem common to all sections of the nation. Wouldn't it be wiser to administer aid to the poor uniformly, through a centralized source? If geographical, cost-of-living or other adjustments are needed in determining what recipients are to be paid, it would seem a simple matter to make them on the federal level, rather than to overhaul the system. The Reagan Administration's panacea has always been, "Give government back to the people." Reagan, in heaping responsibility for social aid upon the states, rather than doing the people a favor, could be merely shifting an important burden from one level of government to another less qualified to bear it. I had a friend named Shaheen. He was actually a friend of my best friend's. Their families knew each other. Shaheen came into our lives in 1978, when his uncle brought him from Iran to be treated for cancer at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Karen, my best friend, and I tolerated Shaheen as older sisters tolerate a little brother who tags along everywhere. Whenever we planned to go someplace, Karen's parents would inevitably say 'Oh, that sounds like fun. Why don't you take Shaheen.' We didn't have a choice. So, all during the summer of 1976, Shaheen followed us everywhere. Whenever we went out to play, she would tell me what we were doing. JoLYNNE WALZ use park to play frisbee, whenever we went for a ride, Shabee was there. I never knew him well, though. He didn't talk much. Karen knew him because her family and his were Baha's, members of a religion that spilt off from Islam in the 19th century in Iran. There he was Baha's in Kansas City, so the group is very close. When Karen first told me she was a Baha'i, my reaction was 'A what?' I'd heard of Protestants, Catholics, Muslims, Bahá'ís, even Zoroastrians, but I didn't hear them. Karen told me that the founder of her religion, Bahu'a lhah', claimed to be the latest incarnation of God in a series of incarnations that included Isaiah, Bahh, Abraham, Moses, Jesus and Muhammad. Baha u'lah taught that each of these incarnations appeared on earth to bring people to a higher plane of spirituality and human development. He was kind of a space age prophet, since he said he was sent to prepare us spiritually for the scientific era, the space age. Baha's believe in world unity and sexual equality. All their marriages are civil because they have no clergy, and because women are equals, they don't wear veils. In Iran, where the Baha'i faith originated, a woman without a veil is a prostitute. Government officials in Iran, where government and religion are inexplicably interwoven, started to distrust Baha's, especially because Baha'u'lillah taught that Baha's is should establish a theocracy, a state ruled by leaders of the Baha'i religion. Officially, Iran has a policy of tolerance for They were no real threat because their numbers were so small, but their members tended to be well educated and held responsible and visible positions. religious minorities such as Jews and Christians, but the Baha'is were an off-shoot of Islam, the government religion, preaching against the Iranian government. Following the Iranian revolution, which catapulted the Ayatollah Ruhul Khomein from exile to power, Iranian officials started firing Baha's from their jobs and seizing their property. Then they started arresting, torturing and killing Baha's. The charges against them included "belonging to a proscribed religion" and "spreading prosecution." They are even charged, "Zionism" and "Judaism" because one of their schools is in Israel. The persecution was just beginning when Shaheen's cancer went into remission. He was well enough to go home, back to Iran, but his doctor said that if he returned, he would be drafted or killed. We lost track of him five years ago. One day Karen came to school and told me that Shaheen's uncle had sent him to South America. The last we heard, Shaheen was living with relatives in Great Britain. However, he was always in danger of having his vasa revoked and having to return to Iran. Since then, filled size articles have been regularly appearing, burried in the back pages of newspapers. They are repetitive. Always reporting that more Baha is have been executed in some small village in Iran. Nobody knows exactly how many have died, because statistics Whenever Karen or I notice one of these articles, we always talk about it. "Have you heard anymore about Shaheen?" I always ask her then. We harbor a small fear in our stomachs that he or members of his family are killed by thousands of Baba is who have died in Iran. But six million Jews died before the end of the Nazi holocaust. Many Americans denied early reports of that tragedy. That many people just can't be dead. It's unreal. But people have to face reality, and it's easier to feel a tragedy if it touches you personally. When one of those articles about the execution of Baba's in Iran appears in the paper, Karen and I know that whoever happens to read it will ask the same question that I asked six years ago. Tousands of people. That's such a large number that we won't seem possible that they all die beil. "What's a Raha'i?" A Baha'i is Shaheen. A Baha'i is Karen. Baha'is are people, and thousands of people can't just die and be burried in the back pages of newspapers. The University Daily USS (5654) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except September. Student participation must be at least $10 for a six month or $24 for a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $8 year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 a semester, send the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanaan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas. KANSAN Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Nateline Jutie Managing Editor Tracee Hannon Editorial Editor Tara Schuster Campus Editor Gene George Campus Editor Jane Pennell Assistant Campus Editors Joe Reben, Rebecca Chaney Assignment Editor Bob Harrah Sport Editor Hon Hagittron Associate Sports Editor Gina Health Associate Sports Editor Rilene Mertz, Rilene Appellman Makeup Editors Lisa Manssor, Lillian Davis, Ron Appellman Makeup Editors Rilene Mertz, Rilene Appellman Photo Editor Ben Bigger Photographers Jon Hardesty, John Hankammer, John Beler, Photographers Bob Greenspan, Tracy Thompson, Mark McDonald Retail Sales Manager ... Ann Hornerberger National Sales Manager ... Howard Shalmsky Sales and Marketing Adviser ... John Ohranen General Manager and News Adviser ... Rick Musser Jniversity Daily Kansan, February 2, 1982 Page 5 Commission to look at apartment plan Pre-enrollment Seventeen fourplex apartments will be built on a KU professor's property at the northwest corner of North and Michigan streets if the Lawrence College City commission approves the plan at its meeting at 7 tonight. The plan to be considered is better than the plan the commission approved last April, the plan will result in less population density that said commissioner Barkley cited. Adrian Tang, associate professor of computer science, said the original plan was still legally solid but he wanted the development to be less use. Because of city ordinances, the commission just approve the new plan even though another man has been approved already, Clark said. "It is a little strange. That's the first time I can remember anything like this, but I think that's an ordinance," Clark said. "I voted for it (the plan) the first time and this one is even better in terms of neighborhood impact." drainage of storm water from the property may be discussed tonight. TOMMISSIONER Nancy Shontz said that Walter Hicks, architect for Tang, said the drainage system would be constructed so that more rain water was captured than the city required. The city requires that a development's drainage system capture any additional water beyond the run-off that would result if the system only single-family residences on it, Hicks said. However, the proposed development will capture any additional water beyond the amount draining from the property in its present undeveloped state, he said. Shoots said, "Our policy is not very stringent and we don't want to water put into the system because of development." But Shon'tz said she had been told by George Williams, director of public works, that the development would exceed the city's drainage requirements. CONCERNING THE aesthetics of having 17 four-plex buildings on one property, Tang said. "My aim is to make them look slightly different from existing four-plexes." One house had a dog and he hoped to build at least 12 of the 17 buildings with separate entrances to each of the houses. "Their plans will provide more retention than our policy requires," she said. "They'll be sort of townhouse style," he said. "They will be to make them more contemporary—like buildings." Shontz said, "There's very little the commission can do in terms of aesthetics. The plans the architect showed me looked very attractive." Hicks said people who were not financially involved in planning should not bother developers with aesthetic considerations when slowed development and made it more expensive. "People who have no vested interest in development should not make decisions based on I are an artist' or I know what's best for the city.' "Hicks said. librarians to teach research methods class Beginning tomorrow and Thursday Watson Library reference department will offer a noncredit research course, Rob Melton, reference librarian, said yesterday. y DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter Mellon, who started the course last spring, said its purpose was to help students learn how to get information and find materials at the library. *classes will be offered once a week on both Wednesday and Thursday, he said. Students can sign up for the classes at the Students can sign up for the classes at the reference desk. moderately successful, it has been limited because the course is not listed in the timetable and therefore a lot of students don't know about it.' Mellon said. The course is not credited, he said, but it would be beneficial to any student who has to do research. Charles Getchell, reference librarian, and Melton will teach the course. For the first class the librarians will review with the students how to use the card catalog and also what some of its complexities are, Melton said. "We will teach students how to use indexes for periodicals, documents, manuscripts and other sources." *We will also show them how to use reference materials such as encyclopedias, bibliographies, histories, and other sources.* "ALTHOUGH enrollment has been He said the use of microform materials also would be discussed DURING ONE class there will be an option either to learn in detail about government agencies or to learn more about them. From page 1 At the final session they will show students how to strategically plan and organize research. "Students in the past have found this course very helpful." Melton said. Under the batch system, student schedules are all fed into a computer at the same time. The computer then tries to establish workable schedules for as many students as possible. But students are not workable schedules means students do not have a choice in the section of a course, Mann said. irus year, he said, more undergraduates have enrolled along with some graduates and a good percentage of them are first-year students. MANN SAID he found that most schools the size of KU who use a pre-enrollment had converted to the on-line system from the batch system because it was more responsive to He said the committee also found that costs on the online system would be less than were estimated. "My opinion is that the cost is one thing, but I don't think the costs in either case were all that great when you look at the number of students we're talking about running through. I think it's a heck of a lot more responsive to our students, personally." "I think the committee saw what the cost implications were because they dropped significantly from the original cost we had looked at there (in the first report)," he said. ACCORDING TO THE 1979 report, 20 new terminals would cost $70,350, and other costs including staffing and maintenance would run approximately $40,670 annually. Mann said, however, that the committee found it would cost less to take the on-line approach because KU probably could buy terminals that the College of Health Sciences now leases. Mann said that the University probably would purchase 15 IBM computer terminals already on lease to the College. He said the University could install them on a three-year installation payment plan. He said costs also might be kept down if the staff that was used normally in the Allen Field House enrollment was trained to do the process at the terminals. Mann said that the terminals probably would arrive in June or July. "It will cost more money for a year or two." Mann said, but he added that Allen Field House enrollment had its costs too, and that they were hard to determine. He said the bulk of the costs would come from his computer system and the renovation of the pressroom. "Those computer costs will pretty much dissipate and after they're paid out, which is about one to three years, you're talking about a cost of less than $6,000 a year," Mann said. He said that figure would include fall and spring pre-enrollments, regular enrolments, and summer programs. Loans From page 1 Front page: difference between the parent loan and the GSLa. Also, Weinberg said that the government asks parents of interest on parent loans it does on Google. ANOTHER SIGNIFICANT difference between the loan programs is the repayment time. The first payment for GLSs is due seven to 10 months after graduation. For the parent loans, the first payment is due 60 days after a loan is taken out. "Some parents would not be able to meet that 60-day deadline." Weinberg said. The parent loans also require a credit check "Some families would not want that," he said. So far this year only 22 KU students have applied for the parent loans, compared to 7,417 students who have applied for GSLs, Weinberg said. With the tighter restrictions placed on GSLs, however, he said the parent loan program may become more attractive to parents and students. "I think it's going to become a program of significance in 1982-83." Weinberg said. SUNFLOWER TRAVEL SPORT Spring Break Ski Trip Winter Park, Colo.—March 13-18 All Inclusive Package: rt. motorcoach transportation 4 nights lodging at High Country Inn *4 days equipment rental/3 days lift* breakfast and dinner daily at High Country Inn Reservation Deadline: February 10 $375/person dbl occupancy $375/person dbl occupancy $325/person quad occupancy (limited space available—call Ruths Hughes 842-4000) Headquarters for All your Spring Break Travel Planning Maupintour travel service Spring Break A Airline seats and vacation packages are filling fast. Get the best deal. Buy your tickets now! Heading Home? Heading Home? **Lowest Air Fares** We guarantee it if ever you find there was a lower fare than the one used for ticket—and for which you would have qualified—we guarantee you a refund of the difference. We are the only company making this guarantee. We can do it because we have total confidence in our reservation staff and their competence. Bahamas Cruise $589 March 13-21. Four days aboard the YT Fl渡, Costa Cruises' Party Ship Lawrence with refreshments provided. All meals and entertainment aboard ship including a "Welcome Aboard" cocktail dinner party. Soak up the Bahamas sunshine in Freeport and Nassau! Ft. Lauderdale $373.50 Spend seven nights at the Beach Club Hotel in sunny Fort Lauderdale! Fly roundtrip on United Airlines (midweek fare $283 included). Use Funway Holidays' discount Funchard and discover Florida with Funway's destination packages. Cancun $463 Want a great suntai during Spring Break? Choose the beach at Cancun with seven nights at the acacias Hotel. 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MARCH 13-19 DANIELLE BARRY & JAMES POTTER TAOS . . . at the SUA office, Kansas Union A world of its own: vast uncrowded, powder slopes under a brilliant blue sky; slopes for all levels of skiing; the historic town of Taos . . . $303 includes transportation, 4 nights lodging, ski rental & 4 days lift tickets. 864-3477 SKI TAOS SKI TAOS WE KNOW SOME SURPRISING FACTS ABOUT THINNING HAIR. ___ We can't stop thinning hair. But we can make the most of the hair you have, because we have the latest scientific data For instance, we know ways to cut and style thinning hair so it looks fuller. We also know that as hair thins, it becomes finer. So building it is essential. Then too, as hair thinns, the scalp often secretes more oil, which holds hair down, makes it even thinner. So controlling oil is important, too. Now there's a scientific system to deal with these problems. First, we design the right style. Then we use and prescribe the new RK Thinning Hair System by Redkera", a lineup of special, proven products created specifically to give a man's thinning hair more fullness, control and predictability. Stop by today and let us show you just how full thinning hair can really look. You may be very pleasantly surprised. REDKEN Safety Responder Center Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her. GQ Gentleman's Quarters 611 West 9th · 843-2138 · Lawrence Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1982 Spare time JAMES BROWN Special to the Kansan Human Switchboard members, left to right, Ron Metz, Myrna Marcarian, Bob Pfeifer, and Steve Calabria. Contrasts spell success for Human Switchboard By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Contributing Reviewer Human Switchboard is a hand hard to figure. Melodies and lyrics that sometimes baffle and often don't jibe in a traditional context. Occasional nonsemenical vocals seemly thrown in simply to create a feeling. One moment they'll have the crowd dancing fast, furious, and—wham—they'll stop ice cold with a jolting change of pace. Yet somehow it works, at least most of the time. Human Switchboard is a four-piece band from Cleveland who have received nothing but critical raves all over America and abroad, especially since the release of their long-overdue debut studio album, "Who's Landing in My Hangar?", in November. They'll appear at Lawrence's Off-the-Wall book tour of Middle America, brought to tour of Middle America. The band has been together since 1977. Guitarist, singer, and principal songwriter Bob Pfeifer grew up two doors down from drummer Ron Metz in suburban Cleveland. Pfeifer and keyboardist Myrna Marcarian met as students at Syracuse University. Pfeifer was an honors philosophy student, Marcarian was studying classical piano. SWITCHBOARD GOT ITS START without playing a note live; saving Lives and putting out a single on their own label. Two 425 and several trips to the East Coast later, the group has been plaued several times by the Village Voice, New York Times, and England's largest music weekly, New Musical Express. Next month they'll be on the cover of New York Rocker. "We just did it for fun—we saw what was happening. Pfeffer said by phone from Ohio last week. Then the first record got great reviews, and then the more interested and quit what we were done." For those who haven't heard, or even heard of, Human Switchboard—and, indeed, most haven't it, to no fault of the band's—their sound is closest to the 60s garage band genre, but with updated tapes and endless twists thrown in that defy classification. Pteifer plays a nervous, scratchy, frantic guitar and sings in a voice off-compared to Lou Reed, without sounding affected. Marcarian's Farisa organ is cheese and sometimes even church-like; she sings in a voice both beautiful and penetrating. Metz directs the unpredictable, stop-and-go part that's normally called the beat. Steve Calabria, who plays on three album tracks, has just been added as the band's permanent bassist. SONGS LIKE "CAN WALK ALONE," { Used To} Believe in You, and the title track are filled with urgency and desperation, while "Saturday's Girl" is a beautiful, delicate song that sounds like a chorus vocals. The song could be a Top 40 hit if radio programmers would give it a chance. Switchboard has the ability to be fragile and violent, grasping and disturbing. The vocal backtalk between Pfeifer and Marciarian works best on "Refrigerator Door," *7*-minute i-picture of frustrated communication with stinging realism and haunting silence, sometimes coming out as screams. We've told us, as though we've walked in on a lover's quarrel, the couple oblivious to our presence. "I believe a lot more in people than in causes," Pfeifer said. "Their commitment and how they treat each other has a hell of a lot more to do with the world will end up than stopping the bomb. THEIR SONGS DEAL PERSONALLY and introspectively with relationships. In the strictest sense, Switchboard isn't political, but the songs can be interpreted more broadly. "We deal with economic problems, but by talking about the immediate problem of how to pay the rent, as opposed to 'why do we spend $75 billion on defense. I think that question occurs a little bit differently. That's the kind of thing I talk about with my friend. The kind of thing that makes me happy or sad." "What's important to me . . . I can accept it if someone says 'I don't like the band, or the music—at least these believe in what they're doing.' "Pfeffer said. "Sincityer. That's what I'm going to think." That's what it's been missing in music. I know too many bands whose major goal is to make it. Sometimes it doesn't work, though. Some of the songs seem repetitive. The quick halls sometimes simply irritate the confusion falls apart. Lines go on where they should end. "Book on Looks," a rave-up testimonial, comes across as an obnoxious parody. HUMAN SWITCHBOARD isn't perfect. But they are real. By MIKE GEBERT Contributing Reviewer 'Prince of the City' good, not perfect PRINCE OF THE CITY Starring Treat Williams, Jerry Orbach, Bob Balaban, Lindsay Crouse. Written by Jay Presson Allen and Sidney Lumet. Directed by Diluvet Lumet. It is difficult to review a motion picture like "Prince of the City"—difficult to watch as a film with so many good things in it falls short of greatness; difficult to explain why that happened without turning people away. To begin with, then, let it be said: for all of its flaws, "Prince of the City" is well worth going to. You may even have a moral obligation to go, and to go to "Heartland" and "Reds" and "Ragtime," as well as flawed they are all, if you want local theaters to show anything that doesn't have either axe murders or cute robots, that is. Moral obligation, of a somewhat different kind, is what "Prince of the City" is about; the guilty compulsion of a cop who can no longer stomach the fact that he and his partners are crooked, and so becomes what they consider to be the worst kind of crook—an informant. DANNY CIELLO (TREAT WILLIAMS) agrees to inform, agrees to be outfitted with a tape recorder, and becomes the middleman for police corruption with the mob, with which he has family ties, chiefly a cousin. He lays down some initial rules—he refuses to go after part- prosecutor in In absence of Malice," as a-you-guessed it—federal prosecutor. He's better here, even if it seems like he'is in a contest with Albert Finney and Kenneth McMillan (the fireman "Ragtimate") to see who can play in the movies in one year. He's better here, even if seems like he's in a contest with Albert Finney and Kenneth McMilan (the fireman "Ragtimate") to see who can play in the movies in one year. ners. But, as the case gets more involved, he loses control to unofficial federal prosecutors, and eventually finds himself the target of their efforts against him. He also his friends and imprisoned by federal custody. The director, Sidney Lumet, has made a career out of New York-oriented material, as in "The Pawnbroker," "Sericpo," "Dog Day Afternoon," and, "regrettably," the Wiz. Similarly, much Prince flavor, most of the small roles are perfectly cast, with the sorts of faces one won't find much in the days of William Hurt. **IF A MOVEMENT COULD be a made of saving graces,“Prince of the City” would be nearly perfect; it has a gritter street feel, looks good, and is intelligent enough to avoid all but a few cheap shots. But it centers on one character, one actor, and Treat Williams isn't the right actor. In most cases, he is not with underwider low-life, he has the right phony bravado; but as he becomes the craven pawn of prosecutors, he doesn't have the ability to let us know what's going on inside—and as the plot gets wrapped up in judicial maneuvers at the same time, it's easy to get as lost as he does. The part needs an actor who can achieve instant rapport with his audience. Treat Williams is simply not of their caliber. one actor in this film does have that kind of rapport—Jerry Orbach, who plays one of Williams' buddies, Gus Levy. And other parts are well cast, even Bob Balan, the federal THE COMPARISON with Pacino is most ap- however, because Lumet and Pacino d' "Sericpo," which was also about corrupt copr This film, even though it was conceived for Jor- Travolta and director Brain DePalma (who did clever rip-off of the theme in "Blow Out" seems to be aiming for that kind of high-mine seriousness and the attendant prestige (o that's why you don't want him superior) for Lumet, who's a good director when he ha good material, and helpless when he doesn't because the best things in the film don't function on that simple level. A great asset of the film is that it has the courage to take the time it needs to tell its story. It lasts two hours and forty-five minutes and covers a period of some years. In doing so, it plays its theme out fully, never taking shortcuts. And it makes all sides of the issue more accessible, even if you feel that it lives on a cop's salary and, that crooked or, not these cops get results to the morality of informing and the impossibility of anybody in this kind of work staying clean. With Big Brother-Big Sisters a little time goes a long wav By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter When students move away from home, not many people refer to them as "big brother" or "big sister" any more. For those who miss monster, there is a campus program called just that—Big Brother-Big Sister—that encourages people to make younger friends. "The program takes volunteers and assigns them students from the Lawrence school district." Kari Dyck, a member of the program, said yesterday. "Once a month, the organization has activities planned. It included a skating party, a picnic party, a dance party." "The volunteers are asked to spend two to three hours a week with the children doing things that involve learning." THE BIG BROTHER-BIG SISTER PROGRAM is a national organization, Rick Lingene, Great Bend senior, said, but “it's run differently in different places.” Lingreen said that KU sororities and fraternities and some church groups have donated to it in the past and that the Student Senate also funded it. The program has been at KU since the early 1980s, and its office is in the Kansas Union. Tony Andersen, Salina junior, said that his fraternity had sponsored the haunted house for several years as part of their national philanthropy. "We converted a couple of rooms upstairs into mini-haundown houses and scared a lot of them." One prank had a fraternity member dressed as a mummy; another, wearing the costume of a demented doctor, and told the kids that the mummy was fine as long as he was kept in chains. The mummy would then break the chains. Brothers and Big Sisters last semester and that 50 more would be paired up this spring. "Anyone that wants to be a volunteer has to attend a workshop," she said. beneath workshop, she said: AT THE WORKSHOPS, the volunteers fill out evaluations and may indicate what type of child they are interested in befriending. Dyck said. Counselors from the schools attended by the children come to give an explanation of what the child expects and what is involved with the program. "We also suggest activities so they aren't totally on their own to find something every week. We stress that they're not a parent or not a disciplinarian, just a friend." Dyck said. School counselors recommend children to the program and the program uses the counselors "Sometimes the kids will have behavior problems and the volunteer won't know how to handle them, or sometimes the child's home life alarms the volunteer," Dyck said. If the problem is severe, the child is recommended for professional supervision rather than observation. Dyck said that the children involved were from broken homes, have had trouble adjusting to new housing. Dvck said that there are 60 pairs of Big THE VOLUNTEERS ARE ASKED to join the program for a school year, but can participate for a longer time if they wish. Dyck said. She asked everyone who knew him had a little brother for four years. Lingere was once a Big Brother and is now a staff member. 'MY LITTLE GUY had to move away after his mother died of cancer,' he said. Lingreen added he had felt close to the little boy and his mother. on campus TODAY THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a DUTCH LUNCH for members from 1 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union. There will be a HILLEL LUNCH from 12:15 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. in Cork I of the Kansas Union. Morris Kleiner, associate professor of law, will speak on "Jewish Ethics and Business." THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kanass Union. THE TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Bonion Center. THE JAPANESE FILM SERIES will crowdron "King of the Pier" Gent- lemen, 17 in La Plata, Chile. There will be a STUDENT ORGANIZATION AND ACTIVITIES LEADERSHIP WORKSHOP at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. How to Visit Our At The Losing Game DIET CENTER It’s a Natural! It’s a Beautiful Medical Center. 841 DIET There will be a FACULTY RECITAL performed by Timothy Timmons on saxophane at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. TOMORROW There will be a BLAK HISTORY MONTH LUNCHCORE ROUNDTABLE at 11:30 a.m. in the Meadowlark Room of the Kansas Union. B41 DIET milestones The Kansas welcomes items for inclusion in this column. Information concerning outstanding accomplishments of KU students, faculty and staff should be submitted to the Entertainment Editor no later than 5 p.m. Wednesday. Balloon-a-Gram TO SERVE THE OCCasion SEND A BALLOON-A-GRAM 10148615 SAMUEL P.O. Box 3227 New York, NY 10003 Cold Beer Bud, Coors and Miller At Your KM Store 9th and Illinois Laura Seitz is offering a February Special. A complimentary skin care treatment with every permanent. For men and women. Coupon not good on this special *Special Reductions on Redken products that have the RED HEART STICKER. REDKEN Nair gallery hair gallery Grooming For Men Beauty For Women Famatic Park Hill Plaza Studio 2330 Louisiana Phone 842 8372 hair gallen made with VISA® Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 TANK from ken's PIZZA Get AFree Keg Of Beer Everytime you or any other member of your organization comes in to our restaurant, we'll apply the total amount of your check to your organization's Free Keg Tally Sheet. EVERYTIME your organization's Tally Sheet reaches $500.00 we'll give you a free keg. To the organization that totals up the largest amount, we'll give another free keg in May 1982 The whole program is designed simply as a way to thank you for your business. So hurry down to Ken's and register your organization now. ken's Pizza 27th and Iowa 843-7405 ✓ MEET WITH THE HEWLETT-PACKARD EXPERT! FIND OUT ABOUT THE NEW HP-IL PRODUCTS r SPECIAL SALE PRICE ON HP 4IC CALCULATOR $199.95 DATE: FEB. 3 TIME: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. PLACE: KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES MAIN UNION, LEVEL 2 hp HEWLETT PACKARD kansas A union bookstores main union level 2, satellite shop on in out- ents, the p.m. you here there am im ni m ai do di jo de ut at is ha it n't the story and exc. cuts. on a oops the work University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1982 Page 7 Med Center trains emergency personnel By TOMHUTTON Staff Reporter The first medical personnel to arrive on the scene of a major accident probably will have been trained or certified through the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Mike Szelgzyczki, associate director, KU Children's Medical Training program in the School of Allied Health, said yesterday. "No longer are the ambulances in Kansas meat wars" "Szevvel said" The Med Center not only has its own training program for paramedics, it also directs state testing of students from other schools, Szczygiel said. SZCZYGIEL MUST approve the programs developed by junior colleges, technical schools and hospitals in training emergency care technicians, and all paramedics must pass a state exam administered by the Med Center. The Med Center's program, the Emergency Medical Intensive Care Technician program, prepares students to work on emergency mobile intensive care units. These units, classified as emergency medical units, respond only to the most serious calls, usually are funded through hospitals or local governments. Examples of these types of ambulances include the KARE units in Kansas City, Kan, and the MED-ACT ambulances of Johnson County. The other two are one ambulance services. These types of ambulances respond to calls that EMICT STUDENTS differ from other paramedics, Szczygiel said. These students are qualified to administer drugs, start intravenous fluids and conduct heart fibrillation if a patient's heart stops. These divisions—classroom, clinical and actual experience on a stage-one ambulance—prepare the student for the required state certification test. Of the 28 students who began the Med Center program this fall, 15 still are enrolled. "EMICTs respond to life or limb-threatening situations," Szczygiel said. "Severe auto accidents, diabetic attacks and areas where advance life-support methods are needed are the kinds of calls that they respond to." "The students have to achieve a minimum of 75 percent on all three phases of the program," "$2cybrid said. We welcome them to come back next year." This day-long test, consisting of both written and practical examinations, is passed by 92 percent of the students, Szczygiel said. require more care than is usually available in stage two ambulances, which often are privately owned, Szczugel said. Becoming an EMCI through the Med Center program requires a student to complete three parts of an intense one-year course. Police arrested a 29-year-old man Friday in connection with a Dec. 8 robbery at the Jayhawk Oil Company, 1306 W. Sixth St. Sherman E. Tolbert was arrested for aggravated robbery and is being held in the Douglas County Jail on $50,000 bond. The bond was set at $50,000 because Tolbert had been convicted of a previous felony, Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said yesterday. On the record Tolbert is accused of robbing the service station of about $300, after spraying Mace in an attendant's face. BURGLARS STOLE more than $4,000 worth of items from a residence on Highway 59, south of Lawrence near the Wakara River, the Douglas County Sheriff's Department said yesterday. After kicking in the southeast door of the hotel, they were joined by 3 a.m. Saturday, burglars ransacked the house and stole items including a diamond and ruby ring valued at $500, one电视 television, two black and white televisions, 100 EMICTs can administer drugs before the patient arrives at the hospital, saving vital time in many cases, Szczegły said. KU POLICE reported a forgery Saturday night. A 21-year-old KU student lost his checkbook sometime between Jan. 20 and Jan. 29, police said. The student received a bank statement with a $500 check that had been written for an airline ticket to Tucson. Ariz. KU police are investigating the case. The University Daily Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one tire two tires three tires four tires five tires six tires seven tires eight tires nine tires 15 words or longer two words three words four words five words six words seven words eight words nine words 10 words or longer AD DEADLINES to run Monday Thursday 2 p.m. Tuesday Friday 2 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Tuesday 5 p.m. Wednesday Wednesday FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kanans will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. ANNOUNCEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can include any of the following: KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ERRORS POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996 11 KOA Laundromat, Free dry with 75# wash By the Airport. East highway 842.842-3877 Applications for Rotary Foundation scholarships for 1839-1854 are being accepted. Applications will be March 1, 1852. Contact Allyn Allen, Lawyer, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone: 2-555-1234. THE ETC SHOP 10 WEST 9th (West of the K童 Store) Vintage and classic contemporary clothing - wool shirts, sportswear, coatings, coats, gloves, waders, formal wear FOR RENT Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf Prepare for LSAT exam. 2-day seminar. Prepare for SAT prep. 1-week seminar. From Stanford, Lectures, practice exams. From Chicago, Test Prep, practice exams. Intensive Preparatory School 211 Charlotte, Kentucky City 362-3838. Cost $75. Register. Register at www.lsat.com. Studious atmosphere. International meals, including wine and fine dining, looking for sixth cooperative group amenities. MEMBERSHIPS INCLUDED. Large house, appliances and laundry. Call 841-769-6026. HANOVER PLACE **completely furnished,** **1st & 4th bath on Mass. Only 3 blocks from** **4th & 11th on Mass.** DONT DELAY **Reserve your apt. today,** **on a month-, waived pay** **811-212 or 812-213** For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. tf Available now. Two bedroom spacious apts and annexes, carpeted interior, carpeted droplets, fireplaces, large outdoor spaces to campus, and on bus route $345 per month. MADBROOK WB 128 & Identify #84-2600. Two-bedroom duplex with garage and deck 24th and Ousdahl. $250. 841-8867 or 1-782- 3716. tf ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished on-campus home immediately. Flexible upgrades available. Located on 13th and Only Two 8th floors from the Office. Call 842-752- 841 or 841-3252. New two bedroom, apartment, low utilities, (two bucks KU, central air. equipped kitchen, carpet and draps). 104 Teen. Call 842- 4242. 2-5 Brand new 3-bedroom houses, $345 and $450, 841-7597 or 841-7251. 2-11 Victoria Capri Apts. 1 & 2 B hrs apts, also have studios I blk away from tennis and basketball courts. Within walking distance of KU campus. Call 842-9703. 2-4 1. br. apt, $180 a month + utilities, walking distance from campus. 843-6725. 2-9 Assume lease, unfurnished 2 BH App. In- connection to University. $250/mo. plus us- plies. Call 816-357-0296 or 842-8896 from 6 to 23 Roommate needed for 3 bedroom house. 1329 Kentucky St. ST $116 + 1/3 utilities. Call 841-0556 anytime 2-9 Good room in large furnished house block from Union. Utilities paid. 843-3208 after 5 No pets. 2-4 reusable reef toilet 640-840-51 Apple and Macintosh devices fully reusable 2 bed 840-720-430 Fabricius toilet, dishwashers ALC- cissors toilet by 1741 W 391 to see by 1741 W 391 to see BLS-5 28. Br pl, on bus route, convenient to shop and eat at a local grocery store. Central air-bell road garage. Available. Shown in Figure 15-43. For second semester, bedroom in quiet home. Private entrance. 843-2121 after 3PM. Available anytime. 2 bdmr. apt. Diposal & dishwasher. Water paid. Good location. Call events. 719-2835 2-4 *bottle-lease 2* Br. apt complete kitchen *drape-drap* central air-bell. Call 800-355-4991 large studio. Carpeted, newly remodeled. Washer-dryer in hammast. 2 blocks from campus. Rent negotiated. 749-2700 or 913- 489-3611. Luxury duplex on bus route; all appliances, reasonable rent. Call 842-0361. 2-3 Sublue twice two bedroom room, law infuriated. Convenient, convenient, to ship 2-5 Call 842-4461 $200 month - 2 bedroom apt. Near new apartments, close to campus. Normal rent for $300. lst come, lst serve baskets. No Pets. 813-479-498 2-5 1. bdmr, apt, for sub-lease until July 21, 1982. 2. $245 mg, bus route available from feb. 15. Free rent for Feb. 2010. 3. L. Avalon Rd. Call 872-2531 or 814-6508-21. Poor grades have opened up a farmhouse. No propane bills—national 5 rooms or bath. In good condition. Is minor damage. Ref. required. 749-2886 2:12 8:00 p.m. For sableble, 2 Br. apt. $310 + elect. Available now. Telephone: 841-8138. STUDIO APT. for rent. 3 rooms. $145 + deposit. Water paid. On bus route. 841- 6484. 2-5 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! **New York:** "A New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense to use them-1) As study guide, for 40 minutes; 2) As textbook, for 40 minutes. **New Analysis of Western Civilization** available now in Town Crier. The book is also available online. Alternator, starter and generator units. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3900 W. 6th. Alcee-Lansing Series Nine speakers, rated 250 watts, adjustable crossovers. Make offer. Call 841-4765 anytime. 2-3 19" Sony color TV. Slightly damaged in shipment. Reduced for clearance. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 2-3 G.E. portable cassette recorders. 3 free tapes with every unit purchased before 2-10-82. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 2-3 73 VW Bug. Good condition $1500. More information call 864-2382 weekdays. 2-3 1979 Mazda Hatchback, clean. A.C. Automatic. 25,000 miles, $3800. 843-4255. Keep trying 2-4 1972 Cheville. New paint, Mags, Pioneer AM/FM Cass, Many extra parts, Beautiful and $1800. Jim, 842-1583. 2-3 Bookcases and stereo cabinets of solid wood and 84 bookcases $9 each. I also make bookshelves. I can build shelves in Kansas. Hardcover available. Michael Stough 303 West 131st, Mon 34, 83-892. Reallistic Minimus 7 miniature speakers. Realistic Minimus 7 great sound for stereo. - 843-100-6955. Royal 5000 CE typewriter—dual pitch self- correcting—Like new. Call 749-2432 af- ternoons. 2-5 Car Stereo Pioneer Super Tuner and Pioneer Power Amplifier. 749-2374. 2-3 1971 White over yellow Chevy Impala 404 conv. Everything original, super clean, loads. Hercules 8 tractor system. Jeep Wagon 18 in 4 awnings (see make a bid). 2-4 LAB SERIES guitar amp. 2-12" spks., 100 watts, cover, excellent condition, $325. 842- 1617. 2-4 FM 8-track, Michelina, very sharp. Must see 749-3728, 749-4676. Keep trying. Please. Polaroid SX-70. Very good condition. Must be ready. Call 841-2891. Please 2-hours before trying. HELP WANTED Use your spare time to earn money for "extra" aggressive *stair-starters* only. Field of total health and fitness. For appointment, call 842-8870. FOUND FOUND, near Pteradactyl. Hohner harmonia. 749-2625, evenings. Describe to claim. 2-3 Bureau of Child Research has student 50% employment, while ability training required. Prefer previous experience. Mildred Julyi 111 Haworth for application. Michael Meyer 111 Haworth for positive action Employee. Clean deacidation. PART-TIME INCOME. Earn $10 for 10 minute demonstration vignette, invoice, and inventory required. Details send $2. R. George Runge 4736 2736 Ernest Drive, Edgewater, 2.8 CRUISES, RESORTS, SAILING AIMED COURSES, TECHNOLOGY, COUNSELORS Eurotips Europe, Carribean, Worldwide Summer Travel, Bend $65 Mk for APPLICATION Carrier, 133 Box 6029, Sacramento, USA. 133 Box 6029, Sacramento, USA. Stockbroker训习. College grade. Kee- tioned in addition to probabilities, arbitrations and ergonomic individual Respect for the Human Body. The University of Kansas Libraries is聘 qualified WORK-STUDY applicants to be responsible in a number of hairy departments for a period for daytime, evening and weekend hours. For more information please visit www.ku.edu. For phone 884-3001. For KOAEA library, or phone 884-3001. For KOAEA library, or phone 884-3001. For KOAEA library, or Energetic personable, waitresses wanted. Must be hard worker and able perform full duty at job site. Provide hourly wage plus tip, commission plus incentive bonus. Apply after 5 p.m at Gam- cled Center. Part time opportunity distributing literature. Collect call after 6:30 1-501-465-371 2-4 POSITION OPENINGS: K. U. Residence Hall Assistant. Must be sophomore, junior, senior, or graduate student for 1982-83 Academic Division. Must be sophomore, junior, senior, or graduate student for 1982-83 academic division. Must be graduate student for 1982-83 academic division. Fifth-year student for 1982-83 academic division. All applicants must complete a semester of achievement, residential group-living experience, and availability for occupations and job descriptions available now in the Office of Residential Programs. Mail resume to KU School of Human Sciences, 5th February 1982. The University of Kansas is an opportunity affirmative action player. 2-2 Student to help with housecleaning and childcare. 6 to 8 hours per week. $3 per must. Hue must own transportation. 842- 6729 2-5 GREAT OPPORTUNITY - Commission sales person wanted part-time. Must have car and be able to work 15 irs/week during weekdays for interview call. Lafayette 743-4129 for interview 2-5 Person interested in doing house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must canvass, house have own tools and be able to work in cooperation. Call Darlay 841-8386. XXXXXXXXXXXX Want to be a Stuffer for the Kansan? If you are free on Wed. morns, 9:00-12:00 and would like good pay, call or stop by the Kansan Business office. 118 Flint - 864-4358 ask for John Oberzon or Howard Shalinsky TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-0996 anytime, B.S. in physicx, M.A. in mathematics, or call 841-1678 (ask for A.M.). tf PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- TF 843, 4821. SUMMER CAMP COUNSELORS Overnight竿 camp in New York's Adirondack mountains, instructors in tennis, waterfront (WSI) sailing and arts; crafts, pioneering, music, photography, dance available in Placement Office or write: Andrew Roonen, Point OF Times, Campside 2-4. **STUDENT OPENINGS:** The Office of Office in Openings. 9400 N. Michigan Avenue, Opening Opens: 5pm-8pm. Data Entry Manager Control 20 hrs. week (valid driver license required). Mail resume to: Control 20 hrs. week (valid driver license required). 9:27-10:27. Contact Holen Wolf. Computer Assistant. 569-391-7898. Applications are being accepted for haftion positions as graduate teaching assistants in the School of Education. Students from any discipline are welcome to apply. The ground in the humanities and social science is required. Instructors conduct 8 weekly meetings associated with instruction in the Program, associated with instruction in the Program, and with the Program. Application forms may be obtained from the Western College Hall. Applications should be received by February 26, 1982. The Western Civilization affirmative action: women, minorities and affirmative action: women, minorities and affirmative action: students are encouraged apply. 2-8 Hurt your back or neck when you slipped on the heel? Don't delayprops. Call Dr Johnson at 843-6332, Accepting Lone Star & Blue Cross Insurance. 2-5 A sweetheart portrait fo: Valentine Days turned a simple story into a lasting memory. Swells Studio 710-1611. 2-12 LOST G get back to the Beogh in your own style of music. Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and theory lessons. All levels, teach teachers in various settings. Music. Curt Kalt 81-6917 2-16 Music. 81-6917. --at Encore! Call 842-2001 for more info... 2-26 Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corp. 25th and Iowa. 842-2001... 2-26 Lost: Canon AE1 camera on Jan. 26 in lost park at 1313 & Vermont. Please return! Hewdon. 841-3950. 2-3 Red and blue USA speeda tracking Hai. NOTICE PENTE sale at FOOTLIGHTS. Mention this ad and save 10% on any Pentе purchase. Footlights 25th & Iowa 2-2 Red and blue USA speedskating hat. Reward. 841-8661. 2-1 PERSONAL Valentine Parties—50% formals, suits, tuites, taisons, shoes, jewelry, hats. We'll help you put together your outfit. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 511 Hewlett, 824-4762. 2-11 MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. **tf** Skillier's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfried Skillier Endaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tt Select your party outfits early. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 842-4746. 511 Indiana. 2-11 Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photo- graphics. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swits Studio. 740-6111. If The Kegler—Weekly Specials on Kegls!! Call 841-9450—1610 W. 23rd. if Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 149-161. Brighten that special someone's birthday with a personalized birthday cake. Phone 841-6215. 2-5 SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS WINTERKAMP, DILLON AND OTHERS Economical packages every weekend and school break Call SKI Etc. E16-8438-sumbu K. S.U—Where Men are Men and Sheep are Nervous. Bumper Stickers 1 each from UMC, P.O. Box 1201. Lawrence. 2-5 If you can't be with that special person this Valentines Day send the next best thing, a life size up-illow from FOOT-LIGHTS—25 inch, i/o, Holiday Park. 2-94 Mary-Ellen Rodgers was so mud when she got her x-Rated Valentines Day card she took the Beaver. FOOTLIGHTS, 25th, & Iowa. 2-9 VAIL SKIING is now no-crowds or crowns our 3-bedroom, 2-bathroom Baskin-Rollers Center. Baskin-Rollers Center available in Fob and March (305) 528-6046 (305) 945-712-2-8 Tell that special person just what you real- ly need. FOG from FOG 2-9, LIGHTS, 25th & lows. Exquisite Valentines Day Gift - two-Lidded figurines (Spanish porcelain) "Kissing Boy" and "Girl with Candle" 842-0794, 9 am-10 pm Spring BreakAway! BAHAMAS STUDENT CRUISE March 14, 2012-18, 92 Only $598 --- From Lawrence With this special cruise over Spring Break, the majority of passengers will be students from other areas. Join in the fun! Make your reservations while space is available. Maupintour travel service Kansas Union 749-0700 Begin planning for Valentine's Day early, Call today and arrange for a Valentine's Day delivery of a Balloon-a-Gram. 841- 5848. 2-5 Tau Sigma Dance Club Bash Friday, Feb 5. 8:00-12:00 pm in the B-8 room. Live band plus all the beer you can drink! 2-5 BATGIRL MEETING 7 a.m. on Thursday, February 4th, 6:00 pm in Baseball Office, second floor. Allen Fieldhouse. For information Call 844-6196 2-4 ALL YOU CAN DRINK. $3.50 AT THE PALIUM WED. NIGHT. KY 110 Nightshower Night with Randy Baley LETRASTER PANTONE graphic art products seminar Wed. February 11 at 11:30 a.m - 10:30 p.m. 51st Art & Design Building. Vermont Office & Office Systems. Vermont 843-3644. 2-8 Get lucky at the Pladium all you can drink $3.50 Wed. night. 2-3 To the CHI RHO CHI's: Fuchsia and Black forever! Moderation is for Monks! From—A DEAD CROCKOACH. 2-2 SKI STEAMBOAT CHEAP: $33 per day, per person. inc. lifts. 4, 6 or 8 guests. Call (303) 799-6888. 2-15 TITUMING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, time (h), day (d), physica, M.A. (m) mathematical concepts, physics EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS project? Call 841-7683. 3-10 SERVICES OFFERED ONE IN THREE INSTERSECTOMIES ARE HEALTH COOPERATORS. Health Coopers are a group of campus and district healthcare providers that distribute information concerning wounds, health issues and treatment. They are 606-366-2006, by mail by 811 Union. Study Skills Workshop via videotape FREE! Music for Time Management. Register at the Student Assistance Center, 123 Strong, 844-644-6445. Time Management (Balloon), Send a personal Love Song with strings and percussion (or a Valentines delivery and performance). *844-644-6445* Get that job with a professionally prepared leader. the intest job hunting technique is better. WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say? how to say it? Stop by The House of Uber and pick up our phone for a brochure on resume and interview materials. 8-4 MON. 9-3 Sat, NOON-SUN. 3 Give a routing cheer for Marjorie Forne, those who do not know, to KU Medical she will go-so when you see her glowily we are. We’re on our way—w-2 I will MLX Experience editor (5 yrs./grad student will edit thems, dissertations. All disciplines. 833-869 after 6. 2-5 31/2 To the special people who made Jan. 26 and being all great. For being papered in an easy manner, Mr. Bain wrote smore's and ple, a birthday bouquet that he made for me. From my T-3d room to the Cat Room, I remember clock that is new, the wonderful disgusting candle that has burned into it so much that I had to cry—here's to Timeless chocolate cake, eagles. Freer beer, you all. Nancy Tuxedo= 28% off, Barb. Second-Hand Rose. 51 Indiana. 843-8746. 2-12 31/2¢ self service copies now at ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th and Iowa 842-2001 Beginning voice (singing) students. $5.00/ hr. 842-0038 2-3 Put your best, foot forward with a pencil, and write on it. Ana wrote on it: 1-26 and then 2-26 2-26 and then 2-26 Schaeider Wine & Key Shop -The final selection of wines in lawsuits-largest supplier of winekogs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212. Experienced English teacher will tutor gram- mar, composition, literature. Domestic or foreign students. 841-091 evenings. 2-3 LETRANST PANTONE art graphic art products seminar Wed, February 3rd at 11:30 AM Art & Design Building Sponsored by Strong Office Systems, Vermont, 834-3644 2-3 Guitar Lessons. Learn to play now from experienced teacher. Reasonable. Call Mark 841-2655. 2-12 TYPING It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. tt TYPING PLUS: Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resume, apologies with composition, grammar, research, foreign study, or Americas. 841-6254. Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IB Correcting. MIB Correcting. Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-8554 Mrs. Wright. tf Experienced typist. These, term papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-898. tf Experienced typist will type letters, thesas, and dissertations. IBM correcting selective. Call Donna 842-2744. tf Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectric. Call Elen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tf Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term papers, mise. IBM correcting selective. Barb, after 5 p.m. p.842-231. tf TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-5675. ff Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. IBM. B见 p. 9; 746-247. Ann. FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myrs 841-4980. tt Experienced typist, Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Electric. Elite or Pica. 842-3644. 2-5 TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS IBM *Correction*, Scientific - full-type tipe, spelling correction to composition assistance, emergency service service. 841-290-2. 297 Professional Typing, quick, reasonably united, paper supplied. Call evenings, 841- 7915. 2-3 Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, letters, legal, e- bib. Deb 843-9592. e-10 Professional typing. Dissertation, thesis, term paper, resume, letter, legal, etc. Deb. 843-3592 B-11 Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyting their thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 842-2801 for more info. 2-68 GOODBYE FINAL. DRAFTS! Papers edited, nolisted, typed. No job too large or small. Reasonable. 841-901 evenings 2-3 WANTED Male roommate. No utilities, January rent paid. $98.75 per mo. Call Kent collect (321) 788-0278. 2-2 Housestate to share large 2 DB b寝 in SW lawrence, D/W, D/W, garb disposp. FP, A/C $175/mo + 1. tl usl. Call John. 83-1916 or 842-2001. 2-3 Housemate wanted for nice 3 bedroom home-dishwasher, washer-dryer and many apples; $100 + 1/3-Call for details-841 4162. 2 Blocks from campus 2-2 GREAT DEAL 2 roommates need to be beautiful old house apes 2 blocks from campus $190 utility fees, no payoff $150 not due f. Feb. 10th, $843-450, $801-105 Housemate wanted. Own room in 3-bed- room house with backward, 1 block north of stadium. $137.81-6545. 2-5 Roommate to share very nice furnished 2 BR apt. 1耕点 to campus $110 + ½ upl. 749-0585 or 843-2116 (1-5). 2-2 Non-smoking male to share fully furnished 2 bdm. duplex $75 month + 1% utilities Close to campus; call after 7 pm 843-5815 .915 Roommate wanted to share large house with two females. Close to campus and downtown. 841-7785, after 5:00 p.m. 2-5 BATGIRL MEETING SCHEDULED February 4th, 6:00 pm in Baseball Office, second floor, Allen Fieldhouse. For 2 information call 864-4196. Male roommate should to share new 2- BDR door close to KU. Washer dryer, fireplace, garage $175 + 1 utilities 841- 864. 2-2 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment, 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 + 1% utilities. 749-268-325. 2-5 Three roommates to share duplex—three blocks from campus. Male or female. Liberal, smoker ok. 842-5104. 2-5 Person to ship 3-BR home with two others On bus route. $80/mo. 1/3 until 841-548-188 3rd female roommate, Village Square Apartment 841-1903. 2-4 LAW STUDENT week roommate to share large, well furnished 2 BR at Harvard Square Apts 5 (blocks from campus) $165. Airport amenities + 1-4 bd $285. Kelvin 790-3189 MALE ROOMMATE needed to share 3 br capacity + 7 utilities to share 3 br Call Brush 6341-6341 Roommate wanted. 3 Brm. House $65 per week. Wanted to drive by bus from house Dobbs or Mail 841-2695. 2-12 BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold from a KANSAN CLASSIFIED ... BUY, SELL, or FIND YOUR pot or with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan. 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here:___ Name: Name: Address: Address: Phone: Phone: Dates to Run: to 1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times 15 words at a time $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 Additional work .02 .03 .04 .05 .06 --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 2, 1982 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Team W W L Pct. GB Tennessee 20 10 14 37 Philadelphia 20 10 14 37 Washington 22 22 524 14 New York 22 22 524 14 Newark 29 19 442 13 Milwaukee...29 14 674 Atlanta...19 18 453 Minnesota...19 14 442 Chicago...18 25 419 Cincinnati...18 34 419 Detroit...18 34 190 11% Western Conference Midwest Division San Antonio 28 19 687 5% Denver 23 12 454 5% Dallas 22 12 454 5% Kansas City 14 12 326 14% Ulah 14 12 310 14% Utah 13 20 310 14% Los Angeles 30 12 721 Seattle 29 12 721 San Francisco 24 17 654 Portland 22 18 561 Golden State 23 18 561 Colorado 13 30 302 Texas 13 30 302 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. Team W L Pct. GB Missouri 7 2 1.04 College 7 2 1.04 Okahama State 4 3 1.04 Oklahoma State 4 3 1.04 Nebraska 3 4 1.04 Nebraska 3 4 1.04 Okahawa 2 4 1.04 Iowa State 2 4 1.04 California 2 4 1.04 Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. Rice 80 Texas (11) 49 Hockey NIL STANDINGS Wales Conference Eddie Wilson Team W W L T G FG GA Pts. NY Islanders 30 13 1 6 21 194 66 Washington 15 13 1 6 21 194 66 NY Rangers 24 20 7 7 188 197 55 Pittsburgh 24 20 7 7 188 197 55 New York Giants 21 20 7 8 198 197 36 Campbell Conference Norris Division Buffalo 29 14 9 205 157 67 Montreal 29 11 12 233 165 67 Boston 29 16 7 211 182 67 Houston 29 16 2 213 182 213 Dartford 14 20 169 169 204 Minnesota 21 14 15 15 200 186 17 Washington 24 16 13 4 128 167 52 Winstem 15 24 14 20 186 252 Toronto 16 34 13 15 215 296 48 Denver 16 24 13 15 177 385 38 Detroit 16 24 13 15 177 385 38 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W L L Pct GR Pittsburgh 15 4 78 New York 12 12 New Jersey 14 6 700 1% Buffalo 9 11 450 1% Cleveland 8 10 444 8% Philadelphia 8 13 450 10% New Jersey 13 13 450 1% Edmonton 33 12 12 10 297 216 76 Calgary 13 12 12 10 297 216 76 Vancouver 17 14 24 11 180 190 45 Los Angeles 17 14 21 11 180 190 45 St. Louis...16 10 842 Wichita...11 8 579 5 Wichita...8 8 754 Memphis...10 12 455 17¹ Phoenix...6 14 250 Phoenix...6 17 190 San Diego City...6 17 190 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No answer YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. Missouri retains No.1 ranking Rv United Press International NEW YORK—Missouri, the nation's only major college unebooted team, is not No. 1, but the eyes of Texas are welling with tears over the Longhorns' plunge in today's UPI College Basketball Rankings. The Tigers, 18,-0 defeated Iowa State 86-73 and eaked K-State 95-88 Saturday, to remain in the top spot with 30 first place votes and 612 overall points from the 42 members of UPI's board of coaches. The team also beat No. 2 with 10 first place votes and 590 points following a pair of Atlantic Coast Conference victories. DePaul, 18-1, exchanged places with Virginia, 20-1, as the Blue Demons crept into third place with 517 votes, while the Cavaliers slipped to 4.4 with 474 points and the other two first-plACE votes. Iowa, 15-2, moved into the fifth slot vacated by Texas, receiving 420 points. to No. 11, after two Southwest Conference losses. The Longhorns dropped from No. 5 Roundup out the top 10, is No. 6 Minnesota, 143; No. 7 Oregon State, 15-3. No. 8 San Francisco, 19-2; No. 9 Calgary, 144; and No. 10 Alabama, 16-2 After No. 11 Texas, it's No. 12 Tulsa. No. 13 Fresno State, No. 14 Arkansas. No. 15 dabhoi. No. 16 Wake Forest, No. 17 Wichita Falls. No. 18 West Virginia. No. 20 Georgetown. UP1 TOP 20 1. Missouri (18-0) 2. North Carolina (16-1) 3. Virginia (20-1) 4. Virginia (20-1) 5. Minnesota (14-3) 6. Oregon State (13-8) 7. Kentucky (14-4) 8. Kentucky (14-4) 9. Texas (16-2) 10. Tulsa (18-3) 11. Tulsa (18-3) 12. Arkansas (15-8) 13. Arkansas (15-8) 14. Wake Forest (14-7) 15. Tennessee (14-4) 16. West Virginia (17-1) 17. West Virginia (17-1) Track team places second in Iowa meet The Kansas women's track team travels to Louisville, Ky., this weekend to compete in the Mason-Dixon games of gaining more national exposure. By SONYA FOSTER "This ought to be a good meet for us," Coffey said. "It will give us the chance to see where we are, and to run on a board track, which ought to be in- Sports Writer The meet consists of a cross-section of college and club track squads from across the country. KU Head Coach Carla Coffey said the team was looking forward to the meet and the national level of competition. ereesting. We're looking forward to being well. I think we can hold our own." The Jayhawks held their own Saturday in Ames, Iowa, winning seven events to capture second place, behind Iowa, at the Iowa Quadrangle meet. "Even though we have a way to go before we'll be ready, the team will know we have coffee." The 1,500-meter run was one of the highlights of the meet, according to Coffe. Gretchen Bajema, Anne Hewlett, and many other personal records for the Jayhawks. Bajerna took second with a time of 1:39.6, Johannsen third with 4:42.8 and Koehler fourth. the 60-meter hurdles, 300-meter dash. 880 relay, mile relay, distant medley relay, long jump and the shot put. THE JAYHAWKS took first place in The 880 relay team of Dora Sperma- mon, McKernan, Lorna Tucker and Tudie McKnight ran a 1:47.2 for their second consecutive win. In the 60-meter hurdles Donna Smitherman grabbed first with a time of 8.9 seconds, beating teammate Connie McKernan, who also had a time of 8.9 seconds. Cherise Taylor took sixth in 9.8 seconds. AARRIE BROCKMAN, Wood Bajema and Johannes gave the 'Hawks another victory in the distant medley relay with a time of 12:30.9. Spearman also recorded victories in the 60 and 300 with times of 7.8 seconds and 41.1 seconds respectively. He also recorded victories in the 60 and McKnight second in the 300. Nancy McCullough, McKernan and Tucker took first place, finishing with a time of 3:54.6. The mile relay team of Smitherman, Sine Lerdahl won the shot put with a put of 46-9.12. Becky McGranahan placed fifth with a loss of 40-7.14. McKnight, McCullough and Kim Jones combined for a one, two, three punch to dominate the long jump. McKnight's leap of 18-10 gave her first. McCullough took second at 17-9½ and Jones third at 17-9⅓. McCullough and Smitherman combined for a second and third place finish in the 600-meter race. Chamberlain decides against 76ers proposal By MILTON RICHMAN UPI Sports Editor NEW YORK—There isn't the slightest doubt in my mind Wilt Chamberlain can come back and play right now. Nor is there any doubt in his. At the age of 45, after having been away nine years, he doesn't merely think he can do all right with the Philadelphia 76ers, he's positive he can, and because he is president of that, so he plays in his own mind, he finally decided not to try. IF THAT's a little hard to follow, maybe it would help if you knew about a statement the late Eddie Gottlieb once made about Chamberlain. Gottlieb was part owner of the 76ers. He knew Philadelphia the way he knew the palm of his hand, and he knew the 7-1 Chamberlain just as well. For sneer will power, I've never seen anyone like him." Gottibbled said. "What he can do on the basketball court, that's only a part of him. He has an even greater ability to do anything he makes up his mind to do, and to me, that's more impressive than his basketball ability." Chamberlain made the right decision when he wired Harold Katz, the 76ers owner, Monday and declined the offer with thanks. IF CHAMBERLAIN has any question about that, he should talk sometime with Wille Mays, who is 50, and oc- cious. He could play basketball; he could come back and play again. "I'm sure I could play a few innings or even a whole game, but what about the next day?" Willie laughs. What had originated purely as a trial ball eventually became something closer to reality when Katz made several calls to Chamberlain, asking if he would have any interest in playing for the 76ers again. Katz thought it would be a great thing for him to come back to Philadelphia. At first, Chamberlain was inclined to laugh off the idea. He was used to such offers, having had a couple of feelers for his time. And then he met Hawks a year ago and a tremendous offer before that from Nick Milet, when he still had the Cavaliers. THE MORE Chamberlain thought about coming back to play in Philadelphia, the more the notion began appealing to him. , was positive I could do it," Chamberlain told me from his home in Los Angeles on Monday. "My physical condition was no barrier because there hardly has been a day I haven't competed in some form of sport since I retired from basketball with the Lakers in 1973. "Another reason I gave some thought to playing with the 76ers is because coming back to Philadelphia would have been something of a blessing for me. There are so many people there I know and love." Chamberlain, he led Kansas to the NCAA finals and later toured with the Harlem Globerotters before playing on championship teams in the NBA with the 76ers in 1962 and the Lakers in 1972, who is the NBA's all-time leading scorer. "I never found out how much Katz wanted to pay me," Chamberlain said. "I told him I could call me and I kept telling him my decision wouldn't be predicated on money. Katz was talking about a $500,000 contract plus fringe benefits. Chamberlain, who has established his own track and field team for kids and donates substantially to charity, doesn't need money. etc. Intramurals "It wasn't." Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Greek Men Independent Men Henrym y 34, Sigma Nu A 32 Wolfpack 43, Phi Kappa Sigma 23 Phi Alpha Phi 44, Sigma Phi Epsilon 20 Phi Kappa Tha # 36, Labo23 20 Battenshire Ayrvarks 45, Hopin 428 Maine Ayrvarks 43, Hopin 428 G46, Pearson 114 Steve Halls IV, 33, St. Lawrence Catholic Center 32, Washington D.C. D4, Starling Innerthalls 33 Mountainine Nine 30, Heretics 26 Clubhouse 35, Peyote Buttons 25 Magic Men 41, Bill Vuallier's Bunch 40 Dragonails 5, O'Brien Bombers 22 Fabulous Freebirds 23, Senne-s millions 24, Vanda 22, Whaler 21 Nui # 11, Nui # 25, The floggers 24, Dingli Leou 39, Leou # 21, Senne-s millions 24 **Jumpers Men** English M 1½ Lx 32 English M 2½ Lx 40 English M 2½ Lx 64 English M 2½ Lx 88 English M 3½ Lx 92 English M 3½ Lx 116 English M 3½ Lx 132 English M 4½ Lx 144 English M 5½ Lx 156 English M 5½ Lx 178 English M 6½ Lx 188 English M 6½ Lx 200 English M 6½ Lx 222 English M 7½ Lx 234 English M 8½ Lx 246 English M 8½ Lx 268 English M 9½ Lx 278 English M 10½ Lx 298 English M 11½ Lx 318 English M 12½ Lx 338 English M 13½ Lx 358 English M 14½ Lx 378 English M 15½ Lx 398 English M 16½ Lx 418 English M 17½ Lx 438 English M 18½ Lx 458 English M 19½ Lx 478 English M 20½ Lx 498 English M 21½ Lx 518 English M 22½ Lx 538 English M 23½ Lx 558 English M 24½ Lx 578 English M 25½ Lx 608 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English M 799½ Lx 29188 English M 799½ Lx 29288 English M 799½ Lx 29388 English M 799½ Lx 29488 English M 799½ Lx 29588 English M 7 Quarterbacks top free agent list By United Press International NEW YORK-Several of the NFL's top quarterback, including Bert Jones of Baltimore, Craig Morton of Denver and Joe Theissnam of Washington, were among the 149 players who became free agents yesterday in accordance with the collective bargaining agreement between the NFL Management Council and the NFL Players Association. The contract states that players not signed by Feb. 1 become free agents and can accept offers from any of the other clubs in the 28-season league. Washington, Denver, Chicago and Houston had the highest number of free agents. The Redskins had 15, including Theismann, defensive tackle Dave Lavender, defensive lineman Karl Lorch and running back Terry Metcalf. Denver had 13, including Morton, defensive tackle Rubin Carter, defensive barney Barney Chavous, linebackers Tom Jackson and Bob Swenson, safety Bill Thompson and cornerback Louis Wright. Mike Philips, and Houston had 11, in tackling Dave Casper and tackle Leon Gray. Chicago listed 12 free agents, including quarterbacks Vince Evans and The New York Jets were the only team without a free agent. Several other quarterbacks were on the list, including Gary Danielson of Detroit, Bob Lee of Los Angeles, Steve Kauffman of Oakland, Diego and Chuck Fusins of Triple A Bay. Miami's Bob Griese, who has retired, also was listed since he was still under Among the other name players that are now free agents are Atlanta wide receiver Alfred Jenkins; Buffalo linebacker Isiah Robertson; Dallas defensive back Ed Jones and running back Robert Newhouse; Miami linebacker Thomas Henderson; New England wide receive Harper Jackson, New York Giants running back Rob Carpenter; Oakland linebacker Ted Hendricks, cornerback Monte Jackson Philadelphia tight end Kevin Lawrence Philadelphia tight end Krewie Pfeife and wide receiver Charles Smith; Pittsburgh tackle Jon Kolb; St. Louis wide receiver Mel Gray and safety Ken Greene; San Diego wide receiver Charlie Joiner and Seattle safety John Harris. Cafe'Eldridge Affordable Fun Dining For fun dining at an affordable price, dine at the Cafe' Eldridge. Choose from the many delicious homemade dishes prepared daily by our Chefs. Most meals at the Cafe' Eldridge cost between $3.50 and $5.00. An extraordinary price for a food served in the pleasant atmosphere of the Cafe' Eldridge. The Cafe' Eldridge is open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week. From 11 am to 11 pm, Mondays-Saturdays and 11 am to 9 pm on Sundays. You can even call in for carry out. Whether it is a special occasion or you just want a delicious homemade meal, dine at the Cafe' Eldridge. 7th & Massachusetts Top Sirloin Steak 6.25 Brest of Chicken Popular Attendance . 4.25 Breast of Chicken Almondine . 4.95 Baked Lasagne . 4.95 Humble Pie . 4.25 Eggs Benedict . 3.95 Monte Cristo . 3.50 British Burger . 2.95 Chili Supreme . 2.50 Crock of French Special Coffee Drinks Onion Soup ... 2.50 University-Community Service Scholarship Award As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20,1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift. Qualifications - Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term). - Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. *Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. Applications - Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Tuesday, February 16, 1982 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held February 23, 1982. * More information and applications available in the SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477. SAVE ON ThisWeek! STYLE UP TO $25 OFF! SILADIUM'COLLEGE RINGS NOW ONLY $9995 We've got what you want—a handsomely styled selection of college rings at a price you can afford. SILADIUM® College Rings carefully crafted in the ArtCarved tradition from a fine and durable jeweler's metal. Add your choice of custom options to the design you select and you'll have a ring you'll want to wear for years to come. But don't delay. Visit the ArtCarved Ring Table and get your ring at a price that's too good to last! ARTCARVED CLASS RINGS JNC This Week! DATE TIME: February 1-3 9 a.m.-4 p.m. p rth PLACE: DEPOSIT REQUIRED, MASTERCARD OR VISA ACCEPTED. Kansas Union Bookstores ©1982 ART CARVED CLASS RINGS, INC. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN The University Daily Wednesday, February 3, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 88 USPS 650-640 JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff COURTNEY Cars spin their wheels on Sunflower Road behind Watson Library Tuesday as they attempt the icy grade. Even a heavy truck gives up and turns around. Some still stalking to legalize falconry By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Historically, it was called a sport. At least 27 people in Lawrence call it a crime. But to Scott Johnson of Junction City, falconry is a compelling vocation that should be legalized in "All the scientific evidence supports falconry," Johnson said yesterday. He began pushing for legalized falconry in the state after moving here from Minnesota six years ago. "But there are 12 qualified fencerists in Kansas fighting against hundreds of letter writing agents." "Kansas seems backward in a lot of ways, and this is just one of them." Johnson's hope that Kansas might join the 45 states in which falconry is legal were shot down yesterday when the Kansas House of Representatives voted 65-50 against a bill that would have added falcony to the state's repertory of hunting sports. A favorite pastime of medieval kings, falconry is the hunting of small game with trained falcons or other types of hawks. Although the sport once thrived in ancient China, Egypt and Europe before virtually dying out last century, it is now a popular sport of the North American Falconers Association. Johnson, a decade-long member, said the sport was denounced in Kansas by environmentalists who did not know anything about it. Two legislators fighting the bill, proposed at Johnson's request by State Sen. Mark Werts, R-Junction City, were State Reps. John Solbach and Betty Jo Charlton, both D-D Lawrence. "People say falconers are careless, but we spend hours a day with the birds," he said. "My job and everything else is secondary to falconing—or was until I moved to Kansas." "There was too much conflict in the testimonies of experts about the environmental impact of nuclear power." These testimonies, given before the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee last month, prompted Solbach to motion that the Senate pass such last year passed favorably through Senate. The committee amended the bill, however, and sent it to the House floor. Werts said last night that the House's disapproval of the bill was not its end. "That was just a voice office," he said. "They had a machine for social assistance. As long as there'a a breath, there's a hope." Solbach and Charlton said that one reason they voted against the bill was that they, like many representatives, received petitions from their constituents asking that falconry remain illegal. Tate Collins, whose name topped a petition of 22 Lawrence residents opposed the sport, said they were in a fight with the team. Richard Johnston, a KU professor of biology and ornithologist at the Museum of Natural History, agreed that opponents of falconry were too emotional, even though he fought the bill. declining in Kansas and legalized falconry would sawn ramrant nest-robbing of the birds. "Falconers do not police themselves very well," she said, "and that sport in the same way. The Falcons play." "Anyone who looks at the record has to agree that what falconers have done in the last 20 years is poor." Johnson defended falconers, however, saying they rehabilitated birds that were wounded, spread hawk populations into areas where extinct and treated their pet birds like children. "Our birds are not locked in cages," he said. They are free to fly all day long. But they are locked in cages. "This is a case of a minority fighting with facts and a majority fighting with emotion." Johnson, who wrote a letter to the Legislature recommending disapproval of the bill, said the only exciting sport falcon in Kansas was the prairie falcon, whose nest could not afford to be "If we had 12 young prairie falcons disappear in one year, that would represent a major fraction of the recruitment for that year," he said. KU officials laud new pre-enrollment By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter Most students and administrators yesterday lauded Chancellor Geneva's decision to institute a study on mental illness at KU. "This is a sign that KU is really trying to instill said James Jeffrey, Kansas City in him." "This will be much more efficient. The pressure on the student getting classes and having somebody pull cards for them early will be relieved." David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, served on a committee to study pre- "I understand it will not cure the enrollment problem, but I believe it will greatly improve our ability to serve students, and because of that, I'm estatic," Amber said. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said details of implementing the system still had to be worked out. He said the offices of Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, and Richard Mann, director of information systems, would be all involved in the implementation of all service departments also be involved. Students will pre-enroll next November for spring semester 1983 Ambler said pre-enrollment might affect a change in dropping and adding courses. With the lapse of time between pre-enrollment and the beginning of the semester, premature and changed decisions would force more adds and dross. One possible deterent would be to charge a fee to students that drive or add courses for conference. John Patterson, comptroller, said that charging a fee for discretionary drops and adds would encourage students to pre-enrol. He said a fee would probably run $5 to $10. Cobb said such a policy would be considered only after the basic implementation of the rule. Patterson said he hoped the University would also implement phase II of the committee's recommendations, which would place the accounts receivable billing system behind the computer system. Such a process would modernize contacting, possibly tiring all fees into one bill a student, Patterson said. In this case, housing, parking, student health fees and tuition would be included in one bill. Patterson would cut down on postage and record keeping. Ambler said various locations were being considered to house the approximately 20 terminals to be used in pre-enrollment, but that a space in Strong Hall would be more favorable because it is close to the office of admissions and records. Many students are looking forward to pre- enrolling. Jeffie said that he had supervised registration at the university for the last two years. "We have workbooks, worksheets," Jeffie said. "I worked summer orientation for freshmen last summer and they were so pleased because we did all the enrollment for them," he said. "I saw some of them the second semester and they were so perplexed—they were having to run here and there and having to pull this and they say, 'We are going to have a lot of people we said. Well, you're on your own.' This will eliminate that, or a good percentage of it. 1 think it's wise of Chancellor Budig to support and go through the implementation of this type of system. I think it sort of brings the technology we've been using this archaic system for so long. Bill Sanders, Kansas City freeman, said pre-enrollment would simplify the enrollment "I'm a freshman and I hate pulling cards," he said. "It's a mess. This way it is a lot simpler and much easier." but Kristie Werner, Milstad, Ill. senior, said she had encountered problems with pre-payment of the loans. "Personally, I've used computerized enrollment at another school and I wasn't too impressed," she said. "Students could get the job they wanted." A representative as an adviser. Those people were not qualified. "It's not necessarily going to be that much more helpful. The number of sections will probably be the same and there'll still be the letter schedule." Weather COLDER Raven It will be bitterly cold today with a slight chance of snow, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The high today will be 10 to 15 degrees with a low tonight of 0 to -5 degrees. Cold rain should continue Thurs. Cold weather should continue Thursday, with an expected high of 10 degrees. Odd objects add spice to bland spaces By ANN LOWRY Staff Renorter YOU A GOOD DAY TO ME FOR FESTIVAL HAVEN When a friend asked Brent Lamb to take care of his 1963 Triumph IV sportscar for him, Lamb didn't think twice. He put it in his dining room. And although Lamb, a Topeka senior, did not intend to make the car part of his apartheid-era family, he was a loyal supporter. "It keeps me from dusting the floor," he said. "It keeps my apartment company while I'm doing it." meet indinitee "My dining room wouldn't be the same that I would." without it, Lamba she! In fact, Lambda's girlfriend, Stacey Leslie, Millastad, Ill., senior, said the car would become a home for new pet gunes pigs. The Triumph could remain in the apartment indefinitely. Striving for that personalized, homey look to his Jayhawker Towers apartment, Kyle McNorton, Topeka senior, enjoys his authentic telephone booth. The booth once stood in the old student union at Kansas State University. MARK McDONALDI/Kansan Staff "We're putting the puinea pigs cage in with the car parts so the guinea pigs will get used to it." An antique wooden phone booth graces the Jayhawk Tower apartments where Kyle McNon ton, Topeka senior, lives. Kansas State University tore its old student union. "We just took it home and rigged it up. McNorton said in a telephone interview." "The door shuts, the light comes on and everything." Like Lamp, many other KU students have found way to distinguish their living quarters. McNorton also said he built a free-standing rough cushion frame to hang a wicker chair from, since the ceiling could not support the chair. His walnut-stained, pine stereo cabinet stands five feet tall and has smoked glass doors and a mirror behind the turntable. He works with last weeks last fall working on it in the evenings. Although he had two roommates, McNorton said, he did most of the work himself. "They always sort of kid me about it, but I'd rather have it nice than just a hole in the roof. Or I'd rather we live in a house that an apartment has." A yard and everything, but I like it here." canstorming a residence hall room into a distinctive room may be difficult, but several rooms can A rubber hand holding a beer can and a cigarette extends from the wall of the Hashinger Hall room that Kevin Freed, Prairie Village freshman, lives in. Freed enhanced its effect by painting a treefleick of blood down the wall underneath the wall. "People look at it and say, 'Wow,' *Freed* the roommate, David Lewis, Shawnee freshman, Another feature of Hashinger that might surprise visitors is the art work students have painted in rooms and hallways during the past few years, Julie Weisshaar, Creston, lowa, junior and Hashinger desk assistant, said. "If you go outside at night, you can see logs on walls and ceilings," she said. Kipp Woods, Garden City Junior, painted the Big Eight team mascots tangled in a fight A guided tour of the hall revealed geometric designs, floral motifs and replicas of album covers. "It adds a little color to the gloom," he said. Students don't have to settle for a drab bare apartment. Some adventure and ambition can inexpensively transform student living quarters into comfortable homes. Finding used furniture in Lawrence is not difficult. Bare quarters easily lightened By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter "Don't be afraid to do it yourself. There's nothing mysterious about painting and fixing," Greg Anderson, Ernst and Son Company, $83 Massachusetts. st., said Monday. Anderson said that refinishing used furniture was the most practical way to fill an empty apartment cheaply. rows of wooden chairs, stacks of dishes and an assortment of beds and desks await shopper's use at the Swap Shop. 608 stores are in St., where furniture is bought and sold. "Some stuff I've had three or four times," Floy Standard, the store's owner, said. Standard said she often sold merchandise to students in the fall and bought it back from them in the spring. Some customers buy everything for their apartments from the Swap Shop, including dishes, flatware, stainless steel and furniture, she said. "We have pretty good values to offer," Standard said. Prices begin at $10 for desk chairs, $25 for desks, and $50 for beds. Standard said students should look for furniture that is sturdy. "I know kids are gonna be rough on stuff—not all, but a little," she said. Anderson said it was not difficult to restore old furniture once the hunt for it was over. Liquid slippers and steel wool take off the old furniture, leaving the pieces look like new after a little sanding. See TRASH page 5 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Building material, not bullet cause of Bush shot incident WASHINGTON—Some sort of building material rather than a bullet caused the "shot" that hit Vice President George Bush's limousine yesterday morning, the Secret Service said. No one was hurt in the incident "We were just driving to work and heard a loud bang and that was it." Bush said later. "I just asked what it was and nobody was sure, so we drove down and saw a large explosion." The rush-hour incident touched off a massive investigation to determine if a shot had been fired at Bush's armored limousine, but officials said a laboratory analysis of the car roof showed that no bullet was involved. A Secret Service spokesman said an FBI examination of the V-shaped dent on the roof of Bush's car "revealed the presence of building material consistent with building materials being used in the area." The spokesman speculated that the dent could have been caused by a piece of brick or dried mortar being used by construction workers along the route. Bush appeared unshaken by the incident as he went about his regular schedule for the day with tighter-than-usual security measures evident. He suggested that while the matter was "nothing to laugh about," perhaps too much had been made of it. President Reagan was immediately notified of the incident, and Bush telephoned him later. Dozier returning, will visit Reagan WASHINGTON—Army Brig. Gen. James Dozier, held captive for 42 days by Red Brigade terrorists in Italy, will come home today and is to meet with President Reagan tomorrow, the Pentagon said yesterday. Vice President George Bush will greet Dozer and Judith, on their 12:30 p.m. arrival at Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington. The General is scheduled to attend a prayer breakfast at the White House tomorrow and to meet with Defense Secretary Casper W. Weinberger at the White House. Dozier was freed unharmed on Jan. 28 by a special squad of Italian police. He will return to the United States for briefings, a physical examination and an indefinite leave, the Pentagon said. Florida plane hijacked to Havana KEY WEST, Fla. — An Air Florida 737 with 77 people aboard was hijacked to Cuba yesterday by a man claiming to have a flammable liquid. All those people were killed. The Boeing 737 landed safely in Havana at 2:28 p.m. and was released by Cuban authorities two hours later. It arrived in Key West from Cuba at 5:30 p.m. and a few minutes later the passengers, all unharmed, got into the plane cheering and clapping at a celebration. The hijacker, described by an unidentified source as a "young Latin man make calls to Havana under custody of Cuban authorities, a request for Air Force help." The pilot of Air Florida's flight 710 from Miami to Key West radioed about 20 minutes after takeoff that he was being forced to fly to Havana. At that time the plane, carrying 72 passengers and a crew of five, was about 60 miles southwest of Miami, the Federal Aviation Administration said. Haig defends aid to El Salvador WASHINGTON—Secretary of State Alexander Haig said yesterday that a "growing threat" from Cuba and Nicaragua had forced the United States to triple its 1982 military aid to El Salvador and to consider other "political, economic and security" sanctions. But three congressional critics proposed stripping all security assistance to the U.S.-backed Salvadoran junta. Defending Monday's administration announcement to send $55 million in emergency military assistance to El Salvador, Haig said the level of arms shipments to leftist guerrillas was near the high levels of a year ago. "All of the countries in the Caribbean are confronted by a growing threat from Cuba and its new-found ally, Nicaragua." Haiti told the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee. Higa reaffirmed President Reagan's "strong reservations" about sending U.S. cattail troops to El Salvador "except in extremis." But he would not send them. Blood stains tie Williams to killings ATLANTA—Witnesses testified yesterday that stains found in the car by accused killer Wayne Williams matched the relatively rare blood types. Williams was linked by the blood stains to victim William Barrett, who testimony revealed had type A blood that contained POMB enzymes, a drug used in the manufacture of heroin. The other victim linked to the stains had type B blood, also with PGM-1 enzymes, a combination common to only 24 percent of all humans. Williams, 23, a black photographer and aspiring impresario, is on trial for the murder of Nathaniel Cater, 27, and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, two of his neighbors. The case was unsuccessful. Panel OKs extra job center funds WASHINGTON - A congressional panel approved an additional $2.3 billion yesterday to extend unemployment compensation benefits and prevent state employment offices from closing as a result of President Reagan's budget cuts. Shortly before the vote, Assistant Labor Secretary Albert Angersi told the panel that no more job placement centers would be shut down. He said the State Employment Services office, scheduled to close this month, had notified to stay open because Congress expects to appropriate more funds. The House Appropriations labor subcommittee voted unanimously to advance the unemployment compensation trust fund $1.9 billion and make the changes. The House Committee approved the budget. In Topeka, Gov. John Carlin ordered a delay in closing 17 of the state's job service centers. The Department of Human Resources was scheduled to shut down on Thursday. WASHINGTON—Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said yesterday that President Reagan had no immediate plan to seek accelerated natural gas production. "At the current moment, the president is not going to propose deregulation of natural gas nor a windfall profits tax on it." Regan told a luncheon Later in the afternoon, however, Marlin Fitzwater, a Regan spokesman, said the Treasury secretary really did not mean to rule out legislation to decontrol the price of natural gas. He said Regan was only ruling out a windfall profits tax. Blizzard hits Plains, moves North Earlier in the day, however, the Treasury Department was essentially confirming the secretary's original comments. At least 50 deaths were blamed on back-to-back storms this week that smothered the Midwest under up to two feet of snow. Winter's latest blizzard covered the southern Plains yesterday with more than a foot of snow that wrecked cars, shut down schools and was blown into hip-deep drifts. Then it took another wipe at the snowbound Great Lakes states. The most recent storm slammed into the Texas panhandle yesterday and dumped 13 inches of snow on Jefferson, Okla., just south of the Kansas border. Trailridge Studios, Apis., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK One Entry Deadline for the Recreation Services One-On-One Basketball Tournament Is 5:00 p.m. today in 208 Robinson. Balloon-a-Gram "Ride to the Occasion" SEND A BALLON A GRAM F. O. Box 2122 Lawrence, KS 63044 Lawrence, KS 63044 How to Win At The Losing Game DIET CENTER It's A Natural! Obtain Nutritional Medical Center 841 DIET COUPON THE DUM STEER BAR-D-Q 2554 Iowa Regular Bum Special $200 This coupon good anytime Sunday through February 28. 841-1060 COUPON Paper Design LAST STREET MANUFACTURER 1 Weaver's Inc. Serving Conference... Since 1897 3 Ways to Charge at Weaver's: Weaver's Charge Account VISA Shop Thursday Til 8:30 p.m. SHOE SALE $23.90 regularly $32 tailored leather slip-on in rust. Selected Shoes from Famous Labels Also On Sale! NOW 12.90 to 49.90 ENTIRE IN STOCK BOOTS NOW 20% TO 30% OFF Shoes-1st Floor SHOE SALE $23.90 regularly $32 tailored leather slip-on in rust. 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Date: February 3, 1982 Time: 7:00-9:00 p.m. Place: Summerfield Hall, Room 128 Refreshments Will Be Provided You've spent four to six years getting your degree; now give Conoco 60 minutes to show you how to use it. conoco An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1982 Page 3 Moslem students want groups to investigate Iranian regime A Moslem student organization yesterday started a petition and letter drive on campus asking that a factual report be submitted to Iran, a spokesman for the group said. Amir, an Iranian student who asked that his last name not be used because of possible retaliation from Khomiini supporters, said the delegation would work with the whether torture and executions were being on in the Khomiini government. "We are trying to get public opinion and petitioned to the International Red Cross, Amnesty International and the United Nations, and the Khominei regime and to send a delegation to Iran." Amir, a member of the Supporters of the Moselm Students Society, said. The group has set up an information table on the third floor of the Kansas Union. Its petition drive will last until Feb. 16. He said the group was urging people on campas to write letters to these international committees detailing their views about Iran. The KU group is participating in an international drive, which, Amir said, is being carried on campuses and in cities in the United States and in most Western European countries, the Philippines and India. Thieves in Lawrence are finding parked cars a profitable target. Between Sunday night and Monday morning, more than $1,000 worth of equipment was stolen from parked cars within the city limits. Thieves store $900 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at Alvamar Quail Creek Apartments, 2111 Kasold Drive, sometime between 11 p.m. Sunday and 8:30 a.m. Monday. On the record were taken. There are no suspects, police said. Police said the car doors were locked but that there were no signs of forced entry. A cassette deck, a power amplifier and two speakers A $300 FIBERGLASS hood was removed from a 1971 blue Duster parked at Potter's Southside 623. Service 524 and Louisiana streets, 8:20 a.m. and 8:10 a.m. Monday, police said There are no suspects, they said. THEVIEWS ALSO STOLE $170 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at 1821 Edgehill Road, Bronx. The door is cassette deck and two cassette tapes from the locked car. There are no suspects, police said. SITKA littoral durability. 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BANK OF NEW YORK 1924 172 THE QUEST OF THE SECRET CITY sweepstakes T here's a city in Europe-you could travel there free. So unravel these riddles, and uncover its key. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 TO PLAY THE GAME 1 WHAT AM I? Answer each of the riddles that will appear here each week in February. Write your answer in the blanks below for each riddle. 1. You are a student and you want to fill in the numbered spaces in the master key. As you fill in the letters of the master key, you will be spelling the name and location of a secret city in Europe. Send us your email address to enterlifesweepstakes.com or send it could win a trip there. To ENTER SWEEPSTAKES 2. Grand Prize consists of two regular top-travel airlines to the secret city, 30-day Eurasian passions, American Youth Hostels passes, two backpacks and an official entry blank or use 3” X 3” card. Print your answer along with your name and address. Mail your answer to enterlifesweepstakes.com. 3. The first 1,000 correct respondents will receive a certificate as an entry prize. 4. Enter as often as you wish, but each entry must be mailed separately. 5. Your entry will be held $29/28@theHighlandGroup, an independent judging organization whose website www.thehighlandgroup.org is owned by the Highland So small and yet so strong Life is never helper skelter, When I travel, the pace seems long Yet I never lack a shelter. GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEES MAKE GOOD COMPANY. $ \textcircled{c} $General Foods Corporation 1982 GF GENERAL FOODS GENERAL Foods INTERNATIONAL COFFEE Suisse Mocha PUB FOE INTERNATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES GENERAL FOODS. Cappuccino GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEE Irish Mocha Mint HIGH STYLE AMBIENT COFFEE BEVERAGE GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEES Cafe Vienna BUSINESS STREET MIDTOWN CENTER BEAVERGROVE kansas General Foods International Coffee CAFÉ FRANÇAIS FESTE NATIONALE CAFÉ FRANÇAISE --- the KEGGER PBR KEG $31.50 union bookstores main union level2 satellite shop the KEGGER 1610 1/2 W 23rd A TRIBUTE TO JIM THORPE 841-9450 While Mr. Thorpe unwittingly became an alien in the realm of amateur athletics by playing baseball for a pitchance, the very organization responsible for his reclassification now studiously overlooks financial transactions which gain for the amateur beneficiary much greater amounts. Through the shameless use of this double standard, the A.A.U. leaves itself open to charges ranging from hypocrisy to racism. The A.A.U. should concede its liability and offer to the Thorpe family both Mr. Thorpe's Olympic medals and its belated apologies. A recent issue of the University Daily Kansan noted that the family of Jim Thorpe was conducting a campaign to have his medals restored. Mr. Thorpe was indisputably one of this country's most accomplished athletes. For two years of his college football career he was an All-American halfback; after winning both the decathlon and the pentathlon in the 1912 Olympic Games, he played both major-league baseball and professional football. In 1950 our sportswriters and sportscasters voted him the greatest football player and all-air athlete of the first half of this century. In 1913, after discovering that Mr. Thorpe had played semi-professional baseball, the Amateur Athletic Union (A.A.U.) asked that he currender his Olympic medals. Today's A.A.U. is only a shadow of its former self. That vaulted olfactory mechanism which once detected an exchange of sixty dollars a month —Mr. Thorpe's reputed compensation for playing baseball — now tolerates, according to Dan Lavitt, former Missouri hurdler currently with the Pacific Coast Club, "expense money to travel to meet, appearance money to run, jump, or throw in meets and contracts with shoe or apparel companies that can net as much as $100,000 a year." William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terrace 12 12 You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1981-1982 officer and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas: 1. President 5. Films 9. Outdoor Recreation 2. Vice President 6. Fine Arts 10. Public Relations 3. Secretary 7. Forums 11. Special Events 4. Treasurer 8. Indoor Recreation 12. Travel SUA Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union. Interviews will be held Saturday, February 27. Sign up deadline for applications is Friday, February 19, 5:00 p.m. The Newest Looks! White eyelet camisole, knicker set. Lavishly trimmed with pink satin ribbons & rosebuds by Gilead. Sizes P-S-M, Cost $26⁰⁰. Matching gown, robe, and pirate shirt available. UNDERCOVER 21 W. 9th 749-0004 UNDERCOVER 21 W. 9th 749-0004 ERCOVER BLACK STUDENT UNION GENERAL MEETING Thursday, February 4, 1982 Ellsworth Hall, 6:30 p.m. Will Be Brief! Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1982 Opinion Task force time again It's time, once again, for the annual formation of the Task Force to Study Beer in the Stadium. The issue has almost been studied to death. For the past few years, groups of students have assembled to try to persuade the University administrators and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation that beer sales in Memorial Stadium are what KU students want, and what the athletic program needs. In 1979, the project was undertaken by the Concerned Students for Higher Education, a now-defunct student lobbying group. And in 1979 everyone said it was a good idea. But the movement faded with the demise of CSHE. After CSHE disappeared, some former members of the group took up the beer banner, with the same results. Last year, those pushing for beer in the stadium tried a double-barreled tactic. Task forces from both Student Senate and Task from KUAC tackled the issue. They failed. This time, supporters of the idea attributed its failure to political unpopularity, and the general conservative climate in the state. So what's changed this year? The new and improved Student Senate task force is again collecting information from schools that sell beer at football games. The new approach is to tell KUAC to take the money and use it however it chooses. They've adopted a slight twist to their sales pitch this year. In the past, those working for beer sales have said the profits should be used to fund women's and non-revenue sports. The outcome will be interesting. Will KUAC and the University approve beer sales? Will the profits disappear into the vast unknown of KU's athletic budget? Will thousands of fans happily enjoy their favorite beverage while cheering on the mighty Javhawks? Or will next year see the creation of yet another task force to study beer in the stadium? Segregation an old tradition in women's residence hall The University of Kansas sent out housing contracts last week to next year's freshmen. If requests run true to form, GSP-Corbin Hall will be by far the most popular hall for freshmen women. It will probably fill up within the first two weeks. McElhene, director of residential programs. If requests run even truer to form, the Corbin side of GSP-Corbin will be 100 percent white Anglo-Saxon. And the GSP side will closely mirror its sister half, except it will probably have a sprinkling of black women and perhaps even a foreign student or two. The residential profile of GSP-Corbin has changed little since I lived there three years ago. Out of 763 HSU-Corbin residents, approximately 11 were black, according to the MARCIA GONZALEZ TERESA RIORDAN hall's residential director. All 11 live on the GSP side of the complex. That tradition is, as MeElhennie aptly puts it, that GSP-Corbin is as a "springboard to the earth." That means that if a woman is from the right class of Kansas society (i.e. white, middle-to-upperclass), she'll know that GSP-Corbin is "the place to live if she wants to go through rush. Outwardly, it would appear that the office of residential programs is practicing blatant racial discrimination. She'll know that she needs to send back her housing contract the day she gets it if she wants a place. And she'll know to put Corbin as her first choice and GSP as her second. In comparison, the black population at Lewis Hall, KU's other all-women residence hall, probably numbers 40 to 50 out of 390, according to estimates made by its resident director. anomal way that the Corbin side of GSP- Corbin doesn't have, and probably never has but they don't. This segregation at GSP-Corbin exists, not because of a conscious effort on KU's part, but rather because the University allows a tradition to determine who lives in the hall. The big wonder is that State Rep. Norman Justice, in his attacks against the KU Greek After all, the Greek system "discriminates" on the basis of a whole slew of criteria. Justice might as well file a complaint against it for wrongdoing or the basis of family income or choice of wardrobe. But this practice of discrimination is really not a "practice" at all. The office of residential programs, McEhlinen reminded me, will have no idea, when housing contracts for GSP-Corbin flood in during the next few weeks, what the race of any of those applicants is. system for racial discrimination, has ignored such an obvious target as GSP-Corbin. The University, on the other hand, has lifespan type, racial discrimination, under any circumstances. Besides, the $14,000 worth of state-paid salaries that Justice is quibbling about is small-time compared to the more than $1 million annual operating budget of GSP-Corbin. And if justice still wants to complain about the fact that KU's Panhellenic sororites have no black members, the foundation of his complaint will be drawn in to draw most of their members from GSP-Corb. Far fewer white sorority members would be prone to say things during rush like "I just don't want I could live with a black girl!" had they had women, or women during their freshman year of college. As it stands, few white GSP-Corbinites have had black roommates. Few have had black neighbors in the hall. Few have had catcaterain neighbors in the hall. Few have had conversations with blacks. In short, many of them leave their affluent high schools, where few classes attend, to live in a city. Small wonder that they pledge sororities without any black members and then keep up the pressure. McEhlinen, alluding to the fact that most GSP-Corbin residents come from similar backgrounds, says he sometimes fears that the ball could turn into "vanilla ice cream." Although he wasn't alluding to the racial composition of GSP-Corbin, the analogy is quite appropriate. But KU is still reluctant to take a stance on the hall's vanilla flavor, McEhline said. One of those steps, he pointed out, is a black caucus at GHP-Corbin, which is supported by the team. But those steps have been made largely because of the efforts of the black residents themselves and the efforts of a concerned director. And those steps have been long in coming. He said, however, that steps have been made in the right direction. The resident director said that a few of those black residents have expressed interest in living there. Let's hope they get their contracts in before the rush of freshman hall contacts fills the hall, because Corbin, the state first women's college basketball coach last when it comes to further racial equality. KANSAN (USPS 85946) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class mail is $1.00 per month; third-class mail is $2.00 per month; fourth-class mail is $3.00 per month; fifth-class mail is $4.00 per month; sixth-class mail is $5.00 per month; seventh-class mail is $6.00 per month; year outside the county Student subscriptions are $a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas. Newroom--864-4810 Business Office--864-4358 The University Daily Bourn Business Manager Vanessa Herron Nateline Jude Managing Editor Travel Hamilton Editorial Editor Karen Schluter Campus Editor Gene George Associate Campus Editor Jane Weidling Assistant Campus Editors Joe Rebein, Rebecca Chaney Assignment Editor Steve Barbari Sport Editor Ron Haggtogut Associate Sports Editor Gina Beach Entertainment Editor Lia Maussol, Lillian Davis, Sharon Appelbaum Making Editors Eileen Markey, Teresa Hurdon, Leni Beniger Wire Editors Ken Bigger Free Editors Jon Hardesty, John Hamakerm, Martin Eislebe Staff Photographers McCann Retail Sales Manager ... Ann Hornberger National Sales Manager ... Howard Shalinsky Campus Sales Manager ... Perry Baili Chaplain Manager ... Sharon Bodin Production Manager ... Larry Larbeungood Tearsheets Manager ... John Kain Sales and Marketing Advisor ... John Ohrman General Manager and News Advisor ... Rick Musser KANSAS NATURAL RESOURCES Steve Norton '82 "Nah governor, using that gun ain't a good idea . . . it might discourage them." Income tax surpasses 'modest intent' the ousted Americans may just barely remember, but there was a time when the federal government could not, by law of the Constitution, collect income taxes. And the country ran just fine—a modest budget surplus even existed. But such a time is not in the distant future, nor is it in the past distant. In fact, it was only 69 years ago today that the last state, Delaware, ratified the 16th Amendment, giving Congress the power to "lay and collect taxes on incomes." In 1913 Woodrow Wilson was the president-elect. Finley Peter Dumme was writing famous columns like "Mr. Dooley on William Jennings Bryan." Jim Thorpe, the Carlisle Indian who had his medals taken away after the 1912 Olympics, had signed to play baseball with the N.Y. Tremblay-admised him not to smoke, especially until times got a little easier. But much harder to conceptualize is that in 1913 the net receipts of the government were less than $300 million, which was enough to create a surplus of $40 million. Corporate and excise taxes and tariffs brought in most of the money the government needed. But Congress wanted another way to collect revenues. Abraham Lincoln had taxed incomes during the Civil War, but when it was tried again in 1885 the Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional, saying income taxes were direct taxes that had to be apportioned among the states. The 16th Amendment circumvented this ruling. presidential salary of $7,000. The governor of presidental salary with a salary of $10,000, would pay $50 annually. The initial intent was modest enough. Congress hoped to bring in $70 million by taxing 1 percent of the net income exceeding $70 million. Wilson would pay $700 annually on his To collect the new tax, the Bureau of Internal Revenue, later renamed the Internal Revenue Service to stress "service," prepared to expand its staff of 277 people in Washington and 3,723 people in the field. To tell people how to prepare their taxes, the bureau prepared a 16-page document called the Internal Revenue Code. The contrast to today is staggering. The IRS is now $1.5 billion operation, employing 1950-2007 CHRIS COBLER Individual income taxes now bring the federal government nearly $300 billion, or almost half of the net budget receipts of nearly $600 billion. Despite these phenomenal individual taxpayer contributions, the budget deficit is approaching $100 billion. more than 70,000 people throughout the world. The Internal Revenue Code has grown to a huge volume of 300,000 words, which must be interpreted along with the several hundred volumes of court decisions and IRS rulings which accompany it. Obviously, much has changed in 69 years. The federal government has grown to monstrous proportions, largely at the expense of the individual taxpayer. And along with this awesome growth, the SKILLfully managed to keep the supporting dollars coming in. Because the whole income tax system is voluntary in nature, the IRS has worked hard to indoctrinate the individual taxpayers. The IRS has a large public-relations program designed to "keep the taxpayer adequately informed" of his rights and duties. The IRS is happy to assist taxpayers who have questions or problems. And the system works remarkably well. Voluntary compliance brings 97 percent of the IRS's revenues, while enforcement brings only 3 percent. rine chief tool the IRS uses to get such a high percentage of compliance is the withholding system, which was reborn during World War II after being used by Lincoln. The IRS bills it as a service free to the taxpayers to spend on the year. This "free service" accounts for two-thirds of all individual income taxes collected in the United States. the rest of the taxpayers meekly comply under the threat of governmental prosecution. And while some tax evasion and cheating does exist, it is certainly limited by the possibility of an IRS audit, which puts fear in the hearts of honest and dishonest taxpayers. For, IRS tax auditors can find something wrong with almost any form prepared. The complexity of the tax laws makes it nearly impossible to be totally accurate. People on a president's enemy list are audited by the IRS. Big-time criminals who police can't touch are no match for the tax form and are brought in on charges of tax evasion or tax fraud. Thus it is that in the relatively short span of 70 years the income tax has pervaded the entire American way of life. Americans accept paying taxes on their income just as they accept the passing of each day. But a saturation point does exist. American workers are becoming more and more angry about giving one third or more of their wages to the federal government, which in turn wants more. The election of Reagan was an expression of this outrage. Americans would be good for as long as he would cut income taxes. Certainly, the government of 1892 is more complex and attempts much more than the government of 1913, but Americans will not accept an Orwellian "1984" either. The corpulent federal government must be chopped before it suffecates the people it is supposed to be serving. No one will benefit when the workers have been taxed to death. Letters to the Editor Security deposit bill would benefit tenants 1. If the editor: In response to your editorial about State Rep. Birch-Bryl's bill calling for interest on security deposits, this is not a new issue in Topека. It has been a part of broad landlord-tenant legislation for years, but has not received much support in the past. The idea has received increased attention in the past few years with soaring interest rates. interest on security deposits is a truly fair proposal and should give acceptance or rejection on its own merits. In your editorial you quoted a representative of the landlord association saying that the refund would simply be passed on. That argument is not a new one. Opponents of the severance tax have made the pass-on argument a popular one. Yet, why are the oil companies and the landlords working diligently to defeat these pieces of legislation? If they can simply pass on the increases, then why should they care? To the Editor: The rental business has become more competitive and competitive. Competition might be the reflexive difficulty to pay rent. make the return to landlords are arguing this point. It is irrigating that some landlords are arguing that the interest will be passed on and others are saying that it cannot be. They increase skepticism when they argue completely opposing views. interest rates skyrocked a few years ago. Take a moment and compute how much money a landlord, who owes 200 units and charges $200 deposit has available every August. At current interest rates, a good amount can be made by May. Your suggestion that ASK be concerned with self-heLP is understandable, but just because ASK might support interest on security deposits does not mean they would have to abandon self-help. The self-help issue has nothing to do with interest on security deposits. Interest on security deposits is not a panacea for tenants. It is not designed to solve all landlord-tenant problems. It is simply designed to return to the tenants what is rightly theirs. State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton D.Lawrence I encourage you to look into this legislation more thoroughly. I cannot accept the pass-on argument because it landlords work on a strict time limit, and landlords receive a rebate when interest rates soared? Group not ridiculous To the Editor: In his column "Fight Fairlwell and gang with reason," Tom Bontragre made a statement that I need clarified. Tom, what is the "inherent business" of the Moral Majority's position? I personally see nothing ridiculous in their stand, and even those people who don't appreciate their views can't exactly call them ridiculous—off-base, perhaps, but not ridiculous. As for Bontrager taught Art Buchdwell, well, anyone that knows of Buchdwell, knows what the subject is about. I see that Bontrager wrote "laugh at," not "laugh with." He also put "themselves" before "others." At least the Moral Majority puts others first and themselves last. As for their not being able to laugh, that's a joke in itself. I know of no other person who smiles or laughs as much as the organization's founder, Jerry Falwell. Since Bontrager has such a misconception of the type of individuals who join the Moral Majority, he should spend more time listening to their message rather than attacking the speaker, with bad arguments at that. Also, Bontrager wrote, "The reason humor can be so destructive to the Moral Majority is that they can never laugh at themselves or their own misdeeds. They must mix well with an air of solemn condemnation." As an after thought, I would like to point out to Bontrager that the intent of the separation of church and state clause was to separate the state from the church, not the church from the state. I think that the state is clearly a separate state, but that doesn't mean that they should abstain from politics and silence their opinion. Gordon Blake Clark, Gordon Blake Clark, Shawnee Mission freshman Letters Policy The University Daily Kanaswelcome letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kanasw reserves the right to edit or reject letters. University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1982 Page 5 out to tion of state state. Iate the should ion. Trash From page one Even broken furniture can be restored, Anderson said. "Take it apart and put it back together," he said. "It's lose-issue - take it apart, glaze, the paint." Flat wall paint can add do-yourself color to rooms, with matching or contrasting semi-reflective finishes. "Flat wallpaint is available in over 1,000 tints," he said. "Most paint stores custom tint, although darker colors are quite a bit more expensive." He said dark colors were more expensive and the hairs were made with additional natural pigment. Groundhog legend preserved in Punxsutawney,Pa. By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Puxsutawneen Phil saw his shadow yesterday Puxsutawneen Phil saw his shadow yesterday Nine hours later it was snowing in Laurel. If the infamous groundhog is correct, we could be in store for another six weeks of winter weather. Beaver Devere, afternoon radio anonymy on WPXZ in Puxsauwainney, Penn, said yesterday. "Yes, he did see his shadow at 7:26 a.m., said a partner. "So, according to legend, we are in life." Beveridge said the legend started in Punxatawney, a town of approximately 8,000 people. It was named after the river. They believed the groundhog was a true know-it-all animal and a true weather predictor, he said. Feb. 1, 1887 by German settlers who believed the groundhog was the smartest of all animals. Phil, the current weather forecaster, lives in a special zoo built for him in the town's library. Beveridge said. Phil lives there with his wife Phyllas. Yesterday, Phil was dragged from his wife into the winter weather. "Around six in the morning we took him to a town, two miles outside of town." Beveridge said. "There were about 1500 people there, many of them from Western Pennsylvania." Beveridge said festivities for Groundhog Day in Puxunxataum included a banquet and a special assembly in the town's high school to elect a King and Queen Groundhog from the But local animal watchers were skeptical of the legend. "I don't believe in the myth," said Kenneth Armata, president of systemsatics and但But it turns out. Gary Clark, director of the Topeka Zoo, called the leezen a hoax. "Any self-respecting groundhog is not about to poke his head out of his burrow at this time of the year," she said. He said that groundhogs, also known as hibernes, hibernate from late autumn to mid- March. "They are the largest member of the squirrel family in Kansas," he said. "And they're frequently encountered in the early morning or late afternoon when they're out and about." Clarke said groundhogs were dull and few zoos had them. At least one groundhog generated a little ex- mentation from his weather forecast for the week's weather, and he saw it on the week's weekday night. "Most people want to see exotic animals when they visit a soo. he said." And grounddogs are very popular. According to Gary Aiessi of the National Weather Service in Topeka, Kansans can expect normal temperatures and below normal precipitation during February. Alessi said temperatures would be normal, with highs in the 40s and lows in the teens in the northwest, and in the mid 20s in the south and east. D. MALYA Eyewear Elegance by AVANT-GARDE A full spectrum of optical services SPECTRUM OPTICAL One Day Service In Most Cases COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTON PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE A COLUMBIA PICTURE PG SR COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TICKETS PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG A COLUMN PICTURE Entr. 7/15 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TICKETS the Seduction R 7:30 & 8:20 MAT SAT SUN 2:15 SR MOTOBECANE FRANCE Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts MOTOBECANE FRANCE CINEMA 1 THE TIME AND WAY TO TELEVISION STUDIO Whose life is it anyway? LIVE 7:20 & 9:20 This school is our home... TAPS Ver 7.08 30 Mar Sat Sun 215 PG VARSITY SOUTHWEST TELEPHONE 1-855-327-9900 the Seduction R 9:30 AM - 6:30 PM MAY 24 SUN 9:30 AM - 6:30 PM BICYCLE 8 VE 7 20    9 20 LTV 10.62 SFT 8.34 SHFT 9.57 HILLCREST 3 9TH AND 10TH AVE. 500 WASHINGTON ST. 1999 CINEMA 2 2195 AND IOWA 8TH AVENUE TREAT WILLIAMS PRINCE OF THE CITY R CINEMA 2 3157 AND 1094 TELEPHONE 817-6400 B HILLCREST 10TH AND IOWA 834-726-5000 HEART LAND IVE, 7:30 & 9:20 MAT. BAY, SUN, 2:15 HILLCREST 2 9TH AND 10TH AUGUST 8:40AM ET / 5:00PM PT The mystery of "The Birds" The danger of "Psycho" VENOM R Headmasters. 809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044 IYANI KUTU Use Kansan Classified You'll Love Our Style. KU VS IOWA STATE ON OUR GIANT SCREEN TV GAMWONS GAMWONS (Tipoff at 7:30) Come out and watch the Hawks whip the wind out of the Cyclones. Doors open at 7:00 THEN Enjoy Yellow Brick Road after the game with . . . 25' draws 10-11 p.m. Ladies get two free drinks after 9:00 p.m. Kizer Cummings Kizer Cummings jewelers loves you Hours: 9:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m. Mon Su 'til 8:30 p.m. Thurs. There are times when you want a very special gift that will do very special things. . . You want it to be a symbol of how much you care. . . You want it to make someone feel special and loved. Free 14k gold dangling heart charm with purchase of 10k gold chain Other accessory set, 13, 1982 800 Massachusetts 749-4333 Mingles Lounge Every Wednesday $1.00 Well Drinks and 50' draws During Happy Hour free Mexican Hors D'oeuvres Build your own taco ... and then finish it off with $1.00 Margaritas MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th St. 842-7030 Ext.136 MIDNITE FLICK FRI. & SAT. VISTA VALEY BAND BY JAMES GALIS JERSE ST JAMES P.T.A. Varsity Downtown 843-1065 R Pharmacy Footnotes SCHOLAR by O.Newton King R.Ph. The digestive tract is a very mild understanding portion of the body, and it is possible that occasional irregularity is a cause for concern in fact, the interval between such events is healthy people vary widely from person to person. Not every one operation on a once-daily schedule will be taken promiscuously. Be certain that the problem is indeed, consequently, severe abdominal pain. In addition, a catharic not is necessarily a good idea unless more clearly added to the problem of dehydration. Consult your doctor rather than prescribing its cure and pre-scribing its cure. AT KING PHARMACY, we carry much hospital equipment for you to use at home. We also have a medical administration. We will administer and monitor blood glucose states and adjust your insulin levels and functions. We sell all the equipment necessary for such monitoring and are available for coverage for all our supplies. See us at 1127 West 5th St., Lawrence Square, Boston, MA 02118. HANDY HINT: We Honor Student Insurance Claims Constipation can sometimes be brought on by fear, worry and anxiety. KING PHARMACY Lawrence Medical Plaza 1112 W. 6th 843.4516 Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-4 THE GRAMOPHONE SHOP OFFERS YOU SOUND POWER presenting the meeting title hotel name HOTEL CARVER CARVER CORPORATION COPPAWAN COPPAWAN COAST OTTER COSTER OTTER COSTER COAST ADS ADS BROWN AIG AIG OBK ART ART SCHOLAR ACCLAIRE ACCLAIRE ENMUNITION COLOR COLOR DENMARK ADDVANT ADDVANT QUATRA ALLIANCE ALLIANCE EL ALLION ALLION ONTO ANNA ANNA EMMA AUDIO CONSOLE AUDIO CONSOLE ELECTRONICS AUDIOSCHINE AUDIOSCHINE ELECTRONICS AUDIO TECHNOLOGY AUDIO TECHNOLOGY ESSEX BIC BIC GUITAR BARGE & COLLISION BARGE GENERUS BAR BAR GRAND BEITÄRAN BEITÄRAN INTERNET BATER BATER HAMINGHARD BAUHMAN BAUHMAN HAMINGHARD BAUHMAN BAUHMAN HAMINGHARD BUSH BUSH INDE KIELS CH & WISH MUSIC STUDIO AUDIO WITH PERFORMANCE AND PRICES THAT WILL BLOW YOU AWAY Ask about Maxell XLIII-S and XLI-Tapes they feature higher glaucoma rate ratio wider glaucoma latitude, lower intermedation distortion, and lower print through thickness due to vances in oxide formulations. JB RADIANCE IVE HONN KENWOOD KAWAN ROSS LIX UX MOGA MITSUBISHI MANKIND MARCOFIT MARCOFFIT MICROACQUISITION MILER KANTEL MILLER KANTEL MILLER LABEL MONSTER LABEL NAKAMACH NAKAMACH NAKAMACH NOMAKA ONYXD ONYXD ONYXD DANAWA DANAWA PANAGONI PANAGONI POCKEYING POCKEYING KIEF'S DIRECT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE SHOP HOLIDAY PLAZA Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 3.1982 --- on campus --there is a 5 P.M. ENTRY DEADLINE FOR RECREATION SERVICES one-on-one basketball competition. Start up in 208 Robinson. TODAY THE UNIVERSITY FORUM will meet at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. COMPUTER THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Parliars of the Kansas Union UNITED THE UNITED NATION'S ASSOCIATION STUDENT ORGANIZATION will sponsor a speech by John Garland on "A Code of Conducts of Multinational Corporations in the Third World: Dream or Reality," at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union the UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY LECTURE SERIES will feature "Killer Bees: An Update on the African Honeybee in the Americas," at 7:30 p.m. in the Panorama Room of Dyce Hall. nere will be a FACULTY RECITAL performed by Alan Hawkins on bassoon at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. $18.90 (1000 Printed Copies) Service Beyond Duplication HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. — 842-3610 TOMORROW $18.90 (1000 Printed Copies) Liberation theology will be discussed at a THEOLOGICAL SEMINAR at 4:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. There will be a GENERAL MEETING OF THE JAY AND DESLIAN SERVICES OF KANSAS at the mine in the Five Room of the Union. THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will feature "In Search of Tolerance," "Gully by Reason of Race," and "Essay on War" beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the Cora M. Dowses Auditorium of Dyche. A site plan for 17 fourplex apartment buildings was unanimously approved last night by the Lawrence City Commission. Commission approves apartment plan The approval was given on a condition that the developer discuss with the city staff the expansion of the site's water retention capacity. The property is owned by Adrian Tang, KU associate professor of computer science. City funds may be used to expand the site's storage of storm water runoff. commissioner Nancy Shontz said the site's water detention plans were inadequate with the construction Shontz said there were already drainage problems on the property. of additional water collection facilities. "If our consultants continue their work on a master drainage plan, one of their recommendations might be detection facilities," she said. "People over on Eighth and Arkansas, I believe, have a lot of drainage coming off Michigan Street that makes their yards swamps, and that's a block and a half away (from proposed development)," she said. She said the site plan would exceed the city's drainage requirements. But she also said Sunday that the city's policy on storm water management was not very stringent and did not handle all the run-off that results from development. she said it might be an instance of a future city policy. Commissioner Don Binns said he objected to the city's offer to enlarge the collection capacity for storm run-off. run. But Shontz said this city-financed improvement was not a precedent for approval of site plans. However, TONIGHT IS LADIES NIGHT TIME OUT take TIME OUT 25' DRAWS 7-MIDNIGHT ($1.00 COVER CHARGE) TIME OUT1 THE PLACE TO PARTY 2408 IOWA Northeast Camping Associates Staffing NOW for Summer 1982 POSITIONS AVAILABLE FOR SUMMER COUNSELORS With strong skills & ability to teach one or more of Archery * Arts & Crafts * Athletics * Baseball * Basketball * Boat Driver * Canoeing Computer Science * Dance * Dramatics * Fencing * General Counselors Golf * Golf or Gymnastics * Indian Lore * Karate * Lacrosse * Nature Music * Riding (English) * Rifley * Rocketing * Railing * Scuba Soccer * Swimming (WIS) * Tackle Football * Tennis * Trap Shooting * Tripping Udone Tape * Water Skiing * Woodwork * RN's * Secretaries * Diring Rm Supervisor With strong skills & ability to teach one or more of the following activities: FULL 8 WEEK SEASON + 1 WEEK ORIENTATION • MINIMUM AGE: 19 WEEK SEASON + 1 WEEK ORIENTATION • MINIMUM AGE: 19 Top salary, room, board, laundry and allowances. Write to any one or all of the camps listed below. specify activity(s) applying for... give full details of background and qualifications. Act quickly. openings are being filled continuously. Cobbossee (Boys) NEW HAMPSHIRE Tomahawk (Boys) Watson, Maine Watson, Maine Kentler, Kemmel, Dan. Dies. A.H. Bogut. Dr. P.O. Box 919, Minneapolis, Minn. A.H. Bogut. Dr. P.O. Box 919, Minneapolis, Minn. N.J. 08433 N.J. 08433 Bristol, New Hampshire Somerset (Girls) Oakland, Wash. Willey: Allen Cramer, Dir. 180 East End Ave. New York, N.Y. 10028 MASSACHUSETTS Winadu (Boys) Wicosuta (Girls) Pintield, Mass. Write: Shelley Weiner. Dr. 5 Glen Lane NY, 10541 Bristol, New Hampshire Write: Irwin Bogart, Dr. 73 Rickell Rd. 7-2 SGT. PRESTON'S OF THE NORTH NEW YORK In the Adirondack Raquette Lake (Boys) Raquette Lake (Girls) Introducing 25c Draws And $1.00 Shots Every Thursday All camps accredited by the American Camping Association 815 N. Hampshire Quake Lake, New York Jerry Halband. Dir. 300 West End Ave. New York, NY. 10023 --- WE HAVE THE REDKEN SALON PRESCRIPTION FOR DRY HAIR It's a four step scientific system to make dry, flyaway hair shinier, more manageable. Call or come in now! REDKEN Salon Prescription Center You'll Love Our Style. Headmasters. 09 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044 --- SVA FILMS For Your Valentine and the New You MERLE NORMAN The Place for the Custom Face 701 MAIN ST. 441-532 - Harold Lloyd's FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE! -PLUS- Bea Lillie EXIT SMILING Smiling face The Place for the Custom Face 701 Mass 841-5324 -PLUS- Bea Lillie EXIT SMILING THE TRAVELLER SAVE UP TO $10 VALID ID CARDS instantly - Laminated - Color available at 1 - DENT SYSTEMS om 11A4 Ramaed inn 841-5003 LEVI'S KING Jeans 740 Massachusetts Y 1 7:30 p.m. WOODRUFF $1.50 Levi's for Gals (Slightly Irregular) Save $$$ on Your Favorite Jeans & Tops 69 $999 Sale *Men's Short Sleeve Knits (Levi's & Kennington) Reg. to $24 at KING + Jeans Patronize Kansan advertisers. Today Thru Sunday Only If You Got $10,You Got A Bargain All -Flannel Shirts Phoenix All Levi's Recycled Jeans straight legs, bootcut, flares All Levi's -Recycled Corduroys straight legs, boot cuts, flares 99 1 Large Group Take on the future in style! Wear a College Ring with diamonds from ArtCarved. On campus now, exclusively with your ArtCarved representative, is the beautiful and very affordable Designer Diamond Collection. Don't miss it! You can choose from three exquisitely crafted styles, all set with diamonds, in 10K or 14K gold. (All styles are also available in the elegant diamond-substitute Cubic Zirconia). Your successes speak for themselves. Let your college ring speak for you, and eloquently, for all the successful years to come. ARTCARVED CLASS RINGS, INC Final Day! ARTCARVED CLASS RINGS INC Final Day! WILLIAMS TEAMMEN 88 DATE: February 3 TIME: 9 a.m.-4 p.m. PLACE: Kansas Union Bookstores nPOSIT REQUIRED, MASTERCARD OR VIRTA ACCEPTED *1962 ART CARVED CLASS RINGS, INC University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1982 Page 7 Women's team beaten again BY GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor The women's basketball team lost its fifth straight game, dropping a 82-58 decision to the Missouri Tigers in Columbia, Mo., last night. The loss was the Jayhawks eighth in their last 10 games. The Jayhawks, who were told on Monday afternoon that the game against Missouri would be cancelled because the Tigers were snowed in during the game, won the game for the first 8:25 of the game. That is when the Tigers hit two free "Missouri is a fine ball team and we seem to bring the best out of teams," Coach Marvin Washington said. "A lot of them can gain a lot to gain after the four years." throws to go ahead 14-12. The score was tied three more times, but Kansas could never regain the lead. THE JAYHAWKS, who fell to 12-11 on the season, were once again the victims of their own mistakes. They turned the ball over 21 times compared to 13 for Missouri. KU's foul shooting also hurt the Jayhawks. Kansas shot 22 free throws, but could contain only 12 of them. Kansas was once again led by Missouri had three players in double figures. Debbie Walker led the Tigers with 24 points of 17 shooting from behind. She added 30 shot and Melissa Mr. Ferrin 16. sophomore center Tracy Claxton. Claxton scored 18 points and grabbed 14 rebounds. She shot 7 of 14 from the field and 4 of 4 from the foul line. Claxton was the only Jayhawk to score in double figures. THE JAYHAWKS now travel to Ames, Iowa, to take on the Iowa State Cyclones in the first game of a doubleheader with the men's team Tipoff is at 5:15 p.m. Intramurals Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Greek Men Rec. A Buckets 32, Tables 10, Lakers 10, No Green Letters 70, Brown Letters 60 etc. Independent Mez Artemis 48, Longbreads 64 The Stiers 44, LEE 63 The Stiers 44, Gun #1 34 The Stiers 47, Write Up 34 Miller Tum 58, The Guz 62 Warrington 9, Warrington 9 Lewis Dishroom 28, The Floor Sweepers 27 Mullard 35, Doorknob 31 The Mildaele 43, Doorknob 31 JOHNSON 31, THOMAS CHI 11 31 ○ Greek Letters 70, Bombers 20 Bridgewater, 60; Hodges, 12; Bowie, 3; White Hippe 16; Arbordier 39, The Chap 16; The Chase 16; Machie 14; Artwork Bruton 4, Machie 13; Artwork Bruton 4, Machie 13; Artwork Bruton 4, Machie 13; Lance M. Picken 27; Lance M. Picken 27; Lance M. Picken 23 Greek Men Rec.B So your Mother 49, E.M. Blue 25 The Syndicate 38, Battlement VIII 33 Seals 26, Fran 21 Cotterman 20, Kelly 14, Kelly Hailwicks Bauleachers 14, Tailwheels 33 The Coppa 26, Carpenters 38 Sangbeubel Chelson 23, The reactions 38 Battlers 4 Independent Men Attention: All Lone Star Student Health Insurance Policy Holders and Other Interested Persons for Contract Year 1982-83 There will be an open hearing concerning the student health insurance policy for your comments and to answer your questions. TIME: 7:00 p.m. DATE:THURSDAY,Feb.4 PLACE:INTERNATIONAL ROOM (UNION) PAID FOR BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES Two times one dollar 13 words can lower one thousand dollars $2.00 $25.00 three times five dollars $3.50 $35.00 four times six dollars $4.50 $45.00 seven times eight dollars $8.50 $85.00 eight times ten dollars $16.00 $160.00 ERRORS AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 8644358 POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996 ff LAOuadraon Laundry. Free dry with $75 \mathrm{~e}$ by the Airport. East highway 24. 842-387-8 Applications for Rotary Foundation scholarships for 1985 and are being submitted for scholarship for scholarships until the application will be March 1. 1982. Contact Arly Allen, Alpen Press, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone 864-749-1850. Prepare for LSAT exam 2-day seminar, 10-week program (on Saturday, Jan. 19th from Standard's Lectures, practice exams, take home materials. Class meet at 6:30 p.m.) Register for Charlotte, Kansas City $35, 128-888, cost $75 Register for Kansas City $24. THE ETC. SHOP 10 WEST 9th *West of the Candy Store*) Vintage and classic contemporary clothing - wool skirts, sweaters, sport coats, coats, cooks, gloves, formal wear The 12th Annual Women's Recognition Program, held in April, will bring the women who would like to help honor KU's outstanding women come to a meeting of the pn on Friday, May 7 at 6:30 p.m. on Union. Call 864-2054, or 842-1475 for more information. Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with patio. Walkable downtown & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5509. FOR RENT Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt. Unfurnished, carpeted & drapped, all electric kitchen & bath. Fully equipped campus, and on bus route $345 per month. No pets. MADEBROOK 15th & Crestfall. PRINCETON PLACE PATH APEARTMENTS, for dormitories, features wood burning fireplaces, workstations, fully-equipped water/derailor, bookings, fully-equipped kitchen, 9:30-12:30 daily at 2038 Princeton Blvd. or 1045 Princeton St. Two-bedroom duplex with garage and deck 24th and Ousahadi $320-81-8867 or 1-782- 420-81-8867 Studioes atmosphere, International meal, crampy room with Christian peel service provides meals. Call 814-7692. Own room $100 meal furnished. Room for private meetings, plances and laundry. Call 814-7692. Close room. For rent to mature male student. Quiet. To eat in the kitchen. Reasonable kitchen to the Union. Reasonable ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished townhouses featuring two full baths, featured two full baths. Must see! Located on 13th & Ohio. Only two short blocks from the Call. Union B42-84-26. Brand new 3-bedroom houses, $345 and $450. 81-579-791 or 81-725-11 2-11 Via Capita Airport, 1 & 2 BH aptns., also have bath courts. Via Capita Airport, bath courts. courts with walking distances of RU 68 km. Roommate needed for 3 bedroom house. 1897 Kentucky St. $16 + 1/3 utilities. 2-9 Available anytime. 2 bdm, ack. **Disposal** & dishwater. jaid. Good. **Access**- 198-2853 2-23 1 br. apt. $180 a month + utilities, walking from campus. 632-6725. 2-9 Amoxicillin, unfairly unfurrowed 2 BR Apt. Cotton, unfurrowed 3 BR Apt. Cotton. Call 816-857-8940 or 842-8699 after examination. For inbase, 2 br. apt. $830 + elect. Available now. Telephone: 841-8138. 2-22 New two bedroom apartment, low utilityites, in carpet and draps. 1104 Furniture. C庐 825-682. On carved and draps. 1104 Furniture. C庐 825-682. Good room in large furnished house block from union. Utilities paid. 843-3503 job 2-4 For second semester, bedroom 8 in quiet home. Private entrance 43-9213 after 2. Luxury duplex on bus route; all appliances 2-3 电话: 426.950.8711 2. Br air, on hsn route, convenzertx7 ty s≈nbspnbsp nbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbsp Apple, Craft Apt. Iqs, Spacious, fully carpeted and drapped 2 bedrooms Apt. for 180 sq ft. include kitchen, family room, facilities, pool, dwainwater, heating, AC included in Btu per month. Call 844-735-6293 Subclass 2 Br apt completes k-kitchen dishwasher, central air conditioning Call: 2-12 Large studio, carpeted, newly remodeled. Warder-dryer in basement. 2 blocks from campus. Rent negotiable. 749-270 or 913- 488-3611. Sublease nice two bedroom apt., low utilities, on bus route, convenient to shopping Call 842-461. 2-3 $200/month—2 bedroom apt. Near new apartments, close to college. Normally rent for $300 1st come, 1st serve basis. No Pet. M43-4708 2-5 1 bdmr apt. for sub-lease until July 31, 1982. $245 mms. bus route available. 1 bdmr apt. for sub-lease until July 31, 1982. $245 mms. bus route available. L Avalon Rd. Call 842-7351 or 841-680-260. Poor grades have opened up a farmhouse. No propane bills—natural gas. 5 rooms - bath. In good condition. 15 minutes from the house. STUDIO APT. for rent. 3 rooms. $145 + deposit. Water paid. On bus route. 841- ^442 Purnished room, utilities paid, two blocks from Kansas Union. $10 per month. Phone 841-3636. 2-4 Studio apt. close to campus at 19 W. 14th available mat. 1, 18. 192. $60.00 mow, with a $200.00 deposit. Absolutely no pets. Call 749-414 or 871-901. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Suit! Make sense out of Western Civilization! 1) For book preparation, 3) For exam preparation, 2) For presentation, 4) Available in book, river. The Book Readout Booklet. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9690, 2900 W. 6th. Alice-Lanning Series Nine speakers, rated 250 watts, adjustable crossovers. Make offer. Call 841-4765 anytime. 2-3 19" Sony color TV. Slightly damaged in shipment. Reduced for clearance. Ray Stonebake's, 929 Mass. 2-3 G.E. portable cassette recorders, 3 free tapes units; unit purchase before 2-10-2014. 73 VW Bug, Good condition $1000, information call @ 842-2838 weeks. 2-1997 Mpaa Hatchback, clean, A.C. Autom- obile, 25,000 miles. $200, $432-495. Keep your vehicle in good condition. 1972 Cheville. New paint, Mags, Pioneer AM/FM/Cass. Many extra parts, Beautiful and $1800. Jim, 842-1585. 2-3 Bookcases and stereo albums of solid woods 36 x 24' bookcases $ each. I also make caterpillars, desk organizers and coffee tables. Books $190. Stroud 307 West 131st Mon-Sat. 83-892-8534 Car Stereo Pioneer Super Tuner and Pioneer Power Amplifier 749-2374 2-3 LAB SERIES guitar amp, 2-12" spkr., 100 watts, cover, excellent condition, $325, 842-1617, 2-4 1976 Trump TRT. Very low mileage, AM-FM B-track, Michelins, very sharp. Must see 749-3728, 749-4676. Keep trying, please. 1971 White over yellow Chevy Impala 400 everything. Original super, clean, loaded. Strikes 8 track system. Jensen homes. In 4 in 4m only. M-24 (make a bld). Royal 3000 CE typewriter—dual pitch self-correcting—Like new. Call 749-2432 after-nos. 2-5 GREAT' BARGAIN on living room couch Good condition, clean, lightweight and easy to move. $25.00. Call 749-6878. 2-5 *Mold Bore 12 speed Bicycle*-Red, excellent condition. Aluminum rims. Dairy bars, seat peg & crank. $200 must sell. 641-7539 2-11 Polaroid SX-70. Very good condition. Must sell. ½ price. Call 841-2901. Please keep trying. 2-8 DOUBLE BED including frame, box spring, mattress $75 (negotiable). Call 841-6158 any time before midnight. 2-9 Component stereo. Hafer amp., Yamaha table, deck and speakers, and Advent speakers. Also Elec. guitar and amp. 842-5403 Part time opportunity distributing literature. Call collect after 6:00 1-501-935-469 2-4 Grandma died! Vintage hats and linen dresses. 749-3708. 2-5 FOUND 1981 AMC SX-4 Eagle 6 cyl. Auto-full arm. OM-FAM, 15,000 mL 842,825,826 FOUND, near Pieradactyl. Hohner harmonica, 749-2625, evenings. Describe to claim. 2-3 Stockbroker trainee. College grad-excels- broker opportunity for hard work, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individual. Reply P.O. Box 157 Red Bank, N.J. 06781. m... CRUISES, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDI- TION Companions Carrier, Caribbean, Worldwide Ship Ownership, INTERNATIONAL GUIDE TO CRUZE- WORLD, 153 Box 609, Sacramento, 3-12 Use your spare time to earn money for those "extra". Aggressive self-starter*s only. Field of total health and fitness. For appointment, call 842-8870. In appointment, call 842-8870. HELP WANTED PART-TIME. INCOME. Earn $10 for 10 minutes demonstration. Unique, high quality training. Fully trained. Required. Details. send $2. R. George Roberts. 738 Evergreen Drive, Edgeworth, Z-524. The University of Kansas Libraries is seeking qualified WORK-STUDY applicants to work in our library departments. Positions are open for daytime, evening and weekend hours. For more information or to apply, please contact the Library Office at 864-3001 or the EOEA Employer 2-365-864-3001. Student to help with housecleaning and childcare. 6 to 8 hours per week. $3 per hour. Must have own transportation. 862- 6729. 2-5 Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, studious, have own tools and equipment in cooperation. Call Carlyl 841-8386. GREAT OPPORTUNITY-Commission sales person wanted part-time. Must have car and be able to work 15 hrs/work during weekdays. Call Layette 257-749-4129 for interview. SUMMER CAMP COUNSELORS Overnight girls camp in New York's Adriackroad structures in waterfront waterway (WSI writing, arts/crafts, pioneering, music, photography, crafts/creative, placement, library available in Placement Office or write; Harvard Avenue SWarthaw, PA 1980-2; Harvard Avenue SWarthaw, PA 1980-2) STUDENT OPENINGS The Office of the University of Illinois openings. **Computer operator - Data Entry** Control 20 week (valid driver) Directive within Illinois State Board of Higher Schools. **Canadian Helen Wade** Computer Technician Applications are being accepted for half-time and half-term positions in the Western Civilization Program. Graduation is required for consideration. A back break is required. Required instruction is required. Instructors conduct a 8-week course associated with instruction in the Program, Salary depends upon grade of good credit, and Application forms may be obtained from the Western Civilization Program. Applications should be received by Hall Applications to be received by Program subservies to the principals of both the Western Civilization and Handicapped students are encouraged to apply. OVERSEAS JOBS—Summer year round. S.E. Amer. A.n. Australia, Asia. All Fields. WORK 12/24 monthly Sightseeing B.A. 908256 Box 25-1-K-13 Comp. Del Mar, CA 892652 Nail Hill Country Club is now accepting applications for fall holiday employment. This season, Positions include pool manager, assistant pool manager, and applicants for the position of manager must have experience in operating and managing pools. Squares commemorate with exterior murals. Squares commemorate with exterior murals. NHCZ, RI Indian Creek Drive, Overlook, NJ 07082 during spring break. 2-9 The Commission on the Status of Women is looking for a few good people to work on this important matter. More information come to the planning committee by email from the P.A. of the Kauras Union or call 854-732-6810. Half-time graduate assistant for chaired professor in the School of Architecture and Urban Design $460 per month must have a Master's degree. Contact Dr. Dewar at 864-1234. Sales clerks wanted full-time day, part- time evening. Wine experience preferred. Apply in person please. Green's Fine Wines. 802 W. 31st St. 2-9 Church nursery helper needed on Sunday mornings. 843-0679. 2-9 In 303 Bailey last Tues. Orange Back-rae with sketchbook, calendar, and folder. Please call Steve at 864-2917. 2-5 NOTICE get back to the Boogle in your own style of music. Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and theory lessons. All levels, teach tunes in voice, Call Kurt at 814-687-3921. Music 814-687-3921. 2-16 LOST Lost: Canon AEI camera on Jan. 26 in parking lot at 13th & Vermont. Please return! Reward: 841-3295. turn. Reward. 841-7359. 2-6 Red and blue USA speedskating hat. Re- ward. 841-8661. 2-3 One maroon, 7 x 10" hardcover Elementary Differential Eqs. textbook lost F-1, 2-9 near Murphy? Mallah -749-4596. 2-9 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT. 843-4621. **if** Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. *tf* MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. **UF** Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 781-1611. ff PERSONAL SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SWIMMER WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS Economical packages every week at school breaks Call Ski Etc. 841-8368 today. Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willard Skillet罐. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tf Hurt your back or neck when you slipped on the lee? Don't delay proper treatment. For modern orthopraxis care call Dr John Smith. Inside Locking Insurance, Star 2-5 Blue Cross Insurance TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-9099 anytime, B.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics, or call 8641-1057 (akk for Robert). *If* Select your party outfits early. Barb's Second Hand Rose, 842-474-511. Indiana. A sweetheart portrait for Valentines Day turns a simple thought into a lasting memory. Swells Studio 749-1611. 2-12 1982 AEA Pledge Class Valentine Parties - 50% formula, auctions, tuxes, talks, show tickets. Call your assistant your audit, Barbara's second Hand Knee. 511 Indiana, 842-4766. 2-11 The Kager - Special Weeks on Christmas Day 11am-7pm. (800) 239-4444. 1922 A C Creamy vault Valentine Anniversary Sale Valentine Anniversary Sale Send An Anonymous Carnation To That Secret Someone Brighten that special someone's birthday with a personalized birthday cake. Phone 841-6245. 2-5 K. S.U.-Where Men are Men and Sheep are Nervous. Bumper Stickers 1 each from UMC, P.O. Box 1291. Lawrence. 2-5 If you can't be with that special person this Valentines Day send the next best thing, a life size bow-up哄门 FROM FOOT-LIGHTS—25th & iv, Holiday Flask. 2-9 Classi Use Kansan Classifieds ... Mary-Ellen Rodgers was so mud when he got her X-valentined Day card she took, the Beaver. FOOTLIGHTS, 25th, & Iowa, 2-9 Tell that special person just what you really think with an X-rated card from FOOT-LIGHTS. 25th & Iowa. 2-9 Exquite Valentines Day Gift - two-Ladro figurines (Spanish pencilcoat) "Kissing Boy" and "Girl with Candle" 842-0794, 9 am-10 am TRAVEL CENTER GETAWAY! Ski Packages - Scrub Diving Adventures - Windjammer "Barefoot Cruises" * Singleworld Cruises & Tours - Dude Ranches - Health Spas - Golf/Tennis Camps - Alaska/Canada Fishing Trips 841-7117 841-711 FREE PARKING "HOME OF THE NEON PALM TREE" 1601 West 23rd St. SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER 9-5-30 Mon.-Fri. 9-4-30 Sat. Begin planning for Valentine's Day early. Call today and arrange for a Valentine's Day Delivery of a Balloon-a-Gram. 841- 5848. 2-5 Teu Sigma Dance Club Bash Friday, Feb. 5. 8:00-12:00 pm in the B-8 room. Live band plus all the beer you can drink. 2-5 BATGIRL MEETING scheduled Thursday, February 4th, 6:90 pm in Baseball Office, second floor. Alen Fieldhouse. For information Call 864-4196. 2-4 ALL YOU CAN DRINK $3.50 AT THE PLADIUM WED. NIGHT. 2-3 LADIUM WEEK NIGHT KY 12 Nighttrocker Night with Randy Raley Get lucky at the Pladium all you can drink $3.50 Wed. night. 2-3 LETRASTAR PANTONE graphic art products seminar Wed, February 14 at 11:30 am-1:20 pm Art & Design Booth 845-784-3844 Office System, 1040-845-784-3844 Veronica by Stucco, 12:30 Ask, about our Poseidon Adventure, The Exchange. A private club 2406 Ireland 2-3 EVERY CAR IN STOCK $9.95 A DAY FIRST 600 MILES FREE THEN DINY A MILE Special weekends rates. We are now leasing trucks & vans. We accept Master Card/VISA. Location: 931 W. Hobbs St. of our cars, it's cheaper than a bus fare home! we're now, for spring Break. LEASE- MOREN 740-1495 Study Skills Workbook via videotape FREE: Friday, February 5. 2:30- Reading. 1:30- Time Management. Register at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong. 646-844-6 www.us.edu/study skills Don't just send a song or a bunch of hot songs with string and percussion (or at least a good attempt). Call now for a "dynamic delivery and performance" 2:12 6888 Women's Recongenition 1982 is scheduled for March 23, 1984. The Women's Commission on the Status of Women plan the program to parlor A in the Kansas Univ. Thursday, Feb. 4, 7:30 p.m. On Friday, Feb. 5, 8:30 p.m. Tuxes—29% off. Barb's Second-Hand Rose. 515 Indiana 842-7446. 2-12 Randall. If your letter, if a joke it won't funny, if not write again and give me your correct address. Write Larry. 2517 Morning-Stri. Dr. Lawrence. 2-9 Help the Commission on the Status of Women and Children (CSWOC) for the First meeting will be Thursday, Feb. 4th at 1:20 p.m in Perilor A of the Kobe City Hall, but cannot attend the meeting call 864-3654, or 864-7933. SKI STEAMROAT CHEAP: $23 per day, per person, inc. lifts, 4, 6 or 8 guests. Call Collect (303) 879-6868 2-15 Champagne for the ladies, 50+ a glass. Tues. 9:00-12:00, now that's real class. The Sanctuary. 2-3 Wow, you wont to see our hookers, price just right. you'll get jacket 9.00-3.00 on Wed. 75th is all you'll pay. The Sanctuary. 2-3 50: draws from 10 pm to 12 pm Monday- Thursday, The Exchange (A.P.C.) 2406 Iowa. 2-3 Super Deal—2 seats available in private airplane to Las Vegas. Leaving morning 2-18 returning 2-18. 665-7738 2-9 RAASCH WESTERN FLAIR is now at 737 Mass. Save 20% on boats, 40% off shirts, 90% off winter coats. 2-9 All my friends from many places, thanks so much for smiling face! It's because of your support and caring. I have this [1] to hold me back when I can't without it, Love, Mo. 2-3 levi's The original Levi's Shrink-to-Fit blue jeans The 501 . . . it made Levi's fit and quality famous! LITWINS 831 Mass. Downtown Lawrence Out our superseded Meadowhouse Friends. The we're sorry for offending you, we didn't do without our engineering buddies we do without our engineering buddies. W GREEN'S CASE SALE, LONG NECK PABST $6.49, LONG NECK BUSCH $7.99, GREEN'S B10W WENT 23rd - 2-12 VACCINE AGAINST PREGNANCY, IBD EFFECTS, AND SOME MORE. The River City Women's community women who are collecting and/balance bills. If you are informed about these issues, please contact SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS project2? Call 841-7683. 3-10 Take that job with a professionally prepared resume by a. local corporate recruiter. Learn the latest job hunting techniques. 841-5664 2-14 TUTING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-6099 any time (b.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics) or call 841-6095 (akk for Robert). tfr WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say: 1) Say it! Stop by The House of Usher and pick up our FIRS resume on resume booklet. 2) Visit machaesthetica, 8-9 M-F-Sat. NOON-3 Sun. LITERATRIX PANTONE, graphic art products seminar. Wednesday. February 4th at 11:30 a.m-12:00 p.m in 21st Art & Design Building. (Sunday only) 228-679-0044 Vermont, 843-654-3644 Schneider Wine & Keg Shop - The finest selection of wines in Wine-Lawrence - largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-2312. 1f Beginning voice (singing) students $5.00/ hr. 842-0038 2-3 31/2¢ self services copies copies now at Experienced English teacher will tutor grammar, composition, literature. Domestic or foreign students. 841-0911 evenings. 2-3 HIMC 25th and Iowa 842-2001 ENCORE COPY CORPS It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. tf Experience editor (5 yr./) grad student will edit theses, dissertations. All disciplines. 843-8969 after 6. 2-5 Guitar Lessons: Learn to play now from experienced teacher. Reasonable. Call Mark 841-2655. 2-12 TYPING Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting. Browse Or, Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-5654. Mrs. Wright. tf Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting selecric Call Donna at 842-2744. tf TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, vocabulary. Foreign student (or Americans 81-8244) Experienced typist. Theses, term papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct. Selectric. Call Eilen or Jean Ann 841-2172. **tt** Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, tern papers, mise. IBM correcting selective. Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. **tr** QUALITY TYPING: Themes, Manuscripts, Dissertations: IBM Selectric, Girl Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 please. TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced vlastist—IBM Correcting Selectire II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. $843-5675. tf Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. Fast. IBM. Before 9 p.m., 744-625. Ann lf Experienced typetting. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric. Elite or Pla. 84- 842. For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-4980. 7943 Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, letters, legal, etc. Deb. 843-9592 2-10 Professional Typing, quick, reasonably prized, paper supplied. Call evenings, 841-7915. 2-3 Professional typing. Dissertation, thesis, term paper, resume, letter, legal, etc. Deb 843-8922 2-11 GOODBYE FINAL DRAFTS? Papers edited, polished, typed. No job too large or small. Reasonable. 841-0911 evenings. 2-3 Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and manual copying are given the save line and money by word processing I will teach them. They learn quality typing and word processing awaited. Quality typing and word processing awaited. Inquire & Secure Copy Corp. 325 and 14th Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20007. WANTED GREAT DEAL 2 roommates need to share beautiful old house app 2 blocks from campus. $150 mo. utilities paid, no deposit. Rent not due in Feb. 11th. Fitch: 843-455-8838. Housemate to share large 2 BR duplex in SW Lawrence, D/W, W/D, garb dispensal, FP A, C/$ 175 (mo. + 1) usl. Call John, 2-3 or 842-2001 or 842-2001 Non-smoking male to share fully furnished 2 bdm; duplex $75/month + utilities Close to campus call after 7 pm #83-3815 Roommate wanted to share large house with two females. Close to campus and downtown, 841-7755, after 5:00 p.m. 2-5 BATGIRL MEETING SCHEDULED. Thursday, February 4th. 6:00 pm in Baseball Office, second floor, Allen Fieldhouse. For information call 864-4916. 2-4 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment, 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 + $1' utilities. 749-2438 2-5 3 three rooms to share duplex- three blocks from campus. Male or female, Liberal, smoker ok. 842-3104. 2-0 Person to share 3-B room 1024a. Person to share 3R-BR home with two others on bus route. $90/no. 1/2 util. B41-5461 3rd female roommate Village Square Axartmont 841.1903 2-4 LAW STUDENT rooms recaon to share, well furnished 2 BR at Harvard Square Apts. (3 blocks from campus). 1 bed/2 bath. Kevin 760-3018 + 14 phone 250-8799 MALE ROOMMATE needed to share 3 br. house. $125/mo. + 1/3 utilities + deposit. Call Brad at 841-6341. 2-8 Roommate wanted: 3 Brm. House $65 per month + 1/3 utilities 1 bik from bus. Call Debbie or Mark 841-2695. 2-12 Non-smoking female to share 3-br. house, close to campus. 83.33 + 1/3 util. 841-9779. No pets. 2-12 Roommate needed to share nice, new, furnished 3 bedroom room. $115 + 1/2 utilities. Call 811-6508. 2-8 Need to rent portable CB radio for trip over Spring Break Call 749-0911 e-2-5 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 3, 1982 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Team W L L Pct. GB Boston 30 14 176 - Beijing 22 21 512 - Washington 22 21 512 - New York 22 21 512 - Los Angeles 22 21 444 Milwaukee 28 19 14 574 Atlanta 28 19 25 432 9½% Detroit 19 19 26 422 Detroit 19 19 26 422 Cleveland 9 34 10 11¾ Western Conference Midwest Division San Antonio 29 14 674 Denver 28 22 540 8% 17% Kansas City 14 30 318 15% 16 Utah 14 30 318 15% 16 Los Angeles 21 19 .705 Seattle 21 18 .600 1 San Francisco 24 18 .675 1 Portland 24 18 .571 1 Golden State 24 18 .571 1 Houston 13 11 .685 8 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Golden State 119, Los Angeles 117 Denver 109, Atlanta 165 Boston 108, Chicago 143 San Antonio 103, Dallas 98 Boston 109, Indiana 126 Houston 112, Miami 112 Houston 122, San Diego 106 Denver 128, Atlanta 107 Chicago 97 RIGHT STANDINGS Team W L P Pet. GB Missouri 7 0 1 100 2% Kansas State 4 4 2 667 2¼% Oklahoma State 4 3 2 500 2¼% Kansas 4 3 1 500 2¼% Nebraska 2 4 1 333 4½% Iowa State 2 5 1 167 4½% IOWA 1 6 1 441 UPI TOP 20 RESULTS Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. Notre Dame 75. San Francisco (8) 66 Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Bobbie Dixon Team W W L T G FG PA Pts. Islanders 18 18 19 4 62 178 68 Los Angeles 19 19 19 4 62 178 68 Rangers 25 20 7 192 192 201 57 Pittsburgh 21 20 10 192 200 198 36 San Diego 15 10 3 192 191 201 36 Buffalo 29 14 1 9 205 157 68 Montreal 28 11 12 305 168 67 Boston 20 16 7 211 208 105 Quebec 20 16 8 214 180 67 U.S. Average 20 18 174 174 67 Campbell Conference Norms Division Minnesota 21 16 15 15 290 181 267 St. Louis 21 16 13 24 216 181 274 Detroit 19 16 13 24 216 181 274 Toronto 16 24 13 11 212 288 45 Chicago 15 24 13 11 212 288 45 Baltimore 16 24 13 11 212 288 45 Edinburgh 33 12 12 10 297 216 74 Calgary 13 12 12 10 297 216 74 Vancouver 17 25 11 10 298 254 60 Los Angeles 14 17 11 10 150 253 39 Houston 18 11 11 10 150 253 39 Quarter 8. Colorado 7. Washington 8. St. Louis 7. Winnipeg 8. Montreal 1. Calgary 3. Hartford 1. Los Angeles 3. Tampa 1. Vancouver 3 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W 15 L 4 Pct. GB Pittsburgh 11 4 789 New York 12 600 1.90 Baltimore 14 6 700 1.1% Buffalo 9 11 400 1.6% Cleveland 8 0 344 1.5% Philadelphia 8 14 235 1.0% New Jersey 8 14 320 1.8 St. Louis 17 17 350 Wichita 11 11 8 75% Dewer 9 9 14 75% Phoenix 10 10 435 8% Phoenix 7 13 135 8% Phoenix 7 13 135 8% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 7, Philadelphia 4 Phoenix 4, Memphis 3, OT Exciting Careers For BS/MS Engineering Graduates... PURITAN-BENNETT, progressive leader of design, manufacture and marketing of state-of-the-art medical respiratory and pulmonary equipment, is interested in you. We are medium sized with steady growth patterns and net sales of $113* million. Positions are available in California, Kansas and Massachusetts for prospective positions in ANALICAL AND INDUSTRIAL DESIGN ENGINEERING. On Campus Interviews Friday, February 5 Sign up now for an interview with us. See the PURITAN-BENNETT file in your College Planning & Placement Center. It interview not convenient send resume to Personnel Manager/College Recruiting P PURITAN-BENNETT CORPORATION General Officers Oak Ash Thirteenth Streets Kansas City, Mo. 64106 Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Jayhawks face Iowa State tonight By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawks will be shooting for their fourth straight victory tonight against the Iowa State Cyclones in Ames, Iowa. Tipeon is at 7:40 p.m. and will be presented on Channel 41 as the Big Eight Show. Sports Editor The Jayhawks take a 3-3 Big Eight record and 12-6 overall mark into the contest, while the Cyclones enter the 5-3 in the conference and 6-12 overall. IOWA STATE is led by freshman forward Barry Stevens. Stevens is averaging 13.5 points and 4.6 rebounds a game. "Barry is a great scorer," Iowa Coach Johnny Orr said. "He is a fine ...DID YOU KNOW? offensive player. By the time he finishes his college career, he could be high among Iowa State's all-time scoring leaders." DID YOU KNOW? John Quincy Adams said: "The highest glory of the American Revolution was the independence indisoluble bond, the principles of civil government with the principles of the Constitution. The HISTORY OF THE CONSTITUTION OF AMERICA, p. 322, Vernon, Mali, Hall, 1979 (San Francisco): Foundation for American Christian Education." At the other forward position is sophomore Ron Harris. He is the Cyclones' second lead scoring, averaging 12.6 points and 5.1 rebounds a game. He also leads the team in steals with 26. Rounding out the starting front line is senior center Robert Estes, from Liberty, Mo. Estes, who was moved to the center position when Ron Falenschek was injured, is averaging 10 points and 5.4 rebounds a game. --clip and save The guards for the Cyclones are senior Malvin Warrick, from Kansas City, Mo., and sophomore Terrence Allen. Warrick is averaging 8.2 points and **Boyd's Coins Antiques** *Chess Piece* - Bicycle - Silver Tissue - Gold Tissue - Silver Coin *Lion Piece* 71.9 in Length *Lamptop* 130.5 in Length 91.82-877.2 IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 44-40 Hwy 843-9800 5. 7 rebounds a game, while Allen averages 5.7 points and 2.5 rebounds. After the Iowa State contest, the Jayhawks will play their second straight road game when they travel to Oklahoma State. "As is the case when you play teams in the Big Eight, Iowa State is a dangerous team," Kansas Coach Ted Owens said. "They've played some very close games against some of the better teams." "We did what we had to last week in winning both games at home," David Magley said. "Now we have to prove we can win in the conference on the road." "Oklahoma State is always tough no matter where you play them. And Iowa State under Coach Orr plays good basketball." BRING YOUR LUNCH AND COME AFRICAN STUDIES LUNCH TABLE LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley 842 7287 843 8771 Prudential N/A North America 11:30 to 12:30 Every first and third Wednesday of the month. —Feb. 3rd,1982— Meadowlark Room, Kansas Union Kings defeated Cliff Robinson kept the Kings in contention with a game-high 28 points. Forward Reggie King added 16 points for the Kings. PORTLAND, Ore. — The Portland Trailblazers, led by forward Calvin Natt's 27 points, shook off first-half doldrums in the third quarter last night and went on to defeat the Kansas City Kings 102-97. By United Press International —Feb. 3rd,1982— "Haiti and the Haitian Problem" by Bryant C. Freoman Natt, held just four points in the first half, scored 18 in the next 10 minutes as the Blazers recovered from a 54-47 halftime deficit to go ahead for good at 64-62 with 6:44 remaining in the third quarter. hip and rear ACADEMIC CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day: 841-0101 808 W24 715-2372 MEET WITH THE HEWLETT-PACKARD EXPERT! √ FIND OUT ABOUT THE NEW HP-IL PRODUCTS v SPECIAL SALE PRICE ON HP 4IC CALCULATOR $199.95 TIME: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. DATE: FEB. 3 PLACE: KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES MAIN UNION, LEVEL 2 hp HEWLETT PACKARD kansas KU union bookstores main union level 2 satellite main union level 2, satellite shop is anyone thinking of B35 MASS. * 843-4813 * LAWRENCE KANS. 6044 913 215 SPRING BREAK? $3 holds your selection until March 10th. Select Your Swim Suit NOW! Jay SHOPPE Downtown FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 BUSCH CASSIDY CAMPUS CONTEST BUSCH CASSIDY BUSCH CASSIDY RIDES AGAIN! CAMPUS CONTEST Nine second lines for the nine clue verses to help you win a vacation for 2 in Daytona Beach, Florida. 1. His mom taught him to climb never fearing 2. Like a bronc all the way to the mill? 3. That a guide would describe as a cleft 4. Or a barrel or some other float? 5. Belle & Largo's the West's latest rage 6. Like a hero or last week's slow mail? 7. You'd guess better if you only knew 8. He might stop at Nell's for the view 9. By appearing to know how to ski? (Look for another clue ad in this space next week.) BUSCH Beer HEAD FOR THE MOUNTAINS p r th s BUSCH BUSCH Brew of Texture, Legend, Sweet, Refreshing 100% 24 FL. OZ. Anheuser-Busch, Inc., Brewers of BUSCH Beer • St. Louis, Missouri, USA ___ in fin st the the 10 need go 44 in 28 eed KANSAN The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, February 4, 1982 Vol.92,No.89 USPS 650-640 Fire singes downtown By BARB EHLI and BECKY ROERTS Staff Reporters The eight-hundred block of downtown Lawrence changed from the usual dusky suprtime calm into a maze of flashing lights, acrid smoke and frozen water yesterday as a long night's work began for the Lawrence Fire Department. Firefighters also responded to two other fires calls later in the evening. Firefighters answered their first call at 6:05 p.m. to the Royal College Shop, 837 Massachusetts St., while Lawrence police blocked traffic and spectators from the scene. Firefighters responded to the call and after some confusion, found the fire in the basement of the Royal College Shop. In order to reach the firefighters broke the shop's oval glass door. "When they busted the window, there was a wall of smoke out there." Jones said. Firefighters worked inside the building for an hour and a half to get the fire under control. They reappeared periodically, smoke billowing from the windows, and empty oxygen tanks in exchange for full ones. Firefighters worked past 11 p.m. to control spot fires that developed in a alcohort in the town of O'Connor, Calif. There are spot fires isolated in small nooks and crannies. In Foley, acting major at the crime scene, he made the call. the scene, looking through the building for the cause of the fire. Near-zero temperatures added to the confusion as water froze into puddles on sidewalks, and as snow melts into ice. Findley said he did not know how the fire started or how much damage it caused. Fire Chief Jim McSwain said it might be a week before a cause and the total damages were known because fire damaged both the building and the merchandise inside it. royal college shop The downtown blaze also kept the Lawrence Police Department busy. "They had to call two extra units out, two other officers from two other districts," Brian埃安, police commander, told CNN. Edwards said one of the police units had been assigned to the back at the Royal College Shop to "People take stuff—clothing, shoes, axes—anything that's lying on the sidewalk." Edwards All available firemen responded to a roof fire at 1415 Kentucky St., including truck 14, an off-duty unit. Less than an hour after the first call, firefighters answered a second call at 705 Rhode Island St. Firefighters extinguished a small fire in a basement heater after shuffling the gas valve. At 8:04 p.m., the dispatcher announced a third fire. James Woydziak, department training engineer, said fire fighters tore out paneling to reach the fire and found flames between the insulation and the shingles. RFN BIGLER/Kansan Staff A Lawrence firefighter smashes through the door of the Royal College Shop,837 Massachusetts St., to fight a fire that broke out there about 6 p.m. last night. Carlin's budget illegal, Stephan savs By United Press International Some of Gov. John Carlin's fiscal 1983 budget proposal procedures were not legal, Attorney General Robert Stephan said in an opinion issued yesterday. The opinion, which came in response to questions raised by State Rep. David Miller, R-Eudora, said that the budget was not in accordance with Kansas law because it left out many of the certain agencies, including the Kansas Board of Regents and higher education institutions. MILLER HAD asked for the opinion to determine whether it is appropriate to lower the overall power in preparing the budget. IN ADDITION, the opinion, written by Stephen and Robert Alderson, first deputy attorney general, said Carlin should see whether B-level allocations for agencies in the budget actually represented the amounts agencies wanted from the Legislature. A new budget procedure, drawn up by Lynn Muchmore, the state budget director, prompted the opinion. Under that plan, the budget office created a separate group into three levels: "A," "B" and "C." The new procedure required agencies to limit their budget requests to specific amounts that are reasonable. Stephen's opinion said that Carlin did not have to predetermine the allocations of those agencies. "It is our opinion that, while the governor has the power to make recommendations regarding budget requests of state agencies, and the director of the budget has the authority to prescribe the format of such requests, neither has the power to predetermine and circumscribe the amount which may be requested," the opinion said. POLICE KENNEDY St. Keeper of stolen property, Lawrence Police Department's evidence officer, Jack Elder readies a stolen street sign for storage. The property is held in the evidence room while the case is under investigation or on trial. JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Staf Officer keeps track of Lawrence evidence "Hopefully, I'll get rid of some of this stuff," Fered said yesterday. By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter Elder is the evidence officer for the Lawrence Police Department. At any one time Elder may be in charge of anything from empty beer cans and 10-foot marijuana plants to color television consoles and living room chairs. "I'd make a pawn shop envious with what I've got in here," Edder said. As evidence officer, he is responsible for more than 12,000 items that fill the department's The 45-foot by 25-feet evidence room, in the basement of the Law Enforcement Center, is protected by cinderblock walls, steel ceilings The walls of the room are lined with gray wall lockers, each filled with a different item. At least 12 of the lockers are filled with different kinds of clothes; others are stuffed with clothing and liquor bottles. Three rows of cubbyholes are stacked on top of the wall lockers. They too are filled with evidence, such as odd shoes, knives and small stone statues. and steel doors. The center of the room has two sets of eight-foot-long shelving units that each have a depth of 24 inches. Everything in the evidence room is used as evidence for court trials that are pending or have "The evidence is one of the most important things in a case." Elder said. "You don't want to lose a case because you lost the evidence." Elder's duties include taking custody of evidence, marking it clearly with the correct case number and filing it in the office. Also is in charge of organizing and taking inventory of the evidence room. Elder then files the reports and shelves and organizes the evidence. Since November, Elder has had a computer terminal to help him inventory items in the evidence room. "I the computer makes it a lot easier for me." Elder said. "I can enter the evidence as soon as I Once the evidence has been used, it is either returned to the owner, destroyed or sold at police stations. To destroy the evidence, Elder must get a destruction order from the Douglas County District Court. "We destroy contraband—things that are illegal," Elder said. "With all the paperwork, it can take a month to get the destruction order." After Elder gets the destruction order, he and at least two witnesses take the evidence to the city dump. Once there, a bulldozer digs a 6-foot Elder and the witnesses pat the evidence. The evidence is then covered in diesel fuel and ignited. Living groups will give up one meal to help Poland By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter The KU Friends of Solidarity has asked all organized living groups at the University of Kansas to skip one meal and donate the savings to eat the food shortage in Poland. Alan Lichter, the adviser of the organization and associate professor of English, said yesterday that the money donated to the "Have a Heart for Poland" program would be turned over to CARE Inc. and would be used to buy CARE packages that would reach the Polish people within three weeks. LITCHER SAID that people who didn't live in househouses to the fund at the collective campus Fax Richard Pack, regional field representative for CARE, said that every $12 collected would provide a 25-pound food package that could feed one person for one month. Students who live in University housing and skip a meal would be contributing $1.25 to CARE. Lachter said the Friends of Solidarity was working with CARE because it could be sure that CARE would be able to deliver the food directly to needy families in Poland. "CARE is one of only two organizations now recognizing government now." Lichter said. "We are assured that the food we send is going to reach the neediest families." Pack said that Phillip Johnston, executive director of CARE, was reassured on a recent trip to Poland that CARE would be able to continue its food distributions. Lichter said that CARE was allowed to spot the packages that the packages were actually received. LICHTER, who returned last June after a year as a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Gdansk in Poland, said that the campus was still able since the project was introduced last week. "I think everyone on campus perceives this as a germ emergency, as a genuine crisis" *Liam* The Association of University Residence Halls last week voted unanimously to endorse the program and residents will be given the option to skip the evening meal and donate the money saved on Feb. 14, the designated "Have a Heart for Poland Day." the office of University housing also has agreed to return the cost of the evening meal to the fund, Kevin Nelson, AURH project chairman, said. Residents must sign up by Tuesday to participate in the program. Sorority and fraternity members have also offered their support to the program, and the All Scholarship Hall Council will decide whether to program the at least weekly meeting tonight. LICHTER SAID that the Friends of Solidarity was formed just before Christmas break. "A few people and myself, people interested in Poland for one reason or another, formed a small committee called Friends of Solidarity," Lichter said. "The situation there as I see it—knowing what I know about the area from last year and what I know from the communication I've received—is extremely dire." Poles are concerned with basic survival, and as trying to get more freedom from the government. He said that his organization placed ads describing its purpose during the Christmas break and received $3,000 to $3,500 in donations. "It was an amazing response, but that's just a drop in the bucket compared to what we need and what they need in terms of food," Lichter said. PACK SAID that donations for food packages for Poland dropped after Christmas, but because more media attention focused on the shortages in Poland, donations had increased. "The Polish relief campaign is starting to take off again," Pack said. Lichter said that the group was non-political, but used the name Solidarity so that people would easily recognize its interest in Poland. "We have no intention whatsoever of entering even a marginal political area," he "Our approach is to line up with the in- stitute and provide families that need to survive, that need for care." Lichter and Pack both said that messages telling the Polish people who had sent the packages would be included in the food parcels. "It is important that the Polish people know that the outside world cares, that there's individual caring as well as government public relations caring." Lichter said. "We will let them know that we here at KU care about them as human beings, that we sympathize with them and support them in their struggles for freedom." COLD Weather It will be bitterly cold today with an 80 percent chance of snow, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The high today will be 5 to 10 degrees with a low tonight of -5 to -10 degrees. Chances of snow increase to 90 percent for tonight, and freezing cold temperatures should continue through Saturday. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 4, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International UAW negotiations blamed for record low auto sales DETROIT—January car sales plunged 18.5 percent to the worst rate in 21 years as buyers apparently waited for promised price cuts that never materialized. Total domestic sales of 989,138 cars were down 18.5 percent on a daily rate basis from the 469,832 average monthly in 1981, domestic auto makers The final 10 days of January dealt the auto industry its worst blow when the daily selling rate dropped 25.5 percent. the only seeing race dropped as waiters stopped Analysts said car buyers were waiting for prices to drop, but prices stayed much the same because contract talks with the United Auto Workers had collapsed. American Motors Corp. posted the biggest 10-day drop of the five domestic auto makers, with sales down 58.5 percent. Its sales for the month were down 40 percent. General Motors also suffered a substantial drop in sales -31.6 percent in the last 10 days of January. Ford Motor Co. posted the best 10-day sales report, with sales down only 5.7 percent from 1981. Import car sales for the month were down 3.8 percent to an estimated 161,000, making the drop in total industry sales 14.3 percent from last year's U.S. threatens to cut U.N. support UNITED NATIONS - The United States threatened yesterday to cut off financial support for the United Nations if it tries to oust Israel. Arab nations, backed by the non-aligned group at the United Nations, are expected to submit a tough resistance against Israel today to the current emergency session of the General Assembly on the Israeli annexation of the occupied Golan Heights. occupied Great Heights. The resolution would not expel Israel from the United Nations but could be a first step towards depriving it of the right to sit in the Assembly, which happened to South Africa. The United States contributes 25 percent of the regular U.N. budget and a total of nearly $1 billion to all U.N. operations. "Any threat or attempt to expel Israel or any other member state would violate the principle of universality on which the U.N. is founded." a State Department report states. Dozier says he's glad to be home WASHINGTON- "It's doggone good to be home," Army Gen. James Dozier said yesterday, standing on American soil after being freed from six weeks of terror captivity in Italy. Dozier and his wife, Judith, arrived at Andrews Air Force base near Washington and were greeted by Vice President George Bush. w328aignorth. The inaugural ceremony was spiced up by some unscheduled aerial maneuvers—the huge Air Force C-411 jet that made the long flight from Europe had to abort its first landing attempt while it was over the runway. "Good to have you back again, General," Bush said, once Dozier was safely on the ground. The 50-year-old, one-star NATO officer repeated his thanks to those who prayed for him during his 42-day captivity and to the Italian authorities who helped keep him alive. "I can assure that if you've been on the receiving end of prayer, you know it," Dozier said. Witnesses testify against Williams ATLANTA—Two witnesses testified yesterday that they saw Wayne Walters hit the man he has been accused of killing, on the last day the victims were seen after he died. Robert Henry, a nursery worker, testified he saw Williams and Nathaniel Cater emerge from a downtown theater "holding hands" just hours before Williams was stopped by police near the Chattahoochee River where Cater's body was found two days later. The second witness, A. B. Dean, said he saw Williams near the same river with Jimmy Ray Payne last April 22. Payne's body was pulled from the river five days later. Dean's testimony was left in some doubt after Defense Attorney Al Binder showed him to be misidentifying an investigator. Earlier, prosecution witnesses provided testimony apparently designed to establish homosexuality as a motive for the slayings. The prosecution had Mubarak favors Palestinian state WASHINGTON—Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak urged President Reagan yesterday to accept a Palestinian "national entity" and to recognize the Palestinian Liberation Organization in the Middle East peace efforts. In his first talks with Reagan since becoming president, Muhakar departed from policies that Anwar Sadat outlined in Washington last year. Sudat had opposed an independent Palestine, urging instead a confederation with Jordan to reassure Israel about any possible dangers from a However, as part of his Middle East peace plan, Mubarak reiterated Sadat's call for a dialogue with the PLO as the designated Palestinian "The key to peace and stability in the area is to solve the Palestinian problem," he said. "A just solution to this problem must be based on mutual recognition and acceptance." Trudeau introduces economic plan The federal government is hoping that the plan will turn around Canada's slumping economy. The country's annual inflation rate hit a 33-year high of 12.5 percent in 1981. More than 1 million people are unemployed, making a jobless rate of 8.6 percent. OTTAWA-Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau introduced a five-point economic development plan yesterday that proposes new initiatives to broaden export markets and create new industry in economically depressed regions of Canada. The proposals include natural resource development, an enhanced national transportation system, development of export markets, restructuring and diversification of the country's exports. Trudeau considers economic renewal the government's "overriding priority," and has allocated $60 billion for federal development expenditures. IFK secretly recorded meetings The Washington Post reported in today's editions that it obtained a 29-page log from the Kennedy Library in Boston of recordings that were made from July 1962 until November 1962, the month Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. WASHINGTON—President John F. Kennedy secretly recorded about 600 of his White House meetings and telephone conversations with family members, his Cabinet and staff, members of Congress and foreign leaders, it was reported last night. The Post said the recordings included a "vast amount of unreleased information, including many highly classified meetings of the National Security Council on such subjects as the Cuban missile crisis, Berlin and Moscow, to controversies such as the 1962 integration of the University of Mississippi. Correction The Kansas yesterday misidentified James Jeffley, Kansas City sophomore, as a supervisor of registration at Hoch Auditorium. Jeffley was a floor supervisor of registration at Hoch for the last two semesters. Water run-off problems lead to sales tax Local committee fights tax By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter Lawrence residents will have to pay a 50-cent-a-month tax on their water bill unless a local citizens' committee is able to force a vote on the tax by collecting 1,138 signatures of registered voters by March 10. If the committee, Citizens for a Better Government, is unsuccessful, the ordinance imposing the tax will go into effect March 15. published twice and did not provide for a 60-day protest period. THE CITY FIRST attempted to finance the study when it passed a tax ordinance in December. That usurpation was judged by County district judge because it was not The tax ordinance was passed by the Lawrence City Commission to finance a study by a Kansas City, Mo., firm of run-off problems in Lawrence. The ruling was made after E.R. Zook, 629 W. 21st St., filed a suit against the city. The city responded by passing a second ordinance to finance the storm water study with the 50-cent tax. City Commissioner Don Binns said if an election was held the commission would have to educate people about the need for the study. Zook, a member of the committee, said he was optimistic that the committee would get the required signatures. Lawrence has a problem with flooding, and the study might help the city set new requirements for the approval of site plans, he said. "IT'S POSSIBLE that a new ordinance will develop out of this drainage study." Binns said. "I think its desirable." The issue of the storm water policy was raised at Tuesday's commission meeting when commissioners approved a plan for an apartment development to provide more developer discuss building extra water detention basins at the city's expense. Binnis said a new ordinance setting such requirements on site plans would help prevent flooding. It would also require that waterproofing be approved according to uniform standards. The city could not require the developer to pay for expanded basins because the plan showed that the city would retain more water than the city requires. Zook said that according to state law, storm water flooding was not the city's cause. "If somebody has flooding in his house it's not the duty of the city to rescue him," he said. "He just made a bad buy. "MOTHER NATURE established detention ponds in various places." Zook said. If we establish building permits in those areas people have to expect flooding, he said. Bims said that flooding often happened in areas where buildings were built years ago and that the city ought to do something. He said he was not opposed to the city paying part of the cost of storm water basins, but a city ordinance should specify when the city should step in. And that cannot be done without a study, he said. Now, the city funds detention basins for a developer it might like, and does not fund them for a developer it might not like, he said. "A builder needs to know what to expect," he said. "We should have a government of laws, not of compulsory work, or of trying in the wilderness down there." Budget could exclude grad student loans By JANET MURPHY Staff Renorter KU graduate students may have to look elsewhere for financial aid if Congress approves President Keagan's KU financial aid official said yesterday. Jeff Weinberg, associate director of KU's office of student financial aid, said that the elimination of graduate students from the guaranteed student loan program would have a significant impact on those students. The president's budget, to be presented to Congress Monday, is calling for a 25 percent overall cut in education and a 50 percent cut in student aid. ABOUT HALF of the nation's 000,000 graduate students received financial aid through the GSls. Not quite half of KU's graduate students studied aid through the univitated Lentel program. During the 1980-81 fiscal year, about 2,500 graduate students on the Lawrence campus and in the College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan. received approximately $10 million through the GSL program, Joe Henry, vice president of the Higher Education Department in n Kansas City, Kan., said yesterday. Henry said that the elimination of graduate students from the GSL program would be a problem. He said a new program, the parent loan program, could be a source for those cut off from schools. That program is still in legislation. WEINBERG SAID he didn't know whether the Reagan proposal would allow graduate students to continue studying or to be admitted if they were already receiving them. George Woodyard, associate dean of the Graduate School, said the University was aware for some time that the cuts might be coming. He said it had received word that graduate students would be affected by the loss of funding from the National Research Council and the work/study program from $484 "It will strain graduate students'' touch with the program and program," Wooodyard said. Graduate teaching and research stipends are not sufficient, he said. WOODYARD SAID the University would not allow it to oppose wounds when the bill was put into effect. The guaranteed student loan program, established in 1965, allowed graduate students to borrow as much as $5,000 a year, to a maximum of $25,000. The current interest rates on the GSLs is 9 percent. But some loans made before 1981 carry an interest rate as low as 7 percent. The government pays the interest on the loan while the student is in school. The student begins repaying the loan equation at the specified interest rate. are calling the proposals "a disaster." They said these changes will put college beyond the reach of hundreds of thousands of students. THE ACTION Committee on Education, a coalition of 12 college and university associations, said the Reagan budget would eliminate more than $2.3 million loans to meedy students and loans to $40,000 graduate students. The groups said that under the proposed budget there would be higher financing charges on the 9 percent GSLs. This would include doubling the origination fee and imposing market interest rates two years after graduation. It would mean an overall increase of 19 percent, they said. Also under the budget proposal, special graduate fellowships to minorities and women would be plaused out. Health profession loans for doctors would be made available. Department of Health and Human Services, also would be plaused out; $18.90 (1000 Printed Copies) Service Beyond Duplication HOUSE OF USHER: 838 MASS. - 842-3610 The nation's higher education groups THURSDAY DRINKATHON $1.00 at the Door 25c DRAWS It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK 1340 Ohio TWA We'll get you the Lowest Air fares Or we'll pay you the difference! We guarantee it if ever you find there was a lower rate than the one used for your ticket—and for which you would have qualified—we guarantee you a refund of the difference. We are the only company making this guarantee. We can do it because we have total confidence in our preservation staff and their performance. Roundtrip from Kansas City Class First Coach Special Fare Atlanta $418 $352 $224 Boston 630 530 274 Chicago 408 296 118 Dallas 332 298 118 Denver 428 306 178 Houston 402 306 130 Los Angeles 820 592 199 Miami 610 508 238 New Orleans 404 320 192 New York 752 542 278 Orlando 544 454 238 Phoenix 626 470 216 San Francisco 852 636 322 Seattle 882 636 318 Washington 552 394 209 Honolulu 1232 838 541 Anchorage 1053 809 550 Acapulco 668 490 343 Frankfurt 3146 1316 649 London 2956 710 545 Amsterdam 2638 778 517 Puerto Vallarta 646 462 258 Tampa 552 444 198 a subject to change without notice. Seat availability is limited for certain 120 Maupintour travel service Conveniently located in the Kansas Union 749-0700 or stop by our downtown office. 900 Mass. THURSDAY SPECIALS From 9 p.m. to Midnight MEN'S NIGHT 25¢ DRAWS SATURDAY SPECIALS From 10 p.m. to Midnight HOUSE DRINKS $1.00 SUNDAY SPECIALS from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. 75¢ PITCHERS $1.75 SUPER SCHOONERS Reg. $2.75, 60-oz. Anytime Sunday MONDAY 50' PITCHERS from 7 p.m.-Midnight $1.00 Bar Drinks Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. 1401 West 7th 843-0540 the SANCTUARY 14L 8A the SANCTUARY P Can't Do A Thing With Your Hair? Time to consult our professionals. PETER J. MIDDLETON hair lords styling for men and women 1017 1/2 Mass 841-8276 REDKEN Hours M-Fr. 9-5 M-T-M evenings open Sat 9 University Daily Kansan, February 4, 1982 Page 3 AX Fri. 9-5 evenings ablished places." mits in expect ten hapgs were city ought without a o the city from water e should up in. without a on basins and does it might isaster," but college tedreds of what to I'd have a of com- crying in tee on college andaid the late moreo needygraduate order the oo higher percent billing the market s after n overall d. B Fri. 9-5 venings 9 proposal, ships to the phased doctors the U.S. Human out. on campus TODAY THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION STUDENT ORGANIZATION will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 103 Hall Bay. A SENIOR RECITAL, will be performed by THOMAS LIPSCOMB on saxophone at 8 p.m. in Swartwout Hecall Hall. THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will feature three films, "In Search of Tolerance," "Gullty by Reason of Race" and "Woman beginning at 7:30 p.m. on WCA," Downs Auditorium in DVChile Hall. THE SUA FORUM will show a free film, "BLACK HISTORY: LOST, STOLEN OR STRAYED," at 8 p.m. in Woodrud Auditorium in the Bronx to introduce the film and lead a discussion following the film. THEATER AUDITIONS for 715 and 815 directing projects will begin at 3:30 p.m. in 209 Murphy Hall. THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will present a slide show, "Project 2020," at 7 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union. GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL University of Arizona offers more than 40 courses, anthropology, art, bilingual education, folk music and folk dance, history, political science, sociology, Spanish language and literature and intensive Spanish Six-week session. June 28 August 6. 1982 Fully accredited graduate and undergraduate program Tutton $360 Room and board in Mexican home, $395 EOA/EA Write Guadalajara Summer School Robert L. Nugent 205 University of Arizona Tucson 85721 (602) 626-4729 By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter Senate gives OK to redistricting map TOPEKA—Despite strong objections from Democrats, the Kansas Senate yesterday approved a slightly altered version of a congressional redistricting map that the House of Representatives approved last week. The altered version of the proposed map leaves the largely Democratic Wyandotte County divided between two districts and further divides Sedgwick County, also predominately between three counties instead of two. The map leaves all of Douglas County in the 3rd Congressional District. State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, proposed last-minute amendments that returned the proposed map almost to its original lines. Hess had also proposed earlier amendments to the map, which the Senate Apportionment Committee approved Monday. Those amendments divided Sedgwick County between two districts and Summer County between two. Hess said recently that objections from some senators to the amendments were the cause of the last-minute reversal. There were some senators who felt NEW WAVE HAIRCUTS Mon-Fri 9-8, Sat. 9-4 18O2 Mass. 842-3114 strongly about not splitting up Sumner County," he said. Ask for Paul Travis Senate Democrata argued bitterly on the floor against Hoss most recent "I cannot believe this has just occurred to him at the last minute," Senate Minority Leader Jack Steinerg, D-Kansas City, said. "This points to at least a slipsiph process and is probably blatant politicism." SHEAR DIMENSIONS Steineger said he thought that Republican legislators angry with Hess' committee armored the campaign, according to news that the man can be returned to its original form. Hess said the final map lowered the population deviation from 1.14 percent to 22 percent. Deviation is the difference in population between the districts with the highest and lowest number of people. it has been agreed on by House and Senate Republicans leadership that the Senate would pass the plan that came out of the House," he said. He said the .22 percent deviation was the same as in a map proposed before by Steinger. "There are honest minds that disagree on the subject of *deviation*. Hess said, "But when the map goes to the courts, deviation is king. That's the main thing the courts will look at." "A deviation of 22 percent will challenge in court," he said. "We have a plan available with a low deviation that splits no counties." Other Democrats were angry at Hess' 11th-hour proposal. "This is the first time I've seen one party take control and have the minority party completely out of the process." State Sen. James Francisco, D-Mulvane, said. "This is not a plan that both parties worked on." Steineger's proposal to send the map back to the apportionment committee was defeated. 23-17. State Sen. Jane Eldridge, R- Lawrence, who voted for the map, said she thought Hess had tried to change lines to please the greatest number of people. “It’s a tough thing to come up with a devaliate acceptance to the courts and make it as least disruptive as possible,” she said. MIDNITE FLICK FRI. & SAT. VISTA VALLEY WEEKS ON TUE JAMIE GILLIUS JESSE ST JAMES P.T.A. Varsity Downtown 843-1055 the KEGGER PBR KEG $31.50 the KEGGER 18101/2 W 23rd 1.50 PAID FOR BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE SPONSORED BY THE STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES ADVISORY BOARD TIME: 7:00 p.m. DATE THURSDAY, Feb. 4 PLACE: INTERNATIONAL ROOM (UNION) PETSTEP Now Under New Ownership OVER 100 VARIETIES OF FISH—ALSO— TIME: 7:00 n.m Free pH Water Domestic Tropical Exotic New Varieties Each Week "The first step to pet care." Testing Ask About Special Discounts Attention: All Lone Star Student Health Insurance Policy Holders and Other Interested Persons for Contract Year 1982-83 We also have dogs, cats, birds & other small animals Domestic In the Malls Call 841-4300 Shopping Center There will be an open hearing concerning the student health insurance policy for your comments and to answer your questions. Keightley said he hoped to establish a program to encourage students to register to vote and a program called the Kansas Legislative Information Network. The network would consist of two Keightley has experience in both KU Student Senate and ASK, and already has plans for ASK this year. ASK selects director As the KU campus director, Keightley will be a link between the state assembly and the KU Student Senate. The Associated Students of Kansas has a new KU campus director, David Adkins, student body president, said yesterday. "This year's going to be very productive because the new administration is working to help our legislative goals in Topeka," he said. "The staff and many of the administrators have been very open to students." The selection committee comprised of Steve Dunn, KU'S ask board member; Steve Lienberger, ASK's legislative director; and Steve Moore, whose chore John Kutchley, St. Louis soonmore, to serve the one-year term. BASI-DIET Some students had questioned the value of the existence of ASK last semester and last year, but most students said ASK would overcome that problem. students in each legislative district who would write letters to their representatives about issues affecting students. Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 --- BAT Wii At Last The Lost Game DIET CENTER It is a Natural 1932 Historic Medical Center BAI DIET COUPON Regular Bum Special THE DUM STEER $200 BAR-B-Q 2554 Iowa This coupon good anytime Sunday through February 28. mean change COUPON 841-1060 Race Tie In With Us Recreation Services racquetball Singles Tournament - Play is available for men and women in three classes provided there are enough entrants: advanced, intermediate, and novice. - Entry Fee is one can of unopened racquetballs submitted with completed entry form. - Entry Deadline is Thursday, February 11, 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson. - Play begins Sunday, February 14. Entry forms are available in 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546. 92 1972 FEBRUARY 4 PRESS RELEASE The East Asian Building was peacefully seized at 6 this evening by women and children. As an expression of our frustration with the continuing sex-based inequalities perpetuated by this University, this building is being occupied. We feel it is a means of obtaining resources to meet the pressing needs of women on campus. Our demands are stated below. We will not move until our demands are met. DEMANDS: 1982 - We demand an autonomous Women's Studies department, to be controlled and taught by women. - We demand an Affirmative Action Program planned and directed by women. - We demand a free day care center financed by the university and directed by women. - We demand that there be equity in scholarship distribution between women and men. - We demand the vigorous recruitment of female Kansas high school graduates. - We demand an increase in women's faculty positions and an increase in women's faculty salaries. - We demand a women's health program to include free birth control devices and counseling. - We demand that a woman fill the vacated position of Vice-Chancellor of Academic Affairs. ♀ In 1982 we find: Better and more accessible women's health care —A large number of women in high administration positions —A nationally renowned Women's Studies program However, we do not believe that these gains are enough progress for women at KU. QUESTIONS: - Why does our nationally respected Women's Studies program have only a half-time director, one half-time instructor and no graduate program? - How effective has Affirmative Action been in eliminating sex discrimination in employment practices? - With the astronomical increase of women in graduate and professional schools, why hasn't Affirmative Action had an effect on the hiring of women faculty members? - Why is child care on campus being cut back? - Why do women comprise only 16-20% of the full-time faculty members at KU? - Why are there so few department heads and school deans that are women? - Why is there such a disparity between scholarships granted to women and men athletes? FEBRUARY SISTERS THIS ADVERTISEMENT SPONSORED BY KU WOMEN'S STUDIES AND KU COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 4, 1982 Opinion Black present, past This week, Black History Month begins. Since the 1920s, the country has dedicated this part of the year to the remembrance of the Black past. The idea was suggested more than 50 years ago by Carter Woodson, a black educator and historian, who realized that much of the history of black Americans had already been lost, perhaps forever. In coming weeks, the University of Kansas will observe Black History Month with dance and poetry, songs, speeches and seminars. And the University Daily Kansan will observe the month by beginning a series of articles on blacks and minorities in the University community. The Kansan series promises to be informative and insightful, but it also points up a problem Black History Month shares with all special periods of remembrance. What happens when the holiday is over? Would he, now for the, the Kanson? consider its obligation to black readers taken care of after printing a few articles. It would be easy, but wrong. On March 1, after the speeches and dancing end, Haitians probably will still be in Miami interment camps. The Voting Rights Act will still be in danger. And millions of black teenagers will still be unemployed. For the moment, let's enjoy the programs that students, faculty and administrators have been preparing for months. In the past 15 years, KU has built up the largest Black History Month calendar in the Big Eight—a calendar that serves as an example to other universities. But everyone—especially everyone in the press—should remember that the problems that face blacks will still exist after Feb. 28. And we should work to alleviate those problems during all 12 months of the year. There is no season for sensitivity. Think twice before eating that cheap fast-food burger What's for dinner tonight? Let's open up the refrigerator and find out. Uh, oh. You forgot to go to the store, so you have to drive over to the restaurant where the King Ring and order a burgler, Fries and Coke. When the counter attendant shoves the burger over the counter at you, you count out about two or three dollars, then take your tray over to a corner table and start to eat. That looks good. You take a bite of the burger. Some special sauce oozes out of the bun and you lick it off your fingers. Do you know what you're really eating? Yes, it is hamburger, made from beef that has been inspected as many as six times by the FDA. PATRICK E. BENNETT JOLYNNE WALZ pesticide DDT per million parts of the fat in the meat. But hamburgers are the people's favorites, and what the people want, the people get. "It's real beef, but the lowest quality beef you can buy. Spiraling beef prices have hurt the fast-fur food burger industry so much over the past two years that they have started introducing non-hamburger sandwiches made with pork, chicken and fish. South American beef is so cheap, and of such poor quality, that it's only legal to use it as a fast-food meat. Domestic beef, made from cattle that eat scientific diets of grain and fattening chemicals, is about four times as expensive as imported beef from South America, which is made from grass-fed beef. So American beef has cleared from the tropical forests. So, South American beef goes into your burger. So the rancher clears some new pasture, and the cycle is repeated. To graze the cattle that produced that cheap beef, ranchers had to tear down part of the Amazonian rain forest and promote grass growth there. While the cattle grazed, they trampled the soil. Because the soil in tropical rain forests isn't very rich in nutrients—most of the nutrients there come from dead and decaying jungle plants that the ranchers have cleared—the grass isn't very luxurious and the cattle soon graze sores. The grass is soaked with weeds that are toxic to cattle. The ranch has to be abandoned five or 10 years after it is cleared. A similar land clearing procedure is used by native Amazonian Indians, but they clear only small portions of land, plant and harvest it for a few years, and abandon it soon enough so that the jungle grows over it again and refertilizes the soil. Even the Amazonian Indian planting system is endemic. About one ton of soil per hectare is eroded. Up to 200 tons is eroded off each hectare of ranch land each year. That's OK, though. Go ahead, take another bite of your burger. Cattle ranchers may have destroyed 200 tons of the Amazonian rain forest to provide the cheap beef that went into it, but so far, only about five percent of the rain forest has disappeared. That's not much. It's not. But we're destroying 50 hectares of rain forest every minute. At least 50 hectares of rain forest have disappeared while you've been reading this. And experts predict that if that destruction is slowed, all the Amazonian rain forest will be lost, tails and preserves, will disappear in 40 or 50 years. Go ahead. Eat that burger. What do we need a rain forest for, anyway? Not much. When it disappears, most of its plant and animal species will disappear too, but there are about 4.5 million known species of plants and animals on earth. Unfortunately, about 3 million of them are in the tropics, and many are valuable to man. Wild forerunners of some of our domesticated food crops, such as rice, originated in the tropics. It's important to preserve the wild species because breeders can cross them with the domestic species to improve resistance to insects and disease, or to improve nutritional value Thousands of insects exist in the tropical forests; too, and many them are economically valuable. For example, Florida citrus growers imported $35,000 worth of parasitic wasps from the rain forest and used them to get rid of other bugs that attack fruit trees. They also purchased $35 million they would have spent on pesticides. And pharmacologists are just beginning to test rain forest plants to see if they have any medicinal value. Already, 70 percent of anticancer drugs are derived from tropical plants. So far, we're doing all right without those undiscovered drugs, and maybe they won't be discovered anyway. We can do without improved strains of rice, too. But, what about the atmosphere and climate? When the jungles are destroyed, rotting vegetation and burning wood releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, and that will warm the climate drastically if the deforestation continues at its present rate. If the climate is warmed too much, ice tied up in the polar ice sheet can melt, causing water in them to raise sea level to the height of the Statue of Liberty's nose and inundate all the major coastal cities in the world. Go ahead though. Finish that burger. Nobody really believes that our passion for cheap beef smothered in special sauce will flood the world and change civilization as we know it. But just in case, maybe next time you should order the fish sandwich instead. Gun control not reducing crime rate Letters to the Editor I will try to keep this letter short, and not bore them with facts longer than the column to which I object. To the Editor: The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 850449) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holiday Subscriptions are $14 for six months or $76 for six months. Subscriptions are $13 for $15 in six months or $7 a year in Douglas County and $1$ for six months or $3$ year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $12 per month. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannan Dhall Fint Hail, The University of Kansas, Kansai, USA. Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Naturalist Jill Sales and Marketing Advisor John Obertan General Manager and News Advisor Rick Masse First, I appreciate that Dor Torchia, in his Jan. 25 column, did not mention John Lennon's death or the attempted assassination of President Reagan. That he did not mention these events is about as close to the facts as the rest of his column. I wonder how the Morton Grove handgun law will lower the city's homicide rate. There hasn't been a homicide there in years. Torchia's estimate of the existing gun laws was far short of the actual total. He also failed to prove any connection between strict gun control and the crime rate, or that additional laws would save lives. The cities in the United States with the most strict gun control laws, with few exections, have the highest crime rates. I fail to see how additional laws will stop criminals who are already breaking laws. I do wish that people would stop penalizing law-abiding citizens, and give rights from those who are causing no problems. I will stop with this thought. According to FBI figures, only 0.003 percent of the handguns in the United States are involved in crime of any kind. Charles D. Coffman, Jr. "American OAMAN THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH © PRES BY THE TYNHURNE COMPANY SMOKER. ...IF HUBERT WERE HERE NOW... ...UH, WELL...LET US HAVE ANOTHER FIFTY YEARS... ...Well, my brothers Jack and Bobby... oh, well, uh, wait... they tried that... WHAT ABOUT THE...AH... HUH? SOLAR POWERED TAX CUTS... THE DEMOCRATS RESPOND Women still fight to make men move By ADRIENNE CHRISTIANSEN Guest Columnist The very notion of women and power stirs up intense feelings of antagonism and contempt in many people. Not without reason, men often see the feminist movement as a direct threat and an attack upon their own power. On February 4, 1972, a group of women at KU decided that seizing power was the only way to obtain basic services for women on campus and to "make men move." In a bold, well-planned plan, 20 women and 4 children peacefully seized the East Asian Languages building and held it for 13 hours, vowing not to leave until their demands were met. The February Sisters, as they called themselves, were deemed "gangsters, hoodlums, criminals and philosophically bankrupt" by the University Daily Kansan University to create services that would recognize the basic needs of women and enable them to attend KU more easily. They demanded that there be a way to get birth-control devices and counseling on campus. They also insisted on a women's studies program for all students at the child care facilities and that women be hired for faculty and administrative positions. The demands seem pretty mild by today's standards, but in 1972 they were daring, controversial and threatening. KU was no exception in following the "policy" that anything that wasn' directed primarily or at all toward men was seen as impractical, the effect of which is clearly evident. KU women now enjoy many services as a direct result of the February Sisters, women who were angry enough to move and take power that had so long been denied to women. Unfortunately, the University of Kansas has a long way to go before women are on a par with men. It is high time that feminists get riled up again and force the University, in a non-violent way, to finish the job it has barely begun. If, in 1982, a group of women took over 'another building, there would be a long list of demands to make the University responsible to its female population. Sone of the demands might include the hiring of more women faculty members. KU has a number of high-ranking women administrators, but they are people not seen on the daily basis that women faculty are. Female students must have women as role models and mentors. In the area of athletics, KU really short-changes its nationally ranked and respected women's teams. KU bookstore receipts and possible beer sale profits at football games are horrible ways to finance women's athletics, even in part. The ideas themselves are honorable, but they are unreliable and uncommitted methods to pay for women's athletics. Male teams certainly don't have to count on the generosity of book buyers to determine their budgets—they use gate receipts. Women's basketball, for example, might charge $1 more and still be able to retain its loyal following. Another possibility would be to use the money KU was sure to pay in Title IX violation fines. The entire Title IX issue has practically been dropped by the Reagan administration. Why not give the $40,000 or so to women's athletics? Other demands would include rigid enforcement of the new sexual harassment policy, putting more lights on campus questioning the showing of pornographic materials. Perhaps the University could make instructors work on the problem of sexist language. Even these possible demands are only a beginning, just as the right to vote, equal pay or the ERA are only beginnings in combating the ugly and vicious policies of discrimination. Sexist actions are perpetuated and feminism is not tolerated. Feminists get angry and act on that anger, sexist and discriminatory actions will remain at KU. Our sisters who have gone before us have demonstrated very clearly what it can take to make men move. Women at this university have a rich history of fighting for rights and services that are needed. The February meeting was a lesson that is as true today as it was in 1972. Adrienne Christiansen is a senior majoring in women's studies and a member of the company. Roosevelt's actions left lesson to be learned That Franklin Roosevelt had both a sense of his greatness and a sense of identity with the common man was evident when he said to a friend, "If any memorial is erected to me . . . I should like it to constitute a block about the size of this (desk) and placed in the center of that green plot in front of the Archives building. I don't care what it is made of, whether limestone or or whatever, but I want it plain, without any or whatever, and with the simple caning. 'I remember of it.'" Rosevelt's wishes were honored, and the stone is appropriate to the nature of his presidency. As with the memorial, he was particular about his simple statemanship. He was also characterized with something that would meet basic needs. This characteristic is a clue to his accomplishments. These past few days Roosevelt has been in the memories of many Americans. Last Saturday marked the centennial of his birth. The occasion has revived debate about whether Roosevelt was a traitor or a martyr; what he did and the agencies to feed a depressed government was a blessing or a bane. A set opinion of Roosevelt the politician does not rest quietly in the Archives, because he, more than any other man, shaped the issues that still guide our world. But Roosevelt the man is at rest, and his personal qualities will not change. We can learn from them. History mainly is a study of men. We can argue Roosevelt's politics until the NRA eagle rises out of its own ashes. We can examine the frequency and length of depression basking in the sun, or electronic waves. or we can respond directly, as Roosevelt did to a proposal to add the Depression's starring artists to the WPA program: "Why not? They are human beings. They have to live. I guess the only thing they can do is paint. There are some public places where paintings are wanted." counts is the ideals, and those will bear some keeping still about." Rosevelt acted on instinct rather than on theory. His maxim is "Take a method and try it. If it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something." The inflamed contempt this premise drew from FDR's political opponents may be better understood if compared to a scene from a television episode of "M*A*S*H* in which a sniper is firing on the But such an attitude shells ideals for the kernels of human kindness they contain. Roosevelt had ideals, but he never allowed them to be welcomed to mechanisms, and rarely rhapsodized on them. So no need: ideals were implicit in actions. As Frost wrote, "What BEN JONES MISHA SINGH 4077th. Major Frank Burger spurs us, "We can't just sit here. We've got to do something—and we deserve desperate absurdity causes Warwick Pierce Perkins with Frank—I think we should do anything." Roosevelt's enemies may have thought his proposals just as foolhardy, but his experimentation was not born of flying sweat beads and wild-eyed panic; was governed by the unbounded optimism that most characterized the man. Playwright Robert Sherwood, a speechwriter for Roosevelt, wrote at the end of his massive biography, "Roosevelt and Hopkins," "He (Roosevelt) was spiritually the healthiest man I have ever known." p rts Roosevelt's robust psyche allowed him to laugh in the midst of the darkest days the world had yet seen. His critics did not understand that his humor and seeming disregard for grave situations allowed him to cope with responsibilities greater than any other man had faced. He operated on instinct, ordered policy like a whispered plea to avoid play and no time out." One has the tremendous feeling of going at it blindly," Eleanor said at the start of his presidency. Rosevelt could face the ominous future unhesitably because his soul was bolstered by a profound religious faith that kept him from taking himself too gravely. Even those who knew him best confessed his method mystified them. Commentators have noted the extraordinary "luck" of this republic, to have come upon a great president at each of its crises. But Roosevelt derived the conviction necessary to act from his belief that it was not luck. A sense of intuition and fearless destiny characterizes genius and makes possible their overwhelming accomplishments. It could be that they do not so much think as they intufully know. The are not paralyzed by deliberations, Roebuck's most famous image, that has made him fear itself", might be paraphrased, "we should be careful not to be careful." Shakespeare bragged he had never struck through a line, once he had written it. A critic retorted he wished the Bard had struck through a thousand because of technical faults. Nevertheless, the imperfections in Shakespeare's plays are covered over by the spontaneous sense of flow. There is a rough charm that would be so spoiled by too much polish. More important, Shakespeare's carelessness about how he stated an idea, so long as he said it, allowed him to be prolific, to our benefit. Consider what we as students could accomplish, if we could overcome the doubts and feelings of unpreparedness that cause us to procrastinate in littery; if they are not seized upon mind, they flee. Those who are unsatisfied with initial efforts often deliberate painfully over minute details. To strive for perfection is admirable, as long as the obligations deadlines are met. Past that point, extreme deliberation becomes self-indulgence at the expense of others. The first step toward overcoming our limitations is to accept them and work with them. Roosevelt's palo did not cripple him so much as he did anyone who could understand the hardships of others. Every task requires something of a leap of faith to begin. The valuable lesson Franklin Rossette taught us is to respond to a situation that is difficult, and to worry later about what happens later. right its be sie sue sue or enent uppus sure sure or cern y a paying of of fecit tory are to be to sit and day ring the University Daily Kansan, February 4, 1982 Page 5 African killer bees unpredictable, prof says By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter A swarm of bees in South Brazil attacked spectators at a soccer match Sunday, killing one man and inflicting multiple stings on 200. Taylor, who talked last night at the Museum of Natural History about his research on the bees in South America, said the bees were so complex it was hard to describe. This is but one story of hundreds that Orleyaylor, professor of ontology, has heard countless times. Taylor said the bees could sometimes be so large that she had to take their hives in hands without stinging, anyone. But some people are fooled by the deceptive nature of the bees. "There are many catchers who make the mistake of catching swarms, putting them in boxes and then saying, 'Look, these bees are very gentle, nothing to worry about,'" he said. "Then a dog will go up and scratch his back on the colony and all of a sudden, the bees just pour out, and by the time things settle down, they have had enough to eat. Kids got stung, somebody's in the hospital." Taylor said the African bee was brought to Brazil in 1986 to be bred with native bees in an attempt to find a more productive bee. But it was not done, the African bees bred throughout the area. Today there are 10 to 20 million colonies of the African bees in South America, he said. Taylor, who has studied the bees for seven years, said he spent about three months each He studies the mating habits of the bees and compares them with the European bees, which live in the United States. year in South America, particularly in Venezuela. The U.S. Department of Agriculture funds his study. Taylor said that African bees, which travel 200 to 300 miles a year, could move into the United States as early as 1988, depending on weather conditions they encountered as they moved north. They were currently in the Panama Canal region, and were moving into a very wet region. He said the extreme weather condition would slow the bees down, but that once past the area, they would likely go through Mexico straight into Brownsville, Texas. tremendous mating advantage and moved much more quickly than European bees. He said the African bee swarmed, or reproduced, 12 times faster than European bees. Taylor said the African bee had a He said that one way to deal with the bees if they came into this country would be to requeen swarms with good European queen bees. He said it would be necessary not only to swarm with bees were dangerously unpredictable but also because they were bad honey bees. Taylor said it was important to make sure the United States continued to breed good bees. The fear of African bees, spread by pesticides, will create problems for beekeepers in the United States. Taylor's speech was part of the Wednesday evening lecture series at the Museum of War & Peace. Study shows Midwest less stressful area of U.S. By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter The growing satisfaction with Midwestern College life may be full of anxiety, but students in the Midwest live in a less stressful part of the country than their Ivy League counterparts in the East. At least, that's what an analysis of psychological health across the nation concluded. The study, reported this week in Psychology Today magazine, attempted to show patterns of psychological well-being in nine different regions of the United States. THE MIDWEST state, including Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa, rated highest in general well-being, second highest in satisfaction with home and neighborhood and lowest in school. living could be caused by the slow-paced lifestyle, Richard Snyder, KU professor of psychology, said yesterday. "The Midwest is insulated from some of the national economic and social trends," he said. "We're buffered by the coasts. We don't have to deal with those stresses." The study's findings were based on 1976 and 1978 research conducted by the Institute of Social Research at the University of Michigan. Researchers asked more than 3,000 people about their life stress, personal competence, positive and negative feelings and overall satisfaction. Snyder said values in the midwest tended to be tied to the land and hard work. "There's still a remnant of the work ethic here. People find satisfaction with their work and relationships," he said. "The midwest is more stable." David Holmes, KU professor of psychology, agreed. NEW YORK, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, states which the study dubbed the "miserable malpigaloals," rated highest for stress and lowest in satisfaction with work or work friends. "The coasts tend to get the extremes of all trends." Snvder said. "In New York, just getting to work is a job," he said. "My personal perception is that life is easier in Kansas than on the coasts. Daily living is just less difficult." He said there might be two possible causes for the trend. "Life here might be better," he said. "There also might be a selective factor going on. People who strive harder may go to New York to live." "Let's say you were an aspiring lawyer. Living the rewards might be higher, but the payoff could be much lower." OTHER AREAS scoring low in happiness were the South and the Great Lakes states—Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin. The study noted "the great Lakes of Disappointment." Snyder said the study might not be reliable because the wording of questions might have influenced answers. The same question phrased differently might always produce different responses, he said. Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi and Alabama were called "wary, insecure Dixie" because their rating for trusting other people was the lowest of all. "You have to take these survey studies with a grain of salt," he said. Committees to discuss computer use, money Four University committees will meet tomorrow to discuss student computer use, the merit pay plan for classified employees, the grading system and student loans for graduate students. The proposal was made by the SenEx committee on computing. University Senate executive committee members will discuss a proposal about the problem of students using computers for word processing theses. SenEx will meet at 10:30 a.m. in the Kansas Regents room. World processing can cost departments up to $500 a thesis, according to Ernest Angino, SenEx chairman and professor of geology and civil engineering. CLASSIFIED SENATE members will discuss the merit pay plan at a meeting at 5 p.m. tomorrow in 102 Carruth'O'Leary Hall. University Council members will discuss the challenges to preparing for Hall at a meeting at 3:30 p.m. in room 108 on Monday, February 27. They also will discuss proposed amendments to the University Senate rules and regulations concerning grade changes and the grading system. One proposed change would allow a department chairman to change a course grade if the instructor of the course was no longer associated with the University. Graduate Senate members will discuss President Reagan's recent decision to deny graduate students Guaranteed Student Loans at a meeting at 12:45 p.m. tomorrow in the Union. The other proposed change would allow a grade of incomplete to be given in a course regardless of whether a student had satisfactorily completed any work in the course. 12 is your lucky number! 12 You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1982 officer and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas: 1. President 2. Vice President 5. Films 9. Outdoor Recreation 3. Secretary 6. Fine Arts 10. Public Relations 7. Forums 4. Treasurer 12. Travel 8. Indoor Recreation 11. Special Events Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union. Interviews will be held Saturday, February 27. Sign up deadline for applications is Friday, February 19, 5:00 p.m. SUA DOMINO'S PIZZA Weekend Special! Good on Friday. Saturday or Sunday only. Use this coupon toward mouth watering pizza this weekend. Plus pet 2 free cup of Pepsi with any tea purchase. No coupon necessary just ask Hours: 4:30 1:00 Sun. Thurs 4:30 2:00 Fr. & Sat Our drivers carry less than $10,000. Limited delivery area. We use only 100% real dairy cheeses www.dairycheesemade.com $2.00 $2.00 off any 15" 2-item or more pizza. Core coupon per pizza Expires 10/30/82 Good Friday, Saturday or Sunday only. Fast, Free Delivery Good at locations listed. DONNIE'S PIZZA 1946-2001 carousel DOMINO'S PIZZA sweater sale 2 for 1 1/2 Buy one at the Regular price, get the next one FREE! save up to Plus... on many other items. We really are hiring. Top Technical Graduates Have you wasted time interviewing with companies that came to your campus with no intention of hiring — companies that sent rejection letters to everyone they talked to, or maybe even cancelled the interview the day before it was scheduled? We don't think it is a fair. That's why the Equipment Group of Texas Instruments wouldn't offer interviews unless we had something else to offer, too — CAREEERS. Were as serious about hiring as you are about getting started in the business world. We're looking for engineers and computer science graduates to work on hundreds of small projects involved with government electronics at our Dallas, Austin and Sherman, Texas locations. If you're interested in state-of-the-art design, manufacturing or software development, drop by and talk to members of the Equipment Group (check our schedule with the Placement Office). If you miss us on Campus, send your resume to: Rich Rollins/B226015, M.S. 3186-Dallas, Texas 75266. Or call Rich, Bryan, Tom, Ed or Bobbie about opportunities with the TI Equipment Group: 800/527-3577. U. S. citizenship required TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED An equal opportunity employer M-F Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 4. 1982 Potholes damage cars and bicycles By KIESA ASCUE Staff Reporter The biker's body was jarred by the impact of zooming full speed into a potheth. The sound of air hissing from a front tire told the story. Another pothole put a bicyclist in the dust. It was a small pothole and a new tube cost only $3.62. Not all bicyclists are so lucky. Potholes can cause even more damage to cars, especially cars with front-wheel drive. "It can knock a car out of alignment, break fiberglass steel belts in a tire, bend rims, bend a strut assembly and wrinkle a fender." Wayne's Body Shop Inc., 1214 East 23rd St., said yesterday. "HIT HARD ENOUGH, it could cost up to $600 to repair. That depends on the car. A lot of foreign car parts don't come cheap." George Williams, director of Lawrence Public Works, said potholes were created when moisture that had seeped into the pavement froze and thawed several times, eroding the pavement. Thus, small cracks can become more pronounced, particularly in porous pavement. "It is awfully difficult not to let them form," Williams said. "The best measure would be an extensive crack-filling measure." With the onslaught of winter, the problem of potholes becomes more acute. However, patching every crack in the roads would be a tough job. Currently, roads are inspected for potholes but nobody inspects them for cracks. Williams said. Pothole repair costs vary as much as potholes do. "It's kind of a never-ending process," he said. "How long it lasts depends on the weather. It could be one day to several weeks." "ITT D PROBABLY take two 30 minutes to fill an average one about two feet by six inches," said Don Farrier, supervisor of the city street department. "That would cost $11 at $5 a man." Joe Christy, KU assistant director of construction, said that all the potholes on campus were repaired Monday. On the record New problems occur after pothels are repaired. The road gets worse when moisture begins to erode the patched area. Watson Library personnel safely evacuated students yesterday afternoon during two false fire alarms, Simmons, circulation assistant said. The first alarm occurred about 1:20 p.m. when smoke from a welder's tools set off the alarms in the library, Simmons said. Library personnel reset the alarms, stopped the evacuation and canceled the alarm. About a half hour later the alarms sounded again. The Lawrence Fire Department answered the second alarm at 2:01 PM. Library personnel did not know why the alarm went off so they continued with library fire procedures, Simmons said. Students evacuated the building while firemen searched for signs of fire. BASF Chrome. The world's quietest tape is like no tape at all. entered the apartment through the balcony door and stole a gold watch, a calculator, a digital alarm clock and blank checks. There have been no With Professional II you'll hear all of the music and none of the tape. And an I will you really want in a trace? BASF BASF 2 For $8.75 REG. $5.99 Each AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASS now in our 35th year THEIEVES TOOK $420 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at 1504 Alvamar St. sometime between 6 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. Tuesday, police responded to an apartment where removed an Alpine cassette deck. There are no suspects, police said. BASF BASF 90 Professional II UCSU High School 2 For $875 REG. $5.99 Each Students returned to the building after fireman said it was safe. Simmons THEVES ALSO stole a student's purse from a reading table at 11:35 p.m. Tuesday night in Watson Library, where the student was valued at $100. There are no suspects. COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN 1207 WEST STREET PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG A COLUMN PICTURE Even 7:15-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN 1207 WEST STREET ELEVENHAM 189-189 R 7:30 & 9:20 MAT SAT SUN. 2:15 HILLCREST 1 HEART LAND 194-204 MAT SAT SUN. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 The mystery of "The Birds" 194-204 MAT SAT SUN. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 This school is our home... TAPS Even 7:40 & 9:20 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 PG CINEMA 1 Whose life is it anyway? EVEN 7:20 & 9:20 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:00 GRANADA TEL 621-375-5000 PAUL NEWMAN TEL 621-375-5000 PAUL SALLY FIELD TEL 621-375-5000 ABSENCE OF MALICE PG TEL 621-375-5000 A COLUMBIA PICTURE Eve 7:15 - 3:00 Mat. Sat. Sat. 2:00 VARSITY TEL 621-375-5000 the Seduction MONDAY 7:30 & 9:20 MAT SAT SUN 7:15 PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE A COLUMNISM PICTURE PGI "Everything ran like it was supposed to." she said. LAWRENCE POLICE also were answering calls Wednesday. A MAN assaulted the manager of Four Winds private club, 1904 Massachusetts St., yesterday at 1:35 a.m. police said. The man kicked Justine Ward in the left hip two or three times after she would not let him into the club. HILLCREST 1 JIM AND WYND TIME AT 8:30 A.M. THE HEART LAND FIVE. 7:30 & 9:20 WAT. SAT, SUN. 7:15 HILLCREST 2 JIM AND WYND TIME AT 8:30 A.M. The mystery of "The Hide" The danger of "Pseudo" VENOM R 9:35 AM 10:00 AM TELEPHONE 726-4878 Sat. 7:20 AM Mon. Sat. 2:00 AM CINEMA 2 TREAT WILLIAMS PRINCE OF THE CITY F Events at 10 am only BURGLARS STOLE more than $400 worth of items from 1703 W. 24th St. sometime between 10 a.m. Friday and Monday morning, police said. A suspect CINEMA 1 1 WEST AND OVER TELEPHONE: (212) 543-8700 Whose life is it anyway? —c Live: 2:00 p.m. Mar. Sat. Sun 2:00 the hairst "Looks good, Feels good" 810 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas (913) 843-2696 LEE LANE, MARY TRAUL ELNIFF, THERESA SCHMIDT FOR APPOINTMENT. 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"DAVID (WELCH, Student body vice president), and I feel, and the task force as well feels, that beer in the stadium this year looks very bleak," he said. "I really don't think a new athletic director would go against the alums." Kansas Union Conveniently located in the The $40,000 to $45,000 that beer sales would have raised annually would be offset by alumun's withdrawal of funds from the $19,000 and said the Williams Fund, Adkins asks. Maupintour travel service Adkins said alumni who met four days ago unanimously opposed a player in the stadium despite efforts by篮球队助教 task last year and this year. Welch said the task force had discovered that none of the top 20 universities in the nation sold beer in their stadiums, and only one Big Eight school, the University of Colorado, allowed it. Beer in Memorial Stadium is out of the question for now, but student influence in other areas of the athletic department is on the rise, David Adkins, student body president, said yesterday. Students influence some policies Alumni opposition hinders beer sales "The immediate response of most people is, 'Who wants to emulate the Colorado program?' That's certainly too to build our case on." Adkins said. 749-0700 Adkins said the University of Kansas By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter ASTA or stop by our downtown office. 900 Mass. He said athletic directors in the past had not listened to the Student Senate, student press or student living groups and refused to price lists and reserved seating policies. "You can't expect students to fill the stadium with the ticket policies of the past," Adkins said. "We're going to try to change that." The ticket price has not been increased at all next year. Adkins said the athletic department in the past had simply expected that students would buy tickets, but that attitude could not continue. The price for basketball season tickets rose from $11 to $28 this year. As a result, only 3,000 students bought tickets to the game. The athletic department had counted on VALID ID CARDS instantly. Laminated. Color available at: I - DENT SYSTEMS Room 11A-Ramada Inn 841-5905 MEANWHILE, the Student Senate will work to represent students in athletic department decisions, selections of the new athletic director. could let another Kansas school or Big Eight school venture to be first to allow beer, and then KU would follow. "Hopefully, we'll find someone who'll be more receptive to student needs," Adkins said. "A lot of people see KU as a liberal haven since the 70's," she said. "We've been trying to downplay that with alums and folks in western Kansas." Welich said the task force would continue to gather information for a permanent file for Senate to use in the next few years. 645 671 (the name may differ) LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley 842 7870 843 8711 Prudential India Health Aloe Vera RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR Rose or red, And Champagne, too. Valentine wine for the two of you. Rose or red, Heart Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor A New Concept That's Long Overdue Southwest Plaza Shopping Center Located behind Hardes s and next to Foodbarn 23rd & Iowa 842-6089 9:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. GAMMONS SNOWMANS Proudly Presents THE MUSICAL 'BONanza' YELLOW BRICK ROAD Tonight thru Saturday 1st Set Starts at 9:30 $1.25 Bar Drinks all night long. 25c draws 10-11 p.m. "THERE NEEDS to be a new approach to ticket sales—a lot better P.R. approach." Welch asid. Adkins said a more personal approach, such as sending athletic department administrators, coaches and players to organized living groups, could improve relations towards the athletic department and ticket sales. "You get the helmets off their heads and they're really nice people to know." Adkins said. "Students should feel they have someone to go to in the athletic gym." Now that every student pays $4.50 in activity fees to the athletic department, Adkins said, the students should exert more influence. i p r th s . "They have to understand we are full partners in the athletic program with student fees." Adams said. Give him Something SPECIAL this year Part of that partnership will be overseeing the committee that audits the athletic budget, including the distribution from student activity fees. Jack Daniels NO? THE GAME WAS MADE WHISKEY Great selection of Jack Daniel's gift items. Large selection of Cigars & Imported Cigarettes CIGARS PIPES Jose Mielendi Savinelli Colombo GBD Valencia JOBE Velocité Blend Jobey Duthil Meerschaum Romie or Julieta Buz Choungi SCHRADE pocket knives 1 yr. guarantee for loss SAVINELLI quartz pipe lighters PIPE & TOBACCO SHOP In the Malls Shopping Center Pipe The Bookmark's 842-7152 SVA FILMS FRIDAY & SATURDAY "Truffaut at his very best." Janet Maslin New York Times The Last Metro PG United Artists Classics 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 $1.50 The first film by George Lucas, director of Star War 14 Visit the future where escape is the ultimate crime. Robert Duvall and Donald Pleasence "THX1138" 12:00 Midnight Woodruff Auditorium No Refreshments Allowed University Daily Kansan, February 4, 1982 Page 7 р rth si Kin of drunken-driver victims want stiffer laws By JANICE GUNN Staff Writer Tears pooled at the lower rim of Sid McCullough's eyes as she explained the auto crash that took the life of her father. And then the car that struck his brother's car. "I was hospitalized for a week for emotional stress and mental fatigue. My brother was killed," McCullough, 61% of W.9th St., said recently. The crash happened in 1973 as 72-year-old Macdonald Reed drove down 17-0 in route from Topeka to his home in Lawrence. A wayward vehicle crossed the median and struck Reed's car in the opposite lane. Reed died instantly. It took McCullough weeks to accept her brother's death. She realized he was gone one day when she stopped by his house, she said. "I was on his front steps, hysterical and angry. At the time I saw him, the car that killed my brother murdered!" She has never seen the man who operated that vehicle, and declared she never wanted to. Pat Owen, who appeared on the Jan. 3 broadcast of CBS's 60 Minutes representing Mothers Against Drunk Drivers, said Monday that family members of victims needed to want to see the driving while intoxicated offender to see that they were prosecuted justly in court for their offenses. The problem of drunken driving victims is widespread and accounts for half of the deaths on highways out of an annual average of 56,000 highway fatalities. To counteract the problem, MADD forces in California managed to put enough pressure on their Legislature to override the jury sentence for drunken driving. Mandatory sentencing for drunken driving is exactly what the Rev. Richard Taylor, president of Kansas Law School, best sees in the Kansas Legislature. Taylor is attempting to organize a MADD in Kansas. He calls the Kansas organization "Many Against Drunk Driving," a title he said was more appropriate. With drunken driving legislation bills receiving special attention in the 1982 Legislative session, MADD could succeed in securing a mandatory sentence for drunken drivers in Kansas. In Gov. John Carlin's legislative message on Jan. 12, he said that more citizens of Kansas were killed on the job and drunken driving than were murdered. In Kansas, first-time offenders can be punished by a combination of imprisonment for 24 hours to six months, a $100 fee, fine, suspended driver's license or participation in alcohol awareness programs. Three bills relating to alcohol-related auto crashes have been proposed in Kansas, and others are being drawn up. Of all the charge charged with DWI in Lawrence last year, only 39 percent were found guilty in court Lawrence police reported. According to reports compiled by the federally funded Lawrence Alcohol Safety Action Project, which is composed of police and alcohol safety directors who apprehend and treat drunk drivers, they are not prosecuted for DWI as charred. More than half of the charges are either amended or reduced. in the fiscal year 1981, Lawrence municipal courts processed 511 drunken driving cases. Only 200 of these cases were reviewed and, rest, were appended to another charge. Lawrence Police Sgt. Ron Dalquest, police supervisor for the ASAP Program, said that all of the offenders last year had a blood-acohol level of 10, the level of legal intoxication, or above. City prosecutors plea bargain with the offenders for sentencing, he said. The significant difference between chivalry and revenge is that driving instead of with DWI is that the charge is not put on the defendant's record. This obstracts the city prosecutor from charging the offender with a criminal offense and defensive if he is apprehended again. “As far as I'm concerned, they’re making a mockery out of the court system,” Dalquest said. “People that are plea bargaining away their sentence are actually getting away with something because the important part of the whole arrest was that the offender's had too much to drink.” On the contrary, Mike Glover, Lawrence city prosecutor, said that each case was different and should be prosecuted on an individual basis. "Other factors have to be looked at besides the blood-alcohol level," he said. "I look for their past driving record, the field sobriety tests and blood-alcohol level, how serious the accident was if there was one, the person's general attitude toward the police and probable cause that gave rise to the crash." He said that a mandatory sentence would not treat each individual fairly and justly. The problem between mandatory sentencing and fairness to the individual remains unsolved. "I'm sick and tired of it-that somebody can be drunk and get a suspended sentence," State Sen. Paul Heus, R-Wichita, said. In 1946, his mother and father were injured in a car accident. The driver of the other car who was at fault was driving under the influence of alcohol. "I've lived with the pain and agony of not only drunk drivers, but the way it affects a whole family. I saw it and I felt it. And I remember the daily pain it caused my father." STOP "We're knocking off a thousand a week on the highways, half of them are alcohol-related and the Legislature is trying to ban it," she said. "The present law is like having a $500 fee for littering. People still litter and people still drive after drinking." With the social drinking that goes on at bars, few bar regulars give consideration to their blood-alcohol content. "Who knows when their blood-alcohol content is, '10?" Glover said. "There's too much emphasis put on 10, because it affects people differently." Dalquest said that the average drink had .02 percent alcohol in it. The average person can drink five of those and be at 10 blood-alcohol limit. Boyd's Coins-Antiques Class Banks Brass - Gold - Trade Gold - Silver - Coins 11 New Hampshire 869-743-2000 6 869-743-2000 An average person can also drink four beers before he reaches the .10 blood-alcohol limit. Society does not take the drunken driving as seriously as it should, said Bruce Beale, president of the Kansas Association of Alcohol and Drug Program. He advocates stiff penalties for all offenders. IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy. 843-9803 31 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 60044 913-842-8773 "We're not trying to throw people into jail for the hell of it." Beale said. "The bottom line is to reduce alcohol-related accidents and deaths. If society thinks you must offense, then they should have stiff penalties to go with that attitude." ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841-0101 808 W 24th offer expires Feb. 28, 1982 --produced by ANDY ROONEY DID YOU KNOW? Benjamin Franklin made a plea for public prayer. On June 28, 1787, a deadlock had descended upon the Constitutional Convention. Men from various states were planning to leave and it would be years before they could gather "e states' representatives again for another try at bringing the loosely-knit confederated colonies together to form a republic. Benjamin Franklin stood to his feet and addressing the convention president, George Washington, directly and with simplicity said: "We have not hitherto once thought of humbly appealing to the Father of Lights to illuminate our understanding. In the beginning of the contest with Great Britain, when we were sensible to danger, we had daily prayers in this room for Divine protection. Our prayers, Sir, were heard and they were graciously answered. . . . Do we imagine that we no longer need His assistance? I have lived, Sir, a long time and the longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth. . . that God governs the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without his notice, it is probable an empire can rise without His aid? We have been assured, Sir, in the sacred writings that except the Lord build this house, they labor in vain that build it. . . . I firmly believe this . . . Franklin's words were heeded and the convention went on to complete its task. AMERICAN COVENANT, p. 11, Marshall Foster, 1981 (Foundation for Christian Self-Government) Mingles Mingles Ladies Night Well Drinks 2 for 1 for ladies 8:00-12:00 MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE 2222 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Ks. 842-7030 Ext. 136 SUA SUA The 1968 CBS-TV Documentary FREE FILM "Black History: Lost, Stolen or Strayed?" 8pm Woodruff Auditorium Thurs., Feb.4 Kansas Union 9 starring BILL. COSBY --the oklahoma city air logistics center The film will be introduced by Bill Turtle, KT professor of history, and will be followed by a discussion of the film. You've heard of happy hour—but only G.P. LOYD'S gives you a whole happy night. (7 pm-3 am) THURSDAYS—$6.00 ALL YOU CAN DRINK House Drinks and Draws only. G.P. LOYD'S 701 Massachusetts 841 2745 --the oklahoma city air logistics center 2120 W.9th Bucky's Big Special Hamburgers for 39¢ OR 3 for $1.00 Buckys Offer Good Thru Sunday, Jan. 7, 1982 Don't forget every Sunday small sundaes are 49 (one of our flavors) Look before you Leap IS NO Accident THAT 600 ENGINEERS CHOSE US (ALL CIVILIANS) It will be interesting work with computers, alright, jet engines and air force aircraft. In the future we might recruit Air Force (we are) recruiting for the military—we're civilians]. It was our permanent location in Oklahoma City, with moderate weather, low cost living—especially for homes and apartments. - it was our faster-than-average advancement to better-than-average pay, benefits and long-range stability. CONTACT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE 20- ON CAMPUS 11 FEB 82 are an equal opportunity employer FOR DETAILS OR WRITE TO: ENGINEERING RECruitment EMPLOYMENT OFFICE ENGINEERING LOGISTICS CENTER INKER, ATKRA. 73145 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 4, 1982 Med Center is researching eye ailments By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter Preceded only by cancer, Americans fear most losing their eyesight, according to the National Institute of Health. More than 600,000 people are hospitalized annually for eye ailments and last year more than 500,000 of these people required surgery. The ophthalmology department at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. is working with doctors to develop access of these operations more common. "Ophthalmology in the last 10 years has made more gains than in the 50 years before it," Michael Hettinger, assistant professor of ophthalmology and director of corneal disease research said yesterday. THE DEPARTMENT provides clinical and technical consultation and patient care in nearly all area of eye disease or trauma, he said. "We treat all of the common ailments, as well as those that could be considered rare." Eye inflammations, those usually caused by bacteria, viruses or foreign objects, are the most common type of eye aliments. Hettinger said. Besides these common problems, the ophthalmology department deals with glaucoma, a big cause of blindness in children and adults. Pediatric ophthalmology, oculoplastic surgery, inflammatory diseases and external problems. Technical services include the use of high-powered lasers, photography, vision exams and other electronic testing. Funded almost entirely through the efforts of the Kansas Lions Club, the Med Center soon will be moving into a newly renovated area that will be more than three times larger than the current area in use. MORE THAN $500,000 was contributed to the Med Center The Med Center ophthalmology department stands out among other hospitals because of its tissue typing devices and partners, Dennis Hettner said. "I recently attended a medical research conference and we were the only center that routinely type the recipients of our transplants," he said. Ophthalmology department by the Kansas Lions Club. He said that cornea transplants actually were more successful than kidney transplants because of the acceptability of the tissues involved. Hettinger compared corneas to the lens of a camera. “If the lens of a camera is scratched or defective, you're not going to get good pictures.” Hettinger said. “The game is true for the corses of the eye.” Healthy corneas can be transplanted to people whose corneas have been damaged by accidents, disease or defect, be said. cent success rate. Hettinger's goal is to eliminate the small percentage of failures. One of Hettinger's most recent patients, a 1-year-old girl, successfully received a cornea transplant through tissues trying. CURRENTLY, HETTINGER said, cornea transplants had a 90 to 95 per- "The parents of the child were able to find some good in the unfortunate accuse. An eye bank, which receives corneas donated by individuals, is run at the Med Center by the Odd Fellows. This group, a fraternal organization whose mission is to provide the eye bank, helps the Med Center in its search for compatible donors. The cornea of another child, a 2-year-old boy dying from injuries received in a car crash, was tissue typed as compatible. ANOTHER AREA of specialization at the Med Center is the insertion of plastic lenses into the eye, replacing eyeglasses and contact lenses. Used only in severe cases where a patient is unable to wear contact lenses or glasses after a cataract operation, the procedure places a plastic disc under the cornea. Not only does this procedure alleviate the problems of inserting a contact lens, it also solves the inherent problem of having it covers over the cortex. Hettinger said. in the new methods discovered at the Med Center is a primary goal of the element's director, Theodore Lawliw. CURRENTLY THE Med Center supplies about 50 percent of the Kansas ophthalmologists. Providing area physicians with basic education on the newest advances should be the Med Center's concern, Lawnill said. "The techniques in visual research are advancing so rapidly that if we can just get what we know now out to ophthalmologists in general practice, we can make immense strides in eye disease treatment," said Lawwill. Long doubleheaders create problems By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter Sid Wilson, KU sports information director, would like KU women's basketball games to start 15 minutes earlier during doubleheader to avoid making the men's basketball games begin late. "The other night was an embarrassing situation," he said recently. Because of a Big Eight rule that requires conference basketball courts to be free for 35 minutes prior to games, the KU-Oklahoma men's basketball game started about 10 minutes later than scheduled Saturday night. THE WOMEN'S game, which began that night's doubleheader, lasted longer than scheduled. Wilson said that Oklahoma knew of the Big Eight rule and that they should have been able to begin warming up at 7 p.m. PHYLLIIS HOWLETT, assistant athletic director, said that something obviously needed to be done. She said he was able to identify to look at all sides of the issue yet. "We had to tell them, 'Sorry, but there's a game still going on,'" he said. She said it was unrealistic to start the women's games at 7 p.m. followed by the men's games at 9. She said it would have been the basketball to lose its audience. "We'RE HIGHLY dependent on that for revenue," she said. She said she never had been a proponent of scheduling a men's and women's doubleheader, although the team didn't expect it. It would help the women's program. "They attract different audiences," she said. "I would like to see them stand on their own feet without piggy-backing on the men." Wilson said he was not against the doubleheader games. "The doubleheaders give the women's basketball team a good chance for a little recognition. If we're ready, we need to start ground 4," he said. WILSON SAID it was "not the solution to start women's basketball games at seven." Wilson said the television stations might ask the teams to shorten their warm-up times if the games ran late. He said that starting the women's games later in the evening and following with the men's would penalize people for coming to the men's games, especially those who came from out of town. He said it also would make it difficult for the media to meet deadlines. THESE OUTSIDE of KU indicated they were unaware of coverage problems because of late basketball games. Max Falkenstein, radio announcer at KKKX in Ottawa and WIBW in Topeka, said that games beginning late weren't a big problem. "We just wing it and addib a little longer. It's not the first time that's happened," he said. He said that late games weren't the problem with radio, but that they were with television, because advertising time was sponsored differently on Channel 4 KSHB, Kansas City, Mo. televises the Big Eight conference games. Su Powell, general sales manager of KSHB, said that a television game had run for 50 minutes. HE SAID IT would be the school's decision whether to shorten the warm-up time. The station has a contract with the NCAA and the Big Eight that games will start no later than 35 minutes past the hour. Balloon-a-Gram PRESENTS A WEEK OF OCCASION SENG A BALLON-a-GRAM! Fax No. 1234 800-756-7890 www.ballon-a-gram.com $129.00 PADRE ISLAND THE BEST PRICES ON SPRING BREAK ESCAPES DELUXE: A accommodations are in the deluxe Baiha Mar dominions right on the Gulf. Each unit has a full kitchen living room with private bathroom and use of a swimming pool and tennis courts. PACKAGE INCLUDES: - 8 days/7 nights lodging STANDARD: Sand Cactus Resort is located right on the bay just four blocks from the Gulf. Each large apartment has a fully equipped kitchette and a private Baltho - Poolside welcome party - Sports activities FOR INFO CALL: OPTIONS: 842-6689 6-10pm - Transportation Latyone FI Lauderdale Key Largo Padie Island Nassau Bahamas Bahamas Islands Cruise Mexico Mamamoros Mexico side.trup Y SUMMIT TOUR This week send our FTD Hearts & Flowers Bouquet. Valentine's Day is Sunday, February 14. Happy Valentine's Day You're sure to capture her heart with the romantic fresh flowers, Heart Stick Pin, and exclusive FTD Glass Heart Dish that make up our FTD HEARTS & FLOWERS® Bouquet. It's romantic. And says all the things you ve been meaning to say. So call or visit us today. Because every Valentine deserves flowers. CUSTOMS STATION Owens FLOWER SHOP 6TH & INDIA Lawrence, Kansas FLOWER SHOP 507 & INDIANA Lawrence, Kansas 60044 843-6111 helping you say it right. FTD COUPON --only $150 with this coupon Regular $2.35 VISTABURGER AND SALAD BAR ... Limit 1 order per coupon. One coupon per customer. Not valid in combination with any other offer. 1527 W 6th Coupon effective 2/4 - 2/7 --- Vista RESTAURANTS Thursday, February 4, 1982 Ellsworth Hall, 6:30 p.m. BLACK STUDENT UNION GENERAL MEETING Will Be Brief! McCall's Shoes Downtown Lawrence U-BANG-EM McCall's Shoes Downtown Lawrence Shoes Lawrence Shoes Lawrence PENNYLACE BOAT COACH ADDED DISCOUNT Shoe Sale WOMEN'S SHOES Values to $50 $14 to $38 Low Balloon Discount EASY AND FUN EXTRA DISCOUNT Here's How— Less Balloon Discount Master Charge and VISA Charge 1. Select one or more of our Sale Shoes displayed on racks and tables at already LOW SALES PRICES. 2. BANG one of the many balloons. 3. Receive the added discount noted inside the baleon. MEN'S SHOES Values to $65 DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 10% to 50% $18 to $48 Come in and join the fun! WOMEN'S BOOTS Values to $110 $25 to $88 Less Balloon Discount NYLON JOGGERS AND CANVAS CASUALS * Men's * Women's * Children's 25% off Less Balloon Discount r p r th s McCall's Just answered the phone! University Daily Kansan, February 4, 1982 rths KANSAN WANT ADS Page 9 Call 864-4358 The University Daily CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 10 words each word 10 words each word 10 words each word AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 9 p.m. Tuesday Friday 9 p.m. Wednesday Thursday 9 p.m. Thursday Friday 9 p.m. Friday Wednesday 9 p.m. 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 844-358. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 POKER AND CHESS LESSONS 641-0996 UR KOA Laudromat. Free dry with 75% wash. By the Airport. East highway 24. 843-8267. Applications for Rotary Foundation scholarship for 1983-1984 are being accepted. Applications will be received mail or be march 1. 1982. Contact Aryan Allen, Press, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone 2-522-1323. The 12th Annual Women's Recognition Program is Wednesday. A group that gala like to help honor KU's outstanding students and faculty will be held Thursday, Feb. 4 in Porter at the KAU Museum. Call 861-3954, or 82-1475 for more information. Phi Kappa Theta Friatern formally apologizes to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for taking road signs and onto taking federal property in the future. 2-4 FOR RENT Must see to be believe. Furnished rooms with nursery. New university & downslope. No pets. Phone 841-500-3230. HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished, 16' x 12' and 15' x 13' on Mass. Only 3 blocks from the old building and three blocks from DONT DELAY. Have your apartment剩下 $240 a month - water paid. Submit to Hanovers.com. Studious atmosphere, international means, seasonal climate, and location are looking for an equiv. cooperative group men- panage to provide support in the UHILITIES INCLUDED. Large home appli- cations and laundry Coll 841-6921 House appliances and laundry Coll 841-6921 House For rent to mature male student Quilt, Room 203 of the Kitchens Class to the Union. Reasonable offers only. PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, perfect for runnables, features wood burning fireplaces, stainless steel shower hooks, fully-equipped washer/dryer hookups, fully-equipped laundry room, 9:30 a.m to 5:30 p.m at 2298 Princeton Blvd. phone 812-2575 for additional information. t Two-bedroom duplex with garage and deck. 24th and Ousdaul. $250. 841-8867 or 1-782- 3716. ttf 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. Brand new 3-bedroom houses, $345 and $450. 841-7597 or 841-7251. 2-11 ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished township featuring two full baths. Must see! Located on 13th & Ohio. Only two rooms available. Call 842-7540 or 842-7541. Roommate needed for 3 bedroom house. 1329 Kentucky St. $116 + 1/3 utilities. Call 841-6558 anytime. 2-8 1. br. apt. $180 a month + utilities, distance from campus 843-6725. 2-9 Vini Campi Agle, 1 & 2 B&R aba, also have buff cottons. Within walking distance of RK ballet courts. Good room in large furnished house black from Union. Utilities paid. 843-5308 after 5. No pets. 2-4 New two bedroom, apartment, low utilities, two blocks KU, central air, equipped kitchen, carpet and draps. 116 Tenn. Call 842- 4242 2 Br. ant, on bus route, convenient to shopping. Complete kitchen carpet, drapes, central air conditioning, garage available. Shown by appointment. Call 841-681-6-212 Sub-lease 2 Br. apt complete kitchen carpet-drapes central air-heat Call 841-6968 2-12 For sublease. 2. br. apt.; $310 + elect. Avail- able now. Telephone: 841-8138. 2-22 Large studio, Carpeted, newly remodeled, Walsh-der衣 in basement. 2 blocks from zamap. Rent negotiable. 749-290 or 913- 484-3611. 2-5 Sublase nice two bedroom apt, low utilities, on bus route, convenient to shopping. Call 842-4461. 2-5 $200 monthly, 3-room apt. Near new apartments, close to campus. Normal rent for $300, 1st come, 1st serve bass. No Pets 435-4798 2-5 1 dbm, and for sub-lase until July 31, 1928 $45 mcm, bus route used. Fb. Fre. 15 rent for Feb. 00 deposit. 101 L. Avalon Rd. Call 842-7351 or 841-060 - 256. Four grades have opened a farmhouse. No propane bills—natural gas. 5 rooms + bath. In good condition 15 minutes from the school. Ref. required. 720-886- 3:00 p.m. 720-886-2-12 STUDIO APT. for rent. 3 rooms. $145 + deposit. Water paid. On bus route. 841. $844. 2-3 Furnished room, utilities paid, two blocks from Kansas Union. $10 per month. Phone 411-3536 2-4 Studio apt. close to campus at 19 W. 14th Mar. 1, 2012. $560.00/mo, with a $0.00 deposit. Absolutely no pets. Call 743-6414 or 81-9701. 2-9 Br. Aint, 1st floor of house, near campus and downtown. Available March 1. $200 per month plus utilities. #929-9445. 2-10 Soy 3 Balm. unfirmed ap. in older stores at 314 W. 118th (14th & Tenn.) available now. Only 279.00 mw. with 20.00 dwp storage. Available absolutely. Holdings 749-6414 2-16 2.3g Bar1m, ant in an older住 at 10712 Bode Island. Available Feb. 1. Only 225 g cm with a 200.0 drip. Gat Call and/or Absorb - may get Call. 749-210 Warm peaceful room in house well furnished. Easy to study, reduced for February. Don't pass this one up 843-828 after One - cheap block from Union Square. 2-10 argue, modern 1 lbm/dm³, unfurnished apt. in a new address at 1201 Roche Island, available now in 1809. mo. with 800.60 dwt of furniture. utilities. Above-ground: 784-6414. FOR SALE Apple Croft Apto. Quiet, Speakout, fully carpeted and draped 2 bedroom Apto for 180 guests. Fully equipped facilities, pool dishwashers, A-C room, laundry, kitchen or come by 1741 W. 39th to see 8-25 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Sale! Makes sense to use them -11 As study guide. Makes sense to use them -12 As study guide. ation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" "New Analysis of Western Civilization" Bookmark, and Oryx Bookmark, if required. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9060, 3200 W. 6th. 1979 Mazda Hatchback, clean, A.C., Automatic, 25,000 miles, $3900, 843-4295. Keep trying. 2-4 Bookcases and stereo cabinets of solid wood tables. Desk organizers, desk caddies, desk organizers, and coffee tables. Kansas hardwood available. Michael Straus 303 W. West 10th. Shelf 84-5-83-697. LAB SERIES guitar amp, 2-12" spikes, 100 watts, cover, excellent condition. $325. 842- 1617. 2-4 Royal 5000 CE typewriter—dual pitch self- correcting—Like new. Call 749-2432 after nons. 2-5 1971 White over yellow Chevy Impala 400 conv. Everything original, super clean, loaded. Sterile 8 track system. Jenson 350 at 8 to 4 mph only. M-24 (make a bid). Polaroid SX-70. Very good condition. Must sell. 1 price. Call 841-2901. Please keep trying. 2-8 **6. Moto Beacon 12 speed Bicycle--Red, excellent condition. Aluminum rim hubs. handle bars, seat peg & crank. $200.00 must sell.** 841-7559 2-11 DOUBLE BED including frame, box spring, mattress $75 ( negotiable). Call 841-6158 any time before midnight. 2-9 GREAT BARGAIN on living room couch Good condition, clean, lightweight and easy to move. Nice kitchen space. 1981 AMC SX-4 Eagle 6 cyl. Auto—full power—sum roof, AM-FM, 15,000 miles, 842-8536 2-5 Component stereo. Hafter amps, Yamaha table, deck and speakers and Advent speakers. Also Elec. guitar and amp. 842-5403. 2-5 Grandma died! Vintage hats and lace dresses. 749-3708 2-5 CALAMITY JANES SALE - Group of cotton dress and skirt blouses, $1 price. All swimwear, 30% off reg. West of Kiel's Holiday Plaza, 841-5363. 2-5 Bargain price on beautiful ankle for jacket, size 5. Originally; $115; now. $70. Like new. 841.-6294. Keep trying. 2-5 FOR SALE: Jim Blackburn Bike racks—front $12 rear $15 (Both $25). Suntour end shifters—$1.79, 749-0722. 2-10 Vivitar 220 SL 35mm camera Black body. 50mm f 1.8 lens, Vivitar Rash. $130. Call tom at 843-4477. 2-5 Surplus jeeps, cars and trucks available. Many sell for under $200. Call 312-745-1143 Ext. 3244 for information on how to purchase 2-4 FOUND HELP WANTED Snap hood off of a down coat. Call and identify at 843-3601. 2-8 GREAT OPPORTUNITY-Commission sales person wanted part-time. Must have car and be able to work 15 hrs/week during school days. Call Lafayette, 740-4129 for interview 2-5 **STUDENT OPENINGS:** The Office of Interschool Openings: Keychip operator Data Entry Control 20 hr week (valid driver's license) 9-18B Contact Helen Wolfe, Computer Science Student to help with housecleaning and laundry. Must have own transportation. 845-317-6290. Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, studious, have own tools and equipment, and cooperate in living arrangements. Call Daryl) 841-636-5980. Use your spare time to earn money for these "extra": Aggressive self-starters - only Field of total health and fitness. For 2-annoint, call 842-8870. Part time opportunity distributing literature. Call collect after 6:00 to 1-501-935-4679. 2-4 Nall Hills Country Club is now accepting applications for forage employment thru the following positions: Pool manager, assistant pool manager, and Assistant Applicant for the position of manager must have experience in managing pools and water systems. Salaries commensurate with expertise. Salaries commensurate with experience. NILC: 6201 Indian Creek Drive, Overland Park, KS 66043 during spring break. 2-9 Stockbroker trainee. College grades - Exiting opportunity for hard working, honest, keen student. Fully licensed P.O. Box 157 Red Bank, N.J. 07301. 3-8 CRUISES. RESULTS, SAILING EXPEDITIONS. Needed: Sports instructors, Office. Reqs: Bachelor's degree in Summer, Career. Send $50 for APPLICATION. OPENINGS, GUIDE to CRUISERLOLD. 135 Box 6029, Sacramento, CA 94708. OVENSKA JOB$S–Summer year round. Europe. B. Ammon, Australia. Aai. All careers. Annually monthly. Slightening. Fidel Info. Dwight Box 24-35. I-C Del Mar, CA 92825. Center of phone 604-824-9255. Applications are being accepted for infile applicants who wish to teach assistants in the Western Civilization Program or administrative assistants. A back bake- ing eligibility for consideration. A bread back- baking is required. Instructors conduct 8 weekly classes with students associated with instruction in the Program, Application process and faculty with the Program. Application and faculty with the Program. Application Civilization Office offer, 216 Wescoe Hall. Applications to the Western Civilization Program subcommittee to the principles of handicapped students are encouraged to submit. The Western Civilization Program subcommittee to the principles of handicapped students are encouraged to submit. DODEA - Summer - year round The Commission on the Status of Women is holding its second Women's Recognition program. For information about the event, contact me at 7:30 pm, Thursday, Feb. 4th, in Room 106, Kansas City Union Office, 3854, or 842-147-6242. call 2-49 Half-time graduate assistant for chained professor in the School of Architecture and Engineering. You also per month must have excellent typing skills. Contact Dr. Dennis Dorner at 864-4231. D-29 Sales clerk. full-time day, part- time. Apply in person please. Green's Pincer Wing, 401-397-8200. 40 Delivery people needed—male or female and knowledge of Lawwance Area. Hours range from 8 to 12. Work will be work. Apply Hallmark—730 Iowa Suite 57, Fb 5 & Fb 6. Apply from 2-5/25. Church nursery helper needed on Sunday mornings. 843-0679 2-9 Temporary work, no experience necessary, operators needed immediately, excellent benis. Hours $5 or $10 @ 9. Apply to us at http://careers.usda.gov/ 4. Apply to 10 am to 4 am 5-2-8 In 303 Bailey last Tues. Orange Back-pac with sketchbook, calendar, and folder. Please call Steve at 864-2917. 2-5 NOTICE LOST One maroon, 7 x 10" hardcover Elementary Differential Eqs. textbook lost Fri. 1-29 near Murphy? Muller--749-6506 2-9 G get back to the Boogie in your own style of music; guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and theory lessons. All levels, teach times for beginners. Call Kurt Aikr at Musi. Mute 841-8817. 2-16 PERSONAL MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 824-6641 tf Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. tf Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Cone in and compare. Wilfred Skillet Eudaly, 1966 Mass. 843-8186. **tf** Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-161. tf SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS. Economical packages every weekend and school breaks. Call Ski Ec. Ekt. 841-8366 using Spring BreakAway! BAHAMAS STUDENT CRUISE March 29, 1983 Study Skills Workshop via videopack. FREE Friday, February 5. 2:30-Reading, 3:30- Time Management. Register at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Struggle 8464-2-56 Tau Sigma Dance Club Bash Friday, Feb. 8, 8:00-12:00 pm in the B-8 room. Live band plus all the beer you can drink! 2-5 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Don't just send a song or a bunch of hot lips to your friend. Personal Love Song with strings and a beat. Don't least a good attempt! Call now for a fresh delivery and performance. 5-12 Only With this special cruise over Spring Break, the majority of passengers will be students from other areas. Join in the fun! March 14-20, 1982 Make your reservations while space is available Call for details TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 641-9089 anytime B.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics, or call 641-9089 (ak) for A.B., U From Lawrence Hurt your back or neck when you slipped on the 'don't' delay proper treatment. For moderate-case cure call Dr. John 410-343-2932. Injured保险公司 Star 51-873 Blue Cross Insurance. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-482. tf $598 Tuxes—20% off. Barb's Second-Hand Rose. 515 Indiana, 842-4746. 2-12 A sweetheart portrait for Valentines Day turns a simple thought into a lasting memory. Swella Studio 749-1611. 2-12 Maupintour travel service KU Christian Unity Week Kansas Union 749-0700 Valentine Parties—50% formal, aux. tuts, taisons, shoes, jewelry, hats. We'll help you put together your outfit. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 51 Indiana. 842-746-476. Select your party outfits early. Barb's Second Hard Rose 842-474-515. Indiana. 1962 A1 Pledge Class Valentine Carnation Sale February 2nd, 3rd & 4th Send An Anonymous Carnation Brighten that special someone's birthday with a personalized birthday cake. Phone: 841-6215. 2-5 The Kegler—Weekly Specials on Kegla! Call 841-9450-1610. W 39rd. tif 1982 ACA Pledge Class K.S.U.-Where Men are Men and Sheep are Nurse. Bumper Stickers $1 each from UMC, P.O. Box 1201. Lawrence. 2-5 Friday, Feb. 5 Hard Rose. 511 Indiana, 842-4746. 2-11 The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs! If you can't be with that special person this Valentine Day send the next best life, a size up-bowl up from FOOT-LIGHTS - 25th & ivory, Holiday Plaza. 2-8 Mary Ellen Roddygott is as mad when she hears that the Beaver, FOOTLIGHTS, 25th and 26th ed., will be published. Prayer & Worship Begin planning for Valentine's Day early, for the perfect surprise. **Day Delivery of a Maltese-Bean.** $84.95 BATHIRU MEETING scheduled Thursday, Friday and Saturday, for second hour. Alon Fieldhouse. For Info: www.bathiru.com. Tell that special person just what you really want. Call her card from LIGHTS, 21st & 10th, 2-8 2415 W. 23rd Street First Presbyterian Church Handall. If your letter war is joke it won't funnily, if you write again and give me your correct address. Write Larry. 2517 Morningside Dr. Lawrence. 2-9 Women's Recognition 1982 is scheduled for February 3 at the Staats Commission on Women in the State of Woman's plan the program come to Parrish A the Kansas City area 4:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 2:44 p.m. 8:42 i-721, 864-6500 Help the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) meet in Chicago this week. The first meeting will be Thursday, Feb. 4th at 1:25 p.m in Patio A of the Kauai Center. If you are meeting the meeting call 863-9544, or cannot attend. ETE BAMBOOAT CHEAP. $3 per day, per collection (30) 979-876-986 2-15 RAASCH WESTERN FLAIR is now at 737 floors, boots, coats, 40' off in off-white winter clothing. LEVI'S Hey Phobra, Happy ten and nine from the eighth and your_Pal Q. Ted #1. 2-4 Congrats Sig Kap pledges. You're super! We're looking forward to a great semester. Love, your sisters. 2-5 SERVICES OFFERED Levi's Straight Leg 505 blue jeans Levi's famous fit and quality . . . and we've got your size! TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE U. B41-809-1496 use (i.e. B.S in physics, M.A in mathematics) or call 844-1675 (ask for M.R.) 1f EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7653. 3-10 LTWINS 631 Mass. Downtown Lawrence Another Encore exclusive: Get that job with a professionally prepared resume by a local corporate recruiter. Learn the latest job hunting techniques. 841-5664. 2-14 ENLARGEMENTS Our to eat our entrenched Heatherwood Friends. The We're sorry for offending you, we didn't do we don't do we do without our engineering buddies. show you what ladies can be RSVP show you what ladies can be RSVP show you what ladies can be RSVP Lakeside Garden Club www.lakeidgardenclub.com GREEN'S CASE SALE. LONG NECK PAINT $6.49. LONG NECK BUSH $7.39. 10W BEST 21rd. 2-12 Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa 842-2001 Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, use it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, 251w and 2-26 Super Deal-2 seats available in private room. 12-18 returning from morning 2-18 returning to 2-21. 665-773-88 Schneider Wine & Keg Shop -The finest selection of wines in Lawrence-largest supplier of wins kgs. 1610 W 23rd. 843-3212 Guitar Lessons: Learn to play now from experienced teacher. Reasonable. Call Mark 841-2695. 2-12 WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Stop by the House of Uber and pick up our PRESENT brochure on resume for your job in Massachusetts, 8-4 M-F 9-3 Sat. NON-Sun 3-5 Experience editor (5 yr.)/grad student will edit theses, dissertations. All disciplines. 843-8099 after 6. 2-5 Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call evening, 841-7915. 2-17 Wildcats, stay away at least one day, "cause we don't have any on the property. Bill will have saughed it for 2. For Pickey. You bring the winters my cornhuskers. They are so loud, they hour to hour do not be sure. See you later. I am sorry." Drafting (charts, maps, etc.). 6 years experience, competitively prized. Also Script Lettering for certificates. 841-7944. 3-8 TYPING FOR HIRE. Courts Campus Representative a two year commitment is required. Requests should arrive at the Lakeside Service Center, 410-752-3690, or from Feb. 2 to April 2711. Storl St. 843-700-690. Get a head start on your spring break tan at T.A.N. Ltd. Call 841-6232 for appointment or additional information 2-10 It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. tf Valentines Dance. Mon., Feb. 8th. Off the Wall Hall 8 pm. Benefit for Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas. 2-8 Experienced typist, typed paper, theses, all journals. Master's degree or equivalent. Spelling, Phonics, 843-924-6544. TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, punctuation. Foreign students. Americas. 814-8524. Hey AO's and their dates: Look out for the Pink Bows at the Knights of Columbus on Friday night. Be there. Alone. 2-5 experienced typist. Theses, term papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tt DID YOU MOTHER TAKE DIES? IF NO YOUR ARE AT RISK FOR CANCER? The River City Women's Health Collective is a group of campus and community women who work together to inform and support caring women concerning women's health issues. 356, or by drop B 181 Union. - 24-24 Experienced typist will type letters, thesis and dissertations. IBM correcting selections. Call Denna at 842-2744. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, granites, editing, self-correct Call Allen or Jean Ann 841-2172. teff Experienced typal- thesis, dissertations, term papers, mise. IBM correcting selective Barb, after 5 p.m. 824-2310 ___ tf QUALITY TYPING: Themes, Manuscripts; Dissertations, IMB Seiclect; Girl Thursday S-critical Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 please. TIP-UP TYPING - experienced typist-IIBM TYPING 500 CD 003 - Royal Correspondence 500 CD 004 - For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. tt Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. IBM. Before 9 p.m. 746-249. Annul. If experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selective, Elite or Pics. 8-5 Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, letters, legal, etc. Deb 843-9592. 2-10 WANTED Quality typing and word processing available from Omnicon Core Corp. Shops 258, 842-2001 2-26 Professional typing. Dissertation, thesis, term paper, resume, letter, legal, etc. Deb. 843-5928. 2-11 Non-smoking mate to share fully furnished. 2 bdmr. duplex $75/month + 1% utilities. Close campus; call after 7 pm @ 843-2815. -SIT- Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retying your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 486-291-8000 for more info. 2825 Three roommates to share duplex—three blocks from campus. Male or female. Liberal, smoker ok. 842-5104. 2-5 Person to serve 3-BR home with two others. On bus route. $90/no. 1/3 util. 841-5461. Roommate wanted to share large house with two females. Close to campus and down-town. 841-7755, after 5:00 p.m. 2-5 Roommate needed immediately! New apartment, 2 car - own bedroom $175.00 2-5 BATGIRL MEETING SCHEDULED. Thursday, February 4th, 6:00 p.m. in Baseball Office, second floor, Allen Fieldhouse. For information call 864-1416. 2-4 LAW STUDENT seeks room to share large, well furnished 2 BR at Harvard Square Apts. (5 blocks from campus). $165/$30 for utilities + 1g phone Kevin 799-301-8644 3rd female roommate. Village Square Apartment. 841-1903. Z-4 Non-smoking female to share 3-br. house, to campus. 83.23 + 1/3 util. 841-9779. No pets. 2-12 Need to rent portable CB radio for trip over Spring Break. Call 749-0941 for EVS. 2-50 MALE ROOMMATE needed to share 3 br. house. $125 mow + 1/3 utilities + deposit. Call Brab at 841-6241. 2-85 Roommate wanted; 3 Brm. House $65 per month + 1/3 utilities, 1 bik from bus. Call Debbie or Mark 841-2695. Call 2-12 Roommate must to share nice, new furnished 3 bedroom house. $115 + 1/2$ utilities. Call 841-6506. 2-9 Roommate to share modern 2 bedroom apartment 3 blocks from campus. $137.50 a month + utilities. 843-8628 Jane. 2-17 Female roommate to share large 2-bedm. ap. Non-smoker. Prefer quiet, studious room. Requires 90 phone calls. Waher/steer. Call 841-4506 after 6:00. Keep trying. 2-10 心 "Happy Valentine's Day" Say ... in the special Valentine's classified section of the Kansan The first 15 words are $2.25 plus 2c for each additional word Say it in a display for $4.00 per column inch All Valentine's messages must be in the Kansan office (118 Flint) by 5:00 February 10. 心爱动物园 --- Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 4, 1982 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Athletic Dilemma Team W W3 L Pct. Pel. Boston 33 11 11 .78% Boca Houston 31 14 10 .28% Washington 22 22 500 11 % New Jersey 21 22 500 11 % Cincinnati 20 22 457 13 % Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee 30 14 682 Atlanta 39 14 682 10%* Detroit 19 36 422 11%* Detroit 19 36 422 11%* Chicago 18 34 227 10%* San Antonio 29 14 674 Denver 24 28 549 %/2 Chicago 22 22 549 %/2 Utah 14 39 328 15 Kansas City 14 39 328 16 Indiana 14 39 328 16 Seattle 30 11 13 698 Los Angeles 31 14 14 689 San Diego 28 18 15 699 Phoenix 24 18 571 6 Portland 24 18 571 6 Philadelphia 24 18 571 6 Washington 24 18 571 17% New York Jets 103, Miami Dolphins 85 Seattle 97, Kansas City Chiefs 84 Philadelphia 122, Washington 96 Atlanta at Detroit, ppd. 118 Atlanta at Denver, ppd. 118 San Diego 113, Dallas 106 Uhls 122, Perthian 118 Sacramento 96, Minnesota 86 | team | W | L | Pct. | GR | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Missouri | 8 | 0 | 1.000 | 2/4 | | Minnesota | 7 | 114 | 1.657 | 3/4 | | Oklahoma State | 4 | 3 | 571 | 3/4 | | Kansas | 4 | 3 | 459 | 3/4 | | Texas | 4 | 3 | 459 | 3/4 | | Nebraska | 3 | 4 | 429 | 4/4 | | Iowa State | 3 | 5 | 286 | 4/4 | YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI Note: Number in parentheses. Missouri 11) Colorado 84 Kansas State 18) 75, Nebraska 64 Illinois 12) Indiana 70 Oklahoma 75, Oklahoma State 72 UPI TOP 30 RESULTS Virginia 19) Georgia 63 Pallas 34) 66, Louisiana 44 Auburn 83, Kentucky 41 OT Alabama 10) 66, Mississippi State 63 Maryland 11) Washington 45 Maryland 11) Wake Forest 16) Mississippi 15) ST. Louis 47 Missouri 15) Tennessee 47 NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Patrick Division Team W Team L T L F GF PA Pts. NY Islanders 31 19 17 232 165 68 64. New York Jets 18 19 17 232 165 68 64. NY Rangers 25 20 7 192 192 200 57. Pittsburgh 21 24 8 192 192 200 57. Boston Celtics 18 20 8 192 192 200 57. Montreal 29 11 12 7 244 153 67 Boston 20 11 12 7 216 182 70 Buffalo 20 15 8 20 107 160 77 Chicago 20 15 8 20 107 160 77 Hartford 14 22 10 174 174 217 8 Campbell Conference Norris Division Minnesota 22 16 15 12 219 192 59 St. Louis 22 16 14 11 219 189 58 San Diego 18 20 10 12 232 245 46 Chicago 18 20 10 10 232 245 46 Toronto 18 20 10 10 177 260 38 Washington 18 20 10 10 177 260 38 Edinburgh 13 13 12 10 309 222 74 Calgary 19 12 13 10 209 222 56 Vancouver 18 25 11 11 188 252 43 Angeles 14 15 11 18 158 243 70 Columbus 14 15 11 18 158 243 70 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota Boston,5 Buffalo, Montreal,Edmonton Vancouver,3 Tampa 1 Oakland,2 Vancouver 2 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W 15 L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 14 4 78 New York 13 61 % Baltimore 14 60 % Buffalo 9 11 830 % Balloons 9 11 104 % Philadelphia 8 14 323 % New Jersey 4 13 235 % St. Louis 17 17 385 590 Wichita 11 11 670 12% Washington 10 10 474 14% Memphis 10 10 435 18% Phoenix 10 13 150 8% Kansas City 10 17 138 12% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York7 Cleveland6 Kings lose seventh straight By United Press International SEATLET - Gus Williams scored 20 points and Jack Sikma added 21 as the Seattle SuperSonics won the Kansas City Nets' eight defeat, a 97-37 decision last night. The victory, coupled with New York's 98-94 triumph over Los Angeles, pulled the Sonics into first place in the Pacific division of the Lakers by percentage points. Williams ran off 16 points in the first half, as the Sonics took a 21-point lead and ended with a 58-39 advantage at halftime. After a brief Kansas City spurt in the third quarter, the Sonics rebounded and led 83-67 after three quarters. Ernie Grunfeld scored 13 points in the fourth quarter to lead a late Kansas City rally, but after the Kings pulled within six, 91-85, with five minutes to play, they managed only one field goal the rest of the way. Grunfeld and Steve Johnson led the Kings in scoring with 21 points. Mike Wooden added 18 and Reggie King had 13. Cliff Robinson, the Kings' leading man, an average of 21 points a game, was an on just three points by the Sonics. Jayhawks continue to lose on the road The Kansas Jayhawks continue to struggle on the road. By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor KU's record fell to 1-4 away from home after losing last night, 55-53, to Georgia. THE JAYHAWKS' only victory on the road came Dec. 29 when they beat Indiana 71-61 in the Holiday Tourney at Madison Square Garden. However, the Cyclones, who are now 7-12 overall and 2-5 in the Big Eight Conference, haven't been that bad of a team at home. At home, the Cyclones are 6-2 and their only losses are to No.1-ranked Missi tion. They were not to be denied another nome victory last night as they led the team in the opening match. biggest lead the Jayhawks ever had were two points. The turning point of the game came in the first half with the game tied 22-22. CENTER KELLY Knight, trailing the play down court, took a pass and hit an off-balanced 15-foot jumper. Knight, who later returned to the game, reinjured his knee on the shot and Iowa State scored six of the last eight points in the half to take a 28-26 lead at intermission. The game remained close throughout the second half until the Cyclones, who held a 46-43 lead, ran off six straight points to take a 52-43 lead. Two free throws by David Magley along with Tykie Peckachk's jumper closed the gap to 82-47 before Malvin gave a free throw increase to the head 'to six. to lead a. Magley's jumper after Warrick's free Barry Stevens' two free throws increased the lead back to six. throw put the Jayhawks within four, 53- 49 The Jayhawks weren't through their first game to pull off some last-second heroes. AFTER WARRICK missed the front end of a one-and-one, Magley answered with two field goals, the second after a turnover, to close the margin to 55-13. Stevens, who finished with 22 points, was sent to the line again with 14 seconds remaining. He missed the front hook on the left side and Jayhawks had a chance to tie the game. The Jayhawks hopes went astray the four second remaining for a jumper with 四秒钟 remaining. KU, which took to 3-4 in the conference game, was led by Maeyer's 20 points and Gouy's 16. "We didn't play well enough to win anywhere," Coach Ted Owens said. "I felt fortunate to be in the position to tie it up." OWA STATE (55) | MIN | FG | FT | REB | TP | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Barry Seymour | 5-13 | 8-8 | 2 | 14 | 2 | | Ron Harris | 1-12 | 7-9 | 2 | 10 | 2 | | Robert Estes | 0-2 | 6-7 | 3 | 2 | 2 | | Robert Eaton | 6-4 | 6-4 | 3 | 2 | 10 | | Terrence Allen | 3-6 | 6-0 | 3 | 1 | 10 | | John Kunert | 0-4 | 6-0 | 3 | 1 | 10 | | John Kunert | 0-4 | 6-0 | 3 | 1 | 10 | | John Kunert | 0-4 | 6-0 | 3 | 1 | 10 | | John Kunert | 12-40 | 8-2 | 34 | 11 | 15 | KANSAS (52) MIN FG PT REB PF TP David Magee 7.15 -3.6 0 5 20 Jeff Dallamun 3.45 -1.8 0 7 39 Kelly Kungli 3.2 -0.4 0 1 4 Michael Wagner 3.2 -0.4 0 1 4 Tony Gay 8.19 -0.4 0 6 1 Lance Hill 0.4 -1.2 0 1 2 Matt Martin 1.2 -1.2 0 1 2 Tyke Peacock 1.2 -1.2 0 1 2 DAVID MAGEE 25.49 -1.1 26 27-53 28 27-55 Jayhawks win, 75-68 to break five-game skid By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor etc. A victory. "I'm really pleased," Coach Marian Washington said yesterday. "We played much better than we have been, because our defense was effective." It has been a long time coming, but the women's basketball team finally broke its losing streak with a 75-48 win in Cyclone Cylons in Airess, Iowa, last night. "We had more players being aggressive than we have had in the past," Washington said. "We've been working for that all season." THE JAYHAWKS, who had lost five straight and eight of their last 10 games, jumped to an uncharacteristic lead in the first half. They led by as many as 14, before the Cyclones edged back to trail at halftime 29-26. The Jayhawks were led by All-America candidate Tracy Claxton, who has led Kansas in scoring in 19 of its 24 games and in rebounding in every game. She had 20 points and 23 rebounds. Angie Snider, KU's second teaching scorer, added 18 and Stewart had 14. The second half was almost a replay of the first half. The Jahaways led by 18 most of the second half, but Iowa State closed the gap to 5 with 20 seconds left to play. Chris Stewart, who is from Oelwein, Iowa, and was playing in front of family, hit two free throws with 9 seconds left to clutch the game for Kansas. Intramurals Tioff is at 4:45 p.m. and tickets are and the Alley Field ticket house ticket Intramural Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS The Jayhawks, 13-11, travel to Kansas City tomorrow to play the National College of Education in Kemper Arena. The game will precede the Kansas City Kings-San Antonio Snurs game. Greek Men Res. A Falling Rocks 99, Buffalo Bub & The Herd 33 P-Cools 48, Giftwrench 29 Zip 56, Fiji A 36 Hennessy 47, Sludge face 36 Independent Men G. Bristolts 38, The Drapes 29 B. Gill 43, Brun Twitts 19 L.F. 35, Tricle Nipkins 32 Grace Pearson 49, Gerald Manikin *Great Manikin* Quasi's 26, The Schlongs 21 Voedoo Nums 35, Heary E's 34 Wizards 35, Sloths 24 Vanilla Thunder 34, Gobblers 11 Independent Men REC. B Theta Waiters 30, Delvin and the Spontanes 26 Later Adulthood Institute 29, Buhlers Bombers 25 F & W Bootleggers 30, The Run and Guns 26 Lakers 26, Red Dogs 24 Lakert 28, Red Dog 24 Rod 23, Red Riders 16 Jeeves 30, Me's Marauders 15 The Wrath 30, Grace's Place 33 The Georatans 30, The Bushman 30 Mondo-Guna 30, PPNMIII 30 Gomona-Starker 30, Lungistles 18 Gomona-Starker 31, Thundering Herd 39, Leray a the treepiers 31 The Marlboros 38, Vandals 29 George 29, 'Go', Nadak 51 The Good Answers 46, Software 19 D.P.'s 32, Muffketteers 31 the Marshmores 20, Variants 29 Geomen 70, "Go" Nads 91 Electra Steve & the Shorts 33, South Wind Sparks 22 DAYTONA BEACH MAKE A SPRING BREAK SUN ESCAPE! DELUXE ECONOMY BACOOK means the beautiful Whitheen Inn. A spacious high rise resort each room has a private ocean front entrance. Features include a balcony, private pool and private cocktail厅 all located on the oceanfront. $11900 BOTH PACKAGES INCLUDE: - 8 Days/7 Nights Lodging Datyonyo * Fi Lauderadeale * Key Largo Paddie Island * Nassau Bahamas Baham Islands Cruise * Mexico - Welcome Party $9900 - Sports Activities ECONOMY The Diplomat Beach Hotel located directly on the beach. Each room is complete with two double beds, television telephone, and private balcony. - All Taxes FOR INFO CALL 842-6689 6-10pm OPTIONS INCLUDE: Side Trip To Disney World Roundtrip Bus SUMMIT TOUR E: g ey World Roundtrip Bus Only. $10500 Only $10500 COLLECT CANS FOR Coors, COLLECT PRIZES FOR YOURSELF. Find out how to earn big prizes in the Coors College Can Plan. See your Coors Distributor for more details. FOR MORE INFO: CALL 843-7608 MARGARET ROSS The winter 'close out' sale continues for one more week on our remaining men's and women's clothing! Hurry! Our prices will never be lower. Hours. Hours: MTWFS—9:30-6:00 TR—9:30-8:30 MISTER GUY 920 Mass. PF TP 5 20 4 1 4 6 1 4 0 0 2 16 2 1 1 0 2 0 2 14 $ 53$ 53$ 55$ PF TP 3 18 2 14 1 0 0 0 3 9 2 10 1 0 0 0 0 4 ' 55 rth si University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Friday, February 5, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 90 USPS 650-640 Beer tax increase requested BvKEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter Alcoholism counselors yesterday asked the State Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee to override the objections of the beer industry and approve a 10 cent a gallon increase in taxes. The increase, proposed by the committee, outside of a million annual fund for state and federal drug arrests. Several alcoholism counselors, including Bruce Beale, executive director of the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism, urged the committee to approve the tax, saying the alcohol and drug abuse field would lose $4.6 million in federal funds in the next year. Beale said that without alternative funding, 40 of the state's 60 alcoholism centers would be cut. "You hear talk now about social programs getting cut back," he said. "But the alcohol and drug abuse field is going out of business. It's as simple as that." Mark Boranyak, a lobbyist for the Kansas Beer Wholesaler Association, acknowledged that the federal government had cut back on dollars for alcohol and drug abuse programs, but said these dollars should not be picked up by the beer industry. "It is now recognized by leading authorities that alcoholism is an illness," he said. "This is contrary to previous notions that alcoholism was a sign of moral weakness or lack of morality." "So the cost of alcohol problems be met like the cost of other public health problems—as a total societal problem, and not as a ministerial leave on responsible consumers of beer." Boranayak said beer consumers in Kansas had not complained about the proposed increase in beer tax, which would raise the cost of beer by about 1 cent a can. But the consumers would start complaining, and possibly start dividing across state lines to get to their point. "The consumers don't know about this now," he said. "It is the sort of thing where they'll say, 'Okay, let's go.'" Some consumers at the University of Kansas learned of the proposed increase last fall, when the Associated Students of Kansas conducted a poll on the issue. Students voting in Student Seante elections also received an ASK ballot on which an increase in beer tax to help finance alcoholism programs was oroosed. By a slim margin, the students approved the increase, say Zimmerman, student from the ASSESS program. "It's kind of surprising that KU students would want to raise the price of beer," he said. Jack Colyer, a counselor for the Douglas County Committee on Alcohol in Lawrence, said the beer industry opposed the tax increase that did not want beer associated with alcoholism. "They want to maintain the image of the healthy, robust beer drinker," Colyer said. "But more and more we get people in here who have problems drinking a lot of beer." Ken Rissler, a laborist for the U.S. Brewers Association, admitted the beer industry did not want to be controlled by him. "It's not a very good argument," he said. "Some alcohols drink nothing but beer." Because beer can play a role in alcoholism, the increase in its sales tax is in part a user's tax, said George Wedge, KU professor of English and counselor for the Committee on Alcoholism. "The beer consumer would take out insurance by paying the tax," Wedge said. "For those who bought it, we can't tell." Boranay, however, said the tax would unjustly implece beer as the cause of alcoholism. "Earmarking of funds from the beer industry for these programs says, in effect, the beer industry is the cause of alcohol abuse," he said. "The accepted facts are that nine out of 10 Kansans consume alcoholic beverages, in-" "trends." Former cult members' parents testify See ALCOHOL page 5 By COLLEEN CACY By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter A group of parents who resorted to kidnapping their children to save them from "slavesy through mind control" yesterday asked a federal judge to seek legal protection to take their children from cults. The parents testified before the House Judiciary Committee in favor of a bill that would allow parents to be appointed as temporary guardians of their children who had joined religious cults, such as the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church. "We hope you will help us get rid of this scourge which is growing in this country, and stop these groups from tearing families apart and coercing young people into slavery through force." Frank Tillman, Kansas State University professor of engineering, told the committee. She lived with the group for six months before her parents kidnapped her and 'deprogrammed' her. Tilman's daughter, Dee Dee, a K-Sate senior, was a member of religious groups called Mandela Campin Mandela. "DEPROGRAMMING" is a process of psychological recovery that involves isolating a cul member from the group, questioning him about his role in the group, establishing emotional contact with the person. Dee Dee Tillman said the group caused substantial changes in her personality. "My family relationships went downhill," she said. "I did not date and was going to let the elders of the group pick my husband. Most importantly, my capability to make decisions on my own diminished to zero. "There is no way I could have left the group on my own. The only reason I have my free mind now is because my parents were willing to take the necessary risk to get me out of the group. We need the protection of this law to provide parents with the security to rescue their children from this mental slavery." The bill says that to appoint a temporary guardian for anyone 18 or older, the person must have undergone a substantial change in behavior and must be unable to make his own decisions. These changes must result from a "systematic course of coercive persuasion that undermines a person's capacity to make informed or independent judgements." The bill also says this persuasion must involve mirepresentation of a group's true identity or credibility. A TEMPORARY guardianship of 45 days would be granted after a hearing to determine whether the child could make independent decisions. The bill allows professional psychologists and physicians to treat the cult member during the recovery period. The committee chairman, State Rep. Joe Hoagland, R-Overland Park, said the committee would take the bill under consideration before making a decision. Religious groups that feared that the bill would influence them tested against it at the hearing. Stanley Hoerman of the Full Gospel Businessman's Fellowship International for Northeast Kansas said his organization gave businessmen an opportunity for a religious experience that often caused an "abrupt and drastic alteration of basic values and lifestyle. "Christian groups, because they are committed to one Lord and a disciplined way of life, have always risked confusion with cults. This law can be used by anyone who disapproves of the friends or association of a relative. It is a very dangerous piece of legislation." The New York Civil Liberties Union made the same objections to a similar bill proposed in the New York Legislature in 1880 and again in 1881. The governor asked all but two years, Gov. Hugh Gulliver caretied it. THE N.Y.C.L.U. said the bill violated the First Amendment right of freedom of religion. Several religious organizations, including the American Jewish Congress and the New York Catholic Conference, opposed the bill on the same grounds. Attorney John C. Fay of Manhattan, Kan, told the committee that the previous bills were rejected because they were too vague. He said because this bill laid out several specific conditions under which the influence of the trumpid motion "it cannot be attacked as to vague功." He said that although the mind control issue emerged as a religious problem, it could be applied to our own situation. the problem we are addressing does not fit neatly into any legal receptacle," he said. "Yet various aspects of the condition are recognizable JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff See MOONIES page 5 BROOKLYN The best way to fight yesterday's frigid temperatures was to bundle up, as Mike Guemple, Fairway sophomore, found out on his way to class. I will help you with the text. The image is a cartoon-style illustration of a bed with scattered books, tissues, and toys. There is a window in the background showing a heart-shaped picture with a sunny sky. Weather There will be a travelers' advisory today and a 50 percent chance of more snow, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The high-to-low temperature night low will be near zero. Winds will be from the north at 10 to 20 mph. Tomorrow's high will be in the low teens. E. BENAN 872.11 Jupiter to align with Mars in rare configuration in 1982 By NEAL McCHRISTY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter An event will occur in 1902 that has both planet and geologists talking about the planet this year. The event concerns the effect of the planets pulling on the same side of the sun on March 10. A book by John B. Gribbin and Stephen H. Plagemann, "The Jupiter Effect," said that the 1982 convergence of the planets would cause solar activity, volcanoes, earthquakes and high Earth temperatures. The book, published in 1974, was so named because the pull of Jupiter is greatest of the nine planets. However, Zeller said that the book was a result of his misinterpreting things and trying to conclude. "The public is subjected to lots of self-serving misinformation that masquerades as science," he said, "and it's understandable that the public becomes very skilful." THE BOOK was damaging to those persons who use the scientific method, Thomas P. Armstrong, KU professor of physics and astronomy, said Tuesday. Armstrong said that mathematical analysis had predicted volcanic activity on Io, a satellite of Jupiter, before the Voyager probes confirmed volcanoes on that satellite. "The same mathematical analysis tells us that the Jupiter Effect is nonsense," he said. Zeller said that the March 10 near-alignment of the planet would cause the Earth's crust to hurt. "The world is full of charlatans, and there's a profit in being sensual, and there is often no problem." THE MOON'S pull on the Earth's crust causes a maximum builge the length of a pencil, he said. the moon has so much more effect on the earth that it is be very difficult to pressure this, the latter Effect is better. Zeller said that the tides would rise by the thickness of a paper clip because of the Jupiter pressure. Tides, he said, are influenced by the moon, atmospheric pressure and other factors, so Earth's response to the Jupiter Effect will be difficult to measure. Zeller said that while there was an influence on the earth by gravitational forces, it was not apparent. "I don't think it's enough to trigger volcanic eruptions or large earthquakes," he said. Another, more visual event, in which three planets can be seen in close proximity at a glance, is unrelated to the Jupiter Effect, Arm-strong said. THE THREE planets - Jupiter, Saturn and Mars - rise in the southern sky about midnight, according to Stephen Shawl, associate professor of physics and astronomy and director of the NASA/JPL/Caltech Science Hall. The three planets can best be seen at 5 a.m. by looking toward the southern sky, he said. Armstrong described Mars as a reddish-brown planet that is farthest to the west and the faintest Jupiter, the brightest of the three planets, is the largest planet that is farthest to the east. Armstrong Saturn is slightly to the east of Mars and is of slightly brighter intensity, he said. "They're all easily visible, and even Mars is at least as bright as the brightest star," he said. "The important thing about seeing these cases is that there are meetings of eight." The three planets will be closest to each other on Feb. 19. They will be in close proximity to be photographed with a 35mm camera with a standard 50mm lens, according to the December issue of Sky and Telescope magazine. The magazine article suggests a setting of 1/2.2 to 1/2.8 a lapse of 1second exposure and fast film. The planets will be visible in their present close proximity until Sept. 13, 1982. Pilots knew of ice before crash, tapes show By United Press International WASHINGTON-Tape transcripts revealed yesterday that the cockpit crew of an Air Florida jettier repeatedly discussed the ice and the weather in their final minutes of conversation before the plane plunged into the Potomac River in January, killing 78 people. However, the captain and co-pilot apparently did not believe the ice buildup on the wings would hamper the operation of their aircraft enough to affect takeoff. Investigators are focusing on ice on the wings and an instrument that measures engine thrust as possible causes of the Jan. 15 crash of the Boeing 737-800. Make a off from Washington's National Airport. "Larry, we're going down, Larry," we copilot Roger Alan Petitt's last words before the plane struck the 14th Street bridge and crashed into the ice-cloaked river. "I know it," Captain Larry Wheaton replied, as the sound of impact was heard on transcripts of the cockpit voice recorder released by the National Transportation Safety Board. THE INSTRUMENT records one half-hour of sounds in the cockpit, including the crew's voices. The crew repeatedly *eferred* to ice on the wings of other planes, and placed their own, as well, in front of them to takeoff. replied. At another point, Petitt said, "Hate to blast himself so much that you are all over me." When the plane was on the runway and was gathering speed for takeoff, Pettit, apparently looking at an instrument showing airspeed, said, "God, look at that thing." "That, ah, satisfied the feds." Wheaton replied. "Specially with the (Washington) Monument staring vau the face," said Wheaton. "Boy, this is a, this is a losing battle here you on trying to deceive those things. (gives) you a false feeling of security, that's all that does." Pettit said at one point, as the jet was still Four seconds later, he added, "Ah, that's not right." Wheaton replied, "Yes it is. There's 80 (knots)." Pettit was unconvinced. "Naw, I don't think that's right," he said, but then added, "Ah, maybe it is." Wheaton called off 120 knots and then announced that the tie reached 4.14, the speed control was up. But as he called off V-2, liftoff speed, the tape recorded the sound of the piano's "stick shaker" note. "Forward, forward," Pettit urged. "Come on, forward... just barely climb." "Larry, we're going down, Larry," Pettit said. "Knott it, Wheaton糖." The last sound on the cockpit voice recorder, the sound of impact, was recorded at 4:01 p.m. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 5, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Black street kids 'disgusted' Williams, witness tells jury ATLANTA—The state wound up its 19-day case against accused killer Wayne Williams yesterday by trying to convince the jury he was ashamed of the assault. In a day of hard-hitting testimony, the prosecution presented witnesses who recounted Williams' disgust with poor blacks and said he had demonstrably been racist. Bobby Toland, an ambulance driver, blurted out before the jury that Williams had once attacked him if he had ever considered "how many niggers hit." Disregarding instructions from Judge Clarence Cooper about use of such racial slurs, Tolan offered the first concrete motive for charges that Williams killed Nathaniel Carter and Jimmy Ray Payne, two of the 28 young blacks abducted and murdered in Atlanta. Although Williams is charged with killing only Carter and Payne, the 23-year-old free lance photographer has been linked in testimony to 11 more of his crimes. Other witnesses for the prosecution testified that during the 22-month period when the killer of young blacks was active, they had seen Williams with scratches on his arms. Senate adopts forced busing ban WASHINGTON -The Senate yesterday approved a stringent ban on busing for the purpose of desegregating public schools, an action Sen. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., called part of an "absolute rout" of America's commitment to civil rights in the Reagan era. The Senate voted 56-38 for an amendment that would prohibit federal courts from ordering busing as a remedy for a school desegregation if the busing was not required. The ban would apply to future court orders and also would permit school districts now busing children under past rullings to seek an end to the con- flict. Weicker said he planned to use filtibustering and other delaying tactics to prevent congressional enactment of the amendment before 1858, when a new The amendment was adopted as a rider to a Justice Department spending bill. Stockman savs states could suffer WASHINGTON—Budget Director David Stockman, his credibility challenged by Senate Democrats, yesterday conceded that some states may eventually come up losers under President Reagan's "New Federalism" proposal. Stockman told the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee that he had said only that there will be no winners or losers through the first four years o process for proposing a call for turning over administrative and financial responsibility for 42 federal programs to the states. The shift involves almost "The president has said it is a financially equal swap," said Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich. "He didn't say for four years. The states have to know what happened." Reagan wants $31 billion cut in '83 WASHINGTON-President Reagan will request about $31 billion in spending cuts in his fiscal 1983 budget, including deep reductions in social welfare programs, according to administration and congressional sources. The budget, to be submitted to Congress on Monday, will project a deficit of about $90 billion in fiscal 1983, which begins Oct. 1. Because Renagan has rejected major tax increases or defense cuts to lower the deficit, he will seek to pare down the basic benefit or entitlement payments. These programs to be cut include Medicare, Medicaid and Aid to Families with Dependent Children. department. Reagan's budget proposal also includes $4 billion in new military spending. Sniper fires toward Carter's office **AILANTA** - A snipier fired shots yesterday through two windows of a downtown federal building where former President Jimmy Carter has offered to be interviewed. Clad in bulletproof vests, FBI agents and Atlanta police SWAT team members immediately sealed off a portion of the Richard B. Russell Federal Center. However, authorities said, the sniper apparently fled before police arrived. One of the bullets was found lodged in a 17th-floor window, the same floor that the Carter offices are on. The second shot was fired through a third-floor window. A general Services Administration employee, making a routine inspection of the building, found the bulb on the 17th floor in a vacant office about 11:45 a.m. at the local police station. Priest barred from seeing Walesa WAHSAW, Poland—Military authorities yesterday barred a Roman Catholic priest from visiting detained Solidarity leader Lech Wacsa to tell her that the priest had been a terrorist. Rev. Henry Jankowiak, Walsa's long-time friend and adviser, traveled from the Baltic port of Gdansk to talk the union leader of the birth of his wife, Elizabeth Browne. Jankowski said officials had given him permission to visit Walesa, who is being held in a secret Warsaw location reportedly awaiting a visit from government negotiators, but revoked permission without explanation at the last moment. Kennedy tapes being transcribed WASHINGTON—Former Secretary of State Dean Rusk, responding to news that 600 taped conversations from John F. Kennedy's White House are soon to be made public, said yesterday that microphones were a common sight in Kennedv's Oval Office. The material, which involves 325 meetings and 275 telephone conversations, now is being transcribed at the Kennedy Library in Boston. It ranges from political chit-chat to top secret discussions of such then-current issues as Vietnam, the Cuban missile crisis and Berlin. Library director John Fenn said he announced the existence of the Kenny tapes at the library in 1973. Kennedy's brother, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, said the recordings had been public knowledge for almost nine years, years after he was committed to seeing that the transcripts were needed as soon as possible. The 1973 announcement did not indicate that the tapings were as extensive as they are, nor that at least some of them were made without the knowledge of their designers. 495 arrested in drug crackdown WASHINGTON - A 14-month campaign with the Colombian government resulted in the seizure of 6.4 million pounds of marijuana and was the most successful international marijuana crackdown to date, the Justice Department announced yesterday. U. S. authorities arrested 498 people in the project, Attorney General William French Smith told a news conference. Smith said U.S. personnel seized more than 1.7 million pounds of marijuana, while the government of Colombia seized at least 4.7 million pounds in that country, the bulk of it on the Guajira peninsula, before it could be smuggled out of the country. "The marijuana problem is one I believe we can overcome," Smith said. "I assure you we intend to keep the pressure on in south Florida." Arson squad to investigate downtown fire By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter The Douglas County Arsenal Squad announced yesterday that it would investigate Wednesday night's fire at a college college店, 837 Massachusetts St. The arson squad comprises members of the Lawrence fire and police departments, the Douglas County Police Department, and the KU Police Department. investigation," Rex Johnson, Douglas County sheriff, said. The fire department answered the Massachusetts Street call about 6 p.m. Wednesday. Although it took only an hour to get back, some residents stayed at the scene until 2:30 a.m. fighting spot fires and cleaning up, fire officials said. "We're going to spend the day determining the cause of the fire," Fire Chief Jim McWain said yesterday. "Seven people will be involved in the Three other fires that occurred Wednesday might not be being inducted. THE FIRE was the second at the Royal College Shop in five years. Fire department officials originally estimated damages at $125,000, but erased that figure yesterday pending further investigation. "It will take us a day or two to find how much surrounding building damage there was," McSwain said. The fire did not cause extensive damage to the Jay Shoppe or The Town Shop, which adjoin the Royal College Shop. "We just got a lot of smoke," Pete Whitenight, co-owner of The Town Shop, said. "We're cleaning a lot of soot and debris." Air-Chem, a company from Kansas City, Kan., treated the air in both stores to lessen the smoke smell that could damage merchandise. "They started cleaning about 10:30 last night because it's important you get it right away," Whitenight said. Lawrence firefighters also answered three other calls within five hours Wednesday night after the Massachusetts Street fire started. A roof fire at 1415 Kentucky St. caused by $2,100 worth of damage, fire officials said. Firemen were at the scene for about an hour and a half. Firefighters also extinguished a small basement fire at 705 Rhode Island St. The fire caused no damage. Lawrence trefighters answered their last call of the evening about 11:39 p.m. A fire caused an estimated $70,000 to the home of Raymond Oaklund. Route 3. Attention The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award. Applications are available in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall and the Student Senate Office, 1058 Kansas Union. The Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award was established in 1973 and is presented annually to a student who has demonstrated through his or her actions a real concern for furthering the ideals of the University and of higher education. The Chancellor selects the recipient from nominations presented by the Student Awards Committee. The Award will be presented at the Higher Education Week banquet scheduled for Saturday, March 1, 1982. The applications for the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award must be received by the Student Awards Committee. cio The Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, by Friday, Feb. 5, 1982. Bocky's Bocky's Big Special Hamburgers for 39¢ OR 3 for $1.00 Offer Good Thru Sunday, Jan. 7, 1982 Don't forget every Sunday small sundaes are 49¢ (one of our flavors) Bocky's 2120 W. 9th --- Now that's something to call home about. Remember your last history midterm, when you decided that five heads were better than one? So you pulled an allnighter together and, amazingly, all of you got A's. Some things that happen are just too good to keep to yourself. When you share them with your friends and family out-of-state after 11pm tonight-or any time between 11pm Friday and 5pm Sunday-you'll save 60%*: Reach out and touch someone. Bell p rth si Southwestern Bell 'Discount applies to calls dialed One Plus without operator assistance' University Daily Kansan, February 5, 1982 re want you aid. answered e hours r the the st. Docky St. at the a half, a washed a le Island ved their :20 p.m. $70,000 d Oshel. prths New center to fight Lou Gehrig's disease By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., will begin a new effort Feb. 17 to stop a disease of kills that kills almost all of the people it strikes. The disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, attacks the central nervous system of its victims, causing paralysis and, usually, death. ALS is commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease, after former first baseman of the New York Yankees and former general manager that prematurely ended the disease. The program, which includes a new center designed for neurological research, was constructed with funds from organizations such as the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. A $100,000 pledge from the national ALS organization also helped pay for the center. "The KU Med Center was chosen as the site of a new ALS research center because of the excellence of the scientific expertise available, and because of the interest of qualified scientists," H. Eames Bishop, ALS Society of America president, said recently. The new ALS center will encourage accelerated medical research of ALS in this area, and expand the present service to patients afflicted with it. Dewey Ziegler, chairman of the department of neurology at the Med Center said. BESIDES researching the cause of the disease, the Med Center assists other doctors in diagnosing and treating ALS patients. The new center will research other neurological diseases in cooperation with the Muscular Dystrophy Association of America. Current ALS research projects at the Med Center, Ziegler said, include studies of abnormalities in nerve cells, the brain and immune cells and patterns of the disease. Keith Worthington, chairman of the Greater Kansas City chapter of the ALS Society of America, and his wife, Sue, plan to raise funds for ALS. They also provide help to individuals who have the disease. Worthington contracted ALS eight years ago and now breathes with the aid of a respirator. He works weekday afternoons planning fund-raisers for ALS and keeping track of the latest clinical developments. Besides helping to guide this weekend's Phi Delta Theta fund-raising basketball tournament in Lawrence the Worthingtons are attempting to plan several other projects throughout Kansas. "The mailing program was slow starting, what with so many other charities this time of year," she said. A mail campaign was one project that the Kansas City ALS chapter started recently. Patients who are stricken with ALS write letters asking the mailing campaign has raised 165,000 so far. Worthington said. OTHER fund-raising projects in the making include a tennis tournament and a hot-air balloon race in the Kansas City area. In addition to the fund raising, the Worthingtons run a program to help ALS patients deal with the mobility problems associated with the disease. Frat fund-raiser starts tonight By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter This is the third year that the fraternity has raised money to combat ALS, but the first year that the funds raised will go directly to the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. for ALS research. The Phi Delta Theta fraternity's annual basketball tournament to raise money for Leogh Behrig's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, begins at 7 onathe at the South Junior High school yrm, 234 Louisiana St. ALS is a disease that attacks the central nervous system, causing paralysis. It usually is fatal. Kirk Worthington, Phi Delta Theta philanthropy chairman, said the Kansas University Endowment would handle the gift to the Mert Center. In the last two years, the Phi Delts have raised $9,200 for the ALS Society of America. WORTHINGTON SAID the KU chapter adopted ALS as its special project because many people did not know about the disease. Worthington said another reason was that Lou Gehrig, a former first baseman for the New York Yankees, was a Phil Delta Theta. Worthington's father, Keith, is the chairman of the Greater Kansas City chapter of the ALS Society and a victim of the disease. Kirk Worthington said the local chapter was interested in getting other Phi Delta Theta houses involved in its project. "We're trying to get this picked up as a national philanthropy project, he The fraternity has collected $2,700 this year from area businesses, in addition to $1,500 in alumni contributions. The Phi Delta will kick off the tournament with a party at the Entertainer, 201 W. 8th St., this afternoon to 2 from 6 p.m. A new local band, Forestie, will play, and the Phi Delts will provide beer. Worthington said that people who already had purchased $19 tournament tickets could get into the party at reduced rates. Women with tickets will be charged $1 at the door and men with tickets will be charged $28. All tournament tickets will be charged a dollar extra and given a ticket to attend any of the tournament games. Sixteen teams from five universities are entered in the tournament, which will begin Friday night and conclude Sunday evening at b. KU teams paid $75 to enter the tournament; visiting teams paid $65. The Phi Delts have scheduled a women's lup-up competition during half time of the championship match for representatives of the 11 KU sororites that helped sell tickets for the tournament. Besides first-place trophies, the Phil Dell will award with the Kelworth Worthington Most Valuable Player award and the Chris Golub Sportsman trophy. on campus 81 Directing Projects will BEGIN AT 3:30 P.M. in 209 Murphy Hall. THEATRE AUDITIONS for 715 and A SYMPOSIUM ON "ADULT DEVELOPMENT THEORY: IMPLICATIONS FOR COUNSELING" will be held at 3:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. Vivian McCoy, assistant to the dean of continuing education, will chair the meeting. THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. TODAY THE ASTRONOMY ASSOCIATES OF Lawrence and the Society of Physics Students will sponsor A SLIDE SHOW on SATURDAY at 7 p.m. in 421 Lindsey Lane. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will present a slide show on Puerto Rico, "Project 2020," at 7 p.m. in the Council Roan of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW Weekend Arts GROUP will meet from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union. THE SIMULATIONS GAMING SUNDAY THE KANSAS CITY PHILHARMONIC, featuring Paul Robinson, flutist, will perform a concert at 8 p.m. in the Music Hall, 13th and 14th store streets, Kansas City. Mo. For ticket information, call 810-482-9428. TOMORROW SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP will begin at 10 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. The Lawrence Arts Center will sponsor a MOUNTAIN DULCIMER WORKSHIP at Haskell Indian Junior College. For registration information call the Arts Center, 843-8444 THE SUNDAY EVENING SUpper at 5:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Orde Ave., will feature a talk by Sandra Zindams-Swartz on "FEMINISM AND CHRISTIANITY." A CONCERT will be performed by Kris and Ron Hansen of the BLACK OAK DULCIMER COMPANY OF MOSSURI at 8 p.m. at the atrium of the Vermont streets. Tickets will be available at the door for $5. TGIF at THE HAWK Balloon-a-Gram "Plea to the Occasion" SEND A BALLOON-A-GRAM! P.O. Box 1222 Laurentia K 60048 Maineapolis, MN 50048 SUNDAY A BENEFT CONCERT FOR THE PI KAPPA LAMBDA SCHOLARSHIP FUND will be performed by the University Symphony Orchestra, Jeffrey Powell and Leon Burke III conducting, at 3:30 p.m. at the University Theatre. Tickets will be on sale at the door, $3 for public and $1 for students. THE FRIENDS OF JAZZ will conclude its concert series with a concert featuring the UMKC JAZZ BAND AND KANSAS CITY BROMBONDISTS Arch Martin and John begin at 7:30 p.m. in White Recital Hall at the UMKC Performing Arts Center, 4949 Cherry St., Kansas City, Mo. For ticket information, call 913-618-5200. JERRY HARPER ATTORNEY 901 KENYUCKY Suite 204 841-9485 Boyd's Coins-Antiques Class Rings Boyd's Silver Coins Gold and Silver Coins 711 New Hampshire Lake Winnipesaukee 911-642-6530 Lake Winnipesaukee 911-642-6530 GRAND W.C. Frank 23rd & Iowa Next to the Food Barn GRAND OPENING GRAND OPENING Special All Meat W.C. FRANK Hot & Delicious 25¢ Now thru Sunday February 14 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES INCLUDE Hiland Chips Three Varieties . . . 24¢ Crispy, Kosher Dill Slice Just . . . 12¢ All Meat Polish Sausage Just . . . 57¢ Melted Cheese Added to Sandwich 14¢ Add Chili or Kraut to your Frank . . . 15¢ All Meat Footlong Hot & Delicious . . . 65¢ GRAND OPENING Special Litre of Coke 45 W.C. Frank "A Frank We Can All Afford" 23rd & Iowa HOURS - 11 am to 11 pm Friday & Sat. till 2 am Lawrence Phone 842-9672 Q OPENING GRAND OPENING Special All Meat W.C. FRANK Hot & Delicious 25 Now thru Sunday February 14 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES INCLUDE Hiland Chips Three Varieties... 24¢ All Meat Polish Sausage Just... 57¢ Add Chili or Kraut to your Frank... 15¢ Crispy, Kosher Dill Slice Just... 12¢ Melted Cheese Added to Sandwich 14¢ All Meat Footlong Hot & Delicious... 65¢ GRAND OPENING Special Litre of Coke 45 GRAND OPENING Special All Meat W.C. FRANK Hot & Delicious 25¢ W.C. Frank "A Frank We Can All Afford" 23rd & Iowa HOURS - 11 am to 11 pm Friday & Sat. till 2 am Lawrence Phone 842-9672 On the record A man robbed a local business Wednesday after telling a clerk that he wanted to rent a car. Police said a 20- to 25-year-old male robbed J.W.'s Fire Extinguisher Company, which is combined with Yesterday's Car Rental, and took between $400 and $450 at 1:45 p.m. Wednesday. The suspect entered the business at 1509 W. 6th St. and asked the clerk about renting a car. When the clerk opened a desk drawer to find information about threats to threaten the clerk. The suspect, who was wearing a brown coat and brown or $18.90 (1000 Printed Copies) HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. — 842-3610 Service Beyond Duplication ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95 / day $60.00 / wk $225.00 / mo 25 FREE miles per day 841 011 808 W 24th THIEVES STOLE a dark green-gray Volkswagen Rabbit Wednesday from D&E Tire, 10th and Vermont streets, police said. black gloves, fled on foot, police said. There have been no arrests. clip and save THEIEVS ALSO STOLE $179 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at West Hills Apartments, 1021 Emery Rd., police said. Thieves entered the parking garage on Wednesday and Pioneer cable deck out of the car's dashband. Police have no suspects. Thieves drove the car from the parking lot between 2 and 3 p.m. Police said the keys were in the car, which was valued at $600. There are no suspects. 841-0101 808 W 24th offer expires Feb. 28, 1982 WHAT'S THE WORLD COMING TO! ers Male Strippers Mud Wrestling Julian X-Rated Movies Burlesup AND NOW MINGLES ANNOUNCES ITS FRIDAY NIGHT SHRIMP PEEL SHRIMP PE. ONLY $1.50 PER 1/4 POUND SPECIAL DRINK PRICES 4 PM-8 PM RATED: XXX TREMELY GOOD NO CAMERAS PLEASE! Friday Night 95' Well Drinks from 8:00 to close MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE MINGLES LOUNGE 2222 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Ks. 842-7030 Ext.136 Presents "Truthful at his very best. A film of exceptional beauty and conviction. Catherine Deneve gives an exquisite performance."—jane Mallasin, New York Times SUA FILMS FRIDAY & SATURDAY Deneuve, Depardieu, Truffaut PG The Last Metro A story of love and conflict 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 $1.50 United Artists Classics Copyright © 1988 United Artists Corporation "THX 1138" technicolor* from warner bros. GP A Visit the future where love is the ultimate crime. ROBERT DUVALL MAGGIE McOMIE 12:00 MIDNIGHT SUNDAY FROM THE DIRECTOR OF In the Realm of the Senses The Ceremony The most acclaimed film to come from Japan in the last twenty years, "Nagisa Ghajaria's masterpiece" the stingling touch of a Buena is evident 2:00 p.m. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM 2:00 p.m. WOODRUPP ROBERTSUM 914-567-8342 Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 5, 1982 Opinion Pre-enrollment—at last Just a nod from Strong Hall, and suddenly, simply, the Allen Field House enrollment hasse is gone. Well, maybe not so simply. Last Monday, Chancellor Gene A. Budig approved a computerized on-line pre-enrollment system to go into effect for spring semester 1983. Eliminating KU's archaic enrollment system took more than a stroke from the chancellor's pen. Years of work by committees of faculty, students and administrators laid the groundwork for the new system. And at last, with a helpful boost from the chancellor, their work has paid off. Since 1974, committees from the University Senate executive committee and the Student Senate have researched the problem, collected opinions and petitioned the administration for the new enrollment system. The first prediction was that the University of Kansas would have computerized pre-enrollment by 1976. Then 1978. But late is better than never and the change is a welcome one. There is no way to make enrollment painless and new headaches will surely develop under the new system. Students may be trading long lines at the card tables for long lines at the terminal. And sections will still fill up. Someone will always have to take Spanish 102 at 7:30 a.m. or English 101 at 4:30 p.m. Only time will tell if computerized pre-enrollment can fulfill its promise. But the new system can't be worse then the old one and it may turn out to be a great deal better. The University may only be taking a small step toward improving service for its students, but thanks to those who have worked on the development of the new system, it's taking a giant step into the 20th century. Severance tax shaky base to support public education In his opening remarks to the Kansas Legislature last month, Gov. John Carlin proposed a source of revenue that he said would reduce the property tax burden on Kansas citizens, increase state aid to public schools around the state and help subsidize highway maintenance from money saved out of the state's general fund. That source of revenue is in the form of a severance tax. You know, that tax that Carlin pushed last year to slap on all the big, mean and rich oil producers in Kansas. Our hero! Carlin looks like a true champion of the people. Of course it could be coincidental that an election is just around the corner and the president is going to build a political strategy around these days. Carlin has presented a case that admittedly the pretty good at a first glance. But believe it or not, there is another side to the severance tax story; we just never hear it. In a sense, a severance tax already exists in Kansas. The Department of Energy has ruled DAN BOWERS MARY CARTER that the present ad valorem tax on leased land and equipment used by gas and oil, qualifies as a form of a severance tax because it is based on production factors. Through this form of taxation, figures from the state revenue department indicate that the oil and gas industry carries an average of 10 percent of the local tax burden across the state. Admittedly, there are states that tax their oil producers at much higher rates than Kansas do, but when those comparisons begin, there are other factors that need to be examined. Although Carlin argues that Kansas is one of few states without a severance tax, most states with a severance tax don't have the ad valorem property tax along with it. An additional 5-percent税 would put Kansas producers under a tax rate equal to those in most of the other oil-producing states. The fact is, oil wells in Kansas just don't produce at the level of those in Texas, Oklahoma It's like comparing apples and oranges. Over 90 percent of the producing wells in Kansas fall under the "stripper" category. Stripper wells, which produce 77 percent of all oil produced in Kansas, are those that produce less than 10 barrels of oil a day. The average Kansas oil well produces at a paltry clip of 3.6 barrels a day, according to figures provided by the Kansas Independent Oil and Gas Association. This contrasts with average figures of 5.6 per day in Oklahoma and 26.4 barrels per day in Colorado. Alaska, which has only 642 wells, produced one times the amount of oil that the 47,000 wells received in a year. What this boils down to is that most of the oil The problems caused by plugging these wells would be twofold. First, the closing of thousands of marginal wells and the subsequent drop-off in exploration would cause drastic layoffs in an industry that employs nearly 38,000 Kansans. Secondly, the extra tax could set off a chain reaction that in the long run would produce fewer tax dollars. Less exploration, closed wells and unemployment in the industry would generate fewer and fewer tax dollars as more marginal wells were shut down. This problem is coupled with the fact that the oil and gas industry is a拈ing one in Kansas. Since 1960, oil production in Kansas has dropped from more than 120 million barrels a year to less than 60 million barrels. Only in the past eight years it has shown a slight upwing, and that can be attributed to the fact that drilling and exploration activity has tripped since 1973. If the state begins counting on a particular source of income, as Carlin has by including the severance tax in this year's budget proposal, it may be that from this source the state begin decreasing over the years. The state tax commissioner miscalculated the amount of money that the new tax would raise, and the state is hard-pressed for funds to meet its sizeable commitment to education. By guessing wrong on projections for oil and gas production, North Dakota found itself *100 million* short. North Dakota learned this the hard way last year when it imptaled a 6.5-percent increase on its crude oil prices. While the figure would not be as great in Kansas, declining production trends would continue to chip away at the $125 million Carlin saw the tax would raise for fiscal year 1983. And there is one widespread misconception that should be cleared up. Higher education will not see one penny of the revenues generated by a severance tax. The severance tax revenues would be collected by the state and placed into a special fund for education. This money would then be allocated to the public school systems. This would free some money that is normally taken from the state's general fund for school aid. The money from the general fund would then be placed into a special fund for highway maintenance. There would be no additional funds to allocate unless choices chose not to cut local property Any property tax relief would be short-lived. Furthermore, the severance tax is setting a dangerous precedent by burdening one industry with the solution to the state's budget woes. As State Rep. William Bunting, R-Topeka, said last week that basic budget issues should be handled in basic trust. Don't need we it. Or does the state have any budget toes? As State Rep. William Ruten-Boos? "We have over $183 million in the state assets that we're said," he added. "We are one of the most financially successful companies." **USPS 58640)** Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. In Kansas, students are required to attend a university activity, Kansas University in Douglass County for $149 per year or the $24 fee year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 a semester, paid during the student activity fee. **Postmaster:** Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, KANSAN The University Daily editor Vanessa Herron Managing Editor Editorial Editor Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Assignment Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Econ Instructor Editor Makeup Editor Wire Editors Food Editors Photo Staff Photographers Business Manager Natalea Judie Travel Harrison Karen Schulster Jane George George Game Joe Meech Joe Reibe, Rebecca Chaney Steve Banzakha Ron Haggettrom Gino Strippi Cerel Heath Lisa Masoubi, Lillian Davis, Sharon Appelbaum Liam Macleod, Fiona Macleod, Liam Macleod Ben Bigler Joe Hardesty, John Hendamer, John Elmore B greenspan, Tracey Thompson, Mark McDennis Retail Sales Manager National Sales Manager Campus Manager Classified Manager Production Manager Trainings Manager Sales and Marketing Adviser General Manager and News Advisor Business Manager Natalea Judie Travel Harrison Karen Schulster Jane George George Game Joe Meech Joe Reibe, Rebecca Chaney Steve Banzakha Ron Haggettrom Gino Strippi Cerel Heath Lisa Masoubi, Lillian Davis, Sharon Appelbaum Liam Macleod, Fiona Macleod, Liam Macleod Ben Bigler Joe Hardesty, John Hendamer, John Elmore B greenspan, Tracey Thompson, Mark McDennis A man fires a rifle. I WANT TO THANK RONALD REAGAN-- GORCHA! THAT'S MY THIRD KID TODAY! --AND THE U.S. TAXPAYERS-- --FOR GIVING EL SALVADOR-- WHEEEEEEEE! NAILED THAT LADY RIGHT IN THE CHEST! --MORE MILITARY AID AND MORE MONEY-- BECAUSE WE'VE MADE SUCH PROGRESS-- HAW! TOOK THE HEAD OFF THAT OLD MAN! --IN THE AREA OF HUMAN RIGHTS! FOR GIVING EL SALVADOR—WHEEEEEEEE! NAILED THAT LADY RIGHT IN THE CHEST!--MORE MILITARY AID AND MORE MONEY-- BECAUSE WE'VE MADE SUCH PROGRESS HAW! TOOK THE HEAD OFF THAT OLD MAN! IN THE AREA OF HUMAN RIGHTS! --IN THE AREA OF HUMAN RIGHTS! Sun setting quickly on solar energy If Jimmy Carter released a sunrise of federal aid over the infant solar energy industry, Ronald Reagan is reeling in Apollo for the sunset. The Reagan administration has reversed the federal role in solar development. Where Carter enthusiastically sponsored research efforts, he has been unable to compete on its own with other technologies. We ought to be wondering how Reagan is changing the future of solar energy in this country, and whether we can plan on solar power as a real option in coming years. Dwindling numbers in budgetleders show the crash that solar energy has taken among federal priorities: Carter had requested $707 million for solar research for fiscal 1982. Reagan cut that figure by more than half, to $303 million. His administration's Office of Management and Budget is calling for only $70 million to be spent next year. If the OMB proposal is followed, the government will be spending $1 on solar research next year for every $100 the Carter administration spent. Carter had given the responsibility of federal solar research to the Solar Energy Research Institute, based in Golden, Colorado. The Reagan administration has already, we could say, lightened the institute's work load substantially. Its budget of $120 million has been reduced to $50 million. Another institute researchers have lost their positions. Reagan has said on several occasions that he hoped to cancel the credits sooner. As for tax credits for using solar techniques, Reagan is looking forward to the day the credits will be history. Credits of 40 percent of the installed cost of home solar energy systems first became effective in 1978 and the program in 1986 for the credits to continue success stories. The total picture is one of a toddler, uncertain and uncoordinated, but The number of homes incorporating solar techniques into their designs is growing slowly, according to the Internal Revenue Service. About 58,000 taxpayers used solar devices in their homes and claimed the tax credit in 1978. In the following year, 61,000 people used solar devices. The figures say that 115,000 people took advantage of the solar credit during 1980. Still, inflation and high interest rates have dampened the growth of solar sales, which PAMELA LARSON JEFF THOMAS Without the tax credit, the industry probably would have much less than its current levels. many in the industry had wagered on. Several firms have closed shop in the last two years. Although Reagan is cutting research funds, one last battle in basic research is still being fought. The prize is the ability to generate electricity from the sun, not merely cut out so much of it that commercial solar energy systems only use the sun's heat directly to conserve energy. The bustle of today's research focuses mostly on silicon cells, about 3 to 6 inches in diameter, which absorb sunlight on one side and within the width of a human hair, transmitting electricity. The little hot spots go by a longer, more cumbersome name-photovoltaics. The trick is making the cells pay. So far, a cell mann hasn't been developed that will generate electricity. When Reagan came into office he faced a choice on how to deal with solar energy. He could have continued research subsidies, or even increased them, to develop marketable solar energy systems, especially photovoltaics, as soon as possible. Or he could continue the federal work needed for private firms to make solar energy systems sell. He chose the second option He chose the second option. Competition drives American ingenuity, Reagan said. If solar power is destined to work, the market will tell us, he said. To a point, Reagan is right. The energy alternatives we eventually rely on must be able to survive without riding the government's back. But sponsoring research and developing country's energy system aren't the same time it is cooperation and the other is dependence. Reagan is costing us time. His faith in the marketplace won't replace the millions of dollars in research he has withdrawn. Over the next four years, federal investment in all renewable energy sources will be $2 billion less due to Reagan's policies, according to Bloomberg. The government days have sent a signal that will divert private investors from renewable sources as well. Of course, canceling the solar-home tax credit should be unthinkable. That stroke would turn an insecure field into a floundering one. The industry would need all the more time to revamp when Reagan's energy prices hit the magic point. The bottom line is clear: Reagan has retarded the solar development in this country. As utility consumers, we'll be the losers as we wait for market prices to rise or for companies to invest in solar energy. Then more money will go to research. Later, problems will be solved. Reagan could have shortened the time between higher energy prices and the wide infusion of alternatives. Reagan, evidently a leader with our energy costs, cohesed otherwise. Pot Shots "Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio? Our nation turns its lonely eyes to you . . . ooh." When 'Joltin' Joe roared centerfield in Yankee Stadium with his graceful lope, he caught the effortless innocence of America's post-World War II period. Then the '6s set in. Kids effortlessb Stepin Space crushed main street instead of centerfield. Joe became a bit of nostalgia in a Paul Simon Joe returned, selling coffee makers, and sometimes I think Simon should revise that line from "Mrs. Robinson" to say "Our students turn their bleary eyes to you . . ." on the snow-coated, windswet KU campus, it's a bafflingly common sight—a student, he bent against the mercelless assault of the winter wind, trudging determinedly along, clad in heavy coat, thick trousers, and no hat. got a Mr. Coffee for Christmas, making the third to infiltrate the cooperative house I live in. Late at night, under the silent stars, while the rest of the house snoozes innocently, our three Mr. Coffees can be heard burbling away, undermining the early-to-bed values of DiMaggio's heyday. The emit a dark, menacing-looking concoction, which steams and hisses like some mad scientist's potion as it fills our nuddy Mr. Coffee beakers. we gulp it spasmodically and grind away again at laboratory assignments. Whenever I spot one of these hatless unfortunates—and it's often—my mind's eye Joe, you were the all-American hero. The Yankee Clipper. How could you become the evil hunch of the insidious Mr. Coffee? A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z travel back to the Cincinnati Bengals—San Diego Chargers NFL playoff game, where scores of over-lubricated fans cavorted sloppily on national television. There's truth to the old Boy Scout saying that if your feet get cold, put your hat on. A person's head, because of the brain's copious storage for fat, can absorb any other part of the human anatomy. This bit of information is nothing new to anyone who makes a living working outdoors. Glance about at the facilities operations workers in their seemingly unremitting war on the air force. On a bitterly cold day, a bare head among them is as rare as a stegosaurus. But then, pulling on a frayed old stocking hat, or a baseball cap smudged with the dirt of warmer days, is to some a betrayal of the canons of fashion. Oh, well. A hat, no matter how gritty or fancy it looks, doesn't do much for a $2 haircut. Well, it's finally happened. A hard-core Wildcat has become a bop-a-gun Jawhawk. I am told transformations almost as startling have taken place throughout history: brainwashing, the rape of the Sabines, and the metamorphosis of a labor leader into a conservative president of the United States, to name just a few. But, as for Tom Bontagh the change in question, well, I've never heard of a documented case. Raised in Manhattan for ten years, I never imagined I would one day root with all the enthusiasm I could muster for "that school down the river." I had been taught that purple was the perfection in combination of colors blue and red, that the Jawhawk was a blue jacket, that publicish imaginations and that KU students had been proved genetically inferior. I learned to chai stunchaingly, "Eat 'em up. eat 'em up KSU," said foul revisions of the verse. But that's all finished, thanks to almost three years of attendance at Harvard on the-Kaw. Indoctrination was painstaking and traumatic, but the final step was quick and I woke up this morning to find myself screaming, "Eat 'em up, eat 'em up, K. Ui!" p rth si University Daily Kansan, February 5, 1982 Page 5 Alcohol From page 1 cluding beer, without any problems to themselves, their families or society. Boranayak said the tax increase also was unfair because it would promote expansion of alcoholism programs at a time when all other agencies were having to cut back. He said the increase would give the field of alcoholism programs "free license to balloon and expand its activities when other state agencies, private sector are asked to economize theirs." The increase also would elevate Kansas' beer tax above an already extraordinarily high rate, he said. Now, beer in Kansas, at 18 cents per gallon, is 50 percent higher than in Nebraska, 225 percent higher than in Colorado and 300 percent higher than in Missouri. George Heckman, chairman for the Kansas Citizens Advisory Committee on Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse, admitted that the beer tax in Kansas was already higher than the Colorado and Missouri raised enough state revenue to compensate for the low sales tax on beer. Moonies in other areas of law. The most prominent one that comes to my mind is undue influence. From page 1 Steven Holley, Prairie Village psychologist, said that because cult members did not come for treatment of their own free will, professional counselors and social workers risked losing their licenses to practice if they became involved in deprogramming. HE SAID if mental health professionals could legally and ethically treat cult members, they would understand deprogramming more and increase its effectiveness. Parents risk kidnapping charges if they try to take their child out of a cult. Tillman said. "Because of the threat of criminal charges for kidnapping, it can cost large sums of money to get someone out of a destructive cult," Tillman said. "These costs can range from $20,000 to $80,000 for the deprogrammer, the security, the travel of all parties and the rehabilitation of the victims. Many families cannot afford this amount of money, even if they are willing to take the risk." Student Senate committees produced several potential resolutions among other action during their first meetings of the semester this week, Lisa Ashner, student executive committee chairman, said yesterday. By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter Senate committees start work Ashner said academic affairs, communications, student rights, services and sports committees had reviewed their committee charges and determined attendance policies. "Committee attendance has been real good as compared to last year, when three or four people She said 15 to 20 people were serving on each committee. At the student rights meeting Wednesday, that committee voted unanimously to propose a resolution to the Senate to declare Feb. 14 Have a Heart for Poland Day. "In support of the Friends of Solidarity group, we will encourage organized living groups on campus." program," Jim Cramer, student senator, said yesterday. Money collected from living groups for assistance to send to Poland to buy CARE packages of food. As the newly elected rights committee on election resolution and present it to the Senate meeting We'll The academic affairs committee, which meet Monday, elected Sarah Duckers, Dalma junior, and Bill McLennan, Lawrence sophomore, to serve as chairman and assistant chairman. Asher said that committee would review a report prepared by the Commission on the draft resolution. The communications committee discussed producing a slide presentation to inform organized living groups about Senate. A Senate committee meeting was also considered. "It will explain SenEx, University Council and other things that don't fit in the record," Ashner said of the publication. "It's a place where committee members can see what's going on." David Zimmerman, finance and auditing committee chairman, wrote a resolution stating that the Senate would not consider approving a $4.50 campus privilege fee to support the athletic department until either the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation or the KU administration had completed a study of the possibilities for beer sales in Memorial Stadium. He said he was not asking for a decision on beer in the stadium, only an investigation. His resolution will go through the rights and sports committees when they meet jointly Feb. Although the cultural affairs committee had not yet met, Ashner said, chairman Mollie Mitchell planned to assist in organizing a spring Celebration of Arts. Ashner said the committee helped Jacqueline Davis, director of the committee, and the chief part of the committee's activities in past years. Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 "It itt by the wayside, but we're going to start again," Ahnher said. The finance and auditing committee will meet for the first time Tuesday. 841 DIET To Wow At The Lounger Game DIET CENTER It Is A Natural! Park New Orleans Medical Center 841 DIET SATURDAY••10 p.m.-Midnight —House Drinks $1.00— SUNDAY SPECIALS 75¢ PITCHERS from 1 p.m..5 p.m $1.75 SUPER SCHOONERS Reg. $2.75, 60-oz. —Anytime Sunday— VALID ID CARDS Instantly - Laminated - Color available at I - DENT SYSTEMS' Room 1.14A Ramada Inn 841-5905 Monday 50' PITCHERS from 7 p.m.-Midnight $1.00 Bar Drinks Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. We invite all Club Members & Their Guest. Memberships Available LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley 842 8267 843 8717 Prudential [Bank Attn] —TUESDAY Ladies Night 50° for a glass at champagne 9:00-12:00 10' draws for everyone 9:00-12:00 1401 West 7th 843-0540 the SANCTUARY Phi Delta Theta's Seventh Annual Basketball Tournament for the benefit of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis February 5, 6, & 7 The Phi Delt's would like to thank Lawrence businesses and individuals for their contributions and KU fraternities and sororites for buying and selling tickets. Because of such outstanding help, we hope to donate in excess of $4,000. - 16 Fraternity teams from 5 universities competing for championship - 11 KU sororities participating in lay-up competition - Friday night, all day Saturday and Sunday at South Jr. High. 2734 Louisiana - One dollar ticket good for entire tournament and Raffle Prize Shootoff at Championship Game - Ticket and $1 for girls, $2 for guys for party at the Entertainer, 8th and Vermont, 2-6 this afternoon. All the beer you can drink. The following individuals would like to express their Deep Appreciation for and wish a Fond Farewell to William T. "Bill" Vicary manager of Naismith Hall, 1971-1982 and our friend. Nellie & Lawrence Adams Dale Allington Erik Bakker Peter Bakker Pauline Ban Dane Boat Mark Brown Mary Anne Brown Robert Brown Lois Clark Steve Clark Andy Cohen Susan Cooksey Elliott Cumonow Frances Dahlem Parkle Debbie Finkel Dave Green Randy Gordon Stuart Harwood Steve & Susie Haase David Hickey Traci Hicks Carol Hochscheid Dary Housworth Gayle Housworth Teresa Krambeer Rod Ligon Ann Lindenbaum Mr. & Mrs. Maddog Dr. & Mrs. Donald L. Marchbanks Phillip K. Marchbanks Adrian Marrullier Cora McLanahan Travis Meyer Bill Mize Colen Newstrom Jim Oglesby Beth Parks Rheta Pestinger Jeff Pishny Greg Poulos Peg Pritchard Steve Quatrocky Melanie Register Dan Roche All the Rogers Robert Rothman Jeff Row Laurie Schwartz Evelyn Scott John Spottswood Bud Stallworth Eunice Stallworth Jerry Stallworth Douglas M. "Ziggy" Stewart Ed Waller Bret Wasser Mr.Wonderful Jay Woodward This week send our FTD Hearts & Flowers Bouquet. Valentine's Day is Sunday, February 14. Happy Mother's Day You're sure to capture her heart with the romantic fresh flowers. Heart Stick Pin, and exclusive FTD Glass Heart Dish that make up our FTD HEARTS & FLOWERS™ Bouquet It's romantic. And says all the things you've been meaning to say 'so call or visit us today Because every intine deserves disney.' westridge Floral 6TH AND KASOLD LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 helping you say it right. FTD Old Carpenter Hall Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse INDIAN HEADWREATH the finest in deep pit BBQ flavor Any Medium BBQ Dinner $3.75* Any Large BBQ Dinner $4.75* Save $1.00 This Weekend Combo Rib * dinners not included Enjoy Coke No Compounds Accepted With This Offer Good Feb. 3 thru Feb. 7 719 Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks. Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 5. 1980 Spare time A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. Charles Oldfather, actor, politician, teacher, father, musician and golfer, discusses his acting avocation. Actor plays many roles in real life By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Charles Oldfather's voice was deep and resonant, more suitable for a theater stage than the closeness of a corner in the Kansas Union Cafeteria. He lit another cigarette and began to talk about his acting. about his acting. "To play someone, you actually become that someone," he said. "And that means blitting out who you are." He moved forward to the table in front of him and reached for the ashtray. "You immerse yourself in that someone else and then you become that person," he said, as he gently tapped his ashes into the tray. inge 191-year-old actor, singer, golfer and retired KU law professor immerses himself in "I like to live my life fully," he said, laughing at his own understatement. Oldfather's affiliation with the University began in 1950, two years after graduating from Harvard University Law School. He served as KU faculty representative to the Big Eight and NCAA for eight years. In 78s he became the University's attorney. His connection with KU hardly ended with his retirement in 1975. For 20 years, Oldfather has been one of the featured professors on the KLWN radio show Professor's Pigskin Picks. Last spring, he taught a course in Insurance law. He frequently returns to teach other courses. Oldfather is also a member of the Lawrence Board of Education and is active in the Lawrence Symphony and Lawrence Community Theatre. What the father of seven really keeps busy with these days is his acting. "I keep busy." Oldfather said. "I like to say I got my start in acting at the age of 13 playing Josephine in H.M.S. Pinafore in an Eastern boys' prep school," he said. Although he no longer portrays women, oldFather's latest roles have been in plays like "Cat on a Hot Tm Roof," The Sunshine Tree, and "On Golden Pond" and "The Good Doctor." "In a way, my performance in 'The Good Man' is my most memorable one." Old- daughter said. The Topeka Civic Theater's production of Neil Simon's "Good Doctor" won first prize for civic theater productions in the United States in 1980, he said. Oldfather's latest play opened last night in the Opera House at Osage City. The play is a thriller, appropriately titled "Sealth." Oldfather plays the lead character, Andrew. "I play an effete English gentleman of some means who is totally immersed in playing games of all sorts," he said. "This gentleman decides to avenge himself on his wife's lover." Oldfather slipped into a British accent as he went on to talk about the play. He inudied in a few lines of the play to demonstrate his British mannerisms. "Acutily, you just talk in a clipped way," he said. "to the case in which he slipped into his part." But acting isn't always easy for Oldfather. “It’s been interesting for me to find that acts takes a lot of intellectual activity,” he "There's so much work involved in finding out what the author wanted his character to do, and I'm not ready yet." Oldfather said that he is always nervous before a performance. "The day you aren't nervous is the day you don't perform anymore," he said. "I'm [waits nervous, nervous as a cat." Despite the nervousness, intense concentration and long hours acting requires of him. Oldfather said the rewards made it all worthbubble. "The rewards are feeling that you've done a pretty hard job well," he said. Oldfather became pensive, the character ines etched in his face growing deeper for an inspiration. "I think the ultimate compliment for any actor is for someone who knows him very well to come up to him after a performance and tell him 'I forgot you who were,'" he said. O'Malley gives up 'tinsel town' for school Staff Writer By CATHERINE BEHAN With experiences like this, why would Terence O'Malley be a graduate student, who kept her job as ordinary? Could you bite into a fake hamburger and look as if you loved the imaginary piece of meat? Or stand in front of a camera and crew singing the "MelloYelo" soft drink jingle in your un- money out come back, after learning that it we can to meet celebrities and to try out for comedy roles. "Sometimes I couldn't believe the things I was doing in the auditions." O'Malley said recently. "It's a look the product people are looking for," he said. Product people such as McDonalds and Coca-Cola bigwigs, tell casting directors and agents what kind of "look" they want for a specific role and the agents send out likely prospects. For O'Malley, people looking for a young male, 20 to 25 years old, six feet tall or over, with youthful looks and brown hair could sometimes see his face on the test films. "You might think you're pretty special," O'Malley said, "then you walk into a room with 20 clones of you sitting there waiting to try out for the same part." O'Malley never got a part in any commercials he tried out for during the year and a half he was in Hollywood, but he did get two small parts in upcoming movies. In his first movie, the controversial, soon-to-be-released, Frances Ford Corp film, "One Man, Two Worlds," he directed. His second role was a small part in the upcoming low-budget film, "Home Run." In "Home Run," O'Malley is a member of a baseball team called the Cougars. He glances at the Cougar cap sitting in a corner of his room, and smiles, remembering the day. In one scene, the team sits around a table in a bar playing "Cougar roulette." The actors were supposed to hold beer cans near their faces, hoping that the can each of them was holding was not the can that had been shaken up. "We started filming at midnight Sunday and it was about 7 a.m. we started playing beer on the set." But, all of the cans were shaken up so each of the actors was doused with beer. The scene had to be shot and re-shot to get close-up reaction shots as well as the group shot. "After wrapping at mid-morning and driving some soaked in beer, I really understand why actors often earn great amounts of money. It is work—in a different sort of way," O Mallay said. O'Malley came back to the Midwest to study television production at KU. He is an alumnus of Rockhurst High School in Kansas City, Mo., and graduated from Towson University in 1980, where he majored in English. And although he acted in high school and in college before he went west to, as he called it, "Tinsel Town," he said his current goal was to work in television production. There he met and talked to such famous people as Julie Andrews, "She's sweet," and Roger Moore, "He's exactly the same off camera as on-polished, debonair and smoking an eight-volt battery." While he tried out for commercials and, o'Malley held himself by working with the company's former executive never. "I saw the good side and the bad side," he said. "Now I'm going to concentrate on going to Almost meeting celebrities at the hotel was thrilling. O'Maley said he was glad to be back "I got a lot of grief for wearing designer jeans," he said. Esquire photo exhibit creates visual overload O'Malley said one hard part of coming back to the Midwest was the difference between the avant-garde attitude in Hollywood and the "campus ambiance," with the student uniform. By DAVID HENRY Contributing Reviewer rive he lives like many other KU students, in a studio apartment with his stereo and books, on the campus of Rutgers University. Richard Nixon Rock 'n' rock Wayline Newton Fabian Topless Bridges James Baldwin Janis Joplin Sharon Tate Male West Andy Warhol Souls Food Catherine Deneuve Gore Vidal John Kennedy The Rest and the Brightest Tom Wille The Beautiful People, the Artist The Real People, in frames, right now at the Spencer Museum of Art. It's a collection from Esquire magazine and it's a well show. Long known for its fiction and its Varga pin-up girls, Esquire began losing readers after World War Two. To save itself, Esquire went contemporary in the late 1950s. Really contemporary Writers such as Norman Maler, Gay Talese and Tom Wole wrote articles on teenage rock 'n' roll stars, love festivals and the new aesthetics of 2014. Nothing was sacred and nobody was safe. Take a breath, walk into the small White Gallery and there they are—110 photographs, all of which first appeared in Esquire, all of which capture a different view of the 60s. It's visual overload. The photographs are everywhere, High, low, at eye level. Walk quickly through the gallery and they compete for attention. Slow down and the exhibition takes on new meaning. Thomas Southall, curator of photography at the Spencer Museum, and a group of art history students recreated an issue of Esquire and placed it on the wall. Sorting through thousands of photographs given to the University of Kansas last year by Esquire, Inc., they edited, researched and organized for more than four months. The final product is as unconventional as the original source. Along with photographs, KU also inherited all of the existing artwork used in the magazine's first 44 years, giving the University a valuable collection of 20th century illustrations and designs. The Esquire photographs are successful because they make you look. Fabian's porcupine hair. Gore Vidal's concealing star. Sharon Tate's signature smile. Your delicate in this exhibit; you won't find art photos. Indeed, some of the individual photographs are pretty dull. But not to worry. As an ensemble of an extraordinary decade, the exhibition is a success. These photographs, most of which have never been seen outside the pages of Esquire, are all too special. They are on view until Feb. 28. Go see them. The Esquire photographs are on the third floor White Gallery of the Spencer Museum of Art. The museum is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m., Sundays, 1:00 to 4:30, and is closed Mondays. PORTRAIT OF MARIA SCHNEIDER Gift of Esquire Inc This Helmut Newton portrait of Cathrin Deneuve was made in Paris in 1978. Part of the Esquire Collection, the original photograph measures 15 and one half inches by ten and one half inches. The eyes have it... The eyes have it... WITH Silhouette FASHION FRAME The Jewel of Eyewear I. R. WILLIAMS Quantrill's A full spectrum of optical services SPECTRUM OPTICAL One Day Service In Most Cases One Day Service In Most Cases Flea Market New Hampshire Weekends Only A 40-dealer market with a full line of antiques, collectables and bargains. A good place to take Mom when she visits. 211 10 to 5 "NEW DIRECTIONS & DIMENSIONS IN FRATERNITY LIFE" the UNIDOS band from Kansas City PHI BETA SIGMA FRATERNITY PRESENTS: Friday, Feb. 5, 1982 from 9:00 p.m. Ballroom Kansas Union $3.00 donation - Cash Bar Available --- RUNNING RACQUET Is having a SUPER SALE 30% off warm-ups 40% off all tennis clothing for men and women Hours: Monday-Friday 10-6 Thursday 10-8:30 Saturday 10-5 Sunday 1-5 Running Racquet --- 2024 W. 23rd 749-2157 TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. WE KNOW YOUR LOVE IS CONSTANT BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER VALENTINE'S DAY AND SO ARE OUR PRICES ORDER EARLY OPEN SUNDAY, FEB. 14 TIL NOON Flower Shoppe 1101 Mass Open 844-1080 8:30-6:30 Monday 2018 University Daily Kansan, February 5, 1982 Page 7 p r t h s i History of blacks explored in movie By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter The history of blacks in 20th century America was depicted in the 1968 film, "Black History: Lost, Stolen or Strawn." A speech by Bill Tuttle, KU professor of history, preceded the film switch which ended the series. The film was shown last night at Windriff Auditorium in the Kansas U Tutte said the film was timely to usure the tension of thegence of the Kutu Kutu and Nagalara. "I believe that the new Reaganomics has a racist viewpoint," Tutted said. "By doing such things as cutting back on social services needed by the poor and giving tax exemptions for people in poverty, we are making it to private schools is blatant racism. TUTLE, the author of "Race Riot," which described a 1919 race riot in Chicago, said that he was happy to be part of Black History Month. He said that the film centered around the turbulent 60s and was meant to remind blacks and whites that civil war is a significant problem in American society. "In the 60s great strides were made toward racial progress. Since then, though, there seems to be a trend that the rights is going backward. With Voting Rights Act 2010, it might be possible jeopardy, black Americans are facing a possible crisis," Tuttle said. Tuttle said that Carter G. Woodson, a black historian, was given credit for firing the white officers. "Woodson wanted to impress white America that blacks had some redeeming qualities and that they could stand on their own two feet," Tuttle said. The film began with narrator Bill Cosby in a classroom. It showed children drawing pictures of how they thought they looked. MOST OF the white children, Cosby said, viewed themselves as attractive, while the black children described themselves as faceless and missing arms. Cosby then talked about history books and the way they denied blacks. "Many blacks fought and died in the civil war but yet you have to dig pretty deep in history books to find much information," Cosby said. "There was also a black who first discovered the North Pole." Cosby said that whites considered most Africans to be primitive, but many of the finest sculpting was copied from African models. "Old movies portraying blacks in the film always showed them serving the white man or it would have them doing what they wanted to make the audience laugh," he said. Cosy said that great black talent by such people as Steppin-Fetchit was wasted because they played baboon characters. Later in the film, a black teacher is shown instilling pride into black children by telling them they're worth something. He tells them to stand up for their rights. He wants them to be proud that they're black and beautiful. TOPEKA-If the State Board of Regents had submitted Gov. John Carlin's predetermined "B-level experience, a possible layoff of more than 400 employees at state colleges, including almost 120 faculty and staff members at the University of Kansas, John Carlino, executive director of the State Board of Regents. By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter Besides requiring the cutback on employees, a "B>level allocation" upon which Carlin's entire budget is based—would have adversely affected libraries and laboratories at state colleges, Conard said. Board veto of budget explained Asked why the board submitted a "rebel" request, Conard said, "Obviously, we didn't think the governor's recommendations were adequate." The Board of Regents was one of several state agencies that refused to comply with Carlin's budget procedures, some of which Kansas governor Robert Stephen declared littered in a 17-page opinion Wednesday. aware of the statutes cited in Stephan's report before they drew up a budget request last year. But the board's knowledge of the probable unconstitutional reasons for reconstitution was not the sole reason not complying with his requests. "It wasn't a matter of stonewalling the governor," Conard said. "The board felt strongly that it had a responsibility to submit a budget that would appropriately fund the universities involved." THE BOARD submitted one budget request, rather than Carlin's predetermined three requests, based on the expected amount of state revenue the highest and lowest estimates estimated by the governor's budget director. Conard said board members were In drawing up his report, the governor used only the "B'level allocations—those based on expected as—each agency had requested. However, the governor omitted the Board of Regents' request for state colleges because the amount was higher than his "B"-level allocation. In Stephan's opinion, this omission was not authorized by law. submit a single request for appropriations, and it is that request which the governor is required to include in the budget report for submission to the Legislature," Stephan said in his report. The omitted request by the Board of Regents was about $168 million for KU, nearly $18 million higher than the governor's 'BU' level request. MIKE SWENSON, assistant press secretary for Carlin, called the budgetary problems outlined by Stephan "very minor and easily recified" and said that 95 percent of the state's agencies had complimented and complied with the governor's new budgetary procedure. However, State Rep. David Miller, R-Edurora, who prompted Stephan's investigation into the budget, said, "That infurates me. I don't happen to think this is minor. This is blatantly unconstitutional." Miller agreed that most state agencies had submitted Carlin's recommended budgets rather than his own. "the political muscle of the governor." "Each state agency is required to milestones "How much money are you going to get if you stand up to the governor?" Miller said. DAVID MORRISON, Prairie Village sophomore, was named recently as one of the 100 MOST OUTSTANDING SOPHOMORE STUDENTS in the nation by the National Association for Higher Education. This annual award is based on the student's academic standing and extracurricular activities. Morrison is the third KU student to receive the award, and the fourth from the state of Kansas. He automatically will qualify as an entry in Who's Who Among American College Students because of this award. W. STITT ROBINSON, PROFESSOR OF HISTORY, was elected VICE-PRESIDENT of PHI ALPHA THETA for a two-year term beginning this year, and president for the following two-year term. IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy. 843-9803 DON W. GREEN, PROFESSOR OF CHEMICAL AND PETROLEUM ENGINEERING, has been named the FIRST KU CONGER-GABEL DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering. The new distinguished professorship was created last April by M. Wren Gabel, retired director and executive vice-president of Eastman Kodak, KENT ZAKOURA, Wichita sophomore, has been named A FINALIST IN COMPETITION FOR THE HARRY S. T. STRANUM SCHOOLARSHIP. He will compete for one of the awards, which provide up to Phi Alpha Theta is an international honor society dedicated to recognition and encouragement of excellence in the study of history. There are 600 chapters in the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico and the Philippines. $5,000 annually, March 6 at the Truman Library in Independence, Mo. HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKET PLACE - 8110 NEW HAMPTON - 8 MON 54TH FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Bring Your Valentine Date to The Castle Tea Room Sunday Feb. 14th Free Estimates THE PRESTON McCALL COMPANY 311 N.3rd 811-6067 --the KEGGER DID YOU KNOW? The Pilgrims landed at Cate Cod in 1620. From there they began their journey across the desert to settle and finally discovered what is now Pipomhur. Had they arrived a few years earlier they would have followed the pilgrim's dian tribe in the region in 1617, the Patuxet tribe, which had occupied that whole area, had been completely wiped out by a plague. It was perhaps Pilgrim's help the Pilgrims could have survived AMERICAN COVENANT; p. 28, Man- shall Foster, 1981 (Foundation to Christian Self-Government) PBR KEG $31.50 the KEGGER 16101/2 W 23rd 843-3212 --and Onions ... 4.50 Chicken Crepes ... 3.95 Italian Omelette ... 3.95 The Eldridge Club ... 3.95 Hot Beef Sandwich ... 3.95 Taco Salad ... 3.95 Gaucho Burger ... 3.25 Wine by the Glass ... 1.60 Cafe'Eldridge Affordable Fun Dining The Cafe Eldridge is open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week. From 11 am to 11 pm, Mondays-Saturdays and 11 am to 9 pm on Sundays. You can even call in for carry out. Whether it is a special occasion or you just want a delicious homemade meal, dine at the Cafe Eldridge. For fun dining at an affordable price, dine at the Cafe' Eldridge. Choose from the many delicious homemade dishes prepared daily by our Chefs. Meats meals at the Cafe' Eldridge cost between $3.50 and $5.00. An extraordinary price for a fun meal served in the pleasant atmosphere of the Cafe' Eldridge. 7th Massachusetts Veal Parmesan . . . . . . . 4.50 Liver with Bacon Special Childrens Menu As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20,1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift. University-Community Service Scholarship Award - Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term). Qualifications *Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. - Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. Applications - Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Tuesday, February 16, 1982 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held February 23, 1982. * More information and applications available in the SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477. COME 'N' GET IT! Country Style Chicken Fried Steak served with Salad. Country Style Chicken Fried Steak served with Salad, Mashed Potatoes and Cream Gravy EG 4.5, BP 3.8 Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner • Daily Bub Breakfast* Lunch* Dinner* Daily Buffet other expires PP PAM'S PLACE 2907 W. 6th 841-6844 Effective Listening Program Get the most out of your classes, by remembering more or what you hear. Two Sessions Thursday and Tuesday February 11 and 16 For registration and payment of fees contact: The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064. The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064. 843-7405 27th & Iowa Lawrence ken's. PIZZA FREE Clip this coupon. FREE FREE PIZZA COUPON remain at any Pizza's Pizza location. When you buy one Kone's Pizza you will receive the next size smaller No Charge On Carry Out Orders Void With Other Promotions Offer Expires February 14, 1962 SUNDAY SPECIAL Everv Sundav. Buy 2 Pizzas Dr Ripper Void with Other Promotions Cornucopia Restaurant - Luncheon Specials Weekdays Through February. Cornucopia Salad with Soup and Bread. $2.50 - Now Featuring: Weekend Breakfast Specials 10 a.m.-1 p.m. This Week's Special Huevos Rancheros $3.95 842-9637 1801 Massachusetts MIDNITE PICK FRI. & SAT VISTA VALLEY Stormy Varsity Deptowege 842-1053 MIDNITE FLICK FRI. & SAT VISTA VALLEY Presented by JAME GILIS JESSICA ST JAMES P.T.A. BASF Chrome. The world's quietest tape is like no tape at all. With professional I you'll be a bit all of the music and noise in your room and not just that what you really want in a tape? BASF 90 Professional II HIGH DRAFT COVER 8.5 x 11 in (21.7 cm x 26.6 cm) BASF 2 For $875 REG. $5.99 Each AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASS now in our 35th year GRANADA TELEPHONE 850.925.7080 PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG A COLUMN PICTURE Sat 9:30am Wed 10:30am Sun 2:00pm VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1085 CALICULA CENTER FOR EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT 2045 WEST 13TH ST. NEW YORK, NY 10017 tax: 2.300 398 mail: info@calicula.org phone: 216 526-3980 HILLCREST 1 15TH AND 16TH OCTOBER 2024 Enthralling... CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Ev. 7-13-20 MAT Sat. Sun 2-19 HILLCREST 2 15TH AND 16TH OCTOBER 2024 The movies of "The Birth" The danger of "Psychic" Ev. 7-13 & 8-25 Mat Sat. Sun 2-19 HILLCREST 3 15TH AND 16TH OCTOBER 2024 HEART AND THE LIFE MAT SAT SUN 2-19 CINEMA 1 15TH AND 16TH OCTOBER 2024 RICHARD ORLEYFUSES in Whose life is it anyway Ev. 7-13 & 20 Sat. Sun 2-09 CINEMA 2 15TH AND 16TH OCTOBER 2024 THE FALL ENWARDED GARDEN Ev. 7-13 20-30 Sat Sun 2-09 HILLCREST TICKETS AND IDENTITY NUMBER 584000 HEART LAND PUB EVE. 7,30 AM & 2 OCT MAT. SAT. SUN. 7,15 CINEMA RICHARD OVERSOS in Whose life is it anyway ? R? 7:30 a.m. Sat. Sun 2.00 RICHARD ONE YEARS Whose life is it anyway? 8.20-24.km.Son 2.00 CINEMA 2 THEY ALL UNCHED ANONYMOUS BEN GOLDSMITH £1.70-3.30 Sat Sun 2.00 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 5, 1982 By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter Lawrence city commissioners may never again have to face homeowners from older neighborhoods who object to a fourplex being built next door. And KU students may never again get to move into a new one on the hill east of campus. Fourplex apartment buildings probably will not be built on single lots in Lawrence because of economic reasons, said Joe Stroug, an owner of the Garden House, 850 Avonley Rd., Birchwood Garden Park 1846 Tennessee St. Although a plan for a 14-fourplex development was approved at Tuesday's meeting of the city commission, high interest rates will prevent the construction of fourplexes on single lots in older neighborhoods. Stroup Stroup said he was involved in building single-stair fourplexes from 1969 to the summer of 1980. But as interest in the complex growth had grown, they became increasingly uneconomical. Even if the economy pulls out of the recession and there is a boom in the construction trade, Strup said, interest rates are expected to remain too high to finance fourplexes on single lots. UNTIL 1880, he said, lenders preferred to finance fourplexes over duplexes and tri-plexes, because renters like them more. Jeff Messick, an associate of Hicks and Associates, Architects and Planers, 825 Vermont St., said that "fourplex" was a generic term, but that it had come to have emotional connotations in Lawrence. "It's a loaded term in Lawrence right now," Messick said. "A bunch of essentially identical buildings have neighbors. Lawrence. The older neighborhood, usually Grady, have borne the bristle of it." City Commissioner Barkley Clark said that people in older neighborhoods did not like fourplexes to be built next door to them because of parking restrictions. But four rental units on one lot. They also were concerned with aesthetics. the general army-barracks style of the fourplex was not very appealing to the neighbors." Clark said. Stroup said renters had two reasons for preferring to live in a fourplex. "First of all, it's a small unit; you're not living in a complex," he said. Also, the apartments usually were built near both the University and downtown, Strup said. Because people liked to rent them, lenders thought fourplexes were a good investment, he said. HOWEYER, that has changed, Stroup said. During the 1970s, rental fees on apartments were substantially determined by the number of people demanding housing, relative to the supply of apartments, he said. But today, these considerations are nearly irrelevant, Stroup said. "The consideration now is the rate of interest." he said. In order for a developer to repay the interest on his building loan, he said, the rent you'd have to have would be higher that people wouldn't be able to navy. He said that this economic trend was irreversible. "I don't know how it could ever come back," Stroup said. Council eyes rule change for grading KU students will have to wait before a policy is passed that will make grade changes more flexible. The University Council yesterday returned proposed grading policy changes to the Academic Policies procedures Committee for revision. One proposed change would permit a department chairman to change a course grade if the instructor of that course was incapacitated or no longer associated with the University. Without the policy change, it is technically a rule violation for anyone to change a grade except the instructor who gave it. Students can not have grades changed after their teacher has left the University or died. "The only person who is inconvenienced (by the current policy) is the student, and I'm getting tired of inconvenience the student. Council member Ernest Hill was a graduate civil engineer, said yesterday. Other Council members thought the policy change would invite manipulation, make it too easy to change grades and that a professor who taught a class should be awarded the degree. But that class, regardless of whether he was still associated with the University. THE SECOND proposed change would allow a professor to give a student a grade of incomplete in a course even if the student had not satisfactorily completed any work in the course. By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter February Sisters altered KU The building is gone. Few of the participants are still on the KU campus. But some of the changes they demanded on a February night 10 years ago have become part of daily campus life at the University of Kansas. On Feb. 4, 1972, the East Asian Studies building, a former private residence near Smith Hall, was taken over by women known as the February sisters. About 50 women took part in the peaceful demonstration to demand day care on campus, a women's health center and an affirmative action program. Christine Leonard, a clerk typist at Watson Library in 1972, was among the women who seized the building. She also took part in the negotiations between the women and the University Senate Executive Committee. She now is working on a history of the February Sisters. sisters. "It changed my life," Leonard said recently, reflecting on her involvement with the February Sisters. MARY CORAL was the wife of a faculty member. She said she had been involved in the civil rights movement and in anti-war efforts before her involvement with the February Sisters School. Mrs. Coral, who was her interest in getting a woman's birth clinic started at Watkins Memorial Hospital. She said the Planned Parenthood office in Lawrence was going to close down at that time because it couldn't be done without students coming in for birth control. Many of the February Sisters were students, but some were women from the community. Courteous she thought she had been positively positioned at time because she was a faculty wife. ALIVE AT ELEVEN! 11 p.m.-12 a.m. $1.25 Bar D 75c Draw GAMMONS SNOWMAD FRI & SAT $1.25 Bar Drinks MARY ALEXANDER CAROLINE FORMER WRESTLER for the University of Northern Iowa, Hans Hinnench and his wife, Joy, will be ministering at NORTH LAW-HOPE Street, in Lawrence, this Sunday. February 7 Hanson, who took honors during high school years in his wrestling career, is presently serving on the UNI campus with Campus Bible Fellowship. You are invited to enjoy their ministry in every service this Sunday at 9:45 A.M., 11:00 A.M. 6:00 P.M. and 7:00 P.M. MOTOBECANE FRANCE SR SR MOTOBECANE FRANCE Mick's Bicycle Shop 842-3131 1339 Massachusetts G CAROLYN GUYETT = First Annual Knights of Columbus Sweetheart Dance Friday, February 12th 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Doors open at 8 o'clock WITH Entertainment by: RICHARD GREENLEE SOUND OF WHEELS You'll Love Our Style. Headmasters. 809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Private Car $ 299 tag DANCE ON DISNEY PUBLIC PUILLE $1,501 pitchers, 500 tentals Sweetheart Contest Cover charge $3.00 per couple Headmasters. "I DRIVE BETTER AFTER A FEW DRINKS." In most states, the legal definition of "driving under the influence" is a blood alcohol level of 0.1%. But scientific tests have proved that even professional drivers 'abilities diminish sharply at levels as low as 0.03% to 0.05% ... just a few drinks. Not everyone is affected, too. So people think they're driving more than ever while they're really driving worse. Drinking Myth of the Week The Student Assistance Center 121 Strong Hall 864-4064 HOMEMADE CHOCOLATE, CHERRY OR BLUEBERRY Pie MISS. STREET DELL MOI MASSAC HUSETT 75c Offer good Wed., Feb. 3 to Sun., Feb 7 reg. $1.25 Cheese Cake No Coupons Accepted With This Offer T.G.I.F. AT THE "NEW" TIME OUT 25° DRAWS 6-8 PM START THE WEEKEND OFF RIGHT WITH A BIG "TGIF" AT TIME OUT! KEEP THE WEEKEND ON THE RIGHT TRACK TONIGHT AT TIME OUT! $2.00 PITCHERS ALL NIGHT take TIME OUT J At a potduck dinner that night, Coral said, many women met for the first time and realized that they were working for many of the same goals. 75' SCHOONERS TIME OUT "My class was a protection," she said. one chain of events that led to the buildakeover started when Robin Morgan, a feminist writer, came to speak on campus Feb. 2, 1972. Her talk was accompanied by the Women's Center, a loosely-knit group concerned with women's issues. THE PLACE TO PARTY 2408 IOWA Leonard said she did not know what the results of that meeting would be until Feb. 4, when she got a phone call telling her to meet at a house. A 6 T P.M. about 50 women, some with children, entered the East Asian Studies building. The old house was to be vacated by the East Asian department a month later. It was chosen for the takeover because some of the women thought it would be a good site for a day care center. Leonard said. Once inside the building, some of the women barricaded and chained the doors. "It wasn't really very secure," Leonard said. "It was more symbolic." The house, which was near where Hilltop Day Care Center is now, has since been torn down. Bard said, "It was more symbolic." Outside other women were divided in telling of the building takeover and listing the group's demands. - An Affirmative Action program planned and directed by women. * An increase in women on the faculty and increase in female faculty salaries. * A women's health clinic to provide care and training. * More women in administration. - Establishment of a Women's Studies program. - A free day care center financed by the University. between men and women. * Better recruitment of female students from Kansas. "I remember Betty Banks walking in with a great big smile." Coral said. "She thought what we were doing was just great." the first negotiating team went out at midnight. When they returned, Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, was with them. She had been asked to serve as a liaison between the women and the administration. university. · Equity in scholarship distribution LEONARD said that about five times as many women were involved in the February Sisters as had actually taken over the building. "I feel we represented most of the women on campus," she said. "The support was incredible." Leonard was in the second negotiating team to go out. She said the members of Senx E were anxious to get involved, but they wanted advice before dawnlight to avoid media attention. Other women were called that night and asked to come to the East Asian building at dawn, Leonard said. When the demonstrators emerged from the building, they were surrounded by this new group of women. Leonard was ready to support and partly to protect the identities of those who had been in the building. Coral said she felt a sense of accomplishment through her involvement in the takeover. Although the women's demands were not met before they left the building that night, some changes have come about since 1972. "I never felt before that I had had any effect—that I did something," she said. --presented by Plymouth Handbell Ringers - Donation $2.00 * Tickets available Rusty's, Raney's & at the door. Candlelight Bridal Fair Fashions Flowers Wedding Music Table Settings Reception T. Sun. Feb. 14 2:00 p.m. Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont --- FREE TRIP TO MAZATLAN, MEXICO DURING SPRING BREAK 1982! 1-800-528-6025. Last year we took over 4,000 students in 6 weeks from 50 Colleges and Universities. We need reps on your campus that are willing to work during their spare time in return for a free trip. The trip for the University of Kansas is March 11, 12, 13 and 14 through March 18, 19, 20, and 21. For more information call Tony or Dennis on our toll free watts line at BORG GULCKIN AND PENTHICHE FILMS INTERNATIONAL PRESENTS CALIGULA THE MOST INFANCY PERSONAL EXPERIENCE YEAR EVER HAVE! GREEK CALIGULA SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE ON PENTHOUSE RECORDS ANALYSIS TLR RELEASING CORPORATORY. R LA AND INTERNATIONAL PRESENT SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE MENTHOUSE RECORDS RECORD R Varsity Downtown 843-1065 NOW SHOWING The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Proudly Presents The University of Kansas Chamber Music The Arts "Chamber music in music can be dated pre- and post-Jailiard... The Jailiard is the yardstick against which all other groups are measured..." 2 Juilliard String Quartet 8:00 pm Thursday, February 11. 1982 Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont, Lawrence Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats general Admission/doors open at 7:30 For reservations, call 913/684-3982 Student and Senior Cotent Discounts Available Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission A University Arts Festival Presentation Universitv Dailv Kansan, February 5. 1982 Page 9 prths were ilding come Buckingham hopes bad breaks behind him By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer Jeff Buckingham's pole vaulting career has been much like the sport itself—full of us and downs. While in high school, Buckingham was on his way up. He set several Kansas high school records and won three state outdoor and two state indoor championships during his years at Gardner. As a freshman at KU, his success continued when he won the Big Eight indoor and outdoor championships and placed second in the NCAA indoor. BUT SOON, his luck changed. He had a disappointing sophomore year. And last year, he was red-shirted because of hack problems. This year, however, Buckingham seems to be on his way back up. In his first meet of the indoor season, Buckingham vaulted 17-1 to qualify for the NCAA indoor meet in March. Last week, he vaulted 23-0 to splits that kept him out for two weeks, he tied his personal indoor best of 17-4 at the Missouri Indoor Invitational. Buckingham, along with the rest of the KU men's track team, will be in Lincoln, Neb., Saturday, for a dual meet against Nebraska. Bowen said that Buckingham was progressing really well, and that he was looking for continued improvement from him. Buckingham said his goal was to be vaulting around 18 feet this year. In fact, he said, he didn't consider 18 feet to be a very high jump. " 46. gets a little stiff after competition a lot, but it's a lot better," he said. "It is always still there, and I got to keep watching it." Although he was out for two weeks and missed most of last season, Buckingham said he wasn't surprised he could've done a fact, he felt he could've some higher. BUCKINGHAM seems to be over the problems in last year, and he said it was all full-bellied. "I wasn't disappointed with 17-4, though." Buckingham said. "It's an improvement." YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Greek Men Sauce Kings 41, The Eight Ball 38 P i Kana Phi 40. Mk JC 34晨晨 Intramurals Buckingham's improvement is KU assistant track coach Roger Bowen. Bowen, who coaches the KU pole vaulters, said that although Buckingham's back was still bothering him, Buckingham was working hard. T the Tortefees 45, GMS 34 Have Not 36, Navy ROTC 29 Sam S. Savagev 44, Lumberjack High Life 18 The Doomers 30, Lumberjacks-Bey 31 The Doomers 30, Lumberjacks-Bey 31 Security Trainer 0 Meatless 2, L-Town Bombers 0 ONE PERSON who has noticed The Orange Men 38, Skunks 36 The PJ Lot LP 85, Gladiators 10 The Men Playoffs Coach 33, C.B.'s 33, Thea Tau 19 Triangles 5, The Tool 24 Triangles 5, The Tool 24 Triangles 5, Skiwer Dikile 19 The Fluirt F-Union 32, Harder's Hoopers 18 Basketball Kenya; Kidra 41, Face Job 30 Wet Took 41, Chicken Chokers 41 Ecobogs 39, The Disease 21 Shooting Stars 4, Sorghily 42 Independent Mer Rep. A Sellards 2, Blisters #20 Snob Hillbillies 28, Ciceless Wonders 12 Comets 47, Bomets #16 etc. Independent Women The University Daily Independent Men Rec.B Independent wof Rec. B Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES Sonics 34, Skyhawks 17 Vicious Valumps 31, Magnetoes 8 one twelve three four five six seven eight nine ten 15 words or fewer $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 15 words or fewer $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 $2.20 AD DEADLINES ERRORS to run Monday 7 p.m. Tuesday 10 p.m. Wednesday 12 p.m. Thursday 14 p.m. Friday 16 p.m. Wednesday 19 p.m. Greek Men Rec. B FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Foid items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can placed in person or simply by calling the Kauai business office at 846-138. ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 POKER AND CHIESS LESSONS. 841-0996, ft. KOA Laundromat. Free dry with 75 wash. By the Airport, East highway 842-3877. 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. THE ETC. SHOP Vintage & Classic Contemporary Clothing And Antique Accessories West of the Candy Store Mon.-Sat. 11-5 10 W. 9th 843-9708 **Applications for Rotary Foundation schools for 1983-1984** are being accepted now. Die Schule für 1983-1984 will be march 1, 1982. Contact Aryl Allen, P23 Press, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone 8-525-3123 Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downstown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf FOR RENT HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished. Kitchen with microwave, 3 bedrooms on 18th on Mass. Only 3 blocks to KU. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your apt at HANOVER PLACE. Month-water-board: 841-712-6854 or 842-4455 For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. **tf** STUDIO APT. for rent 3 rooms. $145 + deposit. Water paid. On bus route 86. 606 E. 72nd St. Studios atmosphere, International media, crazy travel experiences, prospective interviews with co-practices on campus. BELT OFF the market, furnished BELT OFF the market, furnished CUSTOM LUCKED. Custom ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished townhouses available immediately. Flexible furniture, carpet, hardwood floors. ! Located on 3th & Ohio. Only two short blocks from the Union. Call 844-4521 Large 2 Berm. in an older house at 1017 Rhod island. Available Feb. 1. Only 225 bm. a mo. with a 200.0 deg. Utilities pd. by absolutely. Absolute only. Call 2-103. Catalog: C-110 Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt. Unfurnished, carpeted & drapped all electric computer workstation. Ensuite cabinets, carpage, and on bus route. $34 per month. No. pet赋 DOWNEYBLOOK 81 & Creelline 96 PRINCETON PLACE PATH APEARMENTS, for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces and weathered water/rayer panels, fully equipped with acrylic flooring. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., 9:30-10:30 daily at 2208 Princeton Blvd. or 1234 Oak St. for more details. 1. hdm, ap, for sub-lease until July 31, 2014. hdm, ap, bus route been. From Feb 15. Free rent for Feb. No deposit. 0-100. Raleigh. Rd. 8422 - 7315 or 8010 - 25. Brand new 3-bedroom houses, $345 and $450, 81-479-791 or 81-725-71 2-11 Prior grades have opened up a farmhouse. No propane bottles-natural gas 5 rooms + bath in good condition. 15 minutes from home. Ref required. 704-863-9858 8:00 am. 9:00 pm. 2-12 $200 monthly - 2 bedroom apt. Near new apartments, close to campus. Normally rent for $300, 1st come; 1st serve baskets. No Pets. 433-749-878 2-5 Roommate needed for 3 bedroom house. 1329 Kentucky St. $116 + 1/3 utilities. Call 841-0556 anytime. 2-9 2 Br. Apt., 1st floor of house, near campus and downtown. Available March 1. $200 per month plus 4% insurance. 842-995-1243. and downsweat. Available March 1. $200 per month plus 5% offiles; $350 per month plus 5% offiles. Cabin, ski lift, coil air. Air equipped kitchen, carpet and carpet. 1104 Tenn. Call 817-655-1225. Large studio, Carpeted, newly remodeled. Washed-dyer in kisowet. 2 blocks from campus. Rent negotiable. 749-2700 or 913- 148-3611. 2 B-eat. on bus route, convenient to shopping. Complete kitchen carpet, drapes, central air conditioner, garage available. Shown by appointment. Call 641-668- 2-12 Student apt. class to campus at 19 W, 14th Available May 1, 1882. $60.00 me, with a 200.00 deposit. Absolutely no pets. Call 749-414 or 841-7914. Subbase nice two bedroom apt, low utilities, on bus route, convenient to shopping. Call 842-4461. 2-53 Sub-lease 2. Br. apt. complete kitchen carpet-drapes, central air-heat. Call 841-6888. 2-12 1. br apt, $180 a month + utilities, walking distance from campus. 643-6725. 2-9 Cozy 3 Bdm, unfurnished apt. in older building at 314 W. 19th (14th & Tern.) available now. Only 275.00 m. with 900.00 dep. space. Absolutely no tv. Call 749-4141. Large, modern 1 Bedroom, unfurnished apt. in an 8-plex at 1823 Bhdh. Island, available from 1800.00 mo. with 2000.00 dep. tenant pays its utilities. Absolutely suitable. Call 794-4514. 2-10 For sublease, 2 Br. apt. $310 + elect. Available now. Telephone: 841-8138. Warm peaceful room in house well furnished. Easy to study, reduced for February. Don't pass this one up M-4528 after from Union from Union. necessary. 2-10 Apple Croft Apt. 91, Quaint, Speacial, fully carpeted and draped 2 bedroom Apt. 84 for $350/month, full kitchen facilities, pool, dishwashers, A-C included in $315 per month. Hotel #84-8289. Female roommate wants J-hawker Towers, 12 rent, utilities incl. Call 842-3220- 2-10 DEPERATE> MUST SULBASE LE 6 DESPERATE> Call Andy at 641-8000- 2-12 and #B5 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense of these materials by using them1 as Study guide.2 For class preparation, 4 for exam preparation, available now in New Crier. The materials own the book. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3900 W. 6th. Bookcases and stereo cabinets custom built of solid woods 30 x 9 inch - bookcases $30 each. Cabinets 24 x 18 inch - bookcases $56 each. Coffee tables and coffee tables. Kansas hardwoods available. Michael Sought, 80th W. West 13th; Monroe, 80th W. West 13th. Royal 5000 CE typewriter - dual pitch self-covering -Like new Call 749-4252 after 9AM Polaroid SX-70. Very good condition. Must sell. !₂ price. Call 814-2901. Please keep trying. 2-8 26°, Mola Been 12 speed Bicycle=Red,exc. condition, Aluminum rim, handle bars, seat peg & crank: $290.00 must sell. 841-7538 2-11 DOUBLE BED including frame, box spring, mattress $75 (negotiate). Call 841-6158 any time before midnight. GREAT BARGAIN on living room couch Good condition, clean, lightweight and easy to move. Great value. 18MIC AMC SX-4 Eagle 6 cyl Auto-fuel 841-3258 arm, AFM-F 6 cyl 841-3258 2-5 CALAMITY JANES SALE-Group of cotton linen shirts. West of Kiel. West of Holly Place. 841-256-7930. Bargain price on beautiful suede/tur jacket, size 5. Originally, $115; now, $70. Like new. new. 819-6394. Keeprying. 2-5 83 GMC Truck VR 4-space, new paint job Deposition 314 North 81st; 404-867-2525 job 2.314 North 81st; 404-867-2525 Component concert Hall. Hafer amp. Yamaha Bass horn. Electric bass drum. Also Elec. guitar and amp. 842-543-0610 Grandma died! Vintage hats and lace dresses. 749-739. 2-5 Vivitar 220 SL 35mm camera, Black body. Vivitar flash Vivitar flash 12-5 at mount 843-4477 FOR SALE: Jim Blackburn Bike racks—front $12 rear $15 (Both $25). Santour end shifters—$12, 749-0722. 2-10 HELP WANTED DCM type stereo speakers. Call 843-2641 after 5:00. 2-12 Church nursery helper needed on Sunday mornings. 843-0679. 2-9 FOUND 1972 Cheville, new paint, mags, Pioneer Cass '65. Mass. extra parts, Jim 842-183-842 842-183-842 FOR SALE. YASHICA FR-1 35M SLR, 50mm lens, windshield, flasher, X2 extender, cable release. $300. Call Ed #847744 after 6:30 pm. 2-11 CRUISER, RESORTS SAILING EXPEDI- CIONS Counselor Europe Caribbean Worldwide TATION OPENINGS GUIDE TO CRUISE- WORLD 153 Box 6029, Sacramento 3-12 Trailer for sale or rent, $8 x 22 homemade, $1500 or $130 month. 843-5341. 2-11 Use your time up to earn money for the "extra." Aggressive self-starers only. Field of total health and fitness. For appointment, call 842-8870. Did you lose something in 405 SU? Wednesday afternoon? 684-694-1060 to identify 2-9 Person interested in doing old house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, students have own tools and equipment in cooperative work. Call Darryl 841-5386. Snap hood off of a down coat. Call and identify at 843-5601. 2-8 GREAT OPPORTUNITY-Commission sales person wanted part-time. Must have car must have car and be 15 hrs/week during business hours. Please call Layette-25 740-4129 for interview. STUDENT OPENINGS: The Office of Information Systems has two WORK STUDY openings. The key operator is Mail, Key Accounting and Production Control 20 hr w/week (valid driver's license required). Application deadline: February 14th Center or phone 864-4528 Wolf Computer-2-5 Two mathbooks. Date and location: Mathworks. precalculus on Daisy Hill. Call 864-1048- 29. Applications are being accepted for half-time positions as graduate teaching assistants and summer students from any discipline are eligible for consideration. A broad backlog of candidates is required. Instructors conduct 8 weekly classes with students associated with instruction in the Program. Salary depends upon level of graduate work completed. Forms may be obtained from the Western College Hall. Applications should be received by February 26, 1982. The Western Civilization Department's affirmative action: women, minorities and oppressed students are encouraged apply. 2-8 OVERSEAS JOBS--Summer/year round. Europe; S. Australia, Aerisland, Asia All Fields. Europe; W210, Middle City, Sightseeing. USA; with IBM CD Box 35-1-43-34-C MA, CA, 92852 LOST Nall Hills Country Club is now accepting applications for the club's swimming pools. Positions include pool manager, assistant pool manager, position applicant for the position of manager maintaining sand and earth filtration systems. Salaries commemorate with experiential training. Apply to NHCC 6201 Indian Creek Drive, Overlooking Ridge, Houston, TX 77094, held during spring break. 2-9 Half-time graduate assistant for chirped professor in the School of Architecture and Urban Design $460 per month must have a Master's degree with Contact Dr. Dena-2 Dinner at 864-1234. Sales clerks wanted full-time day, part- time evening. Elections experience preferred. Apply in person please. Green's Fine Wines. 802 W. 3rd St. 2-9 - delivery people needed - male or female - portmanteau and know Lawrence Area. Hours of work vary. Apply AlkamHill -T30 Iowa. Work 57. Suit 5. P. Feb. 6. App. from 52. Suit 5. P. Feb. 6. App. from 52. Suit 5. P. Feb. 6. Week-long positions for Assistant Instructors Young People Museums of Natural History, 20 hr/wk 10/31-12/4, Contact Ruth Hall 20 hr/wk 10/31-12/4, Contact Ruth Hall Hall 953) 864-4175 An equal Opportunity Office SUMMER CAMP JOB'S. In the Northeast, for a free listing, send a self-addressed, stamped (137) envelop to Midway Camp Drive, Downtown Drive, Clinton heights, MO 60843. **2-12** **2-12** Temporary work, no experience necessary, nor any training, telephone operative required. Req. Bachelor's degree or baccalaureate, behrs. Hours 8-3 or 4-30 to 9. Apply Halton - 720 south Iowa St. Feb 5 & Mar 6. Apply Baird - 125 South Dakota St. Feb 5. Part time—general cleaning position. Sunday thru Thursday evening with local cleaning service. Call 842-5430 for interview. 2-8 NOTICE In 303 Bailey last Tues. Orange Back-pace with sketchbook, calendar, and folder. www.franklin-scott.com Get hard to to the Boose in your own style. Get a boose from the boose rack. From your records. Call Rusty at Proper R One maroon, 7 x 10" hardcover Elementary Differential Eqs. textbook lost Fri. 1-29 near Murphy? Murphy? -749-5036 2-9 Athletic Women and Men—the KU Crew team is recruiting new rowers. Coach Cliff Elliott 841-5587. 2-11 Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. tf A sweetheart portrait for Valentine's Day memory. Swallow Studio 749-611, 1-521. Brighten that special someone's birthday card. Personalized birthday cake. Phone 749-612. The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!! Call 841-9450-1610 W. 23rd, PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-4821. MARY KAY COSMETICS-Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. **U** Hurt your back or neck when you slipped on the kee? Don't delay proper treatment. For modern chiropractic care call Dr. Johnson at 1-800-749-2655. Star Life 2-35 Blue Cross Insurance. Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-1611. tf SKI TIRES SKI TIRES SKI TIRES SKI WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS. Kemonomical package every weekend and school breaks. Ski Cui Ri: 851-8386 today. PERSONAL Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfred Skidlet Skidlet. 1966 Mass. 843-8136. tf Another Encore exclusive: Select your party outfits early. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 842-4746. 511 Indiana. Nestlé & Company Worldwide ENLARGEMENTS Valentine Parties—50% formals, suits, tuxes, tails, shoes, jewelry, hats. We'll help you put together your outfit. Our Second Hand Rose. 511 Indiana, 842-4746. 2-11 Encore Copy Corp: 25th & Iowa 842-2001 TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-4999 anyone B.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics, or call 864-176 (ask for. Robert). ¢f TRAVEL CENTER TRAVELING? Domestic or Around the World - Airlines * Hotels * Cruises * Resorts * Rentals * Amtrak * Furall Instant Computerized Reservations Automatic Ticketing, TWA Seat Assignments and Boarding Passes. OWEST FARES AVAILABLE 841-7117 FREE PARKING "HOME OF THE NEON PALM TREE" 1601 West 23rd St. SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER 8:5-10 Mor. - Fri. * 9:30-2 Sat. K.S.U.-Where are men and sheep and sheep? MUNCIE, F.O. Box 201. Lawrence. 2-5-3 MUNCIE, F.O. Box 201. Lawrence. 2-5-3 If you can't be with that special person you want, there's a life-size blow-up door from FOO! It's available at www.foo.com. Mary-Ellen Rodgers was so mud when she got her x-Rated valentines Day card she拍 the Shoeur. FOOTLIGHTS, 25th & Iowa. 2-9 Tell that special person just what you really think with an X-rated card from FOOT-LIGHTS, 25th & Iowa. 2-9 EVERY CAR IN STOCK $9.95 A DAY FIRST 50 MILES FREE EVERY CAR IN STOCK LEASE Special weekends rates. We are now leasing trucks & vans. We accept Master Card Visa. Located at 705 W.9th 749-4225 Begin planning for Valentine's Day early. Call today and arrange for a Valentine's Day Delivery of a Balloon-a-Gram. 841- 5848. 2-5 Tau Sigma Dance Club Bash Friday, Feb. 5. 8-10 p.m 12:00 pm in the B-8 room. Live band plus all the beer you can drink! 2-5 Study Skills Workshop with videotape. FREE! Friday, February 5. 2:30-Reading. 3:30- Time Management. Register at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strung, 8646-4-245 - Hey AO's and their dates: Look out for the Pink Bows at the Knights of Columbus on Friday night. Be there. Alba. 2-5 Valentines Dance. Mon., Feb. 8th. Off the Wall Hall 8 pm. Benefit for Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas. 2-8 Don't just send a song or a bunch of hot air (balloons). Send a personable message to the group that, for least a good attention). Call now for a Valentine's delivery and performance. **2-12** Tuxes - 20% off. Barb's Second-Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-744-696. **2-12** Randall. If your letter was a joke it wasn't. Randall corrected the address, Write Larry J. Morningstar. SKI STEAMBOAT CHEAP: $33 per day, per person, inc. lifts, 4, 6 or 8 guests. Call (303) 879-6686. 2-15 Get a head start on your spring break训 getaway. Learn English, socialize and additional information. 2-10 RAASCH WESTERN FLAIR is now at 737 Mass. Save 20% on boats, 40% off shirts, 60% off winter coats. 2-9 Come STROKE IT with the KU Crew team. Recruiting now. Call Coach Cliff Elliott 841-5587 2-11 Congrats Sig. Kap pledges. You're super! We're looking forward to a great semester. Love, your sisters. 2-5 Super Deal—2 seats available in private airplane to Las Vegas. Leaving morning 2-18 return 2-19. 665-7738. 2-9 POR HIRE: Coors Campus Representative a two year commitment is requested. Resumes should arrive at the Lapea Service Center, 2711 Oregon St. 843-7000. - 2-9 Wanted, someone who loves drinking 5-potato chicks on Mondays at the Sanctuary Tabernacle. Learn how to learn about microcomputers. Explore the various systems, word and data processing, graphics, and databases available at 9:00 am to 4:30 pm Tuesday and Thursday. Visit Mass. St. Lawrence, Callence #4-924-9944 for more information. Mr. Bill's $1.25 ea. 3-6 FRIDAYS: PITCHERS $1.00 ea. 12-3 GREEN'S CASE SALE, LONG NECK PABST $6.49, LONG NECK BUSCH $7.99, GREEN'S W19 WEST $23.9 2-12 $2.00 ea. 6-12 If you can't be with that special someone who is having a baby, that's nothing to miss. "Saving Valentine" on sale now with free shipping! Effective Learning Programs - Two sessions. February 11 and 16. 7 to 9:30 pm. Come to the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong for registration and fee payment. 2-11 HAVE YOU EVER WONDERED WHY ONLY Moms and Dads Can Drive the River City Women's Health Collective are who collectively and distributively inform the community of what is interested. Call 864-326-8444 if you are interested, call 864-326-8444. Michelle: Happy 8th to you and John; I am grateful. Your kindness grades individuals have to say about you two together. Now slow down and give them the opportunity to learn. Michelle, remember what MPT tells us. Loss of independence is ok as long as there is a knock it until you've seen what the profts know. I hope tomorrow fulfills both our expectations. Night talk—Take one week to prepare. Make your next party, dance or function an "Event" with ACCEPT. Send information to phone number or email. For details call 81-0285 or write P.O.-Box 1395. Lawn care, KS -2-10 To all our beach bush buddies, get paid to Saturday, Aloha, Sarah, Barb & Kim. SERVICES OFFERED TUTORING MATH. STATISTICS, PHYSICS, REAL ESTATE, 0996-4996 any time (BS. in physics, MA in instruction or call 846-4176 (ask for Robert). Experience editor (5 yr.) grad student will教 these, dissertations. All disciplines. Get that job with a professionally prepaired resume by a local corporate recruiter. Learn the latest job hunting techniques. WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Say to the House of Uber and pick up our P. Brochure on resume or cover letter for MUCHUSIA, 8-405 Musichuasa, 9-30 N-Sun, 3-0N Sun Schneider Wine & Key Shop—the finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs 101 W. Wedd, 826-433-212 Put your best foot forward with a pro- grammer. Learn to type, it is, and print it for you. can write it, type it, and print it for you. Drastically improve your skills. Drafting (maps, maps, etc.) 6 years exp, competitively proficient. Also Script Learning to work on Guitar Lessons. Learn to play new from experienced teacher. Responsible Call Mark Professional typing, quick, reasonably dressed, paper supplied. Call events. 84, 7915. EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 TYPING It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820 it Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting selectic. Call Donna at 842-2744. *tf* Experienced typist. Term papers, threes, all miscellaneous. IM Correcting ESCrity Or Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. "none 863-Mrs. Mrs. Wright." if Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, *m*-correct Selectric Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. **tf** Experienced typist. Theses, term papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-3818. tt TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling. Support for international foreign students or Americans. M-41-8544. Experienced, typist- thesis, dissertations, tennery papers, mise. IBM correcting selective Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tt QUALITY TYPING : Themes, Manuscripts Dissertation; IBM Selectric; Glass Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 please. Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. IBM. Before 9 p.m. (7-549-2447. Annuit. Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Experiential Selective, Elite or Pieces. 5644. TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; I Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-5675. tf For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 411-4980. Professional typing. Dissertations, theses term papers, resumes, letters, legal, etc. Deb 843-9592 2-10 Graduate students tired of typing, retraining Save time and money by word processing it Save time and money by word processing it Quality typing and word processing avail- able in Encore Copy Corp. 25th arc 842-2001 2-26 WANTED Professional typing. Dissertation, thesis, term paper, resume, letter, legal, etc. 387 Non-smoking male to share fully furnished. 2 bdm. duplex $75 month + 1% utilities Close to campus; call after 7 p.m. 843-5815 Roommate wanted to share large house with two females. Close to campus and downtown. 841-775, after 5:00 pm. 2-5 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment. 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 + \frac{1}{2}$ utilities. 749-2438 2-5 Three roommates to share duplex=three blocks from campus. Male or female. Liberal. smoker ok. 842-5104. 2-5 LAW STUDENT seeks roommate to well, well furnished 2 BR at Harvard Square Apts. (5 blocks from campus): $165/ roommate utilities + 1-qb spaces Kevin 791-308-918 MALE ROOMMATE needed to share 3 br. house $125 mo. + 1/3 utilities + deposit Call Bird at 841-6431 2-8 Non-smoking female to share 3-br. house. close to campus. 83.33 + 1/3 usl. 841-979- No pets. 2+12 Roommate needed to share nice, new, furniture. Call 811-6506 $115 + 1/2 $75. Call 811-6506 Need to rent portable CB radio for trip over Spring Break. Call 749-0941 eyes. 2-5 Roommate to share modern 2 bedroom apartment 3 blocks from campus. $137.50 a month + utilities. $43-862 Jane. 2-17 Female roommate to share large 2-bdm. apt. non-smoker. Prefer quiet, studious girl $17.50 plus 1 yuil. On bus route. Keep drying. Call 841-6464 after 2- Keep crying. 3 bdm. dpix, garage, patio, fireplace, microwave, d.w. c/a. cable and w.d. hookage 135 mo. + 1/3 tbl. on bus route. 842-0811 V --- Say Happy Valentine's Day ... in the special Valentine's classified section of the Kansan The first 15 words are $2.25 plus 2c for each additional word Say it in a display for 4.00 per column inch All Valentine's messages must be in the Kansas office (118 Flint) by 5:00 February 10. PUSS Sports Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 5. 1982 KU looks to snap road losing streak By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawks travel to Stillwater tomorrow to face the Oklahoma State Cowboys. KU will be looking for its first road victory in the Big Eight Conference. The Jayhawks are 04 away from home in the conference and 1-6 overall. overall. "Oklahoma State is always tough no matter where you play them," David Magley, co-captain, said. Although Oklahoma State lost at Oklahoma, 78-72, Wednesday night, the Cowboys are 7-1 at home with their only loss coming at the hands of 12th-ranked Tulsa. "OSU IS playing as well as anyone in the conference now," Coach Ted Owens said about the Cowboys. "We have gone 4-1 since the two teams played the season. It will be a very, very difficult game." "I think people would have to regard Stillwater as one of the tough road games in our league." In the two teams' earlier game, the Jayhawks held on for a 77-72 victory in Allen Field House. In that contest, the Jayhawks received a 17-point performance by Tony Guy and were sparked in the late going by Lance Hill, who came off the bench and scored 15 points. "Kansas is a difficult team for us to play." "We were able to shut down their two big guns (Magley and Guy) in the second half at Kansas, but the bench came to the rescue and (Lance) Hill came in to get 15 points and push them over the barrier in Ohio's state Court Paul Hauser said. "Kansas is a solid team that has played tough schedule." OKLAHOMA STATE has made one line-up change since its previous game with KU. The Cowboys have inserted Lorenza Andrews at center for the Lakers, because of that switch, the Cowboys' leading scorer, Matt Clark, moves to the forward position. Cark scored 12 points in the two teams' previous game, while center Leroy Combs, the Cowboys' second-leading scorer, was held to just 4 points. Oklahoma State enters the game one game ahead of the Jayhawks in the Big Eight Conference. Both teams enter the game with 12-7 records overall. "Leroy Combs is starting to assert himself, but that's no surprise." Owens said. "It was just a matter of time, because he's such an outstanding talent." JAYHAWK NOTES: Earlier in the week, former KU running back Harry Sydeny signed a free agent contract with the Cincinnati Bengals, this year's Super Bowl runner-up. Last year, Sydney signed a free agent contract with the Seattle Seahawks. He was later cut. The Bengals have two other former Jayhaws on their roster, Tom Dinkel and David Verser. Jayhawks play at Kemper Arena tonight By DAVE McQUEEN By DAVE MEQUIT Sports Writer After breaking a five-game losing skid last night against Iowa State, the KU women's basketball team will go after their second straight victory tonight when they face the National College of Education at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo. The game will precele the Kansas City Kings- San Antonio Sours game. Although the Lakers, from a school of 1,400 in Evanston, Ill., only have a 8- record, KU Head Coach Marian Washington said they were a tough team. "TM EXPECTING them to be a good player in the hockey team a placed other teams that are ranked a." Washington said that MCE,which had a 26-9 record last year, had played close games against Tennessee and Memphis State. or for the 13-11 Jayhawks to get on the winning Washington said, they need to play with Mackenzie. "Much of what we've been challenged with is establishing intensity from the very beginning." Washington said. "We have found ourselves way behind at the half too many times." That didn't happen to the Jayhawks Wednesday night. KU jumped out to a 14-point lead early in the first half. Iowa State did come back, but KU held a 29-26 at the half. THE GAME will mark the second time that a KU women's basketball team has played in Kemper Arena. The last time was in 1977, when the Jayhawks defeated Northwest Missouri State, T-14, Washington, who was the coach that only personally still with the program from that team. Washington said she was looking forward to playing in Kemper again and hoped her team could have the same kind of luck there that the men had had. "Playing at Kemper will be a brand-new experience," said Wagner. "It will be placed to win at Kemper." JAYHAWK NOTES: KU center Tracy Clacton was ranked third in the nation in rebounding last week. Clacton, who has lead the Jayhawks in rebounds this year, is averaging 14.3 rebounds a game. After playing 17 games in 36 days, the Jayhawks will get a week's rest after tonight. Their next game will be Friday, Feb. 12, when they face northwestern Oklahoma State at Alen For every ticket that is sold in Lawrence for tonight's games, the Kansas City Kings will donate one dollar to Kansas women's basketball. 52 Tony Guy, here going up for two points against Oklahoma last week, scored 16 points in Wednesday's game at Iowa State. Guy and the Jayhawks face Oklahoma State tomorrow. Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Miami Airlines 30 19 14 .682 Atlanta 19 20 14 .642 11% Indiana 19 28 26 .453 Detroit 19 18 3.422 11½ Chicago 19 27 3.422 Carson Valley 19 18 3.422 20 Western Conference Midwest Division Pacific Drivers Seattle 30 13 14 .698 — Los Angeles 21 14 14 .698 — Golden State 19 14 .581 1 Portland 24 19 .588 1 San Diego 24 19 .588 1 Seattle 19 13 .611 17% San Antonio 30 14 15 .682 Denver 24 22 15 .500 8 % Dallas 22 22 520 .600 8 % Kansas City 14 29 .328 16 % Ulah 14 11 31 .236 16 % Dallas 14 11 31 .236 16 % YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Indiana 131, Denver 114 San Antonio 118, Phoenix 112 | Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Missouri | 8 | 0 | 1.000 | 2% | | Kentucky | 5 | 2 | - | - | | Oklahoma State | 3 | 2 | .571 | 3% | | Kansas | 4 | 3 | .429 | 3% | | Oklahoma State | 3 | 4 | .429 | 3% | | Nebraska | 3 | 4 | .429 | 3% | | Colorado | 2 | 5 | .268 | 3% | | Iowa State | 1 | 7 | .125 | 7 | Note: Number in parenthesis indicates UPI ranking. Minnesota (612), Iowa (50, 49) Michigan (72), Pennsylvania (13) BIG 8 STANDINGS Long Beach State 45, Fresno State (13) 42 West Virginia (19) 59, Rutgers 53 Team W 3 L 1 T G FF GA Pts. NY Islanders 32 13 6 G 221 167 Pts. NY Rangers 25 20 8 G 196 204 58 Pittsburgh 25 20 8 G 196 204 58 Baltimore 25 20 8 G 196 204 58 Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Monteau 29 11 11 244 153 70 Boston 28 11 16 7 221 160 69 Bufafile 29 16 9 9 204 161 67 Quedebee 29 16 9 204 161 67 Quebec 29 16 9 204 161 67 Campbell Conference Norris Division any sports bill Edinburgh 13 13 10 300 222 76 Calgary 19 18 10 213 264 51 Vancouver 18 25 11 180 195 47 Los Angeles 18 25 11 180 195 47 Minnesota 22 16 24 16 322 191 280 60 St. Louis 22 14 24 16 322 191 280 64 San Francisco 18 15 24 16 322 191 280 64 Chicago 18 26 10 16 328 251 234 46 Toronto 18 26 10 16 328 251 234 46 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston 5, Buffalo 2, New York Islander 5, Washington 2 Calgary 4, New York Rangers 4 Philadelphia 3, Minnesota 3 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W L P Pet. GB Pittsburgh 15 14 4 .789 Washington 15 4 13 -1/2 Ballimore 14 6 110 1/2 Buffalo 9 11 700 1/2 Cleveland 8 11 321 1/2 Indiana 7 14 333 9 New Jersey 14 13 235 10 Kansas gets two transfers WESTERN AVE. D.C. St. Louis 11 9 350 Wichita 11 9 550 Wichita 11 9 74 Memphis 10 13 435 Phoenix 10 13 418 Flores 10 13 319 ATLANTA 10 13 269 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Kansas City 6, Wichita 5 According to Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women rules, a player can transfer from one team to another. By GINO STRIPPOLI Philicia Allen and Mona Nance, two members of the South Carolina women's basketball team, have left South Carolina and are planning to enroll at Kansas. Associate Sports Editor However, Allen and Nance, who are the fourth and fifth members of the 12-6 South Carolina team to quit since Coach Pam Parsons resigned before the game, will not. Be able to participate at Kansas this year. "They have asked for a release from us, and Allen and Nance, who are not currently enrolled at Kansas, have been at the University since Monday. They have been going through the last complete enrollment, but are waiting on loans to complete enrollment. KC Comets edge past Wichita, 6-5 when a player signs to go to a university and quits in the middle of the season, they have not lived up to their responsibility, and because of this, they do not deserve to get their release." we assume that they are going to enroll at the university. Kelly said, "We will not please them, though." Kansas would usually help the two girls with their finances, but because they have not received their release from South Carolina, Kansas cannot offer them any aid. Allen, a 6-foot-6 sophomore, was a starter under Parsons. The Kansas City Comets scored their first shorthanded goal in the team's existence, and it turned out to be a game winner as the Comets defeated the Wichita Wings 6-5 at Kemper Arena. Nance, a 6-2 freshman who had been playing behind South Carolina star Medina Dixon. By United Press International Gino Schiraldi raced the length of the field and passed to Emilio Romero for the winning goal with just under five minutes left in the game. The goal, made by Kofi Arubo, was penalty called on goalkeeper Enzo Dipede. Fambrough expects banner recruiting year Kansas City took a 3-10 lead in the second period or by Zoran Savin and one by tube Orlean. By TRACEE HAMILTON Managing Editor Managing Editor Don Eambrough is laughing off all rumors. The Jayhawk football coach's name has been mentioned as a possible replacement for former Athletic Director Bob Marcum. But Fambrough war to consider the annual recruiting战 to consider the position. "WHEN PIGS grow wings and fly, I'll be athletic director," Farnham brought Wednesday between chuckles. "I have no desire to leave this job right here." And that job right now calls for Fambrough to do one of the things he loves best—recruiting. "I get the same satisfaction, the same excitement from recruiting as from the season," he said. "That's what makes me sick about the signing date." "IM SURE some of the coaches like it. Some of them would just as soon go fishing or something. But that takes away one of the highlights of life. It's like Christmas or a brawl来来去." Fambridge referred to the new NCAA ruling, which says a head coach may not be present when high school recruits sign their letters-of-intent Eg. 10. "Nobody understands it," Fambrough said of the ruling. "It's dumb. I can't be there at the time they sign. (Penn State coach Joe) Paterno was very in everywhere at once, so he wanted to pass the rule." The Jayhawks' 8-3 season has helped recruiting immensely this year, and any bowl appearance, win or lose, also adds a certain prestige to a team. *much success is showing through recruiting. Famborough said he already had heard of about 20 verbal commitments. The NCAA limit is 30. He was confident that he wasn't worried about surpassing his limit. "That's a problem I would enjoy having," he said, "I have seen anything like this and I've been kept busy." "OF YOUR VERBAL commitments, they are all players." Fambrough said, emphasizing the latter. "Everybody is recruiting them. But a woman's commitment is just an engagement. It is not a marriage." Not quite forever, but close. Fambrough has been a player, assistant coach or head coach for 30 years. And rarely has he been so pleased with a recruiting season. Even so, the recruits are a fairly impressive group, according to Fambrough. In his first year at UMass Amherst, he scored 103 points. Last spring's recruits, by Fambridge's own admission, were more of a rebuilding group, stocked with linemen and plenty of junior college students. The group, according to Fambridge, will be a little of both. "This year's class is a combination of skill people and big linemen," he said. "They're big people, 6-foot-4 and 6-5, both offensive and defensive." Moore, Fambrigh brought in a sharp class dotted with nationally sought players like Alex Baldwin and Dylan Thomas. "WITH A LITTLE FUN, we'll have a good class. If things fall our way, we have a great chance." To help things fall their way, Fambrough and his staff have been hosting recruits for weekend trips to campus. The last of these weekends begins tomorrow. Fambrough was particularly excited about the last recruiting weekend, when he and the football team were honored at half time of the KU-Oklahoma basketball game last Saturday night. —Don Fambrough 'I'm sure some of the coaches like the rule. Some of them would just as soon go fishing or something. But that takes one of the biggest days of my life. It's like Christmas or a bowl game to me.' "My pitch to all the high school seniors this year is that our people are excited about our football program. It reinforced what I had been told them about the excitement and enthusiasm." FAMBROUGH SAID that, although many people thought the recruits wandered around campus for the weekend, the visits were really well-planned. "The important thing was the little deal before the game and the reaction from the student body," Fambridge said. "The recruits had been hearing about it all weekend. They couldn't get to the reception the players got. It meant a lot to their recruiting. They were really impressed." "They have a full schedule from the time they hit the campus until they leave," he said. "We find out in advance what they are looking for. The basketball game and going out with the players." "The rest of the time is spent with meetings and appointments. They meet with the deans of the different schools they're interested in. They meet with their position coach, the academic counselor and Keith Kephart, the strength coach." Fambrough said that Chancellor Gene A. Budig and the faculty also make themselves available to answer questions for the recruits and their parents. 'They're on their own time, and I'm sure it's a real inconvenience, but they never turn me to businessmen. I am involved. They meet with businessmen and give a chance to go to their homes or places of business. "AND I VISIT with each one of them in audition starting Saturday afternoon and Sunday." Fambrigham said this year's Kansas high school senior class was a bumper recruiting crop. Last year, Kansas recruited heavily out of state, but this year, Fambrigham said, Nebraska and other Big Eight schools also were recruiting in the Sunflower State. Among out of state recruits this season are Dave Gervae and Ken Majors of Edison High in Huntington Beach, Calif. Edison was one of the top high school football teams in the nation last year under Coach Wick Workman, and Kansas was established a California Connection with the EDISON GRADS now at Kansas include quarterback Frank Seurer, tailbacks Kerwin and Dino Bell, safety Troy Seurer and linebacker Bill Malasova. Majors, a quarterback, and Geroux, a backfall, are also being heavily recruited by West Coast schools, including Southern Cal. USC wanted Kerrwin Bell when he graduated two years ago, but Bell decided to go to the same school as Seurer. Fambrough said there were several recruits in Colorado, some in St. Louis and three or four from the Miami area, which has also proved to a Jawahir stronghold in the last few years. Several Kansas players have made verbal commitments to the Jayhawks. These include: - Dane Griffin, 6-2, 8-2, 200-pound lineman from * Lawrence and the All-A14 selection and * All-Star-11 selection. - Mark Henderson, a 217-pound fullback from Lawrence - LAWRENCE * John Martel, a 6-4, 215-pound tackle from - Paul Oswald, 64-200 linebacker from Hayden High in Topeka. - Lyndall Yarnell, 6-2, 190-pound linebacker from Washburn Rural, Topeka. Jayhawk swim teams face Arkansas Tomorrow also will be Jayhawk Swim Day, with former KU swimmers returning to watch the event. The KU women's swim team, who will close out their dual season, and the KU men's team will face Arkansas at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Robinson Natatorium. "I LOOK FOR a good meet," Coach Gary Kemp says, essential for some parties. The women are drawn to him. The women defeated Arkansas last year, 87-56. The men lost, 74-39. Last weekend, the women beat Southern Illinois, 76-73, and the men lost to Missouri, 69-44. For this weekend's game, Kernpf said he was looking for continued progress. "We need a little more speed on the first part of the race," he said. "We need to be aggressive." "The men need to stay on the same track. You don't change anything at the end of the season. We have a set plan for the season, and you want to work with that." This will be the last home meet of the year for the women's team, but the men will face Southern Illinois in two weeks at home. The next Championship game will be the big Eight Championships starting Feb. 25. BOTH KU teams are in their tapering-off period, slowing down their workouts to prepare for the Big Eight Championships. The teams work on gymnastics, swim in workouts and work more on technique. "We have a six-week taper, although some of the swimmers wouldn't say I'm easing up on them," Kempf said. "We spend more time on technique, more concentration on being fast." "It's just the way they feel," he said. "They continue until they feel right in the water. Some do it differently and take different amounts of time." JAYHAWK NOTES: Tammy Thomas' time of 23.6 in the 50-yard freestyle freaks her third in the nation in that event. That is the highest-ranking time of any Jayhawk this year. Mets to get Foster By United Press International NEW YORK-K-the Cincinnati Reds and New York Mets yesterday agreed to a trade, in principle, that would send All-Star outfielder George Foster to the Met's. The Mela would not reveal the names of the players they would send to the Reds until they got them. The Mets have been granted permission by the Reds to talk to Foster, because the deal hinges on the outfielder accepting New York's offer. The 33-year-old slugger, in the option year of his contract with Cincinnati, is seeking a multi-year contract in excess of $1 million a month, asking for a $1 million interest-free loan. Foster has been the most effective run producer in the major leagues over the last p rth s Y/Kansan Staff wednesday's nth meetings the deans of ed in. They academic e strength Gene A. themselves the recruits sure it's a turn involved. a chance to f them inrnoon and kansas high recruiting heavily out of 1. Nebraska re recruiting season are season High in one of the nation last Kansas has in with the sas include aks Kerwin llinebacker llback from Geroux, a recruited by rn Cal. USC educated two so the same n recruits in three or four so proved to new years. adverb verbal ide include; newman from selection and tackle from packer from linebacker ter Reds and to a trade i-Star out- mission by use the deal New York's names of the Reds until option year seeking a 1 million a million in- ective runver the last University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN The University Daily Monday, February 8, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 91 USPS 650-640 Delegates discontent after first divestment talks By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The KU Committee on South Africa, meeting for the first time with trustees of the Kansas University Endowment Association, asked the KU Foundation to invest in South Africa for the next two years. Laird Okie, Lawrence graduate student and member of the KUSA committee, said the committee, the American Association of University Professors and the Endowment Association met in a closed-door session Saturday. The unprecedented meeting was finally scheduled after months of delays by Endowment officials. Okie said he was not optimistic about the outcome of the meeting. "I feel it was disappointing because they won't engage in open dialogue," he said. Okie said he also was disappointed that the media were not allowed into the meeting and that the committee was not permitted to tape record the statements made at the meeting. KANSAS ATTORNEY General Robert Stephan has ruled that the Endowment Association, a private foundation, is not subject to the Kansas Open Meetings or Public Records acts. The trustee committee members who were reported present at the meeting were Olin Petfish, Lawrence, committee chairman; Dolphin Simons Jr., Lawrence; and Robert Riss, Merriam; and William Martin, Topeka, of the University of Kansas Alumni Association. Todd Seymour, Endowment Association president, and Richard Porto, Endowment Association treasurer, also were reported to be present. None of the trustees were available for comment. meet: Okie said Seymour said at the meeting that the American investments continued for the beterment of blacks in South Africa. Elizabeth Banks, professor of classics and a KUSA committee member, said the Endowment Association should consider the moral implication of supporting a racist government. "It is a political issue," she said, "and the Association does not want to be involved in poli- cies." OKIE SAID the Endowment Association lacked any sense of social responsibility. re said Seymour also said the Endowment would suffer a loss through divestment. "That argument doesn't hold water," Okie said. Banks the Endowment Association held to the "prudent man principle" and thought that they would abdicate responsibility to their contributors if they didn't invest money in stable Edward P, Dutton, professor of social welfare and the group's adviser, said he also was disappointed there wasn't much exchange between the two groups. "We need to responsibly move into dialogue," he said. Dutton said he thought the meeting was a perfunctory gesture. He said it would be an exciting process to have the whole campus involved in the issue. "Then the University would be the leader it should be," he said. BANKS ALSO thought KU should be among the universities throughout the country to take the first step in pursuing the issue of divestment. "Why aren't we in a leadership position on this issue?" she said. Odile, Dick and Wambui Githora, Kenya, graduate student, appeared before the trustee Stu Shafer, Great Bend graduate student, refused to go in to the meeting protestings that two other members of the delegation. Banks were involved in the protest, and were not allowed in the meeting as observers. The Endowment Association committee once supported years ago. It started its movement for divestment. Lawrence officials' dispute develops into recall drive Three AAUP members also meet with the trustee committee in a separate meeting. "We think they should consider the role social Spec. AFICA page 65." BvSTEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter Dave Shulenburger, professor of business and AUAP president, said their role extended beyond and beyond the academic. A drive to recall Lawrence City Commissioner Tom Gleason, who asked for the resignation of the city manager, has reached an organizational stage. former mayor Ed Carter said yesterday. The effort to force a vote on whether Gleason should remain in office began Saturday after public disclosure of Gleason's letter to City Manager Buford Watson suggesting that Watson Watson said, "He thought my employment was controversial in the city and on the commission." Gleason was not available for comment. Ocasion was not available for criminal Carter said petitioners would try to get the signatures necessary for a special election to vote Gleason out of office. Should the commission desire to fire Watson, the commissioners would have to vale for the argue. COMMISSIONER Nancy Shontz said she expected the five-member commission to go into a closed session at the regular meeting Tuesday night to discuss Gleason's letter. monitor said issues discussed with Watson in an evaluation by the commission last fall were still unresolved. "I think Gleason is attempting to use Watson as a scapegoat for the things the commission hasn't been able to get done," Carter said. "It's a radical approach, not a professional approach. You can just go back to when he was in college in the 80s." Among many issues discussed earlier with Watson was the problem of control of information, she said. Commissioners questioned the manner in which he briefed them about issues researched by the city's planning staff and whether the commission could be given more options. the commission also discussed with Watson the issue of whether he was overstepping his bounds by making policy or whether he was merely implementing policy, she said. Although Shoriz confirmed that these matters were discussed during the evaluation, she did not know how to conduct the evaluation. WATSON ALSO confirmed that these issues were discussed during the evaluation. "What they wanted, of course, was for us to be more sensitive to a broad range of the community," he said. "They said we should be interested in all groups in the community "They felt like when we made recommendations that we should present several He said they also talked about the role of a city manager. "That's an old textbook definition of whether the city manager makes policy or implements it," he said. "I suspect in the modern day he has a role in both." Myles Schachter, a member of the city planning staff five and a half years ago, said commissioners were given incomplete information by the planning staff then. Schachter, 1643 Rhode Island St., emphasized that he had no information about the internal A LITTLE WARMER See WATSON page 5 Weather It will be mostly cloudy today with highs ranging from 25 to 30 and winds blowing from the northeast at 10 to 20 mph, aeph as the National Weather Service Topoki. Chances of snow are 30 percent for tonight with lows in the teens. Chances of snow early Tuesday will be acerated by cold and windiness and cold with hinds in the 20s. 1985. Zoologist Joseph Collins displays a coachwhip snake in one of the newly refurbished snake exhibits at the Dyche Museum of Natural History. See story page 42. Squad hopes tests show cause of fire By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter The Douglas County Arsenon Squad expects to get results of tests later this week that could help determine the cause of a fire last Wednesday that caused $400,000 worth of damage in downtown businesses. Fire Chief Jim McSwain said Friday that the fire apparently started near the center of the basement at the Royal College Shop, 837 Massachusetts St., in an area used to store boxes of shoes. However, as of yesterday, investigators had not been able to find the cause of the fire. The Royal College Shop suffered the rampage of 100,000 to the building and the merchant inside. McSwain said three surrounding shops suffered an estimated $32,200 smoke damage. The Town Shop, $89 Massachusetts St., an adjoining shop south of the Royal College Shop, suffered the most smoke damage, an estimated $30,000 damage. reported smoke damage. The Jay Shop, 835 Massachusetts St., sustained about $1,200 damage and Campbell's Clothing, 841 Massachusetts St., about $1,000 damage. OTHER Massachusetts Street businesses also McSwain said that investigators from the Lawrence fire and police departments, the Douglas County Sheriff's Department, and the Rocky Mountain Fire Department visited this week to find the cause of the fire. McSwain said last week that the arson squad investigated any big fire until a cause was detected. I Gisela Dresdnhoff, courtesy assistant professor of physics and astronomy, and Edward Zeller, professor of geology, space technology, astrometry and physics, discuss their recent trip to Antarctica where they studied radioactive materials. JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staff In forbidding Antarctica KU profs live, research By SCOTT KNOX Staff Reporter It is the windiest, coldest, driest and most forbidding place on the planet. Here, life is scarce, overnight temperatures are biting cold and volleyball can be a deadly game. This is Antarctica. Two University of Kansas professors recently returned from an extensive minerals study on this polar continent. Edward Zeller, professor of geology, space technology, astronomy and physics, and Gisela Dresschoff, courtesy assistant professor of physics and astronomy, spent most of December and half of January in North Victoria Land, about 1,000 miles from the coast. The area was primarily interested in studying the continent's radioactive materials. "Where we work, we see no life at all," said Zeller, who has spent nine summers in Germany. "We don't think of people as robots." Zeller and Dreschhoff spent most of the summer working season in a low-flying helicopter, measuring radioactive resources with a gamma ray spectrometer—a device used to radiation in carrying levels available to distinguish between different chemical substances. URANUM AND THORium, both potential nuclear fuel sources, have been found in some of the most active areas. But Dresschof's main concern is for the preservation of the environment. "It's one of the concerns that everyone has." she said. Dreschoff said that scientists had started the first negotiations on Antarctica's mineral resources. The general interest of both the United States and the Soviet Union, she said, was to maintain and preserve the conditions of the continent. "It's difficult to say what the outcome will be," she said. Mineral resources in the polar continent are protected by the Antarctic Treaty, signed in Monday Morning 1861 by 13 nations, including the United States and the Soviet Union. The treaty maintains scientific cooperation and prohibits political claims until 1981. "We do have a lot of cooperation under the treaty," Zeller said. "It's the best working treaty there is. But it really doesn't run out and hurries, it just goes up for re-ratification." YET LIFE IN Antarctica is all mineral exploration and research. Physical activity is "The most dangerous thing in Antarctica is sports," Zeller said. "We've people rip fingers and dislocate ankles. It's really deadly." "You don't really have a lot of control over your motions when you are playing on solids." leer said that the food in Antarctica usu- self. See DOE page 5 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 8, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International At least 32 dead, 20 injured in fire at chic Tokyo hotel TOKYO—Fire raced through the top floors of a 10-story hotel in a fashionable section of Tokyo early today, killing at least 32 people and injuring 20 others, including two Americans, fire officials said. Jurus, a Japanese official said the Hotel New Japan, built 20 years ago in the Akasaka-Mitsuke district of Tokyo, a chic quarter of popular nightclubs and bars. (AP) Two of the injured were believed to be Americans. One hospitalized victime, suffering burns on the back and one arm, was identified as Sharon Paff, wife of a U.S. Air Force captain stationed in Okinawa. Another, a man whose name was not immediately known, was reported suffering from smoke inhalation but not burns and was also hospitalized for treatment. Guests who escaped said no alarms sounded and the first they knew of the fire was when they were awakened by smoke or flames. **YUADH, Saudi Arabia - Defense Secretary Secretary Weinberger predicted yesterday a proposed $238 billion military budget would not easily pass Congress, but said it would be a "tragic mistake" to make cuts in the proposed sum.** "I assure you that we not asked for anything more than we can justify," Weinberger said at a press conference after a day of meetings with the company. "There are some people who are saying they don't want to spread this much for defense," he said. "All I'm wearing is that I think that would be a fragile situation." Weinberger's proposed $258 billion military budget for 1983 is a $43.7 billion jump over the 1982 military budget. Of that sum, $25.9 billion would be spent during the year and the remaining $42 billion would be used for the purchase of major weapons systems during the next several years. Reagan wants $757.6 billion budget WASHINGTON - Slashing funds for social services, boosting spending and cutting taxes, the Republican's proposals for a new tax code were released Saturday. Reagan sent Congress a record pancake粟军事 budget of $215.9 billion for everything from personnel to nuclear energy. He proposed nearly 13亿 dollars in cuts, but the president's budget was more modest. James Jones, house budget chairman, said yesterday that congressional reaction to the $757.6 billion budget was one of "disappointment and hostility" and predicted there would be a bipartisan effort to come up with a better budget. Despite $28 billion in proposed cuts and additional proposed savings the administration expects a deficit of $1.5 billion. Reagan urged lawmakers not to retreat from his plan to bolster defense spending or his pledge to cut taxes by saying they would make the deficit "Jones said the administration's deficit projection was overly optimistic. "It will be at least $100 billion," he said. Ex-medic says Army falsified tests SACRAMENTO, Calif.—A former Army medic, breaking 25 years of silence, said yesterday he followed orders to prepare phony records hiding high levels of radiation exposure to soldiers at four atomic tests in 1956 and 1957. Van R. Brandon said his top-secret medic group kept two sets of ledgers to record radiation readings from badges worn by soldiers at the Yucca Flat, Nev., test site. The badges were designed to record the levels of radiation to which the men wearing them had been exposed. One set of books showed no exposures over approved limits, while the other showed far greater exposure. In addition, during a fifth test where he was trained, Brandon said he saw others prepares phony records. A Pentagon spokesman in Washington said he would not comment Brandon, who suffers from degenerative discogenic spine disease, said he was denied veterans benefits and told that the top secret医unit he said two or sixteen children were born mentally retarded and two others developed arthritis. He believed that their problems were due to his own genetic predisposition. Marchers retrace King's journey FUTAW, Ala. —A dwindling group of about 40 Civil Rights activists yesterday finished the second leg of a 180-mile trek to the state capital to protest the convictions of two black women on vote fraud charges and to push for extension of the Voting Rights Act. Nearly 200 marchers began the trek from Carrollton, Ala., Saturday and traveled 10 miles to Allecville, Ala. They held a rally at the ShadGrove Baptist Church and resumed their journey early Sunday. The demonstrators three miles outside Allecville and then rode the rest of the 27 miles to Futaw. Another rally was scheduled for last night, and the marchers planned to leave early this morning for Greensboro. The march, which eventually will retrace the steps of Martin Luther King Jr.'s historic Sela-to-Montgomery journey 17 years ago, was being led by the Rev. Joseph Lowey, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and Walter Fauntroy, chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus. "We may be few in number right now," Lowery said, "but we'll pick it up as we go along." Fetus disposal method questioned The fetuses were found after the owner of the storage container repossessed it from Mel Wiseberg, owner of Medical Analytic Laboratory, Inc., in Santa Monica. Weisberg had failed to make a $1,700 payment on the container. Some of the fetuses, which were found Thursday night, weighed up to four pounds and may have been in the sixth month of development, officials said. LOS ANGELES—The disposal of 900 human fetuses, found packed in a dynein in metal storage container, may have violated a state abortion law. Roger Lopez, a department of health services spokesman, said the abortions apparently were not performed at the medical laboratory, but at hospitals or other clinics. He said the fetuses were sent to the laboratory for analysis. A state health department spokesman said his office would determine whether the fetuses were improperly disposed of. Regulations require that fetuses be disposed of within days of an abortion. Medical records found in a patient indicator that some of the fetuses had been aborted as long ago as 1979. Terrorist sought in police shooting The law also proscribes the manner of disposal. NORTH ATTLEBORO, Mass.—State police searched a wooded area for an armed man who fired at two troopers yesterday, and who is identified as belonging to a radical terrorist gang suspected in the murder of a New Jersey State Trooper. A state police spokesman said authorities identified the man who fled from a station wagon full of weapons after a brief 2 a.m. skirmish as Jan Laman, a member of a group headed by Richard Williams, the suspect in the trooper's slaying. A second armed suspect was captured, police said. A second man in the car was captured as he sat in the passenger seat shortly after his partner shot at the two troopers, the spokesman said. Police said they believed the man captured was Christopher King of Brooklyn, N.Y. He was wearing a bulletproof vest and had a 6mm pistol. Snakes draw large crowds at museum The snakes in the Museum of Natural History's Kansas snake collection might appear to be dead and stuffed, but they aren't. By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter The live snake collection, on the sixth floor of Dyche Hall, is the museum's second most popular exhibition, he said. Comaniche, a stuffed horse, which was the only survivor of Custer's Last Stand, is the most popular, he said. Joseph Collins, zoologist, said the live snakes usually were motionless because they were at ease in their surroundings. Collins helped set up the first live snake exhibits in 1969, when the snakes were displayed in small aquariums. The display areas now are larger, with sand and water that encourage broaches that normally would be part of the snake's natural habitat. "People basically love seeing snakes, but they still have a strong love/hate relationship." "If the snakes don't like their new background, then we have to go back to the drawing board." Collins said. Recently, Collins said, the museum has been refurbishing the backgrounds and sceneries of its live snake exhibits. The museum's zoologists have to experiment with different sceneries until the snakes are no longer bothered by them, Collins said. The garter snakes, he said, tore down the neck of a giant monkey, so the ropes were to have wristbands. snake's liking, it would root them up or break them down. Collins said the walls of the displays were repainted and new identification panels installed. the drawing so that HE SAID if the tree branches or other background materials were not to the Collins said that people could come to the museum and see which snakes were in their collection. venomous, so that if they were camping they could differentiate between the two types of snakes. Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 "You need to know what venomous snakes look like so you don't upset yourself over a garter snake," Collins said. Below the labels are new maps showing where the snakes can be found in MOST OF the museum's snakes could be handled by people, he said, and are used in public education classes. used in public education classes. He said people were fascinated by the snake's alien-shaped body. but the museum no longer feeds the snakes publicly, Collins said, because someone complained that the snakes got poisoned to watch the snakes chase mice and eat them alive. How Two At The Losing Game DIET CENTER It's a Natural! 0195 New Haven Medical Center 841 DIET 841-DIET Effective Listening Program Get the most out of your classes, by remembering more of what you hear. 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Old Fashioned Thin Pizza & Deep Pan Pizza Spaghetti, Rigatoni Garnie Bread & a Grand 21 ALL For Only. 3,19 Monday - Friday 11:00 - 1:30 Dr Pepper THE AIRLINES STUDENTS COMMAND 10% OFF COMMAND PERFORMANCE Students save 10% on all Command Performance Services with a FREE Student ID Card including the Performance Haircut $ ^{M}$ The haircut that continues to perform for you and your active lifestyle, long after you've left our shop. Shampoo. Performance Haircut $ ^{M}$ are designed for both men and women Appointments are not necessary. So come in for your FREE ID Card and let us perform for you Command Performance Weekdays 9-8 Saturday 9-6 Sundays 12-5 1806 W.23rd-In the Southwest Plaza Phone 843-3985 P r t s University Daily Kansan, February 8, 1982 Page 3 P rth ps JOHN HANKAMMERIKansan Stat The image shows two individuals seated at a desk in an office setting. The person in the foreground is a man with a beard, wearing a white shirt and glasses, who appears to be speaking or gesturing. Behind him, another person is partially visible, sitting on a couch and facing away from the camera. In the background, there are more papers and books on the desk, suggesting a working environment. State Reps. John Solbach (right) and Betty Jo Charlton, both Lawrence democrats, discuss the Declaration of Independence with their Western Civilization class. The class meets weekly at Charlton's house. State reps teach Western Civ. By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter The situation is ironic—two Kansas legislators teaching KU students about the ideas of, among others. Socrates, whom Greek legislators sentenced to death for "corrupting" young people with his ideas. But to the five students who study Western Civilization under the guidance of State Reps. Betty Jo Charlton and John Solbach, both D-Lawrence, and to the program chairwoman, oversees the class, the situation is ideal. "They offer a better perspective into the readings because of their experience," Chuck Anderson, Garden City junior, said. "I especially like them as teachers. That is they don't act like teachers." OFFICIALLY Solbach and Charlton are unpaid 'adjunct coursey members of the Western Civilization program at Northwestern, where academicers, they are qualified to teach the class because of their education and experience in politics, James Seaver, chairman of the Civilization program, said yesterday. "I think there's an advantage to having these people who are involved in state politics teach our students," Seaver said. "I think if I had been in school and had one of the state legislators teaching me, I'd have been excited." For both Charlton, who began teaching Western Civilization 10 years ago, and Solob, the required readings were taken together with their duties as state politicians. "A lot of the ideas we're dealing with here are political ideas," said Solbach, who joined Charlton in teaching the class last semester. "They fit in naturally with what we're doing in the Legislature." Former classmates in the graduate division of political science at KU, both Solbach and Charlton try to blend experience with the readings discussed in class. DURING A session last Wednesday night, at which the group discussed the Declaration of Independence, some students expressed surprise that the wording of the Declaration seemed "political." "It sounds so political," Anderson said. "I expected it to be more virtuous." "Diligence is vital." "You didn't expect it to?" Chariton asked. After class, Charlton said, "It's important for students to realize that politics aren't dirty. It's the art of government." Solbach added, "Politics is the method by which we allocate the values in our lives. Whether it's a husband- wife relationship, or whatever, politics are involved." Anderson said the teachers' experience in politics often led to informal discussions of political happenings around the state. However, Charlton said she tried to tone down the political aspects of the readings at times. "Half the time we talk about politics in front of a great Civilization," he said. "we're great." "I tend to emphasize the political aspects of things," she said. "I think perhaps I overdo it, so I let a student start the discussions." THE CLASS meets, discusses and argues beside the fireplace at Charlton's house, 1624 Indiana St., every Wednesday night. Often, disagreements arise there between the teachers themselves. "A couple of students last semester accused us of fighting the all time," Charlton said, but added that, as at the house, the arguments were not personal. "When I speak, this is just my opinion, and John knows this is my opinion," she said. Union operations down $9,000 The Kansas Union is in a healthy financial position, but administrators are concerned about services that require them to weigh strength through the first half of the fiscal year. By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, told the University of Kansas Memorial Corporation Board of Directors Saturday that total operations were down $8,000 from last week. The department was not enough to worry about yet. "We're in a fairly healthy financial position considering the economy," Ferguson said. From all its operations, the Union has netted $154,299.95 this year, compared to $129,155.88 this time last year. SEND A BALLOON-A GRAM! F.O. Box 3122 Lawrence K 65044 1812841 3848 MagazineStore Balloon-a-Gram "Rise To The Occasion" SEND A BALLOON AGRAM! Ferguson said that after the Bookstore and Student Union Activities figures were omitted, because they revert to zero before the fiscal year of 2018. The other figures were $9,000 short of last year's figure. THE BOOKSTORES in the Satellite and main unions continued to hold their own weight in the financial balance. Because of healthy profits, the board approved a 6 percent rebate for Period 70, setting aside $40,000 to pay the rebate on bookstore receipts until June 30, 1982. Other departments in the Union's operations didn't fare as well. The financial committee outlined several areas of concern in its report to the Ferguson said the progress of the Satellite Union toward becoming self-supporting was slower than expected, and the Union administration was KU takes third in Quiz Bowl The Rocks and Docs, KU's College Quiz Book representative, finished in third place at regional competition this weekend in Warrensburg, Mo. KU won its first two games in the competition by beating Southeast Missouri State University at 130 points and dismantling Tuusla University 320- They then lost their next two to finish third out of the nine teams competing. "We were very satisfied with our placing in Palmebau, Prairie Ridge senior, said. The team reached the regionals by placing first at the KU Quiz Bowl, which was held last month. "We gave it our best shot, and that's all you can ask for. We had a fun time down there with the other teams and picking out the Warrensts night life." Other members on KU's Quiz Bow team were Pete Smith, Wichita senior; Cluck Dempwein, Wichita senior; Chuck Conklin, Wichita senior; and Pete Copeland, Lawrence senior. on campus TODAY THE DISABILITIES DISCUSSION GROUP will meet at 4 p.m. in 7-D Lippincott Hall. JACK WINEROCK will perform a FACULTY RECITAL ON PIANO at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF KANSAS will meet at 9 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENT ORGANIZATION will sponsor a Dutch lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Cork II of the Union. A LUNCH SPONSORED BY HILLEL will feature David Gottlieb, associate professor of law, speaking on "Some Legal Perspectives on Church and State," at 12:15 p.m. in Cork I of the Union. There will be a joint meeting of the KU GEOPHYSICS SOCIETY AND THE SOCIETY OF PHYSICS STUDENTS at 4 p.m. in room 305 of the Satellite Union. Refreshments will be served before the meeting. THE UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY members along with A&E of the University A BIBLICAL SEMINAR discussing the Gospel of St. Mark will begin at 4:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries center. MINISTRY CENTER THE TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet from 7 to 9 o.m. in 242 Robinson. 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The Jaybowl recreation center in the Kansas Union was another aspect of the operation that continued to worsen financially in the first half of fiscal year 2018. "The Jaybowl is presently not in a financial position," Ferguson Phil McKnight, Memorial Corporation president, said the situation would be studied to determine whether the Jaybowl space could be used in a more functional way that could better serve students. THE COMMITTEE report also noted a declining trend in the income from KU Concessions, which encompasses the Union candy counters, Wescoe cafeteria, vending machines and game concessions. Ferguson said other financial problems had been brought under control in the first half of the fiscal year. clip and save ACADEMY CAR RENT & L The number of returned checks had not grown from last year, hovering around the $10,000 level. He added that the check-cashing fee increase from 10 to 20 cents had helped the banking department stay afloat. "The level's too high, but at least we've kept it from growing." Ferguson said. ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/ day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841-0101 808 W 24th (expires Feb. 28, 1982) COUNTRY mm M-Th only 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 $1. 00 OFF Chick or Steak COUNTRY /nn $2.00 OFF Chick or Steak Fri. & Sat. 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 $un. 11-8 VALENTINE'S DAY BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. WE KNOW YOUR LOVE IS CONSTANT AND SO ARE OUR PRICES ORDER EARLY OPEN SUNDAY, FEB. 14 TIL NOON Flower Shoppe Open 1101 Mass 841 0800 Mon-Sat A COLUMBIA PICTURE PAUW SALLY NEWMAN FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG VARSITY 'DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1085 CALIGULA SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 1000 W. 42ND ST. Wilmington, DE 19816 Wed Sat Sun 2 15 HILLCREST 2 UIPD AND JOBB TELEPHONE 877-800-6000 The mystery of "The Bird" The danger of "Pecho" VENOM R ENTRAINING... CHARIOTS OF FIRE PLC Live 7:15-9:30 Mar Sat Sun 2.15 HILL Crest 2 The master of "The birds" The danger of Psychi Free Mat 8:30 Mat Sat, Sat 2.15 HILL CREST 1 HEART LAND Live 7:30-9:30 MAT SAT SUN 2.15 CINEMA 1 1535 AND UMA MICHAEL MORRIS Whose life is it anyway? 2:00-9:30 Sat 2.00 CINEMA 2 1535 AND UMA MICHAEL MORRIS THEY ALL ENTERTAINED BEN AHRON Live 7:30-9:30 Sat Sun 2.15 HILLCREST 11TH APRIL 1980 HEART AND JOBS EVE. 2-30 & 8-20 MAT SAT SUN, 2:10 Wose life it anyway ? 20.9-20 Sat.Sun 2.00 CINEMA 2 TICKETS AND CAMERA TOM BROOKS STUDIO THEY ALL LUNGED AND I WAS ON THE MAP HARRY POTTER GABRIEL JACOBS Ivy 7:30-8:30 Sat.Sun 2.00 Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 8 1982 Not just for Poland Last week, the KU Friends of Solidarity asked all organized living groups to skip one meal and donate the savings to ease the food shortage in Poland. The group's efforts are admirable. It saw a problem and quickly acted to relieve it. Many KU living groups already have chosen to comply with the "Have a Heart For Poland" program, and the money they donate will be used to buy CARE packages that should reach Poland in three weeks. The program seems effective, but its very effectiveness raises a difficult question: Why did we respond so quickly to Poland's problems? And why do we respond so slowly to other problems? The food drive for Poland is a safe, presentable charity, like the move to adopt those cute Italian orphans after World War II, or the charity functions that civic groups stage for non-disfiguring diseases. The news reports that trickle out of Poland indicate that the Polish people are suffering. They are held under martial law. Meat is scarce and they do not eat as well as they used to. The children cry because they cannot have candy. But few in Poland are starving. In many African and South American villages children wake up hungry every day of their lives. Their stomachs are distended and empty. They die young. In Haiti, many are forced to drink the fetid water that collects in ditches. It is one of the poorest countries in the world, but it receives less U.S. aid than any country but Guyana. The people who organized the "Have a Heart" program are in earnest; they are concerned; and they are to be commended. And in the United States, 25 million people have incomes that fall below the poverty level. Many live and die without hope. But for many others the program seems to be a kind of charity-of-the-week. Skip a meal and ease your mind. The program is a good first step, but its success only underscores the fact that when we confront most human suffering—especially the suffering of non-white humans—we are blind and deaf. Have a heart for Pc' and this month. But don't forget the rest of the world. Small-town KU students find that most labels mean nothing Students come to the University of Kansas from all over the world and soon crash into ideas radically different from the ones they were brought up with. The convenience of labeling people—as foreign, rich, atheistic, gay—gives students from crashing too hard. It's easy to disregard them and leave them alone, simply, if you already know you don't like guys. This attitude comes from the same source as any prejudice: lack of familiarity with what lies beneath the labels that we slap on people different from ourselves. Heterosexuals have a biased view of homosexuals. Many are determined to remain heterosexual. LISA BOLTON arched brows and nervous frowns. Many have never met a homosexual when they come to college. Most students hadn't heard much about gays in their small, Midwestern towns. But as reports of increasingly vocal homosexuals infiltrated the news, the word "fagot" creet in the vocabulary of dirty words that elementary school children sbut across playgrounds. Parents and school administrators in one small Kansas town stumbled onto a potential scandal when they hired two women--who were not teachers. The gym classes at the junior high and high schools. The fact that both were husky women with short haircuts did nothing to dispel their stereotypical image. The women lived together, were very smart and had friends, pets, and they did not volunteer the information. But the girls in the 7th-grade gym class knew, that they ate it about daily in tones of faginaded disgust. The girls dressed quickly after class, sure that they were being observed by the teacher as she stood, one leg hoisted on a bench checking the clothes from the roster attached to her clipboard. After a few years, the two women resigned and moved away. The next coach wore a diamond necklace. Nationwide, however, the emergence of homosexuals from their closets was not so easily dismissed. They united; they organized; they went to their own bars in the face of vocal opposition from such representatives of traditional morality as Anita Bryant. The mass entertainment industry struggled with a new stock character. Hollywood alter-egoes like "Gatsby" and "Marnie" from AI Pacino and the leather-and-chains gay bar scene in "Cruising" to limp-wristed, silver-voiced Jack Ritter on television's "Three's Company." Leading the gay movement in the Midwest was the University of Kansas, where homosexuals in the early 1970s could not be ignored. They united and won office space in the Kansas Union; they sponsored dances; they organized support groups. At KU, a refuge for liberals in an old-fashioned state, homosexuals are now invited to represent their version of the loving relationship in a class offered by the psychology department. Mental health services offer gay counseling along with their other services. And society as a whole has reshuffled to accommodate its homosexual members. But the attitudes of many heterosexual individual still range from indifference to dislike. Those stamped with the gay label are seen as walking stereotypes rather than as real people. Some suspect them of being homosexual just by the effects. Gays seem too foreign to be taken People harbor these feelings—despite the exposure homosexuals have had in the press and on the KU campus—because they don't know any homosexuals well. Certainly none of their friends are homosexual; none, at least, that they know of. When friendship between two people precedes the revelation that one of the two is homosexual, the "straight" friend often is forced to reconsider his opinion of homosexuals. Situations like this happen more often as homosexuals stop hiding their sexual feelings. At the end of the semester, having never dared to actually speak to him, she found herself alone with him in a deserted hallway after they had finished their final exams. Embarrassed by the silence as they walked toward the door together, she finally asked about his plans for Christmas break. She was acutely aware that she was not talking to a classmate but to A Homosexual. One woman came to KU as a freshman with an attitude of distance toward homosexuality. She spent one of her first-semester classes secretly observing a homosexual member of the class. He told her that his parents were getting divorced. As he talked about the breakup of his family, she saw tears in his eyes and felt sad for him. He was no longer just a Homosexual. This isn't a made-for-television movie. There is no moving story to tell of the deep friendship that grew from a chance encounter between a homosexual man and a small-town girl. But the incident underlines the fact that a current current of humanity flows beneath all labels—including that of "homosexual." She never saw him again. KANSAN (USPS 50450) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Mail postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas and mail by mail to Lawrence, Kansas or sent outside the county year around the county. Student subscriptions are $a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas Flint Hall. Fax The University Daily Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Nataline Judie Managing Editor Travee Hamilton Editorial Editor Karen Schlueter Campus Editor Gene George Associate Campus Editor Jane Weald Associate Campus Editor Joe Rebein, Becca Chancy Assignment Editor Skye Baghera Assignment Editor Ron Hargatton Assocate Sports Editor Gino Stripoli Enhance Editor Craig Beach Enhance Editor Liana Manodis, Lillian Davin, Sharon Appelheim Makeup Editor Lisa Manodis, Lillian Davin, Lila Manodis Wire Editors Ben Biger Food Editor John Blakey Staff Photographers Joe Hardesty, John Hanhammer, John Elks Bob Greenspan, Tracey Thompson, McDonald Retail Sales Manager Ann Hornberger National Sales Manager Howard Shallowby Campus Sales Manager Serryn Jenkins Classification Manager Serryn Jenkins Production Manager Larry Leibengood Transaction Manager John Rees Sales and Marketing Adviser John Ohrerman General Manager and News Adviser Rick Musser CONCENTRATION CAMP POLAND CONCENTRATION CAMP UNITED STATES HAITIAN DETENTION FACILITY MIAMI, FLA. © RONALD HAWKS CONCENTRATION CAMP POLAND Haitians languish in forgotten camps By ROBERT L. BERSTEIN New York Times Special Features New York Times Special Features One returns from a recent visit to Fort Allen, the former Army camp in Puerto Rico where 800 of the 2,500 Haitian refugees who have reached our shores are confined, with the distinct impression that the Haitians have become hostages to deter future arrivals. Perhaps our government hopes that those who return to Haiti will spread the word of how bad things are in the United States so that others will not come. There are guards at the gate—not American soldiers but private guards hired by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. The raftans are kept in a compound on a stretch of hard-baked ground perhaps 290-yards long without a tree or blade of grass. It is surrounded by rocks, and its tops tipped over with water, one within the other. It was very cold. The Haitians were sitting and standing around listless. I spoke with three young Haitians who were brought to me. They said that life in the camp was unpleasant, that most felt depressed and, as a result, ate and drank little. They said they would return to Haiti except for the danger to their lives. Inside, the women's compound is separated from the men's by yet another fence, covered with plywood to prevent contact. The immigration officer in charge told me that this is done because it is impossible to document legal marriages. They said they were willing to work hard but did not understand why they were only paid $1 a day. The amiable public relations officer accompanying us did not get much response when he interjected that the camp provided activities such as soccer and dominoes. The man who did most of the talking had left Haiti in a small boat in June and arrived in Florida after 21 days at sea. He left Haiti because he belonged to a club that had been beaten by some members of the club had been beaten; others had disappeared or been killed. The Haitian said there was no indication of when they might be released. The immigration officer told me that the refugees had been detained for varying periods—up to six months—and that they were always offered the opportunity to return to Haiti. Oh, and they gave back four, were deported. Many were up in litigation and could not be returned. I told the immigration officer that I had heard boredom was the biggest problem. He replied that there were some classes in carpentry that provided tables for the mess halls. Palm fronds were bought for weaving although the price of fronds had gone up steeply since the government 100 Haitians were engaged in some sort of job training or work although the programs had been slow to start. Carlos Garcia, a Puerto Rican civil rights lawyer who was trying to act on the Haitians' behalf, asked me to assure a group of them in the compound that they had not been killed or beaten. They were killed, and he was having trouble convincing them that any hopeful action was in prospect. Garcia said Washington was doing everything possible to detain the refugees in the camp and to obstruct their admission to the United States as political refugees. The previous evening, I had met with Jean Claude Bajoux, a Haitian who is a professor at the University of Puerto Rico. Bajoux, who is actively involved in refugee affairs thinks that if the refugees are forced to return to Haiti, the authorities would leave them alone for two or three months. Once it is certain that the United States had forgotten them, however, the secret police would beat or kill them. In Bajex's judgment, it is imperative that the United States cut off all financial support for the Haitian government, because practically none of it reaches the people. He said that the United States and the country by the President-for-Life Jean-Claude Duvalier amounts to $600 million. A few conclusions are in order: First, the Haitian refugees are being isolated indefinitely. Conditions at Fort Allen and other detention camps in the United States persist. A recent riot and desperate attempts at escape Second, Washington is trying to make it very difficult for Haitians to obtain official refugee status. Third, we run a huge moral crisis among Haitians to return to the country they have fled. The solution to the immigration problem is not simple but it is hard to believe that imprisoning Haitians in camps like Fort Allen is the best this nation can do. (Robert L. Bernstein is chairman of the U.S. Helsinki Watch Committee, which monitors domestic and international compliance with human rights provisions for the 1975 Helsinki Accords. Bernstein is also a founding member of the new America Watch.) Letters to the Editor To the Editor: In response to Debbie Seusey's Jan. 25 article covering the pro-life and pro-choice rallies in Lawrence, I ask the readers to view the issue in a different light. Abortion clearly a question of human rights Pro-choice supporters, in most cases, have good reason to believe that pre-lifers have made a religious and political issue of abortion. The issue of abortion is a political matter. It is plainly a human rights issue. The question remains: Whose human right is being violated—the woman's, or that of the prenatal child? Pro-choices think a woman should not be denied a choice concerning her own body. Pro-liers believe her choice to relieve emotional or physical suffering denies the prenatal child of life—un fair trade-off. Plainly, the main point of controversy is deciding when viability, or the presence of a unique human being protected by his or her own human rights, occurs. As a human rights activist, I found it personally necessary to act in terms with the issue and take a stand. Most individuals are aware of the emotional arguments. My knowledge of the issue, based solely on emotions from the left, left me standing in the middle of the road. On the one hand, I claimed that I could never receive an abortion. Yet, at the same time, I sympathized with unwed teenagers who were victims of their own mistakes and, on rare occurrences, However, after careful analysis of the following facts, my prolonged indecision was resolved. At conception, sex, eye color and many other characteristics are determined, proving the uniqueness of the individual. Eighteen days after conception, the child has a heartbeat. Twenty-seven days later he has brain waves. At nine weeks, the infant is responsive to pain, gets hiccups and sucks his thumb—all taking place within the first trimester. What's more, many aborted babies have survived the "medical procedure," living proof that they are separate human beings, not mere anemonees of their mothers' bodies. perlages of their mother. I urge pro-choicers to re-evaluate the facts and Y answer the question: Does relief of suffering justify taking away a human's life? If the public allows doctors to kill prenatal children merely because the act cannot be seen, the law enforcers and judiciary system must also permit the murdering of honest citizens. Sondy Stoan Leawood sophomore At the same time, I appeal to pro-lifers to avoid side issues of religion and politics and address the abortion controversy for what it is—a human rights issue. **Sandy Sloan** Student judges good The University Daily Kansas's Feb. 2 editorial attack decrys the proposed nourishment hourly fees for student judges who serve on the Parking and Traffic Board was self-righteous and refutes a lack of knowledge of the appellate court referred by the University to traffic violators. To the Editor First of all, the facts—noticeably absent from both our conversation and the page one story — Ann Arbor is a city. The Kansan aducatively questions the motives of these student judges for their desire to receive Traffic court is available to those students who choose to appeal their parking violations rather than pay them. First-year law students serve as prosecutors, who represent the University, and the district attorney, who represents the Students who serve as prosecutors first semester serve as defense attorneys second semester and vice versa. Student attorneys who win the most cases are asked to serve as judges the next year. Other defendants are asked by aspiring litigators who are rated by the judges on the effectiveness of their presentations. Is it not logical that second-year law students would serve in the capacity of judges just as members of the Kansas staff supervision reporters student making their debout on the campus paper? This brings me to my second point. The Kansan is irresponsible when it chides these law students for not wanting to serve simply for the benefit of the country and the opportunity to serve fellow students." prts The Kansan says that valuable experience the judge gain should be sufficient compensation. It should be noted that each person listed on the Kansas masstheat receives $alary. Would Vanessa Herron, the editor, forsake her $100 salary for the honor of serving as editor of the Kansan? The paper is considered to be one of the best campus dailies in the country. Shouldn't Herron and her colleagues be willing to work for free in return for that prized addition to their resumes—member of the staff of the University Daily Kansan. So shouldn't Heron and her staff donate their time to the mere opportunity to serve their own needs? rest assured Kanasan staffers. We know you aren't in it for the money. But then, neither are you. Rachel C. Lipman, Rachel C. Lipman, Lawrence first-year law student Student judges bad I am delighted to hear that five of the so-called "justices" are resigning from their administrative duties on the traffic board, and only that the cry bakes resign from the board as well. To the Editor: What silliness to drape these kids with titles such as “presiding judge” and “associate chief I heap contempt on all of those associated with the parking service—whose function it is to transfer money from students and others to the parking agency coffers. I wish them ill, and suggest their next board meeting be held on Potter's Lake. Lawrence graduate student University Daily Kansan, February 8, 1982 Page 5 p r th gi From page 1 agency and uses It may sily coub theawyerssts and o-called air adnd only board as ed with t is to s to the Africa board issues should play in their investments. South Africa is among those." SHULENBURGER said they were given a fair opportunity to say what they wanted to say in the Robert Shelton, professor of religious studies and AAUP executive committee member, said there was not much discussion between them and the trustees. "But they wanted to hear what we had to say," he said. Shulenburger said the Endowment Association existed for the good of the University. "They should be careful of engaging in activities which may reflect badly on the University." The Endowment Association should make social considerations when making investments. The Endowment Association reportedly has about $10 million invested in South Africa. PRIOR TO the meeting the KUSA committee issued a statement of the following objections to the bill: - The number of committee members admitted to the meeting was arbitrarily limited to - The meeting was scheduled to last for only 45 minutes. - The meeting was closed without allowing access to the press. "This is consistent with the secretive and publicly unaccountable nature of the Endowment Association and its operations," the statement read. The statement also said that the meeting was set only after months of delay. The committee said it had received no response to its letter of request, asking the meeting with the truce committee. Only after another letter and telephone calls, the statement said, was the meeting scheduled. The committee's letters and calls were never answered by the Endowment Association President. The committee learned of the Feb. 6 meeting through a third party, the statement said. BANKS SAID the meeting came about only after a request was made by AUAP last summer. workings of city hall since he resigned his post in January 1977. HE ALSO SAID the bad policies were not implemented by Watson, but by the city's "The point is that the city manager knew it was going on and everything got worse," Schachter said. "I wasn't allowed to exercise professional ethics. From page 1 "I was instructed not to answer any questions from commissioners even when a commissioner asked me to. The information given to the city commission was not the full range of in- Watson "I was often being told to bluff the public. I was told to treat the public in a very inferior manner." "At the time Watson said, 'We have to improve that situation.' I waited for four or five months, and the situation got worse." Schachter said he went to wagon and told him the commission was not afforded all the choices. HE'S Scratchier resigned. Schachter said that today, "the planning department is infinitely better than they've ever been." Pole ally was good because it was brought from either the United States or New Zealand. “Sometimes we have native Antarctic fish,” Zeller said, adding that they were very oily and contained a chemical similar to the ocean’s seabed, themselves from the frigid Antarctic waters. From page 1 "Some days you just have to stay in camp." Dreschoff said. "Without wind and with clear skies, we had been sunbathing down there." AND THE SUN shines day and night during December, Zeller said. But despite freezing temperatures, sunbathing is a pastime—but only when all the helicopters already are in use. If the researchers can leave camp, no work can be done. "I't never gets darker than it is outside right now," he said, pointing to the bright afternoon sun shining through his office window in Nichols Hall. The highest temperature recorded during their stay was 35 degrees. The lowest was minus 22. "This season may have been warmer than most," Dreschoff said. "There was one very warm day at South Pole Station. It got up to minus 12." This season's trip included a half-hour stop at the pole for refueling. But Zeller and Dresshoof both admit that Agent Tigger's budget cuts could affect future staff. Zeller and Dreschboff plan to spend the 1982-83 season working at the glacier, named for pioneer Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scott, who died during a blizzard in 1912 after failing to become the first human to reach the South Pole. ABOUT $4.5 MILLION already has been cut from the National Science Foundation's budget, Dreschhoff said. The KU team receives its entire funding from that agency. "It won't affect us next year," Dreschhoff said, pointing out that the team already had some players injured. JERRY HARPER ATTORNEY 901 KENTUCKY ATTORNEY SUITE 204 841-9485 Representative Services & Fees Representative Services & Fees Initial Consultation...FREE Divorce (uncontested)...1190 Name Change...1115 Adoption (with consents)...1445 Simple Will...125 Straight Bankruptcy (short form, no assets)...1225 Ch. 13 Bankruptcy (wage earner)...1255 C. Cummings...125 Racers Tie In With Us Recreation Services Racquetball Singles Tournament - Play is available for men and women in three classes provided there are enough entrants: advanced, intermediate, and novice. - Entry Fee is one can of unopened racquetballs submitted with completed entry form. - Entry Deadline is Thursday, February 11, 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson. - Play begins Sunday, February 14. Entry forms are available in 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546. 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Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 HUTTON For a limited time only while supplies last, frames by Hang Ten ON SALE AT 30% OFF 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. maus charge net admission fee SR SR MOTOBECANE FRANCE Mick's Bicycle Shop 842-3131 1339 Massachusetts T PENTE THE CLASSIC GAME OF SKILL 1982 LAWRENCE CITY CHAMPIONSHIP HOMOS AT GAMMONS MONDAY FEBRUARY 15,1982 8:00 p.m. Officially Sanctioned Qualifying Tournament 1st PRIZE: Round trip all expense paid to Dallas and lodging for 2 at PLAZA OF THE AMERICAS HOTEL & Deluxe Pente Board enscribed "Lawrence City Champion" You may qualify for: 2nd PRIZE: Deluxe Pente Board from Footlights 3rd PRIZE: A keg of beer from Gammons 1982 WORLD OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP IN DALLAS FEBRUARY 27 & 28 1st PRIZE: $5,000 & Trip for 2 to London plus A one of a kind Ceramic Vase Pente Trophy Pre-register at Gammons and Footlights co-sponsored by & Many happy Return are currently paying 6% of total purchases from the fall of '81 (July 1, 1981 to Dec. 31, 1981). These are period 70 receipts. They may be redeemed at the Customer Service Desk at the Main Bookstore or at the Satellite Shop, with your student ID. Period 70 receipts will be redeemed until June 30, 1982. The Kansas Union Bookstores K.U. BOOKSTORE Period No. 70 12462/0 101 226 17/10/01 239 MDS 86 PMS 79 MDS 9 30 AM 7 45 AM kansas XU union bookstores main union level 2, satellite shop MARCH 13-19 TAOS . . . A world of its own: vast uncrowded, powder slopes under a brilliant blue sky; slopes for all levels of skiing; the historic town of Taos. . . 303 includes transportation, 4 nights lodging, ski rental & 4 days lift tickets. SKI TAOS SKI TAOS Last day to sign up: Mon., Feb. 8th at the SUA office, Kansas Union 864-3477 This week send our FTD Hearts & Flowers Bouquet. Valentine's Day is Sunday, February 14. Happy Wedding Day Glass make 'S & er B Valer You're sure to capture her heart with the romantic fresh flowers Heart Stick Pin, and exclusive FTD Glass Heart Dish that make up our FTD HEARTS & FLOWERS™ Bouquet It's romantic. And says all the things you ve been meaning to say. So call or visit us today Because every antine deserves flowers 6TH AND KASOLD westridge floral PHONE 749-2860 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 FTD helping you say it right. SOPHOMORES COULD THE NAVY INTEREST YOU IN 2 YEARS PAID TUITION? If you are a sophomore at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Two-Year Scholarship. The Navy will even include $100 a month spending money. When you graduate, you will have a job in the fleet as a naval or marine officer. You will train in Nuclear Submarines, Surface Ships, Naval Aircraft or one of many other exciting fields. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF 2 YEARS PAID TUTION Call the Professor of Naval Science at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC) Paid Tuition, Spending Money, and a Job. That is Navy ROTC. Pane 6 University Daily Kansan, February 8, 1982 On the record Burglaries entered two Lawrence art galleries and stole more than $8,000 worth of art objects sometime between 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. A police said. Burglaries broke a window near the front door of the Kellas Gallery, 7 E. Seventh St., and climbed into it then entered the Lawrence Lithography Workshop, 7 E. Seventh St., through an unlocked back door. The Lawrence Lithography Workshop is located in the basement of the Kellas Gallery. Judy Kella, owner of the Kella Gallery, said yesterday that she had identified 18 missing pieces which were valued at more than $3,000. "There are as many as 15 more pieces that haven't been identified which could conceivably double the value of what was stolen." Kellas Burglar's took paintings, drawings, original prints and sculpture pieces. Kellas said. They also stole five vinyl and chrome The burglarstole one lithograph from the Lawrence Lithography Workshop, police said. The lithograph, by Robert Sidurow, KU professor of art, was valued at $150. There are no suspicions in the case. All art in the Kellas Gallery is done by local artists, Kellas said. Some of her stolen stole were done by KR family members. There are no suspects in the burglaries, police said. BURGLARS ALSO stole a television worth $500 from 1908 E. 19th St. between 8 and 9:30 p.m. Friday, police said. Burglar's broke out a window in the door to the residence and took a Sharp 17-inch color television. There are no suspects. THEVEYS TOOK $500 worth of car equipment from a parked car at 1741 W. 198t St, sometime between 8:30 p.m. Thursday and 8 a.m. Friday. Police said thieves used a tire iron to remove four wire wheels covers, each valued at $125, from a 1978 Mercury Marquis. There are no suspects. THEVES ALSO took $400 worth of car equipment from 1600 Oxford Road sometime between 10 p.m. Thursday and 11 a.m. Friday. They pried four chrome wheel covers from a 1972 Oldmobile Cuttas, possibly with a tire iron, police said. There are no suspects. GO Professional Hairatling for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters Bring Your Valentine Date to The Castle Tea Room Sunday Feb.14th ❤️❤️❤️ KUSFC PRESENTS: THE SNOBS AGAINST THE SLOBOS Caddyshack Feb. 12 & 13 (Fri. & Sat.) at 7, 9, & 11 p.m. in DYCHE AUD. (next to the Union) Tickets: $1.50 seats are limited ATTENTION A free shuttle bus is available for transportation between Murphy Hall and Plymouth Congregational Church KU Students and Chamber Music Patrons attending the concert by the Juilliard String Quartet. Bus will leave "N" Zone Parking Lot, across from Murphy Hall, at 7:30 p.m. and will return immediately following the concert. Free parking available in "N" zone By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter Canadians Rose-Bowl bound Wagon trip fulfills dream Mareel and Huguette Robert and their three children are traveling across the United States in a covered wagon. The Julland Concert is at 8:00 p.m. Thursday, February 11, at Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont. Tickets are now on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. The French Quebec family has been on the road since last May, and they won't stop until they get to Pasdeaux. Calif.'s Fort Stevens Parade on Jan. 1. "I was our dream," Huguette said Saturday. The family stopped in Lawrence Saturday night before continuing their tour of rural America. Sometimes riding one of the four horses that pull their wagon, other times walking beside them, the horses go 20 miles a day, depending on the weather. "Every day we meet with a new family," Huguete said. "The people are so nice." K COLORS FESTIVAL the kids are about the same, but here it is more strict," France said. "They don't go out as much. They watch TV. THE ROBERT'S son Fabian, 15, their daughter France, 17, and a friend, Daniel Slythe, 13, have used the trip as an opportunity to learn to speak English and to see how the American contemporaries live. "At home, every Saturday night I go to the rodeo and to a dance." France graduated from high school last spring. Fabian, who has two years of experience as a tutor, is offered a job. classes when he returns to Quebec to earn his diploma. "His teachers said this would be a 'good experience for him,' Hauquette told me. France said she missed her friends at home but enjoyed meeting new people. The people in the United States are very friendly," she said. "It warms us." Their 5,500-pound wagon, with the Canadian Maple Leaf and the Kansas flag flying above it and "Les Wagonniers du Quebec" written on the side, drew a crowd of shoppers and local reporters when it was parked at 10th and Massachusetts streets while the Roberts ate lunch Saturday. Huguette said, "We've left a lot of friends on the road. When we left, they cry. Us, too. Some days we feel miserable, but the important thing is what we do every night—the people. That helps us." THE ROBERTS have never lacked for a friendly place to saty. Everywhere, as in Lawrence, they are received eagerly and with curiosity. "When we stop someplace, they call their friends (in the next town). We always know one or two days before where we are going to stay," Huguette The Roberts spent that night with the Raymond Brown family. Rt. 2. "Many people ask us, 'What is this?' Where are you going? Why are you going?" And Huguette answers them: "It's an experience we wanted to do with the horses." France said, "I never tire from riding my horse. But I like the trails best." Huguette said that during the summer the family camped out and could cover up to 25 miles by they cut the days shorter in the winter, but the Roberts had few complaints about the cold. BOB GUCCIONE AND PENTHOUSE FILMS INTERNATIONAL PRESENT CALIGULA THE MOST EXTRAORDINARY PERSONAL EXPERIENCE YOU MAY EVER HAVE! CALIGULA SOURCE TRACE AVAILABLE ON PERTH HOUSE RECORDS THE ANALYSIS CITY RELEASEING R CORPORATE: LATELY DEVELOPED BY THE COMPANY Varsity "When we are cold, we walk beside the horses," Huguette said. "It's the best way to keep warm." The family said they planned the trip for one and a half years before they left. NOW SHOWING Now we're going to Oklahoma City, then to Amurillo, Texas. France said Tuesday Night Special Varsity Downtown 843-1065 France and Fabian said they were looking forward to seeing Disneyland when they arrived in California. "Next winter we will be in New Mexico. And we want to stop in Nashville, Tenn." "Huguette said." "we wanted to do it years before, but it wasn't possible." Huguete said. In the meantime, the family has their itinerary well-planned. Feb 9 only 4 pm to close Their final goal is Pasadena, where they hope to ride in the New Year's Day Rose Bowl Parade. Buy One Corn Dog GET ONE FREE Vista RESTAURANTS Feb 9 only 4 pm to close 1527 W. 6th UNIVERSITY FLORAL Hearts & Flowers™ Bouquet. Valentine's Day is Sunday, February 14. Happy Valentine's Day $17.50 3 sizes available 2103 W. 28th St Terrace Lawrence, Kansas 66044 IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy. 843-9803 UNIVERSITY FLORAL FTD Hearts & Flowers FTD FLAMINGO Valentine's Day is Sunday, February 14. Happy Valentine's Day $17.50 3 sizes available Happy Valentine's Day SenEx computer plan sent to administration WITHOUT this policy, only students with access to a computer through their departments could use the center for word processing. The departments are charged for the students' use of the computer. is used. Depending on how the computer is used, word processing can cost a department between $150 and $500 per thesis. Angina said. After University officials review the policy, SenEx will send it and a list of suggestions to the academic computing committee for revision. By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter "I think it's a good solution." Ernest Angino, SenEx chairman and professor of geology and civil engineering, said. SenEn is studying word processing because departments cannot afford to continue paying for students using word processing for these. The proposed policy would transfer this expense to the students. The University Senate executive committee decided Friday to send a proposed policy on student use of University computers to Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, and to other university officials for their comments and suggestions. The policy would allow all students to use the Academic Computer Center to use word-processing for these, dissertations and term papers, but students would have to pay for the computer use. If some of the work is done on the computer, the cost is lower than if a student writes his entire thesis on the computer. the company. Departments are assigned computer budgets between $200 and $25,000 a year. Angin said. There is no system for students to open an account at the computer center now. Anginio said. "But when it's an incom- generating device, someone always comes up with a way to do it," he said. HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKET, 87th AVE. NW HARD. +1 800-537-3477 FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Free Estimate THE PRINCIPAL SCALE COMPANY 311 N. 340 811-666-6161 monday madness Fast...Free Delivery 841-7900 1445 W. 23rd St. 841-8002 610 Florida Limited delivery area. ©1982 Domino's Pizza, Inc Hours: 4:30 - 1:00 Sun - Thurs. 4:30 - 2:00 Fri. & Sat. DOMINO'S PIZZA $6.50 Good Mondays only... Pay only $6.50 for a large 16" 1 item Pizza plus 2 free cups of Pepsi Price includes tax. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 5/30/82 Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations. Our drivers carry less than $10.00. 19985/6301-2 ZIP·A·TONE save DRY TRANSFER LETTERS 50¢ off half sheet 1.00 off full sheet KU Kansas Union Bookstores COUPON 12 is your lucky number! You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1982 officer and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas: 1. President 2. Vice President 5. Films 3. Secretary 6. Fine Arts 7. Forums 9. Outdoor Recreation 4. Treasurer 10. Public Relations 8. Indoor Recreation 11. Special Events 12. Travel Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union Interviews will be held Saturday, February 27. Sign up deadline for applications is Friday, February 19, 5:00 p.m. SUA University Daily Kansan, February 8, 1982 prths Page 7 Men's track team defeats Nebraska KU pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham set a Big Eight Conference record with a 17-10.4' vault and distance runner Tim Tausen won both the mile and two mile to lead the KU men's track team to a 77-58 win over a dual meet at Saturday in Lincoln, Neb. Also winning for the Jayhawks, who captured 10 firsts in the meet, were spinnerfier Bullock, who won the 600- and 300-yard runs and Warren Lynch who set a Bob Devany Sports Center record with a 25- effort in the long jump. KU HEAD track coach Bob Timmons said the meet was the team's best outing so far this year. Timmons said it was especially pleasing to do so well in the Devaney Sports Center, where the Big Eight championships will be held in March. "We got 26 season bests out of our guys and 14 personal records," Tim Reed said. "We were a very strong team." According to Timmons, the team is starting to show the teamwork and spirit they'll need to do well in the conference. "We didn't feel too well after the Missouri meet," Timmons said, referring to his place where the invitation invites him previous week. "But now we feel like we've THE JAYHAWKS next meet will be Sunday, Feb. 14, when they host Oklahoma State in a dual at Allen Field House. Oklahoma State, considered one of the top contenders for the Big Eight indoor title, edged KU out of second place at the Missouri Invitational last season. Houston has now won five straight games and Malone has scored 145 points in the last three of them. The Rockets have also won seven of their last eight contests and are 3-0 since the All-Star break. turned things around a little bit and we're going in the direction we need to prepare for the conference indoor." Elvin Hayes added 23 and teamed with Malone to dominate the backboards. KU high jumper and basketball player, Tykie Peacock, who set an Allen Field it house record when he jumped 7-6 in four months, is expected to compete in the meet. The lead changed hands four Rockets top Kings, 126-110 KANSAS CITY, Mo — Moses Malone scored 47 points to carry the Houston Hockets to a 128-110 victory over the Kansas City Kings. times in the opening stages of the fourth quarter, before Mike Woodson tied it for the Kings a final time at 98-8 on a free throw with 8:53 remaining. Malone then scored five points and Leavell four to put the Rockets in front 109-106 with five minutes remaining. The loss nullified a brilliant performance from Kansas City guard Larry Drew, who played 42 games in the Ford, Jr. Ford, who was heredited by a virus. Drew scored a season-high 28 points on 12 of 15 shooting and also dished out nine assists. Comets lose 7-0 suffer first shutout By United Press International ST. LOUIS, Mo.-Goalkeeper Slobo lizkesiak faced 40 shots and made 18 saves yesterday to record the 10th shutout in Major Indoor Soccer League history, as the St. Louis Steamers defeated the Kansas City Comets 7-4. By United Press International Don Ebert scored three goals and had one assist, and Tony Glavin added two goals for the Steamers, who improved their league-lead record to 19-3. Kansas City, which came into the Kansas City, which four of its last five games lost. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 15 words of care four five six seven eight nine ten 10 words of care four five six seven eight nine ten AD DEADLINES ERRORS to run Monday Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday Thursday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS FOUND items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be ANNOUNCEMENTS POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0396. U. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 THE ETC. SHOP Vintage & Classic Contemporary Clothing And Antique Accessories West of the Candy Store Mon.-Sat. 11-5 10 W. 9th 843-9708 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. KOA laundethem. Free dry with 75 wash by the Airport. East highway 842.837-887. FOR RENT Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf PRINCETON PLACE PAYO APARTMENTS. Now available: 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect room. One bath plus master suite, 2 car garage with electric owner, wador/dryer hookups fully equipped with central air conditioning. 9-30 daily at 2208 Princeton Bldd., or 9-30 825-275 for additional information. For rent to mature make studebuk, Quert, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. tf Studios atmosphere, International meals, easy roommates with Christian perspectives bed. Own room $110 monthly furnished bedroom. Kitchen and laundry. Closet and laundry. Bedroom. Cali-749-629. Close to the beach. HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished, studios, and 2 & 4 bedrooms located between the AVE and 6th St. KU U DONT DELAY. Reserve your room at KU U DONT DELAY. Width - month-waist - ff. 32" or 82" or 484-825 Brand new 3-bedroom houses, $345 and $450 814-7597 or 814-7251 2-11 Roommate needed for 3 bedroom house. 1329 Kentucky St. $116 + 1/3 utilities. Call 841-0556 anytime. 2-9 ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished townhouses available immediately. Flexible lease terms. Located on 3th & 11th. Only two short blocks from the Union. Call 842-445-845 Large 2 Barm in,仲 in an older building at 1017 Hall Island. Available Feb. 1. Only 225 m² in room with a 200.00 dpm. Utilities paid. Phone: (866) 4414. Call: 49-10- 4414. 2 Br. Agt., 10 floor of house, near campus and downtown. Available: March 1. $200 per month plus *i* utilities. $42-9945. 2-10 2 Br. apt, on bus route, convenient to shopping. Complete kitchen carpet, dresser, central air conditioning, parage available. Shown by appointment. Call 841-6888. 2-12 Sub-lease 2 Br. apt. complete kitchen carpet-drapes; central air-beat. Call 841-6686 2-12 Large, modern 1 arm unit, unfurished apt. in an 8-player at 1821 Riode Island, available now. New 1900.00 mile, with 200.00 dep. cost. Available utilitize. Absolutely mobile. Call 791-4414. **2-10** Cuzy 3. Balm unfurished ap, in older buzz at 314 w. I38. (14th) & Tonnle available now. Only 275.00 mw with 29.00 dep height. Available. Absolutely no Call 794-4114 2-10 Warm, peaceful room in house well furnished. Easy to study, reduced for February. One pass of this one up in the door. Not from Dumon. Clean habits necessary. 2-10 Studio apt. close to campus at 19 W. 14th, available Mar. 1, 1892. $50.00 me, with a 200.00 deposit. Absolutely no pets. Call 749- 414 or 841-7910. Poor grades have opened up a farmhouse. No propane bills—natural gas 5 rooms + garage in good condition 15 minutes from home. Ref required. 15 minutes from 8:00 pm. 2:12 - 2:12 1 br. apt. $180 a month + utilities, walking distance from campus. 434-6725. 2-9 DESPERATE—MUST SUBLEASE 6 mo. old 1 bed room apt. Call Andy at 841-6080 and ask about x28 2-12 Roommate M wanted; Large, old house, 12th & Ohio; $75 a month rent plus 1/5 utilities. Phone 841-8104. 2-12 two bedroom apartment, low utilities, two blocks from KU 3 blocks from town, central air, equipped kitchen, carpet and drains. $252 month. Tenn Call 642-2422 - 12 Female roommate wanted J-hawker Towers- 12 rent, utilities incl Call 842-3222 10 For sublease, 2 Br. apt; $310 → elect. Available now. Telephone: 841-8138. FACULTY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3 br. laundry room, 2121 University Drive. All appliances, 2 car trunk, bus resale rate, $425.19 - or 843-6360. Extra rite 2 bedroom apartment in newer fourplex, 14 x 2 bath, carpeted, wooded area 220 per month. 843-8571 or 1-782-3716. 2-19 Summer sublease: 6-1 to 8-15/2 BR /1900A Kentucky /842-453.1 2-12 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Use these notes to make sense of use them - 13 As study guide. For 2: Class preparation. 2: For exam preparation. For 3: Prepare for exam preparation. 3: Available now at Town Crest. The exam preparation is now on sale. Alternator, starter and generator specialists, Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-3069, 2900 W. 6th. Bookcases and stereo cabinets custom built of solid wood. Bookcases made of hardwood, cedar eider chests, or zebra chairs and coffee tables. Kansas hardwood available. Michael Stought 303 West 137th Mor. 301-825-7944. www.michaelstought.com Polaroid SX-70. Very good condition. Must sell. 1/2 price. Call 841-2901. Please keep trying. 2-8 DOUBLE BED including frame, box spring, mattress $75 (negotiable). Call 841-6158 any time before midnight. 2-9 26. Moto Becan 12 sped Bicyclee -红,ox 27. Moto Becan 12 sped Bicyclee + crank & crone 200.00 must 81-18505 81-18506 FOR SALE Jim Blackburn Bike rack= front $12 rear $12 (Both $25) Suntour end shifters $12 748-0722 2-10 DVD system speaker $750训车 Kit DCM type stereo speakers $250/pair. Call 843-2641 after 5:00. 2-12 63 GMC TRU VK 4-speed, new paint job Dependable, runs well. The Preston McCall Company, 134 North 84-0167 3-12 Trailer for sale or rent, $ 82. 22 home inventory FOR SALE: YASHICA FR-1 35mm SLR- 50mm lens, windsh, winder, flash, 2X extender, release release. $300 Call Ed 842-7444 at 6:30 pm. 2-11 1972 Chorelle, new paint, mags, Pioneer AM/FM cass. Many extra parts. Jim at 842-1585. 2-9 Pair-5 Way Floor speaker with 10" woofer Pair-8 Way Floor speaker with 12" woofer speaker-spokes price, negotiable. 1169 Vivitar Canon mount frame with case and TYPHOON M4-140L Aki for Cork or Hobbie. - 213 M4-140L Aki for Cork or Hobbie. - 213 price $143, sold for $100. For information offered by Cork or Hobbie call 602-275-9670. FOUND HELP WANTED Part time—general cleaning position. Sunday thru Thursday with local cleaning service. Call 842-5430 for interview. 2-8 A set of keys, 6 keys on the ring, were thrown. Floor, 4, between Potter Lake & Spencer Research Library. For information call 843-4672. 2-10 Black white Female pup—with red collar. Call 843-6835 2-10 Did you lose something in 405 SU7? Wednes- day afternoon? 864-894-0 to identify. Use your spare time to earn money for those "extra." Aggressive self-starter starts, only Field of total health and fitness. For 2-11 appointment. call 842-8870. Gold chain with pendant, Inscription "I love you Buddah, Dound." Found at the Anex. Please call to identify. 843-5366 2-9 Two mathbooks—one short calculus and one pre-calculus on Daisy Hall. Call 864-1048-104 Snap hood off of a down coat. Call and identify at 843-3601. 2-8 Person interested in doing old house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable of owning tools and participate in cooperative labor. Call Darryl 841-838-7667. **tf** Sales clerks wanted full-time day, part- time evenings. Wine experience preferred. Apply in person please. Green's Fine Wines. 802 W. 3rd St. 2-9 CRUISES, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDITION CARRIERS Europe, Carson Europe, Worldwide EXPOES, OPENINGS, INVITATIONS, OPENINGS, 153 box 6014, Sacramento, Ca. WORLD, 153 box 6014. Stockbroker trainee. College grad-Excultive opportunity for hard working, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individual P.O. B. 157 Red Bank, N.J. 07971. 3-8 OVERSEAS JOBS--Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. Fields: U.S. Air Force 120th Monthly. Sightseeing. Del Mar, CA 92825. Box Bs 34-1-4-3 Del Mar, CA 92825. Applications are being accepted for half-time positions as graduate leaching assistants. Applicants must have completed undergraduate students from any discipline are eligible for consideration. A bachelor's degree is required. Instructors conduct 8 weekly discussion sections and assists with the Program. Salary depends on level of gradework form applies may be obtained from the Western Kentucky University. Application should be received by February 26, 1982. The Western Civilization Department affirmative action, minorities and incapacated students are encouraged. 2-8 Nall Hills Country Club is now accepting applications for full-time employment with pool, golf and spa positions include pool manager, assistant managers, dive instructor, and lifeguards. All must have experience in operating and managing teams. Salaries commensurate with experience. NRECC 8201 indian Creek Drive, Overland Park Pa. K6 68207 Interviews will be held on Saturday, November 3rd. Work-load positions for Assistant Instructors Students in the School of History and Young People's Museums of National History, Boston University, 20.25 km² 927 'Contact' Ruth Gemecht, Germany; 18.6 km² 647 'Contact' Kathleen Halliway, Halifax, Nova Scotia 664-4175 'Equal Opportunity' Employment. Hall-time graduate assistant for chaired professor in the School of Architecture and Urban Design $460 per month must have completed a Master's degree. Contact Dearen 2-848 Donner at 864-1281. SUMMER CAMP JOB'S in the Northeast for a free listing, send a self-addressed stamped (172) envelope to Midwest Camp Management, MO 60843 MO 60843 2-12 Church nursery helper needed on Sunday mornings. 843-679-7 2-9 JOBS IN ALASKA* Summer year-round. High pay, flexible hours. Located in all industries and industry.密斯勒 Employer information guide. $45 Albuquerque. P O box 601. Sumiyage. 2-12 P Box 601. Sumiyage. 2-12 Bastender, Private Club. Must be Energicate or have a Credit. Contact Dan at ddan 842-9533 3-12 www.bastender.com LOST One maroon, 7 x 10" hardcover Elementary Differential Eqs. textbook lost Fri. 1-29 near Murphy? Mitray--749-0556. 2-9 NOTICE Athletic Women and Men—the KU Crew team is recruiting new rowers. Coach Cliff Elliott 841-5587. 2-11 Get back to the Boogie in your own style of music. Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and theory lessons. All levels. teach tunes with the band. Call Kurt at Music, 814-0817. 2-16 PERSONAL Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. **tf** MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant 842-6641. t New Year for Trees Celebrate Tu B'Shevat Celebrate Stop by the table outside the Kansas Union from 12:00-2:00 p.m. with Hillel Mr Bill's Skillet's kitchen server serving U-Day since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfried Skillet Eudaly. 1900 Mass. 843-8186. tf wag it on a laundry basket with custom silk Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-181). tf TODAY SK1 TRIPH, SK1 TRIPH, SK1 TRIPH, SK1 TRIPH, SK1 ROOM-based vacation every weekend. Room-based vacation every weekend. Mondays: $1.50 Pitchers A sweetheart portrait for Valentine's Day with a miniature doll. Swelle Studio 749-161, 2-18 memory. Swelle Studio 749-161, 2-18 Valentine Parties—50% formalis, suits, tuxes, shoes, dresses, jewelry, hats. We'll help you put together your outfit. Barb's second Hand Rose. 511 Indiana. 843-7476. 2-11 Wanted, someone who loves drinking 50-pitcher on Mondays at the Sanctuary 7:00-12:00. 2-8 The Keeper -9450 Specials on Kegs!! Call 841-9450 -1610 W 23rd. tf Select your party outfits early. Barb's Second Hand Kit 824-476-311. Indiana. OPTIMIST'S '82 COUPON BOOK Over $500 In Value 2 WEEKS ONLY Available at SPECIAL STUDENT Jayhawk Bookstore DISCOUNT or call JF497 7411 TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-4096 anytime bs. B.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics, or call 841-4095 (akr for M.E.) tf If you can be with that special person this Valentine Day and the next best life, a size bicep-up boll for FOOT-LIGHTS—25th & Iowa, Holiday Park. 2-9 כנ Hillel Lunch "Some Legal Perspectives on Church and State" David Gottlieb. assoc Gottlieb, assoc. prof. School of Law tuesday, February 8, 12:15 to 1:00 Cork 1 Kansas Union Cafeteria tuesday, February 8, 12:15 to 1:00 Mary-Ellen Rodgers was so mad when she got her x-Rated Valentine Day card she took the Beaver. FOOTLIGHTS, 25th & Iowa. Tell that special person just what you really think with an X-rated card from FOOT-LIGHTS, 25th & Iowa. 2-9 Don't just send a song or a bunch of hot balloons (Balloons) to people on Love Island, don't send them to people who lend a good attempt). Call now for a Valentines delivery and performance. **2-12** SPRING BREAK MAZATLAN $188 Let me handle all your travel needs—calls to RHONDA at HOLIDAY TRAVEL 841-8100. 2449 Iowa In the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center GREENE HASTE CASE SALE. LONG NECB PAKST GREENE HASTE CASE SALE. LONG NECB PAKST GREENE HASTE CASE SALE. LONG NECB PAKST Bandail. If your letter was a joke it wasn't funny, if not write again and give my correct address. Write Larry, 2517 Mornington Dr. Lawrence. SKI STEAMBOAT CHEAP: $23 per day, per person, inc. lifts, 4, 6 or 8 guests. Call (303) 798-6868. 2-15 Give Yourself A Valentine! Everything with red in it 20% off! Feb. 8-13 Katv's Cellar Shoppe 745 New Hampshire (Inside the Marketplace Mall) Next-to-Now Clothing for Women FASHION LIFE HERESY 10-4:30 Monday-Saturday RAASCH WESTERN FLAIR is now at 737 Mass. Save 20% on boats, 40% off shirts, 60% off winter coats. 2-9 Super Deal—2 seats available in private airplane to Las Vegas. Leaving morning 1-28 returning 2-21. 665-7738. 2-9 FOR HIRE: Coors Campus Representative a two year commitment is required. Resumes should arrive at the Lapeer Park office or contact Feb. 12, 2711 Omanus St. 83-7000. Fax: 2-19. EVERY CAR IN STOCK $9.95 A DAY SO 50 MILE FREE FREE WALKING N 6,412 Special weekends rates. We are now leasing trucks & vans. We accept Master Card Visa. Located at 705 W.9th Lease one of our cars, it's cheaper than a bus fare home! Reserve your car now. LEASE A LEMON 749-1205 Learn how to learn about microcomputers. Installing systems, word and data processing, when to go to a 20. Tuesday and Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lawrence, Callow - 842-995-1980 reservation. 749-4225 Valentines Dance. Mon., Feb. 8th. Off the Wall Hall 8 pm. Benefit for Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas. 2-8 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- right. 843-4821. tf Get a head start on your spring break kit at T.A.N.L. Call 841-6232 for appointment or additional information 2-10 COME STROKE IT with the KU Crew team. Recruiting now. Call Coach Cliff Elliott 841-5587. 2-11 Elicitive Listening Programs - Two sessions. February 11 and 16, 7:30 to 9:30 pm. Come to the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong for registration and fee payment. 2-11 Make your next party, dance or function an "event," ACCENT SON & LIGHT SON or sound professionals. For details at 41-6289 or write P.O. Box 182, Kansas, KS. 12-10 PARTY!! Only 28 rooms left in Indy for 500 mi race and we have we. Join us for the summer. May may may m Y.F. isn't sure what V.O. is—Y.F. never SMACKED—The only thing Drag about Y.F. is his profit. 2-12 Thinking of marriage? Involved in a serious relationship. We are forming a support group for couples who want to partner. Partners, Peter Capitanacci, Episcopal Church, or Ellen Kotliar, Chaplain 864-3948. 2-12 NEED CREDIT: Get Via-Mastercard, no credit check. Guaranteed! It's simple, legal. Free detailed Write: Creditfile, Box 334-FF, Nr. N. H08708. 7-12 SUAa Toss Spring Break. March 13-18 with SAUa 'Taz $00.30. Includes transportation, 4 nights lodging, rental, lift ticket, at time Toilet at 5:00 pm. Sign up at SUAa 2-4pm. Want to make great money while going to school? Get a job in helping living groups. Work for yourselves and make a good investment. Sound system and book-audio systems are required. Only serious impatient please. 2-12 Tuxedo - 28% off. Barb's Second-Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-746-476. Hurt your back or neck when you slipped on the ice? Don't delay proper treatment. For more information, call Dr. John D. Morrison at 340-829-3712, Blue Cross Insurance, 5-212 50 draw—10-12 Monday-Thursday. The Exchange, 4204 Iowa 2-11 It may be cold, but you can warm someone's day with a VALENTINE'S DAY SPECIAL EDITION BALLOON-A-GRAM Call and arrange for 811-3848 2-12 Order your singing Valentines on three floor Balley- 2.1- 2.2 between 10:30- 3:30 Sponsored by Music Therapy Student Asso. 2-12 RIVER CITY WOMEN'S HEALTH COLLECTIVE is a group of campus and community organizations that distribute information concerning women's health issues. If you are interested, call 212-580-3747 or visit www.rivercitywomenhealth.com. If you can help, attend our February meeting this Wednesday at 9 p.m in the Registry on 601 N. Washington St. Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center. 121 Strong Hall, 864-4094 2-11 SERVICES OFFERED TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE B.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics or call 841-4167 (ask for M.A.) If Get that job with a professionally prepared resume by a local corporate recruiter. Learn the latest job hunting techniques. 2-14 841-5664 31/2 now at 3 1/2 $ ^\dagger$ self service copies TAKE CARE ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th and Iowa 842-2001 WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Stop by The House of Ushers and pick up our FREE firehouse on resume and cover letter. Attach resumes, 8-14 M-F 9-3 Sat, NOON-Sun 3 Seindner Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in lawrence—largest supplier of strength kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 842-3212. Put your best foot forward with a protocol for printing. It is easy and painless for you to enroll your books 842-7056 or 842-7057. Drafting (maps, maps, etc.) 6 years exp. Resumes 12 weeks. Lettering for certificates. 842-7044. Guitar Lessons: Learn to play now from experienced teacher. Reasonable: Call Mark 841-2695. 2-12 EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? 8-10 CS_project3_2. Call: 841-7683. Professional typing, quick, read priced, paper supplied Call evenings 841- 7915. 2-17 Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall. H84-4064 TYPING It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. tt www.factfinder.com Experienced typist. Term paper, theses, all-miscellaneous. HM Correcting Sensitive Eile or Piea, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544 Mrs. Wright. tf Experienced typist. Theses, term papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-3618. tf TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, punctuation. Foreign students (foreign or Americans). 814-6254 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, sm-correct Selectric: Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-212-76 tf Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term papers, mime. IBM correcting selective. Barb, after 5 p.m. p.84-2310 tf QUALITY TYPING: IBM Themes, Manuscripts, Dissertation: IBM Selectric; Girl Thursday Secretarial Service: 842-7945 after 6:00 please. Experienced typist will type letters, thes, and dissertations. IBM correcting selective. Call Donna @ 842-2744. **tf** Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. IBM. Before 9 p.m. @ 746-245. Annuit. Experienced typing. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selective. Elite or Pica. Pica. IBM For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-4980. tt TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective I; Royal Correction f 500 000 CD, 845-765-67. Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, letters, legal, etc. Deb 843-9022 2-10 Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa. 842-2001. 2-26 Graduate students tired of typing, retraining Save time and money by using 2-360 Search Engine for 2-360 WANTED Professional typing. Dissertation, thesis term paper, rename, letter, legal, etc. Deb 843-9592 2-11 Non-smoking male to share fully furnished 2 bdrm. duplex $75 month + 1 % utilities. Close to campus; call after 7 pm @ 843-5815 -2IS MALE ROOMMATE needed to share 3 br. house. $15/no. + 1/3 utilities + deposit. Call Brad at 841-6341. 2-8 Non-smoking female to share 3-bt. house, close to campus. 83.33 + 1/2 use. 841-9779. No pets. 2-12 Roommate needed to share nice, new, furnished 3 bedroom house. $115 + 1/3 utilities. Call 841-6506. 2-9 Roommate to share modern 2 bedroom apartment 3 blocks from campus. $137.50 a month + utilities. $843-8628 Jane. 2-17 Female roommate to share large 2-bedm. agt. non-smoker. Prefer quiet, med- tual. Do not plan 8+ hours i. until. On our bus. Wairstud:灯. 841-464. after 2- keep trying. 3 bdm. dpix, glaxe, putio, fireplace, micro- ware, d.w 1/c a cable and w/d hookups 135 mo. + 1/3 unit on bus route 842-0861. 3:11 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment, 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 + ½ utilities. 749-2438. 2-12 Wanted Roommate to share 4-bedroom home with 3 grades, $110 plus 1% utilities, 2127 Barker. Call Matt 842-6840 evenings. 2-12 Sub-leave 2 bdmr. apt. on bus route. Move in today, low price. Call 842-1429 or 841- 8467. 2-16 Val People who want to send a unique Valentine's day gift. Compose your own message and I will deliver it with a special edition Valentine's day Balloon—a balloon. 2-12-19 --must be in the Kansas office (118 Flint) by 5:00 February 10. Say Happy Valentine's Day ... in the special Valentine's classified section of the Kansas The first 15 words are $2.25 plus 2c for each additional word Say it in a display for 4. 00 per column inch 心形 爱心 --- Sports Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 8, 1982 Javhawks lose another on the road By RON HAGGSTROM Create Editor Sports Editor A lot of games are decided at the free throw line, and that was the case in the Jayhawks' loss Saturday. The Jayhawks fell to the Oklahoma State Cowboys 79-64 in Stillwater, Okla., before a Oklahoma State hit 21 of 23 free throws in the contest compared to 18 of 30 for the Jayhawks. It doesn't look like much of a difference, but KU's missed free throws came at times when the ball was AT THE HALF the Jayhawks found themselves trailing the Cowboys 37-11. In the first half the Cowboys outgained the Jayhawks by 20. In the early stages of the game co-captain Tony Guey hit on only 3 of 6 from the line. However, it wasn't only Guy who was misfiring from the line. With Oklahoma State leading 25-21, Brian Martin, who started in place of insured Kyle Knight, had the opportunity to close the gap to two but missed both of his free throws. With the score still the same, Tyke Pencock changed his opportunity. Pencock cashied in one of his free throws. One Jayhawk who did't struggle from the line was substitute Mark Summers. Summers' two free throws closed the lead to one, 25-24. Summers went 5 of 6 from the line in the game. THE REST of the half was much of the same for the Jawhaws. Guy hit 1 of 2 from the line to tie the score at 29 and freshman Tad Royle had the opportunity to give KU the lead but missed the front end of a one-on-one. After Boyle's miss, the Cowboys ran off 6 straight points and Jacaws could get no shot. Jarek just scored on the second. “It’s strange,” Oklahoma State Coach Paul Hansen said about shooting free throws. performance than Wednesday night (referring to the game), Owens said. "Brian Martin played very well." "We came back today. Wednesday night against Oklahoma (Oklaoma beat Oklahoma State 75-72) we missed 14 free throws and five one-on-one." him, who probably will be called on to start again Tuesday night against Missouri, scored 7 points and grabbed 9 rebounds. Starting center Kelly Knight remains doubtful for the Missouri game. 'We played hard and had a much better OAKLAND | | FG | FT | REB | TP | P | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Brad Livingstone | 1-4 | 5-8 | 2-6 | 0-1 | 19 | | Leroy Shaw | 6-8 | 1-2 | 4-5 | 3-7 | 8 | | Matt Clark | 8-11 | 5-5 | 4 | 2-1 | 10 | | Lorene Andrew | 3-8 | 4-5 | 3 | 2-1 | 10 | | Eddie Hannon | 3-8 | 4-5 | 3 | 2-1 | 10 | | Raincy Brownban | 3-7 | 0-0 | 4 | 4 | 12 | | Ricky Jacoby | 6-13 | 6-0 | 4 | 6 | 12 | | Bill Self | 6-13 | 6-0 | 4 | 6 | 12 | | Kim Shimabara | 6-1 | 1-1 | 0 | 2 | 79 | | | 29-58 | 21-33 | 30 | 22 | 79 | | | FG | FT | REB | PF | Tp | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Jeff Dishman | 4-1 | 8-1 | 2-4 | 3-10 | 4 | | David Magley | 6-1 | 8-4 | 1-4 | 2-10 | 5 | | Brian Mulligan | 3-4 | 1-3 | 9 | 4 | 7 | | Tony Gill | 6-3 | 1-4 | 9 | 4 | 17 | | Lance Hill | 6-3 | 1-4 | 9 | 4 | 17 | | Tad Boyle | 2-3 | 0-1 | 1 | 2 | 4 | | Tyke Peacock | 2-3 | 0-1 | 1 | 2 | 4 | | Tyke Summern | 0-4 | 1-2 | 3 | 1 | 3 | | Marks | 23-49 | 18-30 | 27 | 21 | 64 | | Kansas | | | | 32 | 45-79 | KU women's team wins second consecutive Ry DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer KANSAS CITY. Mo.—On the whole, the KU women's basketball team had a pretty good time at Kemper Arena Friday night. They shot well from the field, grabbed an early lead that they never relinquished and won their second straight game after losing five in a row. There was only one problem—nobody showed up. Despite the poor turnout, which was generously estimated at 200, the Jayhawks, behind a 29-point effort by center Tracy Clayton, defeated a former National College of Music team, 77-50. ALTHOUGH THE Jayhawks, 14-11, never trailed after racing to a 18-10 lead early in the first half, they could never quite shake off the Lakers, 8-10. After going ahead 41-35 at halftime, KU built up a 39-43 lead early in the second half before the Lakers started to fight their way back onto the floor. Led by the impressive outside shooting of Kunta Kinte, NCE clapped away at the Jayhawkle. With four minutes left to play, Crosby, who hit 11 of 10 from the field and had 23 drowned, a long jump shot to make the score 67-65. Then, after KU guard Angie Snider found Claxton for a wide open baseline lay-up to make the score 69-65. Rose Peeples fouled Laker Myra Warren, who sank two free throws to make the score 69-67 with 2:36 left to play. But that was the closest NCE ever got. Claxton scored on the next KU possession, and the Jayhanks hit several throws in the final minutes to ice the game. Although hardly anyone had ever heard of the teacher's college of 1,400 in Evanston, Ill., KU head coach Marian Washington was not surprised at how well they played. "I HEARD they were a good club," Washington said. "They played close games against Tennessee and Memphis State. I was not surrised." Washington said she was especially pleased with KU's shooting. They shot 50 percent for the first time in two years. One problem KU had, however, was playing man-to-men defense against the Lakers. "We went into man and they went to the line an awful叶," Washington said. "As much as we really stopped them on the man, we just got careless and had to work back to the zone." DESPITE HIS team's lack of depth and ability in the javelins, J. O'Berg was not competised by the Jahwahys. "We were going for the win there," O'Berg said. "I think we're Division I caliber. I don't think our players are getting the exposure they need." Depth has been a constant problem for the Lakers, whose women's basketball program is only in its second year of existence. In a previous game, a 105-92 overtime loss to Western Michigan, NCE only had three players on the floor at the end of the game. All the rest had "Basically, we only work with seven girls," O'Berg said. "Coach Washington was substituting at will—trying to run them down. But they're in good shape—they're primed for this." BUT ONE THING nobody was prepared for was the small crowd. Actually, crowd isn't the word for it. For most of the first half, there were more people on the court than in the stands. hive people of Washington said it had been a long time since she had seen a crowd so small at a basketball game. "It was so quiet," she said. "We didn't get that many fans out." KU forward Chris Stewart said she wasn't surprised by the poor turnout. "I didn't think it was very well advertised." Stewart said. "If I wasn't playing, I wouldn't have played." Although the Jayhawks did have a good game, Stewart thought they would've played better if they hadn't taken the lead. there was no cheering either way," she said. Gathering she had ever played before, agreed. gathering she had ever played before, agreed. "If we had some fans, we would play real well," she said. "I think tonight if we had a lot of fans." As it was, Claxton did play well, making 14 of 17 shots from the field and sinking her only free throw attempt of the game for a 29-point performance. But despite her impressive shooting, Claxton said she wasn't satisfied with the game that "As far as my playing went, not in too apples," I said. "I knew I could've got more than 12 recharges." "Overall, we played good as a team, and that's what counts." KU will have a week off before they go after their third win in a row against Northwestern Oklahoma State University in Allen Field House on Friday. JAYHAWK NOTES: KU center Tracy Claxton is now ranked second nationally in individual rebounding. Her 14.2 rebounds per game average for the week ending Feb. 5th puts her only .08 rebounds away from the nation's leader. Valerie Still of Kentucky. KU women's basketball coach Marian Washington has been selected as one of two finalists for the 1982 Stayfair Coach of the Year Award on the large college level. This is the second straight year that Washington has been nominated for the award. Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Scoreboard Team W W L Pct. GB Detroit 106 24 14 .75 Philadelphia 33 14 14 1½ New Jersey 23 23 479 12 Washington 23 25 479 12 New York 22 24 468 12 Cleveland at Detroit Milwaukee 19 24 12 696 12 Atlanta 12 13 12 432 12 Indiana 20 18 27 436 12 Detroit 20 18 27 436 12 Chicago 18 27 18 382 12 Cleveland 18 27 18 382 12 Western Conference Midwest Division San Antonio 30 16 652 % Denver 30 16 652 % Houston 24 22 115 % Kansas City 15 32 319 % Dallas 14 31 319 % Dubai 14 32 304 % Seattle 33 13 717 % Los Angeles 83 14 704 % Golden State 26 18 59 % Portland 26 19 578 % Phoenix 25 19 578 % San Diego 14 33 298 % Portland 106, New York 98 Las Vegas 108, Boston 17 Louisville 123, Chicago 124 Dverner 124, Washington 15 Milwaukee 15, Phoenix 92 San Francisco 91 Golden State 115, San Antonio 111 New Jersey 119, Cleveland 94 Nashville 118 | Team | W | L | Per. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Missouri | 8 | 6 | .750 | 1% | | Kansas State | 8 | 2 | .750 | 1% | | Oklahoma State | 5 | 4 | .825 | 2% | | Nebraska | 3 | 4 | .650 | 2% | | Oklahoma | 3 | 4 | .650 | 2% | | Kansas | 2 | 3 | .375 | 4% | | Iowa State | 2 | 6 | .375 | 4% | | Colorado | 2 | 8 | .211 | 1% | Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. Nebraska 67, Missouri 11 (51) Kansas State 18, 65, Colorado 58 OKlaimna State 64, Kansas 64 UPT TOP 29 RESULTS Fresno State (13) 55. California-Irvine 49. OT Hockey Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Patrick Division W W L T G GF GA Pts. rs 34 12 7 61 172 96 sb 29 10 7 60 172 96 b 29 10 7 60 172 96 b 25 11 8 200 212 32 b 21 11 8 200 212 32 b 15 11 8 200 212 32 **MASS DATA** | | | | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 31 | 11 | 17 | 22 | 256 | 184 | 74 | | 31 | 17 | 17 | 26 | 234 | 169 | 69 | | 29 | 17 | 9 | 9 | 212 | 172 | 67 | | 29 | 17 | 9 | 11 | 212 | 167 | 65 | *Note: The "MASS" column is not used for this table.* Campbell Conference Snyder's 10,12 Edmonton 30 14 10 131 227 86 Calgary 30 14 10 313 247 53 Vancouver 18 26 12 190 260 47 Los Angeles 18 26 12 197 294 37 Colorado 11 36 11 194 257 41 Minnesota 22 17 16 14 234 200 69 54 St. Louis 22 17 16 14 234 200 69 54 Colorado 20 28 11 18 245 216 50 42 Chicago 20 28 10 19 245 216 50 42 Toronto 20 28 10 19 245 216 50 42 Detroit 16 29 10 19 245 216 50 42 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Chicago 5, Minnesota 2 Cleveland 10, Ohio 7 New York Islanders 1, Buffalo 5 Tampa Bay 6, Carolina 4 Washington 5, Quebec 8 Education 8, New York Hangover 4 Edmonton 8, Washington 4 Team W L Pct. GB - Pittsburgh 15 5 10 -- - Baltimore 15 5 727 -- - New York 15 5 727 -- 1 Buffalo 11 11 500 -- Cleveland 8 12 394 -- 7% Philadelphia 8 12 394 -- 8% New Jersey 5 14 263 -- 9% St. Louis 19 13 3 864 Wichita 19 3 9 862 Danver 10 11 176 9 Memphis 10 8 417 19*# Phoenix 10 14 417 19*# Kansas City 10 18 250 14 St. Louis 1, Kansas City 0 Buffalo 6, Cleveland 2 Wichita 4, Phoenix 3, OT Baltimore 4, New Jersey 3, OT Simons wins Bing Crosby tournament By United Press International PEBLE BEACH, Calif.—Jim Simons made up a five-stroke deficit in the final nine holes yesterday to move past a staggering Craig Lester and Bob Browdy Brosley National Pro-Am by two shots. Simons, winning for the first time in five years, closed with a 46 for a 72-hole score of 14-under- As well as Simons played, he would not have won without a near collapse by Stadler, after Stadler had opened up a five-shot advantage in the first eight holes. hole at Pebble Beach when he missed the green and wound up with a double-boyes six Stadler, who opened the year by winning the Tucson Open, started coming apart on the ninth He also bogeyed the 14th and 17th holes while Simons birdied the 13th, 14th and 17th holes to collect only his third career victory in 14 years on the TPA tour. Stadler, who had been headed for a tournaments record score, finished with a 70 and a 12-4. The clinching hole was the 17th, where Simons put his tee shot on the par-3, 209-yard hole on the green. Sandwiched went over the green and wound up on the beach. After a "drop," he chipped within five feet of the hole and made the putt for a bogey. Simons sank a four-foot putt for a birdie and a two-shot lead, which he protected on the final hole to win $4,000. Women swimmers win; men defeated By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer The KU men's and women's swim teams split their meet with Arkansas Saturday at Robinson Center, with the women winning 76-35 and the men losing 73-40. SPURRED ON by a large crowd for the Jayhawk Swimming and Diving Alumni Day, the women dominated Arkansas, taking first in all of the swimming events and Carrie Gangel capturing second in both the 1 and 3 meter diving events. "I'm proud of our men," Coach Gary Kempi said. "Arkansas has one of the 15 teams in the nation. We have some glaring weaknesses and these are problems. But our speed was better and will get better. Today was a good sten." "The women's meet didn't mean a lot," Kemp said. "Arkanisas are not yet up to your level." Thomas also improved her time in the 50 freestyle to 23.4, which ties the nation's second best time in that event this year. Thomas also won the 100 freestyle in 22.2 Wagstaff and Cerny also won two events with Wagstaff winning the 200 individual medley and the 200 freestyle. Cerny won the 200 butterfly and backstroke. the Jayawicks' 2002 medley relay team of Celine Cerny, Mary Kay Fitzgerald, Jenny Wagstaff and Tamy Thomas qualified for nationals with a time of 1:48.7. "It was a good crowd." Cerry said. "You really don't notice it in the water, but you get it out quickly." IN THE MEN'S meet, Ron Nuegent won two close races in the 1,000 and 500 freestyle. Brad Wells and Ken Grey had the other Jayhawk victories with Grey winning the 200 individual medley in 1:57 2 and Wells the 200 backstroke in 1:54.5. "Towards the end of the race the noise pick up and you notice the crowd." Neugent said. "It pumps you up. I knew Arkansas had a good distance swim and I would be pushed." Kempf said that he was pleased with the men's effort despite the score. "Naturally we would have liked to come closer, but we're looking at the positive things. We're not a good dual meet team. We've got good depth and depth isn't important in dual meets. The men have a tough next two weeks, facing defending Big Eight champ Nebraska and the Cardinals. THIS WAS the last dual meet of the season for the women, who finished the year with one dual loss, to SMU in January. Their next meet will be the Big Eight Championships, Feb. 25-37. “It’s one of the toughest schedules around.” Kempt said. “Both are top 20 teams. If we were to play, they would go ahead.” "The men made some good steps. We need to keep doing what we're doing." [Image of a swimmer in the water, wearing a swim cap and goggles, swimming with a streamlined body.] etc. Beta 1: #A1 39, Beta 2: #A4 38, Beta Pal 35 Pla Delt #E2, Sigma Pal Epsilon 25 Sigma Chi A 37, Cem Chi A 38 Cem Chi B 39, Cem Chi B 38 AKI Management Epsilon #E4 24 AKI Management Epsilon #E4 24 Tau Kappa Epsilon 66, Sigma Kappa Tau Kappa Epsilon 66, Sigma Kappa Pla Beta Sigma #E2 27 Fid #E3, Vernon Scholaer #21 Fid #E3, Vernon Scholaer #21 Delta Upsilon #L4, Lambda Chi Alpha 36 Delta Upsilon #L4, Lambda Chi Alpha 36 Intramurals Rec. B Fantasia 20, Sigma #92 18 Railers 38, Railers 23 Kappa Padma 40, Theorsens 24 Greek Men Basketball YESTENDY'S RESULTS Greek Men Trophy League Sally Burger swims to a third place finish in the 1,000 meter freestyle Saturday against Arkansas. independent Men Trophy League Tarantulas 15, 4.1, 4.0 McCadden & Weidman, Harriscreams 24 McCadden & Weidman, Sarrasins 24 Soul Hard 35, Bagworm 35 Hustages 70, The Infra 36 Hustages 70, The Infra 36 Rick's Running Rebels 40, Law School 36 Know Names 38, Knowledge 37 Wetland 36 Trophy League Gator Haters 31, Plai Paid-Hirds 30, Vincenty 41, The Thumpers 21, Fitzpatrick 21, The Knicks 12, Fifth Avenue 21, The Go-Go 16 Trophy League Kapuja Alpha Tie 32, Kapuja Omnisphere P11, Kapuja Dura 34, Kapuja Dura 41, P1 Phi 19, Akpai Gamma D4, Akpai Gamma D4, Akpai Kappa Gamma P10, Kapuja Kappa Gamma P10 Greek Women Trophy League Trailblazer players tell of illegal recruiting By United Press International PORTLAND, Ore.-Mychal Thompson, who was embroiled in a probation incident at Minnesota, and several other members of the Portland Tri. Blazers admit they had extravagant offers from colleges that recruited them out of high school. The players agreed to talk to a reporter this weekend about the gifts and money offered, if most schools involved were not disclosed. of the corners of their mouth, thinking that the offer would make a difference," Thompson said. Thompson, the 6-foot-10 center for the NBA team, said he had offers of fancy cars, luxury apartments and first-class plane fares home to him. He also moved out of Miami's Jackson High School in 1974. 8508 High School in 1944. "The recruits would be real sly, talking out "I used to talk to other athletes. They'd tell me the things they had, and I wondered how they'd get away with it. I thought some schools were so powerful that the NCAA didn't want to mess with them." "The whole college situation should be put on probation if the NCAA really wants to look. I saw guys driving Cadillacs, living in high-rise apartments. These were major schools, AllAmericans. You knew the NCAA was looking the other way." Forward Peter Verhoeven said he was recruited so heavily out of high school in Hanford, Calif., that he had to stay away from home to avoid the telephone calls. "There was one school that just handed me money as soon as I walked off the plane," she said. Guard Kelvin Ransey, who played at Ohio State, said, "Only one school offered me something—clothes and a nice place to stay. They wanted to make sure I was set up." "They spent $100 to $200 trying to win me money," he said. "They kept betting the money Guard Jim Paxson, who played at Dayton, said a couple of recruiters from one school took him to Camp Curtis. Jimmy Lynn, assistant Blazer coach, said he thought penalties should be on the coaches rather than the school or players, if illegal recruiting practices were to be abolished. "The coach is the one who does it." he said. ent e green white holes to years on a tourand a 12- Simons lie on the round up d within tt for a a birdie d on the nsan Staff ended me plane," ton, said took him win me the money o, said he coaches f illegal he said. KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily Tuesday, February 9, 1982 Vol.92,No.92 USPS 650-640 Commission to discuss letter By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission expects to hear the full story tonight from Commissioner Tom Gleason on his attempt to get City Manager Buford Watson to resign. The meeting, beginning at 7 p.m., is expected to include an executive session for discussion of Gleason's letter last week to Watson suggesting that Watson resign. The meeting comes in the midst of efforts by a group, which includes former Lawrence Mayor Ed Carter, to petition for a special election to recall Gleason. "The almost rabid response coming from people for my recall, comes from those who already have an "in" with Watson," Gleason said yesterday. Watson said he did not have a comment on the recall effort. GLEASON said he felt that people were focusing on this specific manner of dealing with Watson rather than on the deeper issue of whether Watson should stay at his job. "All this talk about the manner in which I made the proposal is just a smoke screen for the issue." Gleason cited an example of a study session last year in which he believed Watson was not doubtful. "The most clear case we've seen in recent times is that there was a study session of the city commission where we discussed the Chamber of Commerce proposals for the new industrial park and we discussed the nuclear transportation ordinance." Gleason said he thought it was important that Watson study the proposals about transporting radioactive materials because the city manager is also an important role in implementing the ordinance. Gleason said that he was not at the session but that he was told about Watson's performance during a competition. "He seemed relatively uninterested and was going in and out of the room. While the Chamber of Commerce people were there he was all ears and was helping out." WATSON RESPONDED. "It be awfully hard for you to guess if he wasn't there. I don't know." ClassEx calls Carlin's pav plan weak By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter Gleason said, "It's hard to build a broad base of support for something because it is (Watson) a special case." KU's merit pay plan, which rewards employees for improved work, will fall apart if Gov. John Carlin's proposed 1.25 percent merit increase is not raised, Jan O'Neill, president-elect of the Classified Senate executive council, said yesterday. ClassEx decided Friday to send Carlin a letter this week asking him to recommend further courses. See WATSON page 5 Carlin recommended a *183,362 merit increase in his jan. 12 legislative message, down sharply that of Jan. 9, for a higher pay. "He is recommending far less for merit than he has in the past," Zimmerman said. EACH OF THE AT about 1,700 KU classified employees is assigned a range number, from three to 31 that corresponds to his position and salary. David Lewin, director of personnel, said. The 1.25 merit increase that Carlin proposed As employees move up to higher ranges, their salaries are increased by between 2.5 and 3.25 percent, according to their performance over either six months or a year, he said. Employee evaluations are based on work objectives they set with their supervisors at the job level. would not even pay the scheduled rate to an employee with average performance on the job. Twenty percent, or 340, of KU's classified employees regularly receive outstanding evaluations, she said. Their scheduled pay increases now could be as high as 3 percent, she O'Neill said that if average and outstanding employees "balanced each other out," the average merit pay increase would be about 5 percent. THE MERIT pay plan was started in the 1980-81 school year to reward employees for good work. A woman walks through a snowy parking lot in New York City. A car drives away from her. Two other people are walking in the background. ASK requests Senate funds for another campus director Staff Reporter By ANN LOWRY "She really knows the issues in Topeka well. Available at $4 KK pages." KU's board member of Associate Students of Kansas intends to present a bill to the Student Senate finance and auditing committee today requesting money to hire a second campus in the bill, Steve Dunn, the board member, asked for $360 from the Senate's unallocated account to hire a second ASK campus director, to replace the current executive in May, beginning in February and ending in March. Weather But Bren Abbott, former student body vice president, said that senate and ASK were meant to prevent her from taking office. IF THE BILL be issued, the individual hired would technically be employed by the Senate as a legislative assistant but would work as co-ordinator. Adkins, student body president, said yesterday. Senate already allocates $17,000 annually to ASK. The state organization then pays $80 a month to each campus director at the seven member campuses. Adkins said Patty Gerstenberger, Lenexa senior and ASK member, probably would be chosen to work alongside John Keightley, the present campus director. "There's nothing in Senate rules and regulations that says what ASK can and can't do. They're supposed to have complete autonomy." Abbott said, "There's no way around not having two people working," Adkins said. See ASK page 5 Dunn's bill states that because KU is near Topeka and is much larger than the six other ASK member schools, only one campus director cannot fulfill the needs of the KU delegation. ROB GREENSPAN/Kansan Staff Adkins said that one director would concentrate efforts on dealing with the Legislature in Topeka while the other director would work to improve the ASK membership on the KU "We don't have the kind of delegation and membership to be efficient." Adkins said. BIRD it will be mostly cloudy today with a slight chance of snow flurries in the morning and winds blowing from the north-northwest at 10 to 15 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Toneka. Chances of snow are less than 20 percent tonight, with lowes between zero and five below. Wednesday will not be as cold, with expected highs near 20. COLDER A woman and a car leave their tracks in fresh-fallen snow south of Memorial Stadium. Winds cause continuous cold From Staff and Wire reports Another cold snap hit most of the central United States yesterday, leaving bitterly cold temperatures, snow and numerous weather-related accidents in its path. Lawrence police reported no serious accidents in the wake of the storm which blanketed New York City. Snow fell over the Rockies, parts of the Central Plains states and southern Missouri and Illinois. "These jet-stream patterns that sweep down from the North Pole have caused strange weather patterns all winter," Eagleman said. "They have been having 50-degree temperatures Freezing rain and sheet was reported in central Texas, northern Oklahoma and northwest The source of the cold weather, an unusual jet stream from the North Pole, has caused havoc all winter long, Joe Eagleman, KU professor of geology, said yesterday. in the Aleutan Islands while we've been stuck in the icebox." COLD WEATHER will continue in the Lawrence area through Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Partly cloudy skies will replace the snow, however. The Weather Service forecasted a warming for related storm zones 7 See related story page 7 trend to begin Thursday, with temperatures in the 40s on Saturday. But yesterday's storm already has caused several accidents. Increment weather was blamed for the death of Michael Holtkiss, 29, who was struck and killed by an Amtrac train at a crossing on the Western Michigan University campus in Kalamazoo. Holtkiss was clearing snow with a small tractor. Two cars also were struck by passing trains in other parts of Michigan. One man was killed when his car slid through a railroad crossing into the path of an oncoming train. BALTASAR O ANIVERSARIO la Biblioteca Nacional SE MARTI. 1901-1981 JOHN HANKAMMER Kansan Stall George Woodyard, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, stands in front of his souvenirs from his recent trip to the Second Cuban National Theatre Festival. The posters are hanging in his office in Strong Hall. Theater festival gives prof insight into Cuban culture Staff Reporter By JANET MURPHY Many Americans view Cuba as a country sealed off from the world by the impenetrable wall of communism—a country that people flee in makehawk boats. But a KU professor who recently visited the school he found the people contented and well友利。 George Woodyard, professor of Spanish, was the only American invited by the Cuban Ministry of Culture to be an observer at its National National Theatre Festival in late January. Woodyard said he felt fortunate to have attended the festival because Cuban theater The festival ran from Jan. 21 to Feb. 1. Woodward was in Cuba from Jan. 25 to Feb. 1. WOODYARD, associate dean of the graduate school, academic affairs and associate professor, also edits the "Latin American Theatre Review." The review is published at the University of Kansas and is distributed nationally. Woodyard was he among observers from Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Canada, Holland, Spain, Algeria, Bulgaria, East Germany and the Soviet Union. The festival will continue every two years. tribute troupe, a group from the festival, the "Teatro Escabraya" performed a dramatization of short stories with a social message by a Cuban writer. The reception room is there. There is an emphasis in Cuba to take the theater to the people, he said. He attended one production in a steel factory. The Cuban people respond very well to the theater, he said. The first year of the festival, 1952, was one of the worst. This year, Woodyard said, that goal was surpassed on the fourth day of the festival. "Theater is an important phenomenon in a revolutionary society," he said. "The government uses theater as a way of promoting social reform." Although most of the Cuban productions followed a social reform theme, Shake-speare^2 "wrote Night and French" with the title "The Bourgeois Gentleman." also were presented. ALTHOUGH THE factory had its own theatre troupe, a group from the festival, the Along with the Cuban theater groups, Woodyard said, were young acting troupes from Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala. He said the productions of the Salvadorians and Guatemalans, who are in exile because of the revolutions in their countries, reflected the revolutionary struggle. Although he was busy at the festival, Woodyard was able to see some of Havana. He said the festival officials were very accommodating in taking him wherever he went. Social reform themes included the role of women as equals in a revolutionary society and commentaries on equal rights, Woodyard said. "I had the feeling that people were contented with their lifestyle," he said, "but you can't be enthused by it. You can't be enthused by it." HE SAID many of the dissidents in Cuba and the people who remained in Cuba were insane. One man he talked to, who was an editorial writer for the government, said he was a member of the Congress. Woodyard that because the state owned all property and provided the basic necessities for daily life, Cuban people did not have many great worries. The salaries are low by our standards, he said. A worker may earn between $10 and $35 per hour. See CUBA page 5 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 9, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Plane crash in Tokyo Bay leaves 17 dead, eight missing TOKYO—A Japan Air Lines DC8, carrying 174 people, plunged into the waters of Tokyo Bay yesterday, 100 yards short of a runway. Police said at least 17 people were killed and 149 others were rescued from the floating fuselage. Eighty-one of the survivors were seriously injured, police said. Eight were unaccounted for. A landing approach light in the bay was demolished and officials speculated that the four-engine jet had clipped the light during its approach. The DC-8 flight 350, from the southern Japanese city of Fukuoka, was carrying 166 passengers and a crew of eight. It crashed into the sea off the southern part of Tokyo's Haneda International airport as it tried to land yesterday evening. Many of the survivors climbed onto the wings of the plane and were rescued by boats that sped to the scene. rescued by boats that speak to the scene. A Japan Airlines spokesman said the passenger list showed there was a Japanese boat near South Korea. The National Police Agency said that among the dead was the captain of the plane, who had clocked in 5,450 hours of flying. An aviation commentator said birds had long constituted to planes at the airport and it was possible the plane's engines stalled after drawing in exhaust. Inmate guns down fellow prisoners PETROS, Tena.—A white inmate shot four black prisoners execution style in their cell at Bristle Mountain State Prison last night, officials said. The inmate killed two and wounded two others while forcing four guards to watch as he held them hostage. The guards were released unharmed about 10 minutes after a Spokesman for Gov. Lamar Alexander said seven white inmates armed with knives and a pistol were involved in a confrontation with blacks when the guards walked up, and one of the inmates opened fire. The injured prisoners were rushed to a nearby hospital where they were reported in stable condition several hours later. None of the prisoners were immediately identified. Stocks plunge with deficit proposal NEW YORK—President Reagan's proposed $91.5 billion budget deficit spoiled Wall Street investors yesterday. Stock and bond prices plunged. On the New York Stock Exchange, the widely followed Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted 17.6 points to close at 833-43. Its lowest level in Reagan sent his $474.6 billion 1983 budget to Congress yesterday and predicted that Democrats would pull out "horrier stories" to block passage of the budget. But Republican leaders conceded that Reagan's proposal was likely to undergo alterations because of opposition from both sides of the aisle due to him. Howard Baker, Senate GOP leader, said the deficit would be "damaging to Republicans" and the reductions in social programs and state aid would be "very painful." The president said he was "determined" to Five arrested for gun shopping list BUFFALO, N.Y. — Immigration officials announced yesterday the arrests of five Irish nationals to be attempted to enter the United States from Canada on Friday. Authorities confiscated about $10,000 worth of English and Irish pounds, as well as a "shopping list" of guns and ammunition that officials said the men had stashed. The Buffalo district director for the Immigration Service said the aliens were not trying to enter the United States for violence here, but to raise awareness of immigration issues. The five were stopped late Saturday night at the Whirpool Bridge in Lewiston, near Niagara Falls, authorities said. Haig, Genscher devise Poland plan MADRID, Spain—Secretary of State Alexander Haig and Hans-Dietrich Genscher, the West German foreign minister, yesterday forged a broad, strategic plan to oppose military repression in Poland during the Madrid talks on security and cooperation. The Soviet Union said it would blame the United States if the talks, which are among 35 nations, were sidetracked by the Polish issue. Haig plans to deliver harsh criticism of Warsaw and Moscow for the military repression he speaks today at the Conference on Europe. Hagi and Genscher met for about two hours last night. Officials said the two had reached an agreement for dealing with the Polish question at the United Nations. In Poland yesterday the martial law government published a detailed program for Poland's economic and political recovery, but officials warned that some of the measures would be counterproductive. Williams' parents hit with citation ATLANTA -- A superior court judge, excusing one from his gag order, slapped a contempt of court citation on the parents of accused murderer James T. Patterson. Homer and Faye Williams, retired school teachers who have defended their son adamantly, each telephoned an Atlanta radio station Friday night Superior Court Judge Clarence Cooper also cited Dan Stowes, a pediatric pathologist from Ulica, N.Y., for granting an interview to an Atlanta The judge placed the gag order on lawyers and witnesses before the trial began in December. In other developments, Stowens, who testified that the two boys Williams is accused of killing were not murdered, also said yesterday he had perforated a blast window in the building. Stowna's testified that although only one of the autopsies he had performed since 1968 had turned out to be an indictable criminal case, he had been a witness. Nebraskans want to join Wyoming SCOTTBLUFF. Neb.-More than 85 percent of the residents in Nebraska's pachyderm community propose a proposal to annex the pachyderm to a recent news station. The Scottbluff Star-Herald said 1,709 of 2,004 people who returned questionnaires answered "yes" to the question: Are you in favor of the 11 counties of the Panhandle leaving Nebraska and becoming part of Worning? Wyoming Rep. Doug Chamberlain has recently resurrected the secession issue, saying he wanted the Wyoming Legislature to consider annexing the The Star-Herald reported that respondents who favored annexation repeatedly mentioned lower taxes and closer distances to the Wyoming border. John Hav Whitnev dies at age 77 Also listed were similarities of climate, terrain, time zone, sparseness of population, agriculture and cultural and social ties with Wyoming. MANHASSET, N. Y., *John Hay* "Jock" Whitney, former ambassador to Britain, owner of Greenstein Stable and the last publisher of the defunct New York Times. Whitney, educated at Yale and Oxford, was U.S. ambassador to Great Britain from 1964-61. He was a W. Army Air Force colonel during world War II and was cited for his escape from the Germans. Internal services will be held Friday. funeral services will be held Friday. Librarv thefts prompt warnings Several thefts in December and January have prompted librarians at Green Hall Law Library to put up signs to students to guard their valuables. By VINCE HESS Staff Reporter Fritz Snyder, reader services/circulation librarian, said recently the signs were put up in December after one student's purse and another's yellow legal pads were taken from their cubicles in the library. "There's a slight problem," Snyder said, "but it could be a lot worse." A new textbook was stolen from a cubicle last month. Snyder said he had worked at the library for 17 months and could remember only one or two thefts reported before last semester. The signs read, "Don't leave valuables in your cubicles or on tables. Thefts have been reported!" Snyder said he had no dollar estimates of the items. THE LIBRARY is five floors. The first, third, fourth and fifth floors have books and cubicles that are assigned to the staff. These rooms contain books and the circulation desk. Law students study at the cubicles and leave their books, many of them heavy case books, overnight at the library. Andy Brann, acting head librarian, said thefts had been infrequent at the TACO BELL EVERY TUESDAY Burrito Tostada Pintos 'n Cheese 39¢ each no limit 1408 West 23rd St. good only at this location TACO BELL Sunday Thursday 10:00 A.M.-1:00 A.M., Friday and Saturday 10:00 A.M.-2:00 A.M. Skiing SKI WINTER PARK/ MARY JANE or Spring Break Mar. 12-17 Breckenridge, Keystone, Copper Mountain With Ski etc... Four full days All lifts Rentals Lodging Transportation by sleeper bus 841-8386 only $245 Many happy Returns K.U. BOOKSTORE Period No. 70 12/6/9 1:01 2:56 17/16/9 30 25 29 34 2.7% MDS 80% MDS 78% MDS 8.30 M 7.45 M ts. They the Customer Main Bookstore op. with will be redeemed The Kansas Union Bookstores are currently paying 6% of total purchases from the fall of '81 (July 1, 1981 to Dec. 31, 1981). These are period 70 receipts. They may be redeemed at the Customer Service Desk at the Main Bookstore or at the Satellite Shop, with your student ID. Period 70 receipts will be redeemed until June 30, 1982. The Kansas Union Bookstores kansas union bookstores library during his three years there. The signs were put up, he said, as a warning to students that the thief or thieves were still at large. KU main union level 2, satellite shop "We just want to keep things under it's a good place to work." Brassad said. Snyder said the stolen purse was reported to KU police. The purse was held in the Green Hall several days after being reported, but the money had been removed. The other thefts were not reported to police by the owners, Snider said. The pads were a minor item, and the new textbook had no name written inside it. There were no suspects in the thefts, Snyder said. KU police said the purse was reported stolen Dec. 1. Also reported stolen from primary was a stolen toy Snider. Snyder said it did not know about a stolen typewriter. --presented by Plymouth Fashions Handbell Flowers Ringers Wedding Music Table Settings Reception Table Sun. Feb. 14 2:00 p.m. Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont table Clief-Sheet Music Candlelight Bridal Fair Donation $2.00 Tickets available at Rusty's, Raney's & at the door. This ad sponsored by The Treble Clap-Sheet Music PENTE MOMO THE CLASSIC GAME OF SKILL 1982 LAWRENCE CITY CHAMPIONSHIP AT GAMMONS MONDAY FEBRUARY 15, 1982 8:00 p.m. Officially Sanctioned Qualifying Tournament 1st PRIZE: Round trip all expense paid to Dallas and lodging for 2 at PLAZA OF THE AMERICAN HOTEL & Deluxe Pente Board inscribed "Lawrence City Champion" 2nd PRIZE: Deluxe Pente Board from Footlights 3rd PRIZE: A keg of beer from Gammons "Lawrence City Champion" You may qualify for: You may qualify for: OOO WORLD OPEN 1982 WORLD OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP IN DALLAS PLUS 1st PRIZE: $5,000 & Trip for 2 to London A one of a kind Ceramic Vase Pente Trophy FEBRUARY 27 & 28 Pre-register at Gammons and Footlights co-sponsored by & Selling something? Place a want ad Call 864-4358. Look before you Look before you Leap IT'S NO ACCIDENT THAT 600 ENGINEERS CHOSE US (ALL CIVILIANS) It was interesting work with computers, aircraft, jet engines and many other kinds of aircraft. One of the reasons is recruiting for the military—we're civilians. It was our permanent location in Oklahoma City, with moderate weather, low cool living—especially for homes and apartments. it was our faster-than-average advancement to better-than-average pay, benefits and long-range stability. CONTACT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR DETAILS OR WRITE TO: ON CAMPUSI 11 FEB 82 we are an equal opportunity employer E FOR DETAILS OR WRITE TO: ENGINEER REBURGEMENT DESIGNER TECHNOLOGY OKLA CITY AIR LOGISTICS CENTER TINKER BK, OKLA 73145 the oklahoma city air logistics center University Daily Kansan, February 9, 1982 rth si Page 3 Alumni say Senate beer plan could prompt negative opinions By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter The Kansas University Alumni Association did not support a Student Senate proposal last week to sell beer in Memorial Stadium because it was concerned about adverse public events an association official said yesterday. "We don't have a negative attitude about the product, like it was a fourletter word," Dick Wintermote, Alumni secretary association treasurer, said. But public attitudes should be checked out thoroughly before the decision, whether to sell beer is made, he said. There is a difference, he said, between selling beer at professional games in private or city-owned stadiums and in the arena campus in an arena owned by the state. BECAUSE THE state owns the University's property and finances the University of Kansas, the Alumni Association is very concerned about the reactions of the Kansas Legislature and the Board of Regents, Wintermote said. "The image of the University is very important when trying to recruit students," he said. Parents won't send students here if they think the University is not responsive to their attitudes, he said. In a large public area such as Memorial Stadium or Allen Field House, Wintermato said, there would be the problem of checking IDs. "I would like beer to be served in proper settings where there are good controls," he said. He said that the Student Senate had been working on such controls, but that their proposals had not yet been satisfactory. "The proposal to sell beer has to be well thought out and carefully planned with few places for error," Wintermote said. DAVID WELCH, Senate vice president, said beer sales would be controlled by having only two or three places below the stadium where it could An ID would be required to buy beer, Welch said, and there would be a limit of two or three beers. Such a limit is usually given by the number of beer ID on which the number of beers bought since the first purchase would be recorded. Wintermorte said if all the problems of selling beer were not considered, the end result could have a bad effect on Chancellor Gene A. Budig, who, he said, was trying his best to represent the University. the University. "The chancellor doesn't need anything that would compromise his position," Wintermorte said. "I am also concerned that a decision not be made prior to the appointment of a new member of the Board." THE ATHLETIC director needs to be involved in this type of a decision and he needs to discuss the whole situation with representatives, Winternote said. "The Alumni Association is not against beer," he said. "In fact, we took the leadership on getting beer into the Kansas Union." But, he said, that was under a different set of circumstances. "Ongoing discussions, planning and checking would be very helpful." Wintermorte said about the beer selling proposal. but, he said, he really did not know how the public would react to the proposal. Committee approves Moore Hall funds By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter The Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved about a new addition to Moore Hall, headquarters of the Kansas Geological Survey. Construction of the addition, approved last month by the Senate, will begin in late spring if the appropriation approved by the House and John Carlin, William Hambleton, director of the Geological Survey, said yesterday. "We're getting this approved long before the Legislature considers most appropriations." Hambleton said. "I think the Legislature recognizes that we'll need to be under cover by next winter." The addition would enlarge Moore Hall on West Campus to the size originally outlined in blueprints of the building made in 1973, Hambleton said. "There was a time lapse between the planning of the building and the construction of it," he said. "In the meantime, building costs went up, so to stay within our appropriation, we had to brainstorm, shrank the building by about one-third." The planned three-story addition would connect Moore Hall with Parker Hall, which houses the U.S. Geological Survey. Hambleton said that one reason the Kansas Legislature approved the addition without many questions was that representatives from the Geological Survey often testified before committees when bills concerning oil, gas, water or land developments were discussed. "If it involves gas or oil within the Hambleton said he would return to Topeka today to testify before a committee hearing arguments on the proposed severance tax, which would impose a tax upon all minerals from grounds within the state. might occur if 15 faculty positions are cut. As a result of decreased enrollment at KU last fall, Carlin has recommended that 15 faculty positions and $292,000 be deleted from the 1983 state, no one knows more than us," Hambleton said. The committee is also meeting with Deanell Tacha, vice censor for academic affairs, this morning, Shulenburger said. The appropriations approved by the Legislature included about $10,000 for the renovation of Moore Hall, which has leaked water since it was built in 1974. "We give the facts," Hambleton said. "We don't lobby." He added to a meeting for the campus-wide AAUP will be held sometime in the spring. The KU executive committee of the American Association of University Professors will meet this afternoon to discuss the possible impact of Gov. John Carlin's recommended faculty member cuts, Dave Shulenburger, president of the KU branch of AAPU, and associate professor of business, said yesterday. AAUP discusses faculty cuts McCollum approves kegs Shulenburger said the committee would discuss Carlin's proposed budget for KU for fiscal year 1983, particularly because of her role as legislators, and the ramifications that By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter Students can continue to tap beer kegs in McColum Hall without the interference of the hall director, the hall senate has decided. Senators deleted the portions of the proposal that dealt with 24-hour notice and the resident director's role. But the proposal still was defeated. Sherl Schmidt, president of McColum Hall, said recently that the hall senators amended the proposal to allow for a final vote, but it was defeated. 16-12. In its original form, the proposal read, "A resident must notify the desk 24 hours in advance of tapping a keg for public or private use. The resident director has the right to deny that request." Schmidt said that the entire proposal was interpreted by the senators as an invasion of privacy. Doug Frazer, McColm resident director, said that he proposed the measure to help control noise in the house to keep residents from drinking. "It really riled them up," Nick Oropea, Chicago junior and McCollum senator said. "When a resident brings that much alcohol into his room, he takes that responsibility because this is his home," he said. "Our position is that where there are kegs, there tends to be a great amount of noise," Frazer said. Frazer said that by knowing where keks would be, the security staff could better control noise and protect the other residents' rights. "We're anti-noise. There's nothing in the proposal that was anti-booze or anti-kez." A staff proposal that would have required residents to get the resident director's permission to have 3.2 beer beers in their rooms was defeated by the McCollim Hall senate Thursday. Oropeza said he thought the proposal contradicted the contract that residents signed with the residence halls. He said that if the measure had been approved by the hall senate, he would have used the right to deny kegs on the basis of previous noise or alcohol-related problems with the individual involved. "When the residents signed their contracts, they didn't sign their rights away," he said. Oropeza contended that the residents should be responsible for the parties involving kegs. Fred McElenbite, director of the office of residential programs, said the individual halls were allowed to use certain protective rules if the residents agreed. The residence hall contracts allow residents of legal age to have 3.2 cereal malt beverage in their rooms. BAI DIET Frazer said that the defeat of the proposal would be the end of the issue. "I respect their right to say no," he said. “There’s no problem from my standpoint. I will continue to enforce quiet hours, what I perceive to be in need of interest of all the residents.” How to Work At The DIET CENTER It's A Natural! It's Awesome! By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter Arson squad continues investigation The Douglas County Arson Squad is interviewing people in a continuing investigation to determine the cause of a fire last Wednesday that resulted in more than $280,000 worth of damage to four downtown businesses. The Wednesday night blaze is believed to have started near the center of the basement of the Royal College Shop not long after closing time. Fire Chief Jim McSain said yesterday afternoon that investigators already had interview Tom Black, a former Massachusetts state senator. Massachusetts St. yesterday morning. McSwain refused to say whether Black's interview had shed any light on the case. The Arson Squad, which is comprised of the Lawrence Chief of Police, Fire Chief, Douglas County Sheriff, the KU director of Public Safety and the Douglas County District Attorney, met with fire investigators for a weekend morning and again for an hour and a half yesterday afternoon. "We're continuing our investigation. There are more people to interview and to ask general questions," McSwain said. Last week, McSwain said electrical or heating problems were not the cause of the fire. Investigators also are waiting for results of lab tests made on materials taken from the basement of the store, where the fire started. McSwain would not say how many other people the investigators planned to question. He did say that several Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-733 The fire was the second in five years at the Royal College Shop. In 1977, Black rebuilt the store after it sustained more than $450,000 worth of damage. The cause of that fire still is undetermined. KLZR 106 Night Special McSwain said investigators had followed up 27 leads and had made three trips back to the scene of the fire. CONVERSE Royal College Shop employees had been interviewed and that several more would be. Hours: M-F 9-8 pm Sat. 9-6 pm Sun. 1-5 pm All Star $ ^{\mathrm {T M}} $ Pro Leather Hi-Cut. Converse All Stars are worn by more pro and college players than any other shoe. 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If you are unable to make arrangements for an interview please send Payless Cashways INC College Relations Manager PAYLESS CASHWALKS, INC. 2501 Main Miami Kingston City, Missouri 64141-046 This week send our FTD An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Hearts & Flowers Bouquet. Valentine's Day is Sunday, February 14. You're sure to capture her heart with the romantic fresh flowers. Heart Stick Pin, and exclusive FTD Glass Heart Dish that make up our FTD HEARTS & FLOWERS™ Bouquet. It's romantic. And says all the things you've been meaning to say. So call or visit us today. Because every Valentine deserves flowers. Happy Valentine's Day Owens FLOWER SHOP 17TH & INDIANA Lawrence, Kan. CUCHINOS ETD 843-6111 Helping you say it right. Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 9, 1962 Opinion Education strikes out President Reagan's proposed 1983 budget clearly demonstrates the value his administration assigns to education. If the budget is approved, higher education, particularly graduate study, will become a luxury available only to those wealthy enough to afford it. Reagan's proposal calls for the elimination of graduate student loans from the Guaranteed Student Loan program. His proposed cut would affect 400,000 graduate students nationally and 2,500 graduate students in Lawrence. Last year, KU graduate students received approximately $10 million through the loan program. The cuts to education are particularly galling when compared to the $33.1 billion increase Reagan requested for defense spending. While the president is willing to funnel increasingly larger amounts of money "to restore our margin of safety and counter the Soviet military buildup," he is ready to ignore the need to develop the minds necessary to accomplish this task. The GSL program was established during an era when Americans believed that education was an important and valuable asset to the development of civilized society. But in his relentless quest for the elusive balanced budget, Reagan is willing to sacrifice the greatest of all national resources—the human mind. In addition to massive cuts in aid to college students, Reagan's budget also includes the elimination of the Department of Education and the $2.9-billion cut in the Title I program, which provides remedial help for disadvantaged children. The only break Reagan is willing to give to education is a plan he will present to Congress later this year that would provide tuition tax credits to parents with children in private schools, another one of his breaks for the wealthy. Reagan may not be "balancing the budget on the backs of the taxpayers," but he is trying to do it at the expense of education, a move that can only promise serious consequences for the future. Aunt's funeral strengthens family's weakening bonds We gathered last week to remember and honor Alice Lignon. We were at her house, with adults packed everywhere and the children running under the tables and adults' legs. Conversation flowed freely, more so than it had at any other time that weekend. It was a time to talk, relax, to eat and drink and maybe smile a little. Alice Lignon, a great-aut, dawn at 59. For eight years she fought leukemia, until the medicines gave out. She fought it four years longer than the doctors offered her, until her body grew tired, but her snirit never did. There is nothing newworthy about this column. Family ties and death are not typical A. P. S. M. DAN TORCHIA topics for a college newspaper. But they exist and need to be reckoned with. As society becomes more mobile, the chances of students returning to work in their hometowns are slim. Extended families—aunts and uncles and grandparents living close by and being actively involved with the immediate family—seem almost extinct now. Yet such families do exist. Most of my family still lives in the Kansas towns in which they were born and reared. The ties there are very strong, and we appreciate when I visit only once or twice a year. As students graduate and move into jobs, they decide how strong their family ties will remain. In families with an ethnic tradition of a strong family, the traditional ties grow weaker as succeeding generations assimilate into American society. In one weekend my family, whose ancestors came to the United States from Italy in the early 20th century, was able to re-establish ties with members who had lost touch. Three generations gathered in southeastern Kansas that weekend. It was a homecoming and a chance to rediscover family history. The girls were at the Orange Alison Ligeon wedding, Mrs. Alice's house at 42 Camp, an old mining community, was the house the first members of the family settled in. The Catholic Church teaches that death is a time of celebration and sorrow. The sorrow is meant to remind us of our own mortality, and the burden it must honor to the person's life. We tried to do this. The rosary service, the funeral and the short service by the grave offered a testament to the dead as well as for the living. Gathering in a group somehow made it that. After each gathering, conversation was easier when it was not too rosy; we caught up on news after the initial hour. "We got a lot of snow in St. Louis. I don't know if we're going to get home." I'm due in August. This is my last chance for a girl." "You ought to talk to Frank, he makes good sausage. I don’t mumble, but I’ve had his, and it’s fine." The talk also turned to Alice, how she celebrated the 40th wedding anniversary in the hospital the week before she died and how she remembered that week detailing her funeral arrangements. "The word 'luekemia' scares me to death," she wrote, an unintended pennant that described an eight-year-old fear. Alice loved to dance. She had asked that no "sad music" be played at her home. Then she sang songs from her youth—"Oh, Johnny, Oh," "Sunrise Serenade" and "Sentimental Journey." She added an admonishing postscript to her letter, saying, "Don't go too much on my funeral." She was worried that they had never had much money. After the funeral and the grave-side ceremony, we drove back to 42 Camp where the kids and food were waiting. The children were too young to realize what was happening, and they saw their weekend trip as an adventure. Their play eased their parent's sorrows, just as the parents would comfort them when they began to ask where Alice was. That would be the best memorial to Alice Lagon. Later, the children may have to be taught to understand the ties that drew their parents back to 42 Camp. They will have to be taught that children can be close even when they live far apart. APPROVED "Yeah. who savs those Japanese fellers make better cars than we do?" U.S. auto industry not laughing now By the 1920s, only 12 years after Henry Ford introduced the automobile, automobiles had been on the road for a long time and the Army was We had sprawled our cities and suburbs so that only cars could move us about efficiently. Four of every five people, now, get to work by automobile and have no feasible alternative. But rising fuel prices, the unhealthy U.S. auto industry, inflation and recession have made automobiles an expensive necessity. In 1979, 142 million U.S. drivers were shelling out 20.3 cents for every mile they drove, and prices have risen since then. Cars cost about $10,000 this year compared to about $6,900 in 1979. So if you bought one in 1979, you better hang on to it, since prices aren't about to come down. What's that? You say you have a '70 that you plan to trade in next year?' You say it's on your calendar. Surprise! Despite all the news about how Detroit just can't make them like they used to, the average car will last about 150,000 miles. Does that sound like a tall tale? Janet Guthrie, the first woman to race in the Indy 500, drives a 1968 Plymouth Barracuda, and has driven it for 171,000 miles. She says that older cars are easier to maintain and that maintenance is the secret to a car's longer. She's a race car driver, though. She knows about cars. What about the ordinary Joe? But maintenance can be expensive. Large Edward Donaldson of Eugene, Ore, drove his 1968 Mercedes 1 million miles. No, that's not a typographical error. He drove his car 1,000,000 miles, and then took it back to the dealer to use for publicity. The dealer gave him $30,000 in exchange. Donaldson said the secret of his car's longevity was maintenance-fixing things before they fell apart, when they were just old, dusty instruments, and changing the oil and oil filter often. repairs sometimes cost more than the car is worth. Maybe, but they cost less than the price of a new car. Besides, remember that 20.3 cents per mile the average driver pays? Only 8.5 percent of that amount goes for maintenance. Depreciation accounts for 31.4 percent, gasoline for 29.2 percent, insurance for 15.2 percent, finance interest for 11.1 percent and miscellaneous costs for 4.6 percent of that amount. So, except for miscellaneous expenses, maintenance or the lowest expense drivers Still, most people skip the preventive maintenance and drive their cars until they are rust buckets, complain about shoddy Detroit workmanship and trade them in on They find that prices have gone up considerably since they bought the old car. But. Yes, steel prices have risen. Several years ago, steel makers wanted to raise their prices $6 a ton, and auto manufacturers complained they would have to pass that price increase on to the car consumer. A car weighs about one ton, so the price increase would have risen about $9. They rose about $65. What consumers pay for when they decide to trade one and a half tons of old steel in on one and a half tons of new steel, is not the fact that the auto industry's failure to face reality. Small foreign cars have been buzzing around American streets for years, but for a long time they were oddities in the eyes of Detroit automakers. What Americans really wanted were big luxury cars, new models every year, Detroit automakers said, and that's exactly what their manufacturing lines were set up to create. What a coincidence. When Volkswagen introduced the bug in the United States, Detroit automakers tried to laugh them off the streets because they refused to change their model every year, kept their prices as low as possible and offered 30 miles per gallon. Consumers weren't laughing. New Detroit automakers are crying. They wouldn't be, though, if they had stopped trying to tell U.S. drivers that they wanted cars to listen to what U.S. drivers really wanted. They could have gradually changed their manufacturing lines to produce a few small, fuel-efficient cars as an alternative. Instead, they have been forced to switch over manufacturing processes all at once, when business became so bad that major manufacturers were going under the one-third of the autoworkers were, too. Experts say there will be some big changes in Detroit before the U.S. auto industry gets back on its feet. They predict innovations like electric cars, solar-powered cars, ultrasmall, ultra-efficient commuter cars and increased fuel efficiency in diesel and gasoline. But nobody is predicting that Americans are going to stop driving cars. However, all those changes mean that cars will be more expensive than ever, so Americans will be forced to start maintaining them longer. No longer will people be able to use cars as one and a half tons of scrap metal, temporarily pressed into the form of status symbols. They will learn to regard them and care for them, as the finely designed, well-tooled machines that they are. Letters to the Editor Columnist's subject alive, well and living in Lawrence To the Editor: I would like to call your attention to the Feb. 2 column of Jolynne Walz. Walz uses a high school friend as the basis for her column. I am the person to whom she refers.-Shahin Adhieh. Walz is inaccurate in her writing. She does not have written about my without consent. First, I did not "come into" her life as she would suggest. The truth of the matter is that I only knew Walz through our mutual attendance at Shawnee Mission South High School. Walz is incorrect in saying that I came to this country in search of a cure for cancer. I did have cancer when I was a child, but I was cured when I lived in England, long before I ever came to this country. Nor did I come to this country from Iran. In fact, I have never even lived there. My parents are Iranian and for that reason I carry an Iranian passport. I was born in Ethiopia. Finally, I would like to clear up some rather important misunderstandings about the Bahai faith, particularly its relationship with the Iranian government. The Bahai faith is not an off-shoot of Islam, nor is it "perchance against the Iranian government." It is a doctrine of the Bahai faith to obey all the laws of the country one lives in, and to stay out of politics. In the words of Jacques Brell, Shahin Diahieh is alive and well and living in Lawrence. Third, my cancer has never gone into remission and I was never sent to South America to escape the draft or possible death. In fact, I have never been to that part of the globe. Shahin Ahdieh. Prairie Village senior Secondly, I object to the manner in which she treats me throughout her article. Her description of me as a tag-along requires imagination since I only met her on three or four occasions. Shahin Ahdieh. Caution necessary To the Editor: After reading the editorial, I am inclined to draw the conclusion that there is improvement in the recruiting policy of the Kansan. It is really encouraging and inspiring to see journalism as are qualified and experienced as those Herron enumerated in her article being positioned. I wish to congratulate Vanessa Heron on her success in occupying the most important position she has held for the company. Her introductory column was historical and educative. The Kansas City Star, Aug. 30, 1981, featured an analytic article on the educational standards of journalism. Several opinions and suggestions concerning the deteriorating standards were given. Most journalism deans and teachers quoted in this piece blamed the degradation of journalism education on rising enrollments in journalism schools and the students' poor grades. In their profession - English - Advancement in technology was another factor considered. But one important point needs to be mentioned along with the policy changes of the Kansan and Lakeland governments. Del Brinkman, dean of the KU School of Journalism, had a different view on the subject. city's low standards on that school's admission of minor students. "They admitted a lot of minority students. That in itself was a good thing to do, but in so doing they lowered their standards and they've never been asked to come back up." Brinkman was quoted as saying: As a student from Nigeria, I am not sure I fall into the minority fold. Still, fear, uncertainty, depression, sadness and embarrassment are common in my life. Hail, I feel like a dancer each time I see the dean. Nevertheless, caution is absolutely necessary in the pursuit of a journalism career in the face of such incredible feelings, remarks and comments by the highest official in the William Allen Vanessa's appointment and her pragmatic introduction sprinkled temporary relief on my Apollo E. Dimbo, Port Harcourt, Nigeria, senior Apollo E. Dimbo, Equal opportunity To the Editor: I am writing in response to Teresa Riordan's column, which stated that, because most GSP-Corbin residents are white, the KU residence hall system doesn't further racial equality. I have to wonder what Hyland's definition of equality is. To me, equality is achieved not in numbers, but in opportunity, and any female student is a current or permanent student has an opportunity to S-Ortho1. As Riordan laid out, prospective residents of the hall do need to send their contracts in as early as possible. She asserts, however, that middle-class white Kansans "know" this, implying that there is some kind of conspiracy going on to keep blacks out of the hall. There's no conspiracy. The system is fair as it is: the first contracts sent in receive top priority. If blacks want to see more minority students living at GSP-Corbin, they must cast their masters and friends know that the hall fills quickly. rths But maybe most black women don't want to live there anyway. Lewis and Ellsworth walls may hold more appeal for them because, after all, those halls are to black sororites and fraternities what GSP-Coriin is to the white collar: a place to recruit guests and little sisters. Patricia Crocker, Topeka freshman. Riordan had the ethnocentric idea that most black girls want to stay in GPs-Corbin, but don't know about the application procedure. I think that they just don't care to live there. Racial equality means the same opportunity for everyone, and that currently exists in the KU housing application process. Racial equality does not mean equal percentages of blacks and whites in every dorm. To have equal numbers, KU would have to adopt quotas, with race specified on the contracts. That truly would be discrimination. Avoiding discrimination is vitally important. So is ensuring freedom of choice. Let the hall residents decide for themselves where they want to live, because it is not the job of a university housing office. KANSAN (UBS$ 650440) Published at the University of Kassam and Tel Aviv University. Subscription for June and July祭 day, June and July祭 end on Saturday, Sunday and Monday祭 day. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 for a year. Subscriptions by phone are $649 for a year. Outside the county. State subscriptions are in a yearly subscription. Footmatter. Send changes of address to the University Dada Kanoi, First Hall, The University of Kanoa, Nigeria. Vanessa Herron . Natalie Johnson Managing Editor . Tracey Hamilton Editorial Editor . Karen Schuster Campus Editor . George Geee Campus Editorial Manager . Joe Rebein. Rebeine Chaney Assistant Campus Editors . Joe Rebein. Rebeine Chaney Sports Editor . Hargot Hagerstrom Associate Sports Editor . Gin Stripes Makeup Editors . Liam Mansson. Lillian Dava. Wire Editors . Ellen Marker. Terra Kordan. Photo Editor . Ian Mann. Staff Photographers . Jon Hardesty. John Hankmanker. John Fisk. Tracy Thompson. McDonald Mark Head Copy Chair . Jane Bryant Copy Chiefs . Cindy Campbell. Charlie George Columniere . Bren Abatt. Brian Hawkins. Dan Torcha. Jolynne Wash, Lake Isabella Tort Rivertown. Thomas Tiernan. Tiernan, Ben Jones. Ann Horrberger Retail Sales Manager . Ann Howard Shalwari National Sales Manager . Howard Shalwari Classified Manager . Sarah Burno Tourteletta Manager . Larry Leathenden Retail Sales Representative . Barbara Bain. National Sales Manager . Howard Shalwari Associate Manager . Sarah Burno Tourteletta Manager . Larry Leathenden Retail Sales Representative . Barbara Bain. National Sales Manager . Howard Shalwari Associate Manager . Sarah Burno Tourteletta Manager . Larry Leathende sas sas sas p r t h s University Daily Kansan, February 9, 1982 Page 5 KU employee gets coverage from Redbook feature article By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Evy Gerson isn't letting national exposure go to her head, but local reaction to an article about the killing of a black man is growing. "It's a little disorienting." Gersson, KU assistant director of student financial aid, said. "Everybody was really pleased with me," she said. "They wanted to know what had led up to A feature article about Gerson appeared in Redbook, a national magazine for young women, in its February issue. The feature was part of a series about jobs and how women find satisfying work. GERSHON, who has worked in the financial aid department for three and a half years, reached her present position through a series of clerical and secretarial jobs—working as a member of the financial aid department and an receptionist in the and, later, acting placement director in the School of Law. "The goal I had set for myself was to work in an administrative office in a central part of the city." The Redbook article highlighted her goal and the way she achieved it. How did a national magazine published on Park Avenue in New York City Hind Eyre Gershini wrote about it? "The consulting editor who wrote the story contacted her sister, who is an English instructor" When the editor, Jane Cibattari, called her sister Dense Low, Low told her about about her brother. Clabattari contacted Gershan in November and asked her whether she'd be willing to do the "It sounded like a good opportunity to share my experiences." Gerson said. THE ENTIRE story took about two weeks to complete, she said, with Ciabattari interviewing her by telephone and sending a photographer to get a picture of Gershon at "They were mainly excited that KU had gotten some good national publicity," she said. When the February issue came out during the last few weeks of January, people started calling for an update. the attention Gerisman received because of the article hasn't affected her life in any dramatic way. "It's exciting," she said, "but I don't know that it makes me any different. "He's more concerned with who's asking him to do something than what he's asked to do. The basic issue is whether or not the city commission has the trust of the broadest spectrum of com- From page 1 Watson To fire Watson, three of the five commissioners would have to vote for the move. "There's some merit in favor of the suggestion that we go through the evaluation," Glesson said. Gleason would not say whether he would move for Watson's dismissal tonight. DURING AN evaluation last October, some commissioners discussed Watson's job performance with him. There was to have been another evaluation of Watson in about six months, Commissioner Nancy Shontz said Sunday. Gleason did not say whether he would wait until after the second evaluation to move for dismissal of Watson. But he did say, "When the evaluation comes, I will make motion for Gleason said that no individual instance of Watson's not performing well on the job was very significant apart from all the other instances. He said that one instance alone carried as little weight as a snowflake. "But you wind up with a sufficient number of snowflakes you have enough to build a snow fort," Gleason said. From page 1 But, he said, monthly electrical bills may be only $10, the telephone, $7 and rent was usually less than $10. Such things as medical care and education are provided by the state. Cuba He said housing in Havana was at a premium. There is not always adequate space appropriate for the size of the family living in an apartment or house. Woodyard said there was some free enterprise. He went to a square in old Havana where there was a farmer's market on the weekends. He said that although the plaza goods sold there was rather poor, the plaza jammed shoulder-to-shoulder with people. ONE PLAY at the festival, he said, satirized the housing problem and the elaborate plans some people go through to change residences. He said people who sold their own goods would often make more money than a salesman. He also said the news from and about the United States was very slanted. The Cuban people were very wary about the possibility of an American invasion. He said there was a mobilization of people in the reserves last December but nothing happened. Merit From page 1 work and to help make state salaries competitive with private industry salaries, she said. "It will not hold up as it should in the first place (with the 0.39 percent increase.)" O'Neill said, The previous pay plan contained six steps which were fewer and farther apart than the steps in the current merit plan. But each of the previous steps represented a 5 percent increase. "That would in essence be worse than the pay plan we had before this was instituted." The alternate to raising the merit increase is to change the plan to reward only outstanding merit. An outstanding employee would receive a one-step pay increase, but employees evaluated as average or above average would not get raises. ASK From page 1 John is more of an organizational man," Adkins said. he said Keightley got the job of campus director because he would be at KU through next year, while Gerstenberger would leave school this spring. The Senate's finance and auditing committee will review the bill today at their regular meeting. If they approve the bill, it will go before the entire Senate at its meeting Wednesday. 12 is your lucky number! 1. President 3. Secretary 2. Vice President 5. Films 9. Outdoor Recreation 6. Fine Arts 4. Treasurer 7. Forums 10. Public Relations 11. Special Events 8. Indoor Recreation 12. Travel Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union. Interviews will be held Saturday, February 27. Sign up deadline for applications is Friday, February 19, 5:00 p.m. SUA The Cafe Eldridge is open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week. From 11 am to 11 pm. Mondays Saturday, and 11 am to 9 pm on Sunday. You can even call in for carry out. Whether it is a special occasion or you just want a delicious homemade meal, dine at the Cafe Eldridge. by Stephen Sondheim During February and March the Cafe Eldridge features 99c books from 9 mm, 11 mm Affordable Fun Dining For fun dining at an affordable price, dine at the Cafe Eldred Choose from the many delicious homemade dishes prepared daily by our Chefs. Most meals at the Cafe Eldred cost between $30 and $50. An extraordinary price for a fun meal served in the pleasant atmosphere of the Cafe Eldred "Rats" by Israel Horowitz "Side by Side by Sondheim" Feb. 18, 19, & 20 at 8:00 p.m. Feb. 21 at 2:00 p.m. Ferrugin Room, Kansas Union "Scenes from Soweto" By Steve Winner 8.5 at 8:00 p.m. 7th Massachusetts Cafe' Eldridge SUA Theater Series Almondine 4.95 Baked Lasagne 4.95 Humble Pie 4.25 Eggs Benedict 3.95 Monte Cristo 3.50 British Burger 2.95 Chili Supreme 2.50 Crust of French --- by Thomas Babe Feb. 25 & 27, March 3, & 5 at 8:00 p.m. 100 Smith Hall, Religion Bldg. "Taken in Marriage" As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift. Qualifications - Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term). --- Onion Soup 2,50 Sweetbread Coffee Drinks - Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. Feb. 24 & 26, March 4 & 6 at 8:00 p.m. Big Eight Stadium, Kansas University For more information call 864-3477 Top Sirloin Steak 6.25 Breast of Chicken - Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. Tickets on sale now at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union. For more information call 864-3477. Applications - Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Tuesday, February 16, 1982 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held February 23, 1982. * More information and applications available in the SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477. --- University-Community Service Scholarship Award The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358 THE BEST PRICE IEC 10 5555 76 Lines of Quality Audio • Complete Service • Discount Prices • Mail Order Selection, Price, Quality, Service Three "State of the Art" showrooms; two large mass manufacturers showrooms; one budget manufacturers area, as well as, our mail order facility and wholesale warehouse. Shop every major dealer of audio components in the midwest or compare more lines of quality audio at the Gramophone Shop! KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, Ks. shop 842-1811 Spare time Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 9, 1982 University festival to feature performances by KU alumni By KATHRYN KASE Staff Writer A variety of international, national and Kansas artists will highlight the 1982 University Arts Festival, which will begin this week and continue until March 12. The internationally acclaimed Juilliard String Quartet will inaugure the Festival Thursday evening when they perform at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. The Juilliard Quartet is performing off-campus for a variety of reasons, according to Charla Jenkins, publicity director for University Theatre. The performance had to be moved, she said, because the University Theatre was unavailable and because the University of Arts Festival Kansas wanted to involve Lawrence residents in the Festival. AND, PLYMOUTH CHURCH does have its advantages as a concert hall. "Accustomically, it's very, very good for chamber music," Jenkins said. For student patrons without cars, a shuttle bus will run between Murphy Hall and the Plymouth Church before and after the performance. The Jullandil Quartet is but one of the highpoints of the five-week Festival, which will include dance, film, theatre and visual arts as well. For those who want to view some home-grown talent, three KU alumni are also slated for the job. Patricia Wise, operative soprano, will perform her first solo recital at University Theatre on Feb. 21, Rockne Krebs, sculptor will lecture on Feb. 24 in the Kansas City public art gallery graphic artist Phil Rishek will be on display at the Art and Design Building Gallery from Feb. 14 to March 9. Although this is the Arts Festival's second year, this is the first time that special programming was done with the Festival in mind, Jenkins said. "The way the Arts Festival start, well, last year it just happened," she said, "that between three or four weeks we had some incredibly good events." this year, however, groups such as the Kansas City Ballet were asked to perform for the arts festival. And other events which were part of the Concert of Chamber Music Series were scheduled under the umbrella of the arts festival. test. FUNDING FOR the festival comes from many sources, Jenkins says, and depends on whether an event is part of a series or is individually programmed. Nonetheless, grants from the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts will help fund the performances of the Guthrie Theatre Company and Rampal. FOLLOWING is a calendar of the events scheduled for the Arts Festival. Events marked with a $ have an admission charge and tickets are available at the Murphy Hall box office. - Photographs from the Esquire Collection O. display through Feb. 28 in the Spencer Museum - The Juilliard String Quartet—$ - The Juliillard String Quintet 8 p.m. Thursday at the Plymouth Compound in 925 Vermont Rivers. - Posters by Phil Riskeb On display from Feb. 14 to March 5 in the Art and Dance Hall - Harpsichord Recital by Peter Williams—$ 8 n.m. Feb. 18 in Swartout Recital Hall. 8 p.m., Feb. 18 in Swarthout Recital Hall. * "She Stops to Conquer," a play by Oliver Goldsmith=- 8 p.m., Feb. 19, 20 and 25-27 in the University Townhouse *Particia Wise, sopra-no* $3: 30 p.m. Feb. 21 in the University Theatre. 8 p.m., Feb. 23 in the University Theatre. 3:30 p.m., Feb. 21 in the University Theatre. * "The Rainmaker" by N. Richard Nash—$ - "The Rainmi: or" by N. Richard Nash-$ 8 p.m., Feb. 23 in the University Theatre. - Rockne Krebis; Visits Artistic Institutions b.p.m., Feb. 24 in Woodruff Auditorium of the Krebis Museum. Rubberization: *“SITE: Buildings and Spaces”—Exhibit Opening 1 p.m., Feb 28 at the spilleen theater, over theater of "Knopf," Heartz; Isaac, Stern in "China-USA" TV series. Chim"—SUA Firm—a$ 2 p.m. Feb. 28 in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas City Opera. - Symposium of Contemporary Music; The Grave, guest composer * Michael Mortuary Hall 28. 18 through March 3 at Murphy Hall. * "Don Giovanni" - SUA Film-$ 0 p.m., March 4 at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union Kansas Union * Jean-Pierre Rampal, Flute> $1 --director of the center, said the main source of funding is memberships. 8 p.m. March 6 in the University Theatre. "The Kansas City Ballet"—$ - The Kansas City Baller—$ 8 p.m. March 16 in the University Theatre 8 p.m. March 10 in the University Theatre. * "Chinese Calligraphy form the Crawford Collection — "Exhibit Opening 3 p.m. March 12 in the Spencer Museum of Art. STARRING: MARY GILLIAMS AND KATE HANKS. Terry Snyder, left, plays Nyfrm the Sprite in the Seem-to-Be players on going serial, Nyfrm. Here, Nyfrm and her friends Mother Dear, played by Jeri Stanfield, and Sno-Po the Penquick, played by Gall Bronfman, rehearse a scene from the current episode of the serial. Center offers entertaining escape Staff Writer BY ELIZABETH MORGAN Staff Writer So you want to take a course in life drawing, but it doesn't fit your schedule, and it won't help your credit hours or GPA? And learning bobbin laying is additional French skill, isn't it? Or credit? The Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets, offers an opportunity away from the University to learn a variety of arts from calligraphy to juggling and jazz The center currently is having a membership drive. "The building is in almost constant use." Katie Armitage, chairman of the membership drive, said. "It is literally an all-day experience there." "They enjoyed the short-term courses as a contrast from the more academic at KU," she said. Armitage, acting director of the center last week, said she was surprised at how many KU students were there. Armitage said that the classes in drawing and painting were always very popular, but that the center offered more diverse courses, including art lessons, lessons, mime and Chinese landscape painting. "THE MAIN benefit (of a membership) is support of the Arts Center," Evans said, but members also get discounts on course fees, which range from $15 to $25. BESIDES THE courses offered, there also are workshops that meet one time and programs sponsored by the center, such as the dulcimer concert performed Saturday night. Works of local artists are displayed in two galleries in the building. mittee of people in the arts. Anyone can apply to have their work shown and, according to Armitage, many of the artists are KU faculty and students. Many of the center's teachers are KU faculty members or students, Armitage said teachers were interviewed and selected by the Center for the Teacher for the Center. The teachers are all paid. Artists whose works are displayed in the earlery are chosen by an advisory com- Salaries for the center's staff members and other expenses are paid by grants from the Kansas Arts Commission, course fees, donations and memberships. Anne Evans, Memberships are $5 for students, $15 for adults and $25 for families. JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staff TOMMY MARTIN Chris Hansen, Harrisonville, Mo., left, leads a workshop on advanced dulcimer playing Saturday afternoon at Haskell Indian Junior College. Hansen is a member of the Black Oak Dulcimer Co. The Lawrence Arts Center sponsored the workshop. TODAY on campus THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will have a Dutch lunch for its members from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union. A LUNCH, SPONSORED BY HILLEL, will feature David Gottlieb, associate professor of law, speaking on 'Some Legal Perspectives on Law' at 12.19 pm, in Cork I of the Kansas Union. OF PHYSICS STUDENTS at 4 p.m. in room 306 of the Satellite University. George Rothe, assistant professor of geology, will discuss "Recent Earthquake Activity in Southwest Nebraska." THE UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY will have a meeting for new members at 4 p.m. in Aloe B There will be a joint meeting of the KU GEOPHYSICS SOCIETY AND THE SCIENCE FESTIVAL. THE JAPANESE FILM SERIES will present "And Yet We Live" at 7 p.m. in Dyche Auditorium. THE TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet from 7 to 9 m.in. 242 Robinson Center. A BIBLICAL SEMINAR on the Gospel of St. Mark will begin on June 6, at the Ecumenical Ministers' Center. THE MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the Kansas Union. THE UNIVERSITY FORUM, featuring Joe Eagleman, professor of geography, will meet at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. TOMORROW Players 'Seem-to-Be' more than entertaining By RICK DULLEA Staff Writer Scores of excited children followed his cue and huddled around the stage as the Players, kneeling in front and facing the children, captured their attention with questions. "We like the children to sit right up next to the tape," said troop director Ric Averi, pointing to a line of masking tape that separated the stage area and the large gathering of spectators. The singing and merriment served as prelude to the Players' main performance Saturday, a musical version of the children's fairy tale "The Three Little Pigs," a production the Players will tour in 30 Kansas communities this theatre season. THE PLAYERS' INSTANT RAPPORT with the children led to the first song as Averill asked "How many people like to go fishing?" Dressed in color-coordinated overalls with matching bandanas the Players led the audience in singing with pantomime of an imaginary fishing trip. As Averill stummed the turn on piano in singuor, the audience joined Players in singing "I've Been Fashin' for Catfish All Day Long." Six of the 17 Seem-To-Be Players, all of whom are from the Lawrence area, starred in Saturday's production. Featured with Averill were Chris Johnson, Terry Snyder and Jeri Stanfield. "All six Players have some kind of tie with Averil, a well-known high school student. Students are graduate students." THE TROUPE PERFORMS a modified version of "The Three Little Pigs" which in addition to the pigs and the Big Bad Wolf, includes characters like Farmer Mulehead, Judge Hoot Owl and a not-so-pushy barker at the fair named Mackie Pack Rat. The audience, young and old alike, maintained fixed eyes on the Players as they enacted the old-time tale about three naive pigs and a villainous wolf. An enthusiastic round of applause complimented the Players, performance. But the plausible reason was that the game was not a Players' own serial, "A Adventures of Nyrfm the Serené," this month featuring the 71st episode. Before Nyfrm, though, were more songs and skills. SKIRT The Seem-To-Be Players' Automatic Dance Instruction Machine was popular with the audience. The Players assembled themselves on stage as Averill found child-volunteers in the audience who received free dance lessons from the machine. Averill placed the first child into the machine as he programmed it to instruct ballet. The machine snatched the child's imbs, lifting him from the floor. She performed some intricate ballet maneuvers. ANOTHER CHILD then stepped forward and received a quick lesson in tap dancing by the machine followed by two others who paired up for a brief tango lesson. one players were forced to dismantle themselves after their machine temporarily went crazy. The children, interested in the activity, kept their eyes glued to the performers on stage. Averil followed with a fascinating performance that featured his two trained hats, prtus The hats responded instantly as Averill voiced the commands. Still to come was the latest installment in the the commanders. "Sit" and "Roll over" he said. The hats magically obeyed "Count to seven." he said. Floyd responded with seven thumps in a chair. "Play dead," Averill instructed. The hats Floyd and The Dutchman left the stage, and the time for Nyrfm the Sprite's latest adventure "Anyone can train a hat," Averill told the anvaders, "but you have to start them young." IN EPISODE 71 NYFRM to combat two mean and nasty Freezer Creatures, Cold-o and Wind-o. The frosty oud dangged up on its victims—Cold-o's touch would instantly freeze while Windo-o's wrath found the poor victim and blew her away. Nyrm was too fast, physically and mentally, for the next Prezozer Creatures and easily behaved. The Players ended the fantasy-filled afternoon with their theme song, followed by participating in a reception line where they bade farewell to the audience. Balloon-a-Gram New to the Occasion! SEND A BALLON-A-GRAM! F.D. No.: 1222 Lennox, MI 48540 MAJOR STREET The same show will be staged by the Players at 1:30 p.m. each Saturday through February at the Center, 9th and Vermont streets. During March the feature will be “Many Moons,” adapted by Player Jeff Tamblyn from a James Thurber tale. Balloon-a-Gram In April another musical, "The Peddler and His Capes," will be presented, and in May the "Peddler" will be performed. Use Kansan Classified 3 1/2¢ COPIES Service Beyond Duplication HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. - 842-3610 VALID ID CARDS Instantly - Laminated - Color available at I - DENT SYSTEMS Room 1.14A-DAA inn 841-5905 1350 N. 3rd COUNTRY Inn $2.00 OFF Chick or Steak M-Th only 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 1350 N. 3rd COUNTRY Inn $1.00 OFF Chick or Steak Fri & Sat, 5-9 Empires 2/28/82 Sun, 11-8 LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dialley 842 7870 843 8771 Prudential Immployer Advantage JERRY HARPER ATTORNEY 901 KENTUCKY Suite 204 841-9485 Effective Listening Program Get the most out of your classes, by remembering more Two Sessions Thursday and Tuesday of what you hear Two Sessions Thursday and Tuesday February 11 and 16 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. For registration and payment of fees contact: 884-4084 For registration and payment of fees contact: The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4084. The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 804-804-804 ROB CUSCINONE AND PENTHOUSE FILMS INTERNATIONAL PRESENT CALIGULA THE MOST ENTRADIRNARY PERSONAL EXPERIENCE YOU MAY EVER HAVE! CALIGULA SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE ON PENTHOUSE RECORDS ARALYSIS FILM RELEASING R CORPORATION NOW SHOWING Varsity Downtown 843-1065 p rth s University Daily Kansan, February 9, 1982 Page 7 frm the code. ings and Dance with the lies on s in the ons from machineilet. Theting himperformed Vet's charges prompt probe ward and by the paired up ole themely went activity, on stage. ing perled hats, ill voiced n a chair. The hats stage, and adventure told the young." SACRAMENTO, Calif.—A federal investigation started yesterday into a former medic's charges that the Army covered up exposure of high levels of radiation to soldiers during atomic bomb tests in the 1950s. o combat o, Cold-o up on its ly freeze or victim mentally and easily ddler and May the med. afternoon anticipating arewell to The ex-medic, Van R. Brandon, discused Sunday that he followed orders to prepare phonic records in four atomic tests in 1956 and 1957 at the tests. Nev., and observed failed experiments prepared at a fifth test in 1955. Players at February at s. During Moons," a James A spokesman for the U.S. Defense Nuclear Agency said yesterday the agency was digging into 25-year-old problems to determine whether the charges were true. On the record The Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the Lawrence police and Douglas County District Attorney, Mike Malone arrestedAlex F. Liscano,Venezuela senior, Sunday night for possession of cocaine.Malone said yesterday. Police, KBI agents and the district attorney arrested Lascano after a midnight raid of his residence at 1315 Ohio St. Liscano was charged with possession and sale of cocaine yesterday. He is being held on $10,000 bond in the Douglas County Jail. THE KU POLICE Department reported an aggravated assault Saturday night at Templin Hall. Police said a resident of the hall threatened another resident at dinner with a table knife and fork. When temperatures start dipping below freezing, and cars refuse to start, phones start ringing at KU Parking Services. "We've been getting around 10 to 15 calls a day," E.W. Fenstemaker of Parking Services said yesterday. The phone has been ringing constantly during the past week with calls from people all over Lawrence requesting towls and jumps, according to Patti Foster, co-owner of Jawahry Tow and Storage, 1545 N Third St. "Several times we go out to the dorms to jump a car and someone will stick their head out and say 'I'm next,' he said. "But when the temperatures average out, we get 20 to 35 calls daily," she said. "When the weather was extremely bad, we were getting several hundred calls a day," she said. By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter find that sometimes their cars won't start," Foler said. Cars need help as temperatures Foler said that during December and January, calls came in at a rate of 150 to 200 a day. Cars owned by KU students haven't been the only ones susceptible to the recent adverse weather. LAST WEEK, Jayhawk Tow and Storage received about 35 calls requesting lumo starts, she said. By 3 p.m. yesterday, 22 calls had come in requesting towing and jumping services. Parking Services provides free jump starts for vehicles stalled on the KU campus, Fenstemaker said. "We've been keeping busy seven days a week, which is kind of unusual," Folaer said. FENSTEMAKER SAID that many students were aware of the free jump start service, particularly those living in the residence halls. "When the temperature is freezing, we get about one or two calls a day," he said. Although the service operates 24 hours a day, Foley said the busiest times were usually around 4:30 p.m. REQUESTS FOR towing services have increased more than those for jump starts, said Jim Hahn, co-owner of Kaw Motor & Salvage Co. RFD3. "But just about the time it starts getting around 10 degrees or so, so we can use that." decline "We received 40 calls in the last two days and not a request for a jump start was among them," he said. "This is when people start getting off work and when the weather is bad, they "It's picked up some during the past few days, but it hasn't created a boom," Hahn said. He said that the number of daily calls requesting towing and jumping services was affected by extremely cold temperatures at or below zero. But the first big snow of the year last month brought a backlog of requests, he said. The University Daily Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 10 words or fewer $2.50 $2.60 $2.80 $3.00 $3.20 $3.40 $3.60 $3.80 $4.00 ten words or fewer $6.50 $7.00 $7.50 $8.00 $8.50 $9.00 $9.50 $10.00 AD DEADLINES ERRORS to run Monday Thursday 2 p.m. Tuesday Friday 2 p.m. Wednesday Monday 2 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 2 p.m. Friday Wednesday 2 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found terms can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 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. POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0906. tf KOA Landminster. Free dry with 75r water. Airport. East highway. 842-887-378 Name Your Flame Write it in wax 843-9583 1405 Mass. WAXMAN FOR RENT THE ETC. SHOP 10 West 9th (west of The Candy Store) Hatches and classic contemporary clothing—jewelry, purses, hats, coats, dresses, suit, small apparel. $48.50. 2-12 Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. **tf** Studio apt. close to campus at 19 W. 14th amol. Mar. 1, 1821 $600.00 mow with a 200.00 deposit. Absolutely no pets. Call 749-341 or 841-7601. 2-9 Sub-lease 2. Br. apt, complete kitchen carpet-drapes, central air-heat. Call 841-854- 3600. For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable, efficient apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. tt Prior grades have opened up a farmhouse. No propane bills—natural gas, 5 rooms + tables. In good condition. 15 minutes from the beach. Required. No required. 2018-12- 300 422 Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt, unfurnished, carpeted & drapery. An outdoor garage. In school, in campus, on bus route. $35 per month. NO MALEBOUND BOOKJ & Creativity. PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Princeton Place, 2083 N. Elm Street, for remodelations. Featured wood burning fireplace, water heater & dryer. fully equipped 9:30-12:30 pm at 2088 Princeton Blvd., or visit www.princeton.com for details. Studios atmosphere, International media, erase roomware with international perspectives within 24-hour operation. Oven room $110 million furnished. Kitchen $90 million furnished. plates and laundry. Call 861-7692. Close plates and laundry. Call 861-7692. Close plates and laundry. Call 861-7692. Close plates and laundry. Call 861-7692. Close HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished studio, & 2 lamps, 12bm. Only 2 blockers KU. DONT DEMOT. Reserve your space. 841-121 or 842-4455 month-worth if you: 841-121 or 842-4455 Large 2 Bairn, mk. in an old home at 1017 Rhode Island. Available. Fiat 1. Only 225mm a.m. with a 200.0 dpi. Utilizes pd. by 4014. Aria 4144. Call 2-1014. Warm peaceful room in wall well furnished. Easy to study, reduced for February, must pass this one up 843-5208 after learning from knan. No need! 6-210 ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished lowhouses available immediately by Flexible arrangement. Call (800) 579-2413; locate it on 13th and 18th only. Two short blocks from the Union, Call 814-264-7320. Cury 3. Bidon, uninfirmed age, in older standing at 314 w. HI 14th (16th T.e.) available now. Only $259.60 mo. with pet care. Available. Absolutely no pets. Call 719-4144. 2 Br. ant, on bus route, convenient to shopping. Complete kitchen carpet, drapes, central air conditioning, garage available. By appointment. Call 841-6688 2-12 DESPERATE—MUST SUBLEASE 6 mo. old b.j.broom apt. Call Andy at 841-6080 and address ask @858 2-12 Brand new 3-bedroom houses, $345 and $450, 817-597 or 817-725. 2-11 Roommate needed for 3 bedroom house. 1329 Kentucky St. $116 + 1/3 utilities. Call 844-0557 anytime. 2-9 Large, modern 18-inch, unfurried apt. is an 8-inch by 12012 Rose Island, available now. Only 190.00 mo. with 200.00 dep. fee. Available at station. Absolutely free. 2-10 Call 741-4541 2 Br Apt. 1st floor of house near campus and downtown. Available March 1. $200 per month plus 1 utilities. 842-9945 2-10 distance from campus. 843-6725. 2-9 Roommate Wanted. Large, room old, house 102% of $72 a month plus 1.5 unities. Plato 843-6724. 2-12 Two bedrooms apartment, low utilities, two beds from KU 3 beds from town, central air, equipped kitchen, carpet and draps. $250/month. Call 842-1494-62-12. Female roommate wanted J-hawker Towers ¥1 rent, utilities incl 148-322-3220 2-10 For sublease, 2 Br. apt. $310 + elect. Avail- able now. Telephone: 841-8138. FACILITY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3 br bureau, 2712 Université Drive. All appliances. All electronics. Baisse route. $45/mo. 84-19- or 84-6260. Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in newer fourplex, 1 bed & 2 baths carpeted, carpeted area, 220 per month, 843-8571 or 1-782-3716. Summer sublease: 6-1 to 8-15/2 BR./1900A Kentucky/b42-4513. 2-12 DIPLUX-GREAT LOCATION 809 Ohio, 2-bath, brown, refrigerator, $250 per month. Available now. 1-796-6833. 2-15 Apartment Roommate Wanted (Female) One Bedroom and Suite, Squirt 2-12 Call 749-283-212 2-12 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense out of Western Civilization! 1. For class preparation. 2. For exam preparation. 2. For class preparation. 3. For exam preparation. available now, please visit www.cruser.Creater. The book is a hardcover Book. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-969, 2900 W. 6th. Bookcase and stereen cabinet custom built of solid woods 30" x 20" boxcases $30 each, hardwood table 30" x 30" boxcases and coffee tables. Kansas hardwoods available. Michael Schoal, Sandusky W13 West 30th, Northeast 46th Street. 26" Mets Bremen 15 spadet Red-Ced, ov capped, bats prat & crank. $200.00 must be paid. DOUBLE RED including frame, box spring, mattress $75 (negotiable), Call 841-6158 any time before midnight. 2-9 FOR SALE: Jim Blackburn Bike rack— $102 rear $15 (Both $25). Suntour end shipper-$12. $74-0722. 2-10 DCM type stereo speakers. $250/pair. Call 843-2641 after 5:00. 2-12 182 Chevellle, new paint, mags. Pioneer 1974-1828. Many extra parts. Jim L. Bauer 182-1885. Pair 3-way floor speakers with 10' woofer Speaker arm wrench for easy pairing. Pair speakers—price negotiable; 18'-26' Visiator Cannan mount lens with casel and PLTER- er. Largest speaker—price lower—78¢- Call 415-792-2650. Apk for China, or App. Newport, 314-872-3560 Dependable, 314-872-3560 McCallion, * Company, 314-872-3560; * 841-606-197* -with 3 grads, $110 plus itsills; 2uillies, Barker Call Matt 642-684-8000 2-12 Sub-lease 2kpm, apn on bus rout, or low price, low prices or 481-6 8476 FOR SALE, YASHICA FR-1-3m 5LB SLB- CARRIER release. $999.00 *Call 822-7444* *300 call release*. Guild Electric Guitar solid body, Schalters, limbobassing w/ 2-way switch 50 watt 180 - 769-246 - 2-15 wiring Trainer for sale or rent, 8' x 22' homemade, $1500 or $130 month, 843-$341, 2-11 FOUND Two mathbooks—one short calculus and one precalculus on Dairy Hill. Call 664-1045. Brand new gold carousel, 1-8 x 12 or 2- 4 x 6, 864-1670 2-10 Hey video game buff! Home video game system. Fairchild. Nine cartridges plus unit. $200.00. 843-8705. 2-12 Did you lose something in 405 SUI? Wednesday afternoon? Call 864-8940 to identify 2-9 Gold chain with pendant, Incription "I love you Buddah, Doug." Found at the Anxes. Please call to identify. 843-368-29-9 HELP WANTED A set of keys, 6 keys on the ring, were found. Thurs, Feb. 4, between Potters Lake & Spencer Research Library. For information call 843-4672. 2-10 Stockbroker trainee. College grad--Excellent opportunity for hard work, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individual. Rep. P.O. Box 157 Red Bank, N.J. 06701. Use your spare time to earn money for those "extra" users. Aggressive self-starter only. Field of total health and fitness. For appointment, call 842-8870. *App 2-11* CRUISES, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDI- TIONS? Needed: Sports instructor, Worldwide Summer Cruise; Send $250 for AURIA WORLDL. 153 Box 60129, Sacramento, CA- 3-18 Church nursery helper needed on Sunday mornings. 843-0679. 2-9 Black white Female pup—with red collar 84.8% 69.7% 9.1n Sales clerks wanted full-time day, part-time evenings. Wine experience preferred. Apply in person please. Green's Fine Wines. 800 W. 23rd St. 2-9 Found at 1403 Tenn. Set of keys in black lather case: Call 842-8778. 2-11 Pam interested in *doing odd house jobs* in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, studious, have own tools and experience in cooperative. Call Darleyi 841-8336. OVERSEAS JOBS-J暑季/year round Europe, S. Ampra, Australia, Asia Fields, W. Amrapali monthly, Sightseeing Fields, W. Willow Box Bc 35-24-3 Carol, DA Mar 19,2020 *C-3* Nail Hill Country Club is now accepting applications for four full-time positions. Including pool managers, Positions include pool manager, assistant pool manager, and Applicants for the position of manager must have experience in operating and managing tennis courts. Salaries commensurate with experience. Salaries commensurate with experience. NHCZ 6201 Indian Creek Drive, Overbrook, NY 10594. Hold during spring break. 2-9 Hull-times assistant for chaired professor in the School of Architecture and Urban Design $460 per month must have a master's degree. Contact Dr. Daniel at 844-2831. SUMMER CAMP JOB'S in the Northeast For a free listing, send a self-addressed, status (3F), envelope to Midwest Camp Management, MO 60432 HEIGHTS MO 60432 2-12 JOBS IN ALASKA! Summer year-round, work with leading U.S. companies, oil and industry, and market Employer information, information guide $4.85 Alaska - P.O. Box 60125, Mossland Vale - 212-12 Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Persuasive. Contact Dan at the Exchange. 842-3593 3-12 SUMMER CAMP COUNSELORS. Overnight girls camp in New York. Summer camp includes counselor-instruments in waterfront w/WSI, sailing, arts crafts, pioneering music photography, art crafts, pioneering music photography, available in Placement Office or write-up. Harvard Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 1981. Clerklyt position position available for Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings in the morning at 120 Strong Hall. Application deadline: Thursday, February 28. Strong Hall EOE: 2-11 LOST One maroon, 7 x 10" hardcover Elementary Differential. Eqs. textbook lost Fri. 1-29 near Murphy? Mitch----749-0596. 2-8 LOST FEMALE Cat- CAThe with grey and orange tiger markings, white paws, neck Brown flea caelum. Missing since mid-June. REWARD 814-1407 864-394. 2-11 G get back to the Beoole in your own style of music, Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and theory lessons. All leks teach tunes from our collection. Call Kairi at 841-6871. Music #841-6871 2-16 Athletic Women and Men—the KU Crow team is recruiting new rowers. Coach Cliff Elliott 841-5587. 2-11 PERSONAL SKI TRIPH, SKI TRIPH, SKI TRIPH, SKI KOMMUNICIAL, communicał every weekend, and KOMMUNICIAL, komunicał every weekend. Instant passport, via, ID, & resume photographs Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. tt Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing to 1000 inch paper by Swella Skillset's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. In come and confine, Wilfred Skillset. MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tt A sweetheart portrait for Valentine's Day The collection includes a 24-hour memory. Swella Studio 749-1611. 2-3H Select your party outfits early. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 842-476-511. Indiana. Tell that special person just what you really think with an X-rated card from FOOL-LIGHTS. (25th) & Iowa. 2-9 OPTIMIST'S '82 COUPON BOOK TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 641-899-098 tuesday. B.S in physics, M.A in mathematics, or call 641-897 (akk) for M.A. Report. tt Don't just send a song or a bunch of hot songs. Send a personalized歌 Sang a song with the best lyrics or least a good song. Call now for a personalized delivery and performance. 48888) 2-125 48888) Bandall. If your letter was a joke it wasn't funny, if not write again and give my correct address. Write Larry, 2517 Morning Dr., Lawrence. 2-9 The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!! Call 841-9540-1610 W. 2fd. tref Valentine Parties—$350 formal, music, tuts, pictures, joint honeymoon outfit, $400. Second party—$200 formal, music, tuts, pictures, joint honeymoon outfit. If you can't be with that special person that Valentine has sent the net, they'll have to blow it up. FOOT-LIGHTS - 52th & Ivy, Holiday Plaza. 2-9 Mary-Ellen Rodgers was mad when she GREEN'S CASE SALE, LONG NECK PAPER GREEN'S WEST 23rd, $79.95 GREEN'S WEST 24th, $79.95 Mary-Ellen Rodgeris was so read when she left Iowa to the Beaver. FOOTLIGHTS, 25th ed., Iowa. SKI STEAMBOAT CHEAP: $33 per day, per person, inc. lifts, 4, 6 or 8 guests, Coll Collect (303) 879-2155 2-15 Heart A火箭. A9 Helping Heart Buffers will be sold at the Main Union and Western for 242 Feb. 10 12:30-3:00 AM to serve the American Heart Association. RANCH WESTERN FLAIR is now at 737 Mass. Save 20% on boots, 40% off shirts, 60% off winter coats. 2-9 Super Deal—2 seats available in private airplane to Las Vegas. Leaving morning 2-18 returning 2-21. 665-7738. 2-9 Learn how to learn about microcomputers, building systems, word and data processing, and database systems. Nine: 9 am to 4:30, Tuesday and Thursday. 9:30am to 11am. Mass. St. Lawrence Call: 424-998-3981 Valentines Dance. Mon., Feb. 8th. Off the Wall Hall 8 pm. Benefit for Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas. 2-8 Get a head start on your spring break run at TAN Ltd. Call 841-6232 for appointment or additional information. 2-10 Come STROKE IT with the KU Crew team Recruiting now. Call Coach Cliff Elliott 841-587-588 2-11 --- TRAVEL CENTER TRAVELING! - Student & Faculty Travel * Campus Residence * Family Vacations Group Travel * Charter Tours Motorola Tours Sports Holidays Weekend Get-a-ways Wyndale Skiing Air Hotel Packages Drive-In Excorter & Independent Tourns FREE PARKING Tuxes—20% off, Barb's Second-Hand Rose. 515 Indiana, 842-4746. 2-12 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT. 843-4821. tt Effective Learning Programs - Two sessions February 11 and 16. 10 to 9:30 pm. Come to the Student Assistance Center, 12, Strong for registration and fee payment. 2-11 Make your next party dance or function in an "Event," ACCENT SOUND & LIGHT CO. The sound professionals. For details on the sound professionals for P.O. Box 1808, KS. 12-30 1808 CREDIT CREDIT: Get Visa-Mastercard. no need credit check. Guaranteed! It's simple, legal. Free details! Write: CreditLifte, Box 334-FR, N.Y. 02878. M. N58700 2-12 Y.F. isn't sure what V.O. is—Y.F. never SMACKED—The only thing Drag about Y.F. is his profs. 2-12 PARTY!! Only 20 rooms left in India for 500 mi race and we have we! Join us for the party of the summer at Lawrence Travel Club 941-218-1 2-10 Lawrence Travel Club 941-218-1 Want to make great money while going to school? Work as a D.J. party for parties. Work for a group of good people—a good investment. Squid system and bookkeeping. Only serious inquiries please. - 2-12 Hurt your back or neck when you slipped on the ice? Don't delay proper treatment. For modern chiropractic care call Dr. John Garrison, 212-563-8097, Blue Cross Insurance. 2-12 50r. draws- 10-12 Monday-Thursday. The Exchange, 2046 Iowa. 2-11 Order your singing Valentines on three floor tables. These are available by Music Therapy Student Aids 2-12. It may be cold, but you can warm them up in the BALLROOM-A-GRAM **Call** and **Education** **BALLROOM-A-GRAM** **Call** and **Education**. PARTY FAVORS--glassware, sportwear, High quality, low cost. Call for St. Pats' day specials University Photography 843- 5279 2-15 Old Pissan Bob, Good luck on your Chem exam tomorrow--Young Pissan. 2-9 RIVER CITY WOMEN'S HEALTH COLLECTIVE is a group of campus and community organizations distributing information concerning women's health. If you are interested, you will be asked to mail 404-844-3562 or 404-844-3563. If you can help, attend our February meeting this Wednesday at 7 a.m in the Registry 201 at Riverside College. SPECTRUM OPTICAL - Do you have a screw bone? Broken lens? Broken frame? One day service on lens in box. Open 16-6. M-S 841-113, 4 E 7th. 5-12 Engineering students freshmen their seniors. Do you remember how to do anything but the Engineering Semi-Formal 8 pm Fri at St. John's Church? The engineering actually laugh, dance, and have fun bring dates as but your friend's Hall D宴, Office Dept., or by Room 106. Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064, 2-11 IN HONOR OF THE FEBRIARY SISTERS, they will be on hand to welcome the will be on hand to welcome the student at 7 pm Tuesday, the first Room. Union. Sponsored by Lawrence NOW Women's Studies. Raleigh: Ralston of Women's Studies. Champagne for the ladies, 50r. a glass. Tues. 9:00-12:30, now that's real class. The Sanctuary. 2-10 Collection records: Zeo, Floyd, Stones, Whi- m; 843-5826 after 3. CHEAP RECFONDS, some new, some used Ft. Feb. 12 noon-6 JKHUR. 2-12 To Lisa, Linda, Peggy, Sherri and Wendy. I want to thank you for your time, advice, help, and encouragement. I don't know what I'd do without it. I sound like Barry. But I mean all of the things. Wow, you ought to see our hookers, price just right, you'll get something 9:00-10:00 on Wed. 75 each is all you pay. The Sanctuary 2-10 SERVICES OFFERED TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, PHYSICAL SCIENCE (BS in. S.P.S., MA in. Math.) or call 846-1476 (ask for Robert). If Gt that job with a professionally prepared resume by a local corporation reiterate. Gt the latest job building license. 845-3644 2-14 3 1/2 31/2¢ self service copies now at ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th and lows 842-2001 WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say? I tell you. Stop by The House of Uber and up our PB2 office on resume to resume the job. PB2 offices, 8-4th N-3-9, Sun-3N. Sun-3N. Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of kewgolds. 160 kg. W23d. 843. Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience. Writing letters for certificates. 814-794-384 Guitar Lessons. Learn to play now from teacher experienced. Teach Alicia Call Marks Put your best foot forward with a professional printed resume from Encore. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, Staind and Iwu. 2-26 EXPERT TUTORING, Math homeworks? CB project? Call 414-738-5200 COMPUTER SCIENCE: Private terminal facility; Group Writing lab; Supervised work; Word to write a tute? List our list of avail. ENCE: Private terminal facilities. Group rates available. Call John 492-3626. 1. Want to hire a tutor? The list of availability. Assistance Center 211. Strong Hall; 864-4064. TYPING TYPING PLUS. These dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, punctuation. Foreign education, foreign students or Americans. 814-8244. Experienced typist. Term papers,theses all, municipialone. IB Correcting Mecetic Correction. Elite or Pice, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-0544 Mrs.Wright. t Experienced typist will type letters, thesis and dissertations. IBM correcting selective. Experienced. typist. Theses, term papers, etc. IB Correcting Soletrie. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. ff Experienced typet-thesis, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectic. Barb, after $ p.m. 842-2310 **f** Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing,补-scure. Selective. Call Elen or Jean Ann 841-2172. f tf Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. IBM, Before 9 p.m. 7-6:45. Ann-1f. tmm For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myrs. 841-4980. QUALITY TYPING: Themes. Manuscript. Discussion: IBM Selectric, Girl Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 phone. TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selecric II; Royal Correcting S 500 000, 843-5675. **tf** Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, letters, legal, etc. Dub. 843-9925 2-10 Experienced typist. Excellent tyling. IBM Correcting Selecirt. Elite or Pica. 842-3644. 2-26 Professional typing. Dissertation. thesis. term, caper, resume, letter, legal, etc. 1-21 Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and rtyping your thesis or dissertation Save time and money by word processing I Call 842-2061 for more info. 8-262-7345 Professional typing, quick, reasonably orteed, paper supplied. Call evenings, 841-7915. 2-18 Quality typing and word processing available at Eacore Copy Corps 25th and Jewa. M2-2001. 2-20 *TYPTING-EDITING-GRAPHICS*. IBM *Correcting Scientific, full-time tpil, spelling correction to composition assistance.* *Emergency service available.* 841-267-308 EXPERIENCED TYPIST would like to type anything. 841-8525 2-15 Non-smoking female to share 3-br. house close to campus. 83.33 + 1/3 util. 841-9779 No pets. 2-11 Non-smoking male to share fully furnished: 2 bdm/ferm; $75/month + 1% utilities Close to campus; call after 7 pm #843-5815 2-10 WANTED Roommate needed to share nice, new furnished 3 bedroom house. $115 + 1/2 utility. Call 841-6506. 2-4 Roommate to share: modern 2 bedroom apartment 3 blocks from campus. $137.50 a month + utilities. 843-8628 Jane. 2-17 Female roommate to share large 2-bdmr. Male nonnier. Prefer quotient studious roommates. Call 841-4568 for Waher/dryer. Call 841-4568 for 6:00- keep trying. 2-10 3 bdmr. dpkc. garage, patio, fireplace, micro- wave, d/w c a cable and d/w hookup. 135 no. + 1/3 util, on bus route 842-0831. 9.11 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment. 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 + ½ utilitys. 749-2438. 2-12 Wanted Roommate to 4-bedroom house with 3 grades, $110 plus 1% utilities, 2127 Barker. Call Matt 845-6840 evenings. 2-12 on bus route. Move People who want to send a unique Valentine's Day gift. Compose your own message and I'll drive it with a special edition Balloon-Day Balloon-2848. 2-12-1984 Carp Pool from Shawne Daily M-F 7:30- 3:30 631-1998 2-10 Female wanted to share 2 bedroom furniture apt $125 mo. 1 utilities $25 2 roommates $150 + deposit 1 each. Beautiful house and excellent location. 1085 Indiana. 842-4630 2-9 I-2 to share 3 BB houses. Prefer female housemates. RSVP at 618-527-5400, toll 40 & Mississippi Ave. Keys 794-3030 - 512 Established hand sweeping bass and key- board. Call 749-7893 or 842-8848. Email info@musicbox.com Say ... in the special Valentine's classified section of the Kausan The first 15 words are $^{2,25}$ plus 2c for each additional word Say it in a display for 4.00 per column inch All Valentine's messages must be in the Kansas office (118 Flint) by 5:00 February 10. COFFEE SHOP --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 9, 1982 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Team W L Pct. GB 9 14 13 7.92 Philadelphia 13 12 13% 1/16 New Jersey 23 25 479 12 Washington 23 25 479 12 Houston 23 25 458 12 Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee 12 14 596 43 Atlanta 29 24 638 12 Tennessee 20 24 438 12 Detroit 20 27 430 12% Chicago 20 27 430 12% Houston 18 31 239 21 San Antonio 30 16 652 Atlanta 29 16 632 5% Houston 28 22 524 5% Kansas City 15 32 311 10% Dallas 14 32 310 13% Dubai 14 32 304 13% Seattle 33 13 717 Los Angeles 32 13 717 %* Portland 36 19 578 %* Phoenix 26 19 578 %* San Diego 14 23 298 %* YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. Team W W L Pet. GB Missouri 6 1 389 Kansas 7 2 500 1% Oklahoma State 5 3 625 2% Nebraska 4 3 600 2% Okahoma 3 4 500 3% Wisconsin 3 5 375 4% Iowa State 2 6 250 4% Colorado State 2 6 250 4% Note. Number in parentheses indicates UF rank. Ranker State (6) / State (57) California 50 Arkansas (10) 78, Texas Christian 69 Missouri (24) 69, Memphis State (18) 75, Ball State 64 Campbell Conference Narcotic Delecion Team W W L T G FG GA Pts. 20 Philadelphia 29 10 7 641 172 74 Philadelphia 25 21 8 200 212 56 N.Y.Rangers 25 21 8 200 212 56 Pittsburgh 25 21 8 200 212 56 NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Edinburgh 35 13 13 10 313 227 84 Calgary 52 13 14 13 215 247 56 Vancouver 18 20 11 11 217 204 57 Los Angeles 15 21 11 19 207 247 51 San Diego 12 16 11 19 207 247 51 Montreal 31 11 17 2 264 158 74 Boston 31 11 17 2 264 158 69 Buffalo 29 17 17 9 210 172 67 Quebec 29 17 9 9 152 172 65 Québec 29 17 9 13 182 165 Minnesota 22 17 16 16 234 200 60 Slouis Louis 25 17 16 4 294 200 54 St. Louis St. Louis 26 17 16 4 288 200 54 Chicago 20 16 16 10 249 200 52 Toronto 18 16 10 10 249 200 42 Calgary Calgary 18 16 10 10 249 200 42 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No names provided Team W L L Pet GB --- Pittsburgh 15 5 750 --- Raleigh 16 13 727 --- New York 13 11 722 1 Buffalo 11 5 500 5 Cleveland 8 13 381 --- Philadelphia 8 16 384 9% New Jersey 7 14 904 9% Virginia climbs to No.1 rating St. Louis 20 13 870 9% Wichita 13 18 694 9% Oakland 10 8 875 9% Memphis 10 14 417 10% Phoenix 10 14 417 10% Cincinnati 10 13 250 10% By United Press International NEW YORK—The Virginia Cavaliers catapulted ahead of three teams yesterday to claim the No. 1 ranking in the NFC West, their weekly board of coaches ratings. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. DePaul also held its spot at No. 3 with Missouri falling to No. 4. Iowa remained in the No. 5 position. Rounding out the top 10, Oregon State moved up a notch to No. 6 followed by Virginia took over the top spot from Missouri. North Carolina remained in the No. 2 position. Fill Your Heart With Chocolates Chicopee Waltham 1001 W. 23rd - Southern Hills Center - 749-1100 Tulsa, Minnesota, Kentucky and Arkansas: UPI Surprise your valentine with a beautiful heart box filled with chocolates, jelly belies, fudge or dietetic candy! Bring your own box 96 to $16. Delivery and singing sweetheart delivery available Hearts and flowers sugar icings can be used to decorate cupcakes, fudge, butter cups 8 ea., flowers 3 ea. COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA TEL: 718-245-9734 PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG A COLUMBIA PICTURE Eve 7:15 10:30 Mat Sat Sun 2.00 VARSITY TEL: 718-245-9734 CALICULA TEL: 718-245-9734 ENTHRALLING... W CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Eve 7:30 9:30 Mat Sat Sun 2.15 HILLCREST 1 ENTHRALLING... W CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Eve 7:15 9:30 Mat Sat Sun 2.15 HILLCREST 2 The mystery of "The Hyde" The danger of "Nopal" Eve 7:30 9:25 Mat Sat Sun 2.15 HILLCREST 1 HEART LAND EVE 7:30 9:20 MAT SAT SUN 2.15 CINEMA 1 RICHARD HENRY MUSEUM Where life is it anyway? 7:15 10:30 Mat Sat 7.00 CINEMA 2 JILLY AN UNABORDED JACKIE BURGAMON Eve 7:30 9:30 Mat Sat Sun 2.15 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE: (818) 764-2055 THE VARSITY TELEPHONE IS PRESENT CALICULA Evt. 7:30-9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 7:15 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TEL: 214-735-8000 PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD TEL: 214-735-8000 ABSENCE OF MALICE PG A COLUMBIA PICTURE Ever 7:15-10 PM Sat. Sun. 2:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONES: 214-735-8000 THEATER: 1100 N. Grace St. CALICULA THEATER: 1100 N. Grace St. Ever 7:15-9:30 Mat. Mar. 8-Sep. 7-13 HILLCREST 2 TICKET NO. 0040 TELEPHONE 867 8400 The mystery of "The Rails" The danger of "Pevlin" HILLCREST T TEL 214-530-6784 TELEPHONE 214-530-6784 HEART LAND FVE 7.30A 9.20 MAT. SAT SUN 2.19 PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG A COLUMBIA PICTURE 1. Virginia (22) 1. North Carolina (18) 2. Florida (14) 3. Missouri (19) 4. Iowa (19) 5. Iowa (19) 6. Oregon State (16) 7. Tahoe (18) 8. Texas (18) 9. Kentucky (15) 10. Kentucky (15) 11. Alabama (15) 12. Idaho (19) 13. Washington (19) 14. Kansas State (14) 15. Kansas State (14) 16. Kansas State (18) 17. Georgeorge (15) 18. Georgeorge (15) 19. Wake Forest (15) 20. Wake Forest (15) GO CINEMA 1 BURCHIDAN YEARS ON WHERE LIFE IS IT ANYWAY ? 7:00 - 20:00 Sun. 7:00 CINEMA 2 THEY ARE UNKNOWN HARRY WATKINS BEN GAZAMAN Ex. 9:00 - 10:00 B.B. Sun. 2:00 Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters 11.1 W, 99h 843-2138 FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION THE SNOBS AGAINST THE SLOBBS THE PRESTON McCALL COMPANY 311 N. 3rd 811-6067 KUSFC PRESENTS: R Caddyshack Feb. 12 & 13 (Fri. & Sat.) at 7, 9, & 11 p.m. in DYCHE AUD. (next to the Union) Tickets: $1.50 seats are limited By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawks play the Missouri Tigers tonight in Allen Field House in what can be labeled as a "must run" for the Jayhawks KU faces fourth-ranked Tigers tonight Sports Editor It isn't a critical game for the Jayhawks as far as having a shot at Missouri, but it is as far as finishing in division of the Big Eight Conference. THE JAYHAWKS have to finish in the top four of the league in order to gain a home-court berth in the Big Eight Post Season Tournament. If the team wins, they will be on the road, where KU is 1-7 for the first round of the tournament. rest of the season is that four of their last six conference games are at home. KU is 11-1 at home this year and 3-0 in the Big Eight. One thing going for the Jayhawks the "Even though they're at home they will be very difficult games," Coach Ted Owens said. "We're going to win as many of them as we can." The Tigers enter the game ranked fourth in the nation and first in the Big Eight with a 8-1 record. 19-1 overall. After Missouri tonight, the Jayhawks will play Nebraska, Kansas State and Iowa State at home. MISSOURI, ranked first for the past couple. Mississippi is coming off a 67-41 Earlier in the season when the two teams met in Hearnes Center at Columbia, Mo., the Tigers held on for a 41-35 victory. KU, 3-5 in the Big Eight and 12-8 overall, is also coming off a loss. The Jayhawks were defeated by Oklahoma State 79-64. Tipoff is at 7:40 p.m. The game will be telecast live on ESPN and Channel 4. The Tigers were led by Ricky Pierce at 15 points in the Jan 20 meeting. games have been led by co-captain Tony Guy. Guy has ht 35 of 58 shots in those games and has averaged 18.5 points a game. STIPANOVICH WILL go up against Jayhawk Brian Martin. Martin will start in the place he Knight who bounced with brushe and ankle ankle and is doubtful for the game. Frazier leads the Missouri team in scoring and is second in rebounding, while center Steve Stipanovich is second in scoring and first in rebounding. Guy is 33 points away from passing Wilt Chamberlain for fifth place on the all-time KU scoring list. Little collected 20 points and five rebounds Wednesday in a 75-72 victory over interstate rival Oklahoma State, and then scored 23 points and grabbed eight rebounds to help the Sooners snap a 17-game conference road losing streak with a 86-59 triumph Saturday over Iowa State. JAHYAWK NOTES: Forward David Little of Oklahoma was named the Big Eight's Player of the Week yesterday after scoring 43 points and grabbing 13 rebounds in victories over Oklahoma State and Iowa State. The Jayhawks in their last four Hettwer named GCCC coach GARDEN CITY--Hank Hettwer, a former KU assistant football coach, has been hired as the new head football coach at Garden City Community College, GCCC's president Dr. Thomas Saffell announced yesterday. Hettier was immediately on the job, according to Saffell and was to meet one of GCC's assistant coaches, Tom Barta, in Wichita last night to sign new We interviewed a number of pretty good people, we thought, and it looks as if he can do the job for us. At least we hope so." Most recently the sales manager at Stephens Real Estate Inc., in lawrence, Hettower previously coached at Kansas under both Don Fambrough and Bud Moore. He has coaching experience at both the major and state college levels in Kansas, and has拓展 extensively throughout the state. "He's been in the business a number of years and has been out of coaching only since the 1978 season," Saffell said. "He wants to get back into coaching. GCCC's athletic director, Ray Fulton also spoke highly of Hettwer. "He's been in Kansas so he knows the coaches and the state very well," Fulton said. "He's very personable and a kind man. I think he'll be great addition for us." Hetter received both his B.S. and M.s. degrees in Health, Physical Education and Recreation from State University Moorhead, Minn. Hettwer joined KU's coaching staff as freshman coach in 1974. He was recruiting coordinator from 1975-78 and defensive end coach from 1976-78. He used the coaching staff when the Jaybakes played Pittsburgh in the Sun Bowl in 1975. Women place five in Mason-Dixon meet The KU women's track team competed in the Mason-Dixon games in Louisville, Ky., this past weekend and had three different women place fifth or sixth in the relay team limited second, and the $80-yard relay team took fourth. Tudie McKnight won the long jump with a jump of 19-6$\frac{3}{4}$. McKnight's jump earned her a bid to compete in the invitational division of the games. She had a jump of 19-1 in that competition. Other top individual performances were turned in by Bev Mortimer, who finished fifth in the 600-meter dash, and second in the 1000-meter dash, finished fourth in the 60-yard hurdles. HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Custine IN THE HARVEST FACE, 47TH AVE. NEW HAMPTON • 8 SMOOK LAT The Jayhawk's second place mille relay team consisted of Smitherman, McKnight, Nancy McCullough and Lorna Tucker. IN-ROOM MOVIES • WATERBEDS • MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 843-9803 The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Proudly Presents Tuesday, March 10th at Chamber Music The First Family of Chamber Music "Chamber music in America can be dated pre- and post-judiillium...The Juilliard is the yardstick against which all other groups are measured..." V Juilliard String Quartet 8:00 pm Thursday, February 11. 1982 Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont, Lawrence Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats general Admission/d doors open at 7:30 For reservations, call 913/684-3982 Student and Senior Citizen Discounts Available Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission A University Arts Festival Presentation etc. Intramurals Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Rec. A Lidbodes 49, Sigma Phi Epidon 39 Wollpack 28, Nau Ai 59 Leather Ballers 38, Phika Kappa Theta 27 Phika Kappa Sigma 36, Hemis 39'y Heroes 49, Clubbies 62, Clinton Pearson II 30, Pearson H17 Cleveland Browns O'Brien 85, O'Brien Bombers 18, St. Lawrence Catholic Center 37, Starship Innerthright 31 Cleveland Browns 45, Hopin 126, Hopin 124 Moosehead Nine, Pyease Buttons 0 Pearson 128, GP 13 Magic Men D9, 45nrows Average White Boy 38, W.A.S.T.E.D. 36 Wilber Nether 33, Battlenet Aardvarks 28 Greek Men independen Rec. B Naul Sigma N13, Whales 20 Dangli Lions 25, The Flockers 21 Fabulous Freebirds 31, V兰特 16 ~a-million Eucalyptus 18, Eucalyptia 16 Combs 2 & 26, Jake 28, Jayleigh Quayhawk 102 & 22 Higher Five 2, M5, Merge Meggence 103 & 34 Bankers 70, The Mog Mess 83 32 Bankers 70, The Mog Mess 83 36 Vardes 32, 1' Lx 21 Mive B Pre 46, Fellner Billions 84 Theodis x & Unknown 61, Andy's Animals 94 Theodis x & Unknown 61, Andy's Animals 94 Dodgers trade Lopes to A's Lopes, 35, had confirmed the trai during the weekend. By United Press International The trade breaks up the starting Dodger infield combination of Lopes, shortstop Bill Russell, third baseman Ron Cey and first baseman Steve Oyster. The players played regularly together since 1973, a major league record for an infielder. OAKLAND, Calif.—The Los Angeles Dodgers announced the trade yesterday of veteran second baseman Davey Lopes, part of an infield which played nine seasons together, to the Oakland A's for a Class A minor league infielder. Lopes, 35, had confirmed the trade Boyd's Coins - Antiques Clair Ring Buie - Sell - Trade Gold - Silver - Coins Antique - Watches 511 New Haven, CT 60944 Lawrence, MA 60944 918-842-8731 In exchange for Lopes, the Dodgers received minor leaguer Lance Hudson, a 19-year-old switch-hitting shortstop and second baseman. Lopes slumped miserably in last year's strike-shortened season, when the Dodgers captured the World Series. His batting average fell to 206 with just 17 RBI. He also stole 20 bases in 58 games. The trade allows the Dodgers to move highly touted second baseman Steve Sax into the starting lineup. hip and save ACADEMIC CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95 / day $60.00 / wk $225.00 / mo 25 FREE miles per day 841-0101 808 W 24th Store Information Our Supreme Court is a wondrous and compassionate organism which accommodates almost any use of accumulated capital. Consider for a moment the circumflexual spasms of this entity on obscurity, a category of expression that the Court has always held to be unprotected by the First Amendment. In 1957 this distinguished body found obscure "material which deals with sex in a manner appealing to prudent interest" in the opinion of "the average person, applying contemporary standards". Just five years later (1962) it decided that obscene material must also be patent offensive. The year 1964 found the Court appending the requirement that such material be "utterly without redeeming social importance". In 1967 it was willing to sustain obscenity concern only to juveniles or unwilling adults from the exposure to such material. A 1973 ruling by the Court誓约ed the requirement to 1964 standard of social importance and the existence of national standards which underlay the 1962 decision. Chief Justice Burger put it this way: "It is neither realistic nor constitutionally sound to read the First Amendment as requiring that the people of Maine or Mississippi accept public depiction of conduct found tolerable in Las Vegas or New York City". ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF JUDICIAL TIMIDITY However, Chief Justice Burger's and the Court's faith in community standards was short-lived. In the following year (1974) the Court overturned a Georgia jury's finding that the "Carnal Knowledge" was obscene. The Court nullified its own ruling on the matter because it did not "have abridied discretion" to determine what is patiently offensive. nth si Each of these costly apologias was heralded as the definitive, i.e. Constitutionally-inspired, pronouncement on obscurity. Although those in the judicial strathesphere are evidently unable to recognize obscurity, the same cannot be said of the people who sell it as they always allot this refuse the same section of the magazine stand or store. By shrinkage time and again from the task before it, the Supreme Court has nurtured yet another cancerous tumor on the body politic. William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Ter. Michael's DEPARTMENT STORE TUESDAY IS 106 NIGHT ALL DAY TUESDAY $1.06 VALUES ALL OVER THE STORE! MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SWEATERS . . . BUY 1 GET 1 FOR $1.06! MEN'S ROLAND SHIRTS . . . BUY 1, GET 1 FOR $1.06! SELECTED MEN'S SPORT COATS . . . BUY 1, GET 1 FOR $1.06! MANY OTHER $1.06 SPECIALS TOO The Southern Hills Shopping Centre 73rd and Gusdahl Sunday 12pm to 5pm Wednesday 12pm to 4pm M MI DAILY and five victory a State. grabbed rs snap losing atdray nth Dodgers Hudson, shortstop in last o, when 1 Series. with just es in 58 to move in Steve KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily Wednesday, February 10, 1982 Vol. 20, No. 93 USPS 650-640 Gleason will call again for Watson's dismissal BySTEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Lawrence City Commissioner Tone Gleason said last night that he would fire city manager Buford Watson in a special closed session of the city commission at 3.30, Feb. 18. "I don't know what else I'd do," he said Watson's dismissal would have to be approved by a majority of the five commissioners. The commission decided to hold the executive session while they were in another executive session during last night's regular commission meeting. the commission also decided that there would be an informal meeting every three months for discussion of the city manager's progress in complying with the terms of his yearly evaluation The special session Feb. 18 will be one of the quarterly discussions of Watson's progress. But Comquerer Barkley Clark said, "I think this one will be different. I feel need to make a change." Watson would not speculate on the outcome of the next executive session. Commissioners called last night's executive session in response to the disclosure last week that Gleason had written a letter to Watson asking that he resign. In response to Gleason's letter, a group that includes two former city commissioners has submitted a bill to change the definition. Clark said he thought the upcoming executive session would be the decisive one and that Walters outwardly have to face the possibility of being in danger of ever running away. "If a decision is made to retain the city manager that creates a pretty good presumption, it should be a matter of law." Clark said Gleason's letter to Watson was not discussed in the executive session. "I bit my tongue tonight instead of talking about Gleason," Clark said. "I thought his action was a rebuke to his fellow commissioners and his peers." He added books for the commission on matters of this kind. " in duuruit had followed Gleason's advice and resigned, we would have had a city manager resign on the basis of an act by a single commissioner." In his letter to Watson, Gleason said, "I have not discussed my decision with my colleagues on the commission, but I would not be willing to make the motion if I did not feel it would be Clark said, "certainly hope he doesn't have three votes in his pocket." Gleason said last night that his motion to fire Watson at the coming session would be a way of "dealing with Watson's apparent inability to respond evenhandedly to a diverse community. And as communities go, Lawrence is certainly one of the most diverse." Gleason's letter said that Watson's continued employment had become controversial and risky. The letter also said, Your employment itself continues to be a central source of contention both on the city commission and among Mayor Marci Francisco said the commission did not review Watson's job performance last night because it was unfair to take such action without officially announcing it first. She also said that the commission decided to standardize its procedure for evaluating the city Commissioner Nancy Shontz said, "Once a year we will have a through evaluation. Each commissioner will produce a written document." Watson said, "I'm very happy with the city commission saying they'll look at these progress reports." Bitter cold fails to deter fans By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer The rowdy throng sitting behind the KU bench at last night's KU-Missouri game was definitely not a bunch of fair weather fans. In fact, most of them braved several hours of one-chilling cold just for the privilege of sitting under a table. And despite KU's disappointing 42-11 loss to the Cavaliers, the fans' spirit and enthusiasm remained his base. By the time the northeast doors to Allen Field House opened at 6 p.m., several hundred cheering, cap-gun shooting students stood in a long, winding line that stretched to the Parrot Athletic Center. They whiled away the time by doing nothing from studying to playing basketball. "We had a group that was down here at 9:30 and we've been here ever since," Kipp Woods, Garden City sophomore, said. Woods, along with many of his sophomores, were standing at the front of the line. Woods said that he and several others living on his floor in Ellsworth Hall had spent the day taking turns standing in life saving seats for everyone else on the floor. Although the temperature was in the teens and a strong wind was blowing, Schauerd didn't seem to be swaying. "I did it last year and it was cold out," Schueler said. "It was worth it." The cold didn’t discourage Lloyd Hemingway, Wichita senior. Hemingway also was saving his mind. Most of the people in line said they'd been doing it for years. To them, the sacriice was worth it. However, Tom Kayzius, Wheaton, Ill., sophomore, was starting to have his doubts. "It was cold three years ago when I stood out seven hours for the K-State game," Hemingway went on. "No, it's not worth it," Kayzis, who had been standing in line for 45 minutes, than 90 minutes, said. Although the Jayhawks have been struggling all year, and Missouri had recently been knocked out of the number one spot in college basketball, the fans' enthusiasm for the game did not seem *Missouri* and Kansas has always been the game of the year. Lonnie Dillon, Lawrence "I wish we were the ones to beat them first." Ed Morrison, Lake Bluff, Ill., senior, said. Weather CHILLY Tomorrow's high will be in the low 30s. Today will be mostly cloudy with a high in the low 28th, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Skies will clear tonight. The overnight low will be 5 to 10. Winds will be from the southwest at 10 to 20 mph. F Despite the encouragement from Tim Henderson, Pratt sophomore, and thousands of others, the Jayhawks fell to Missouri last night, 42-41. Henderson and a friend painted their faces red and blue for the occasion. Drug paraphernalia still prevalent despite law By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter Shops in Lawrence still sell bongs, pipes and rolling papers seven months after Kansas passed its drug paraphernalia law. Last June the Kansas Legislature passed a law making it illegal to sell "drug paraphernalia." Drug paraphernalia was defined as all materials used or intended for use in planting, producing, injecting, ingesting or inhaling a controlled substance. Since the state law was passed in June, two shops in Lawrence have continued to sell items that could be considered drug paraphernalia. Exile Records and Tapes, 15 W. Ninth St., Bokoton Imports Ltd and Potion Painer, 12 E. Eighth St., are and operating much as they were last spring before the law passed. In both shops, pipes, waterpipes and rolling papers are displayed on shelves. Both stores have signs that say the merchandise is not to be used with controlled substances. Exile Records and Tapes is now appealing a case against Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan. An association of Kansas paraphernalia dealers filed a lawsuit against Stephan not long after the state law was passed. The owner of Exile, Steve Flack, said he would not comment on the effect the law has had on his business until the court has made a decision in the case. Mark Williams, manager of Bokonon, said his shop had decreased its inventory but refused to comment further on the paraphernalia law. Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, has not changed his opinion of the case. Malone said in August that he thought the law was unenforceable because of the number of things that could be used as drug paraphernalia. Malone used as an example a grocery store being found guilty of selling paraphernalia because it sold Baggies. "It was more cosmetic than anything else." Malone said. "It's a basically unenforceable law that the state passed to show they were doing something to enforce drug laws." Have prosecutor Mike Glover said there been no court cases in Lawrence indictments? Glover said the law was hard to enforce because some items such as cigarette papers were used for smoking controlled substances as well as tobacco. "There is a certain amount of unenforceability because there is a legitimate legal use for items in the gray area such as pipes and papers," Glover said. Some other stores in Kansas are taking more precautions selling smoking accessories. Mother Earth in Topeka still sells pipes, cigarette papers and water pipes, but tries to sell them only for use with legal substances, store employees said. "We throw people out of our store all the time when they make a reference in conjunction with illegal consumption," employee Sherry Connell, said. "Nothing we sell is for illegal purposes. Everything is for use with tobacco and snuff." Connell said the store also distributed a sheet that explained the store's rules on selling items for use only with legal substances. The sheet says that employees are instructed to ask a customer to leave if they have reason to suspect he will use an accessory with an illegal substance, or if they overhear a conversation concerning an illegal substance. Connell said. The store takes this precaution so that Mother Earth can continue to serve its children. Johnson County stores are having a more difficult time selling paraphernalia. The Chooses Beggar in Overland Park has had all of its authority confiscated by the county authorities. Almost any item called "drug paraphernalia" can be displayed as having legal purposes. The store is now awaiting a ruling in a court case filed by the state against the store's See PARAPHERNALIA page 5 Defects riddle drug law, reps. sav By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter Some local legislators agree that a law passed last year in the Kansas Legislature banning the use of drug paraphernalia is ineffective, but they say the Legislature is unlikely to make any changes in it this session. The law prohibits the use of all equipment used to grow, manufacture or consume organic food. "I would agree that the thing is probably unenforceable," State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said Monday. "But I would not expect much to be done about it this session. The Legislature probably realizes it is not right, but this is not the right climate to change it. "It is slightly ridiculous because many items in a grocery store are considered paraphernalia. I don't see much you could do with more teeth into it. What would you add to it?" STATE REP. John Solbach, D-Lawrence agreed. Branson said legislators favored the bill because they saw it as a method of cutting down jobs. "It's about as effective as it can be," he said. "That was one of those bills that moved through the Legislature like a speeding train. I didn't throw myself on the tracks." Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said he thought the law was unenforceable because of the variety of things that could be called paraphernalia. the un had nud of popular appeal in terms of the Legislature," she said. "They thought they were acting responsibly in attempting to cut down on drug abuse." Sobach said the law was designed to provide tools for district attorneys to protect communities from socially harmful conduct. "Our DA, Mike Malone, has indicated that he doesn't need those tools, that he already has them and that it's not a very useful tool," he said. Miller said a group of parents angry about the availability of drugs in Wichita, which is BUT STATE REP, Robert H. Miller, R-Wellington, the member of the House Judiciary Committee who proposed the original bill said the law had good results in community "It has eliminated a bunch of stuff on the market in my area," he said. "It was enough of a deterrent to those selling it that they've had to sell it." You just don't see the stuff around anymore." near Wellington, encouraged him to propose the bill. "They're very pleased," he said. "They're happy about its results." "It goes along the lines of the uniform act proposed by the Drug Enforcement Administration," he said. "It's been very well received." State Rep. Joe Hoagland, R-Kansas City, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said several recent court cases had upheld the constitutionality of the law. The bill passed incorporated provisions of the Drug Paraphernalia Act, drafted by the DEA. "It has caused a reduction in retail establishments." Hoagland said. "I suppose there's a black market or something, but as far as the record shops and so-called head shops, it's pretty much closed those places up." STATE REP, Arthur Douville, R-Overland Park, a member of the committee, said the Legislature might be willing to make changes to make the law more effective. "If the prosecutor takes the attitude that he'll try to prosecute in the areas he thinks the law is reasonably clear, if he has problems, he can come back to us" he said. "We'd be glad to know where there are problems. We'll try to help him." Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 10, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Senate vote limits filibuster against tough anti-busing bill WASHINGTON—The Senate voted by a narrow margin yesterday to end a renewed filibuster against a bill that carried the most far-reaching ban on oil production. Sixty votes, a three-fifth majority, are required to invoke closure. School board moved, 63-33, to invoke closure in its second attempt to halt debate on the legislation that liberal Sen. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., has filibustered since last summer. Sixty votes, a three-inth majority, are required to invoke closet. Although closure limits all further deliberation to 100 hours, other delaying tactics still could prevent passage for weeks. Weicker has 500 amendments ready to call up, but clearly will not get consideration for all of them. The Senate adopted a busing ban by a vote of 88-38 last week as a rider to the $2.4 billion justice Department authorization bill, after killing a filibuster against the amendment on the fourth try. The new filibuster was against the authorization bill as a whole. against the enemy. Sen. J. Bennett Johnston, D-La., a chief sponsor of the ban, said that in East Baton Rouge Parish, La., some children are bused 90 minutes each way daily. "Busing has failed as a remedy for desegregation," he said. Sen. Max Baucus, R-Mont., an opponent of the ban who spoke just before the vote, said that although no one liked busing, "on the other hand, all of us recognize we have a constitutional form of government to protect the individual citizen and individual rights." The proposed ban is by far the most severe measure to win any backing in the Senate and House since efforts begin to slow court-ordered busing. Kissinger to incur heart surgerv Boston—Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, tanned and appearing in good humor, said yesterday that he would undergo open heart surgery. Kissinger, $4, said he had been suffering from chronic pain in his right shoulder. He flew to Boston from Washington last week to have it checked at the NYU Hospital. The Hospital said doctors diagnosed "something else" but would not disclose it at that time. Gerald Austen, a long-time family physician and friend who will perform the operation, said tests indicated that one artery was blocked and two other Austen, Chief of Surgical Services at the Hospital, said Kissinger also was afflicted with arthritis in his shoulder and spine. Inmate says letters told of attack PETROTS, Tenn.—The warden at the state prison where white inmates shot to death two blacks and wounded two others told a black prisoner last month that he had received letters indicating such an attack would occur, an attorney said yesterday. Nashville attorney Jinx Woods said Herman Davis, the warden at Brushy Mountain State Prison, told inmate Harney Conley last month that he had been receiving letters from some white inmates who said they planned to kill the blacks. "Davis told my client back in January of these death threats," said Woods, who represents Conley. Woods claimed that Conley would have been hit if he had been in the same area that was sprayed with gunfire Monday night. About a dozen blacks were fired at by white convicts, but some escaped injuries by hiding behind their mattresses, authorities said. Report was falsified, witness says ATLANTA—A prosecution witness was pressured into changing the results of his report on river flow characteristics at the bridge that first linked Wayne Williams to the slayings of two young Atlanta blacks, David Dingle, the co-author of the report, testified yesterday. Dingle, a hydrologist for the National Weather Service, testified that he helped prosecution witness Ben Kittle prepare the report last summer. He said he was later told that Assistant District Attorney Gordon Miller had called for a change to help the prosecution. "Mr. Kittle said he had been under pressure from Gordon Miller to make the change in the report last fall." Dingle said. Williams, a black 23-year-old free lance photographer is on trial for the killing of nathalan Mateheri Cater, 27, and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, by prosecutors in Brooklyn. MUSCAT, Orman—The United States and Saudi Arabia finalized details of their controversial AWACS deal and agreed to establish a joint commission to promote military cooperation, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said yesterday. "We have agreed to establish and oversee a Saudi-U.S. joint committee for military projects, which will deal with military matters of interest to our two countries." U. S. officials portrayed the agreement on the commission as the central achievement of more than eight hours of talks between Weinberger and Berger, who were both appointed by President Obama. The United States had been trying for seven years to set up a military commission with Saudi Arabia, the largest oil producer in the Persian Gulf and primary oil supplier of the United States. Washington already has such commissions with Jordan, Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia. Leaders slow down Black march GREENSBORO, Ala.—Civil Rights leaders interrupted a 160-mile march yesterday to record accounts of alleged voter discrimination, but only a few of the 100 blacks who showed up met the residential requirements for testifying. About 45 marchers who are making the march through central Alabama are advocating the extension of the 1985 Voting Rights Act and protesting the killing of African-American activists. Hale Court Judge R.M. Avery said that of the 100 blacks who turned out for a hearing at the courthouse, only a handful actually lived in the county, and most of the others represented the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Cincinnati frat suspended for party The suspension of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, effective immediately, bars the fraternity from using the university's name or facilities and joining in. The suspension is made permanent. CINCINNATI—A fraternity that held a "Martin Luther King Trash Party" where partygoers dressed in costumes reflecting racial stereotypes was issued a two-year suspension, the University of Cincinnati president said yesterday. The Cincinnati NAACP and the campus chapter of a black student group had called for a permanent expulsion of the fraternity. Acknowledging that his decision to temporarily suspend SAE might displease some people, University President Henry Winkler said, "I have been guided by what I thought to be right rather than what might be popular." Ultimate self-serve station unveiled LOS ANGELES - Car-crazy Southern Californians became the first drivers in the nation to gas up without cash, credit cards or attendants yesterday, filling their tanks while computers drained their checking accounts. In what has been billed as the "ultimate self-service gas station," USA Petroleum Corp. unveiled the futuristic gas pump at eight stations in the U.S. to promote eco-friendly operations. The 24-hour-a-day system will undergo a three-month test period in freeway-dominated Southern California, where self-service stations The service may then be offered at some of the company's 500 stations nationwide. Phone rates could increase 200 percent By KEVIN HELLIKER TOPEKA—Residential phone rates in Kansas may increase by more than 200 percent in the next two years, Pete Duggar said. The corporation Commission, said yesterday. Staff Reporter The increase would stem from a recent anti-trust settlement between the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. and the U.S. Department of Justice. Loux told the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee that no state commission could regulate the increase, which the anti-trust settlement would create by placing the telephone industry in the free market. "Dramatic advances in technology led to a determination at the federal level that competition among suppliers of telephone equipment is good for the ratepaper," Louis said. "What appears to be a real problem would admirable, goal will have the impact on local ratepapers of substantially increasing their rates." State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said, "People who need phones to most—rural and han-dened people—wont be able to afford them." State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said in that rural Douglas County rates could jump as high as the average. Because lawrence they could rise about 125 percent. Resolved last month after seven years in court, the ant-trust settlement calls for a divestment of AT&T from the company. The case, including Southernwest Bell in Kansas. "When you add the phone of phones to heating bills," she said, "they won't be able to do anything." In reaching the settlement, the Department of Justice allowed AT&T too many concessions after the company made it out of 22 of its subsidiaries. Louis said. "Once AT&T agreed to divest, the company literally wrote the rest of the settlement," he said. On the record Burglarst stole about $1,800 worth of weight scales from Lawrence High School sometime between 4 p.m. Friday and 3 a.m. Monday, police said. After breaking a window with a blunt object, burglarls took 12 Cent-O-Gram balance scales, valued at $81 each, nine Dial-O-Gram balance scales valued at $65 each and two other balance scales valued at $110 each. All the scales are called "LBS." There are about ten possible suspects, all juveniles, police said. BURGLARS ALSO BROKE into the New York School, 936 New York St., and took $700 worth of items sometime after the last week in January, police said. The burglaries took two Olympus 35mm cameras from the media office, which is located in the south wing of the building. There are no suspects. Burglarls took more than $500 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at 1043 Delaware St. sometime between 9 p.m. Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday, police said. After prying open the rear window on the driver's side, burglaries look a Kenwood cassette stereo, an MP3 player, or a security cameras. There are no suspects, police said. BURGLARS ALSO TOOK more than $200 worth of items from a parked car at 2525 Iowa St. Monday night, police驻。Burglarstole a pair of sunglasses, a portable radio, a flashlight and two calculators after possibly using a coat hanger to unlock the door, police said. American Diabetes Assoc. Meeting Paul Reinhart M D MBA, American College of (practical workshops) Thursday, Feb 11 7:30 a.m., Lawrence Room Memorial Hospital Students & FacultyWelcome There are no suspects. COUNTRY nn $2.00 OFF Chick or Steak Thresh, F. R. M-Th only 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 COUNTRY /rnn $1.00 OFF Chick or Steak Fri. & Sat. 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 Sun. 11-8 "They've gotten so many of the goodies, the only way the Bell companies can afford to continue is to raise rates two or three times." "AT&T picked the plumpest plums off its branches before divesting," he said. Solbach agreed. But State Rep. Larry Erne, D-Coffeiny Blamed the extent of the proposed increases on the state Corporation Commission. "In order to keep residential rates down, the Corporation Commission has insisted that the largest share of increases be borne by business," Erne said. "Now it's coming back to haunt them." Erne said the deregulation of telephone rates probably would mean a decrease in the rates of businesses, and the potential insider use of phones for years, he said. But Loux said that argument was not valid. "That's a myth that's been perpetuated by the telephone company nationally," he said. "Studies show that there is a difference in residential users carry big business." Under the proposed changes, the rates of businesses and residences would not be fixed by the Corporation but would be determined by a competitive market. Those worst hit by the changes would be residents of rural areas, where long distances between consumers cause company profits to sink. Traditionally, rural and city residents have paid uniform monthly rates. But a free market system might result in rates 100 percent higher in the country than in the city, Loux said. One reason rates for all users may rise is that AT&T has asked to receive all revenues from Yellow. The agency said the past was collected by local phone companies. Although all calls within the state now are regulated by the Corporation Commission, the anti-trust settlement could shift regulation of all long-distance calls to the Federal Communication Commission, which probably would raise the rates, Louis said. "Since Kansas toll rates are lower than comparable FCC toll rates, increasing the intrastate rates would greatly harm Kansans, especially those who are dependent on short-lived calls for business and social interaction," he said. Loux said the changes brought about by the anti-trust settlement were being handled by the Senate and House of Representatives in Washington. Although both houses have introduced resolutions concerning deregulation of phone companies, Loa said the Corporation Commission is supporting a resolution drawn up in the House of Representatives. "The House resolution gives the states more flexibility," Louis said. "It designates a pricing for the sale of mortgages, which is least detrimental to the state." "The Senate bill, however, was literally drawn up by AT&T lobbyists." Lux urged the committee to contact the state's congressmen to lobby for the House resolution. 40 CREATIVE IDEAS Photo ideas to put new life in your pictures featuring Walt Croxton MONDAY, FEB. 15 7:30 p.m. at Ramada inn Downtown Topeka ONLY **45**$0 Enroll now at Wolfe's Enroll now at Wolfe's or send enrollment to: HOT Wolfe's camera shop, inc. 625 Karsa Avenue - Phone 203-136-186 KEGGER the KEOGER COORS LONGNECKS $7.98 the KEKGER OFFICE 230 LONDON 614-745-9888 841-9450 From u. CANNERY ROW From the bizarre bedrooms of The Bear Flag Restaurant, northern California's most notorious bordello, to the abandoned boiler where Doc and Suzy first fell in love... the spirit of John Steinbeck's colorful world is now on screen in MGM's happiest movie of the year... an irresistible irascible love story. love METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER Presents A MICHAEL PHILIPS Production of A DAVID S. WARD Film NICK NOLTE DEBRA WINGER JOHN STEINBECK'S CANNERY ROW AUDRA LINDLEY Notary by JOHN HUSTON BACK NITZSCHE Designated by RICHARD MACDOUGHVIEW NYKYVIS A.S.C. John STEINBECK Michael PHILIPS Notary by David S. WARD Metropolitan 心 OPENS AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU IN FEBRUARY! p nth s University Daily Kansan, February 10, 1982 ner in the said. may receive may receive agencies as dest wasanies. the state corporation settlement all long andal Com- which Louis, Louis re lower states, ires would those who toll social in night about were being and House location in interning Les, Louis Mission is up in theaves the said. "It sale of seas least er, was abyssists," by for the THE UNIVERSITY Arts Festival THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS February 11 - March 12, 1982 Sunday, February 28 * From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China 2:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union Thursday, February 11 * Juilliard String Quartet 8:00 p.m.. Plymouth Congrega- tional Church, 925 Vermont Friday and Saturday. February 19 and 20, Thursday- Saturday. February 25-27 *She Stoops to Conquer, by Oliver Goldsmith 8:00 p.m., University Theatre. Murphy Hall Sunday, February 28. Wednesday, March 3 Symposium of Contemporary Music Murphy Hall Through Sunday, February 28 "Photographs from the Esquire Collection" Exhibit in Spencer Museum of Art Thursday, February 18 Peter Williams, Harpsichord 8:00 p.m.. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall Sunday, February 21 *Patricia Wise, Soprano 3.30 p.m., University Theatre, Murphy Hall Sunday, February 14-Friday, March 5 Posters by Phil Risbeck Exhibit in Art and Design Gallery Tuesday, February 23 **The Rainmaker, by N. Richard Nash: The Guthrie Theatre 8:00 p.m.. University Theatre. Murphy Hall Wednesday, February 24 Rockne Krebs, Visiting Artist Lecture 8:00 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union Thursday, March 4 *Don Giovanni, Film Directed by Joseph Losey 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Audi- torium, Kansas Union 29) Box+3477. Designed by the Office of University Relations *Supported by the Kansas Arts Commission, and with Affiliated Arts Councils of the Upper Midwest, for the funds provided by the National Endowment for the Arts *Presented and the Nat Sunday, February 28 "SITE: Buildings and Spaces" 1.00 p.m.. Opening of Exhibit. Spencer Museum of Art KJ7w KaA Monday, March 8 $ * Jean-Pierre Rampal, Flute 8.00 p.m., University Theatre, Murphy Hall Wednesday, March 10 * Kansas City Ballet 8.00 p.m. University Theatre, Murphy Hall Friday, March 12 "Chinese Calligraphy from the Crawford Collection" 3.00 p.m. Opening of Exhibit. Spencer Museum of Art Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 10. 1982 Proving its worth The Associated Students of Kansas are trying to prove that throwing money at problems makes them go away. The University of Kansas has been a member of ASK, a statewide student lobbying group since 1978. During that time, the group has been plagued by problems, including a serious lack of student interest and participation, and its general ineffectiveness. Last spring, the Student Senate voted to approve a 60-percent increase in the amount the University pays for membership in the organization. This year, KU students are paying $14,652, through their activity fees, to belong to the group. In addition, ASK receives $1,500 from the activity fee money Senate allocates to itself to pay for office supplies and miscellaneous expenses. ASK uses the money KU and the other member schools contribute to pay its operating costs and the salaries of the campus directors and the legislative director in Toneka. Steve Dunn, KU's ASK board member, has now written a bill asking Student Senate to allocate additional money, $360, to pay the salary of a second KU campus director. The primary responsibilities of the position, paid from the Senate's unallocated account, would be to coordinate ASK activities in Topeka. The other campus director would be responsible for improving ASK membership on the KU campus. This semester the Associated Students of Kansas is promising to become a more active and valuable organization, through such projects as the Kansas Legislative Information Network and a voter registration drive. And the group is sending a larger delegation to this weekend's legislative assembly then it has in past years. But if the ASK leaders in Topea think that another KU campus director is necessary, they have the option of finding room for the position in this year's budget. Or, if the duties of KU's campus director need to be split, maybe the salary should be split also. Senate approved the membership fee increase with the understanding that it was sufficient to solve ASK's internal problems and establish the group as a strong student voice in Topeka. It is too soon to tell if the group's problems have been solved, and too soon for ASK to stick its hand out to the KU students for more money. Bad reports could result from KU close encounters Who can say with absolute certainty that extra-terrestrial beings have never visited the KU campus? What if one did? What if he disguised himself as an earthling and learned some English? What report would he send to the folks back home? The following is one possible account "Commander Targ, this is Otto. My expedition to Earth was both dangerous and enlightening. What I saw there will be of interest not just to you and me, but to all loyal Gorfians." "I had originally intended to make contact with the earthlings in my true form, but sub- tlety," he recalled. TOM BONTRAGER what I thought to be the best place to observe the finest humanity has to offer; the campus of an institution of education. This is what I observed. "When I landed, I saw all around me the humans' main mode of transportation, a four-wheeled vehicle so plentiful it might easily have been taken for an alien species itself. These machines rested in great cement fields. Periodically, humans in smaller, three-wheeled carts would drive through the fields, leaving small cards affixed to the larger vehicles. They seemed to take great pleasure in the task. I wondered if it was a form of entertainment. "It may have been a language game, because whenever the owners of the machines lucky enough to receive cards returned, they would words I cannot find in my English dictionary. "I was content to wait until nightfall, when I went out onto the campus. I ventured into a huge edifice called a 'field house.' I heard shouting and whistling. I expected to find a political rally or inspirational lecture of the kind so common on our planet. As I approached the center of the building, I was disappointed to discover nothing more than a sporting event, in which humans attempted to toss a sphere through an elevated ring. "They were getting good exercise, I thought, and they had a sufficient reason for so many others to cheer loudly." "I presumed the building was not a part of the camp, and left it to continue my observations. I decided to explore a dwelling known to the earthlings as a "dorm." I entered an elevator and ascended to the top most level, where a sequence of unsettling experiences began. "I passed a number of doors until I found one open. I entered the dark and foreboding chamber, hoping to meet with students of the University. In the dim light, I could barely make out the shapes of other beings, apparently human, all seated in chairs and facing in the same direction. My gaze followed them until I noticed the object of their fixation, a curious box, outfitted with knobs and dials, from which etheral sounds and images enunciated. "I understood immediately that it was an object of worship. Had I stumbled upon some sacred rite? "A member of the group, perhaps a high priest, walked to the box and turned a dial. The images changed rapidly, but they remained the same in one respect, they were images of destruction. A building burned, a woman slapped a man,imailed him, and then dragged him on the ground, killing his opponent. Just as I could not bear to watch further, the picture stopped changing. "In the box, a man was conversing with a small, ugly animal. Was this the climax of the story?" 'Horrified but fascinated, it turned back to the audience. In the twilight of the idol, their faces appeared blank, devoid of both passion and reason. "They had given their minds to the box. "I was determined to communicate with this strange congregation, whatever the price. Summoning courage from deep within me I pointed at the box and stuttered, "What is it?" "The person nearest to me turned, as if in a trance, and uttered a profaned reply," *Bedtime* "I ran from the room, fearful of the implications of this expression. Perhaps Bonzo was the barbaric deity that encapsulated the other, and I wanted to box. I would not risk my life further to find out. "I entered the elevator and descended to another level. When the doors opened, my ears were assaulted by raucous, rhythmic noise. A group of people were yelling, singing and jumping about. It was a far cry from the somber landscape of the city, dwelling must house a separate tribe of students, each with its special beliefs. This tribe was, no doubt, the most primitive. "A proselety from the group bade me come join him. Against my better judgment, I accepted the beverage he offered me. At this point, my observations become unclear. * "Soon after I emptied my cup, I became unsteady and light-headed. Before long, I was also yelling, singing and dancing about uncontrollably. How I spent the next hour or so, I found myself in a kind of panic and made my way to the dorm's first level. There, I encountered my greatest horror of all. "I spied a row of machines with image-producing boxes like the one I described earlier. Humans stationed in front of the machines manipulated levers and buttons while, on the screen, more images of destruction were projected." "I imagine my complete terror when I saw on a screen perfect replicas of our own race being slammed mercilessly by the human at the controls. We can see so close to be more coincidence, Commander." "The crucial difference here was that the humans played an active part in the destructive nature of it." "Not only are the humans barbaric, they are crafty as well. They have known about us all along and are now training spaces of space that we need us. This is the meaning of our education!" "I immediately boarded my craft to warn you of the imminent threat to our very civilization. "If the humans do not eliminate themselves, they may eliminate us." KANSAN The University Daily (USPS 605-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kenasos Subscriptions by mail to Student Subscription masters or $2 a month in Douglas County and 18½ cents or $3 a year in subscriptions masters or $3 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 69048 Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Judeline Jadie Managing Editor Tracee Hamilton Editorial Editor Karen Schulen Campus Editor Retail Sales Manager Ami Hornberger National Sales Manager Howard Shaliniky Sales and Marketing Advisor John Obernan General Manager and News Advisor Rick Musser BURP! HAROLD! THAT WASN'T ME, AGNES! IT'S THE NUCLEAR POWER PLANT ACTING UP AGAIN! People read about plane crashes every day. They read about them so often, in fact, that one more crash is of little significance—unless, of course, it happens to be a big one. Then, for a few days, the topic pervades dinner conversations and sparks debate over the safety of air transportation. But soon the conversation turns to more familiar channels, like the weather. To most Americans, the threat of a nuclear accident is about as immediate as a plane crash. Nuclear accidents easily accepted Nuclear power mishaps seem to have taken a similar course. When the big crash—Three Mile Island—came along, people were shocked by the risk of nuclear power suddenly became tangible. The accident pricked consciences for a while and provoked feverish arguments over the safety of the nuclear power industry. Public opinion forced tighter control of the industry, but shortly, other events overhit it. We have also heard conversations steered back to the weather. Like plane crashes, nuclear power accidents have become another hazard of daily life. Each successive accident decreases the importance of following accidents. ago in Ontario, N.Y., produced barely a sight of disapproval, people who were violently shocked. Accidents aren't the only thing scientists are worried about. Reactors can be sabotaged by fire. The mishap at the Ginna plant two weeks Another danger of nuclear power lies in the highly toxic radioactive waste generated by reactors. There is no way to render such wastes harmless. They must be stored and guarded until the natural decay has run its course, and they remain deadly for tens of thousands of years. And the president's 71st birthday probably got more attention this week than the news that one-third of the nation's 72 nuclear plants are shut down because of problems that in- lease enough radioactive material to cause death and birth defects to people exposed to it. I am a female teacher. I teach English and Chinese in school. I have a degree in Computer Science. TERESA RIORDAN But the problems of nuclear power have been in the public's eye since the nuclear power program was started in this country. The biggest problem with nuclear power has been the public's complacency toward letting it undergo more dangers, to continue on a massive scale. It seems strange that the public is so willing to accept nuclear energy as an alternative energy source, when it has so few answers to the safety problems that keep cropping up. clude a hydrogen explosion and equipment failures leading to radiation and water leaks. The frequency of nuclear mishaps has made them recently seem like any other accident. However, nuclear power is still very much at the experimental stage, and the safety problems are legion and well-known, although the public chooses to ignore them. Nuclear plants have the potential of having truly catastrophic accidents. The danger is a sudden release of lethal, radioactive material that can cause serious injury or nuclear accident—a meldown—could re- Americans have grown so accustomed to nuclear power—and its dangers—that the threat of a nuclear accident has become just as alarming, asigned, as a plane crash on the East Coast. Letters to the Editor It is indeed unfortunate that Ann Wylie's Feb. 2 article on the resignation of five traffic judges neglected to relate the true reasons for the rulings and many facts given to her which were not reported. To the Editor: Not all facts presented in resignation article Wille failed to mention that the funds we were trying to get would not be appropriated until fiscal year 1884. We will all have graduated by 1930, and would have received no benefit from the progress. We are specifically sanctioned by the Kansas Board of Regents in the Kansas Administrative Regulations, Section 88-4-8. We are one of two bodies given this status by the state and the Board of Regents. Obviously, the governing body of state universities saw the necessity to make a distinction between this board and University committees. The article failed to mention the distinctions our board and the University committees We do not act in an advisory capacity, but make actual decisions that aid in making the traffic rules and regulations consistent and enforceable. We are a completely autonomous body. All appeals heard from our decisions are reheard by the same body en bane. From there, all appeals go directly to the Douglas County sheriff, who is accountable to any other University assembly. Our decision was truly based on the premise that we should no longer designate our time to perform the administrative details of the Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals Our Office provides such services as administration on the parking service. We have all remained on the board as judges. We have direct control over a large amount of money, more than $10,000 during a school year. I would be hard pressed to find many University committees with this kind of authority. We took the job believing that we were providing a useful, necessary function for the student body and the University. We performed our duties diligently, conscientiously and seriously. We met twice a week and over breaks to try to get the docked casket up. We started out one and a half years behind, and have brought the docker to within six months of being current. The decision to seek reimbursement for the time the judges spend weekly was a policy decision on the part of the judges and the Parking and Traffic Board. The action by the University Senate executive committee, made without the assistance of the judges or board, showed a lack of respect and a lack of confidence in the court and its administration. Our resignations are in response to the attitude taken by SpenEx to our function in the University community, not the refusal of funding. The University Daily Kansan acted irresponsibly in failing to relate these facts and the real reasons behind the resinnations. Kari S. Schmidt, Lawrence law student No exceptions allowed To the Editor: In our society people who break rules are punished. It has come to my attention that some of the "KU on Wheels" bus drivers are in need of punishment. They are disobeying the plainly displayed "No Smoking" signs inside their buses. Are bus drivers a special exception? No. Their cigarettes and pipes fill the buses with the same disgusting smoke. Don't, tell me that a slightly algera window allows them to break the no smoking rule. The rule is clearly posted with no exceptions. Angie Sutcliffe, Wichita sonhomo Can a bus driver steer safely while smoking? No. Driving a motor vehicle requires the complete concentration of the operator. I would think that driving a large bus packed with precious human lives demands an even more intense concentration. And because these smoking bus drivers have divided their attention, they cannot be safe drivers. Attention:Student Senate, Lawrence Bus Co. and all KU students. The ignorance of this rule Objections not valid To the Editor: I would like to express some disagreement with Tom Bontrager's column about the "New Federalism." (I might add that I enjoyed his previous two very much.) I am not familiar with De Morgan's reagent Reagan's proposal, but I am not sure Tom Bontrager's objections are completely valid. He considers the probable delay in implementation to be a drawback. It is that relevant to the idea's validity? *L* legislation almost always seems to take too long. Perhaps it is an intolerable error. It can counter some of the "burden" to the state if it the national government can't act quickly enough. In addition, farsightedness is one of the positive aspects of the conservative philosophy, and has always been sorely lacking in our government. Perhaps federalism is "plausible" in the long term. State governments need not remain "less - qualified" to handle these programs. (Besides, doesn't government tend to grow more easily than it reduces?) nth sI I think it is more appropriate for local authorities to administer aid to the poor for several reasons. Often, aid should include education or other personal attention (give a man a fish and he eats for a day . . .). This might be more efficiently and appropriately done at the local level, with innovation flourishes most readily. Innovation is very important; many local authorities are finding new ways of aiding the poor at a streamlined cost, and often utilize it better than the national government can. When individuals have to be considered, generalization and centralization should be avoided. (Think of your own experiences with centralized authority.) San Diego's mayor calls decentralization of "resources and discretion . . . good managerial practice." Also, the "adjustments" needed for geographical differences would be far from a "simple matter . . . on the federal level." I would assume that this is already being tried, and that some lack of success is a motivating factor behind this idea. Such adjustments require communication and red tape, which becomes garbled and proliferated in Washington. Besides, why do it in Washington if it can be done better at the source, eliminating a level of bureaucracy? Some state and local officials are panicking, but added responsibility is usually frightening. Others have voiced agreement that they would be more efficient in this area of service. Most feel that, at the least, a reassessment of the distribution of responsibility is necessary. Let us hope that our elected representatives act with great care and courage on this impending occasion. Nancy Ives Overland Park senior Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters. nthsi ase ests sied the by chand its of ave airy. asn ang ng ve to to the just near University Daily Kansan, February 10, 1982 Page 5 Fans From page 1 sophomore, said. "Even if both teams were 0-15, it would still be the game of the year." But of all the fans shivering in front of Allen Field House yesterday, nobody stood out of the crowd more than Tim Nederson, Pratt sophomore, and Stanley Rasmussen, Pine, Colo. They did they stand in line for four hours, but they painted their faces in red and blue checkers. Rasmussen said that for the K-State game, he and Nederson plan to do even more. Besides painting their faces, they plan to camp overnight in front of the field house. Besides getting to watch the Jayhawks from the seats in the houx, the group of shovering fags (as seen above) "If it weren't for the local fans, the team wouldn't win as much as at home," Hemingway said. Paraphernalia From page 1 "Our things were confiscated, we were arrested and charged for possession of drug paraphernalia. We're the test case for the whole state." co-owner Jerry French said. Dennis Moore, Johnson County district attorney, said there was compliance with the state law. "We're enforcing it right now. A jury might find it unconstitutional, but we assume the law is constitutional and should be enforced," Moore said. Moore said he agreed with the law as an effort to control the use of illicit drugs. "Where paraphernalia is for the exclusive use of illicit drugs, we should also discourage the possession and distribution of them." "I'm not just talking to roach clips, but cocaine cutting kits and waterpipe bongs that French said the Choosey Beggar has suffered financially because it no longer sells smoking accessories. are clearly for exclusive use in consuming illicit drugs. Before the materials were confiscated the store sold water pipes, regular pipes, tobacco and gasoline. Signs were posted in the store that said the accessories were not for use with controlled access. "If someone expressed his intent to use the accessories with anything illegal, we wouldn't do it." "I believed we were in compliance with the law." But French said he could not understand why the state would pass a law like the paraphermalia law or how it could be enforced. 'Why is a cornbock pipe legal while a glass pipe is illegal?' French said. "How can something be illegal until it is used illegally?" The Choosey Beggar will go to court sometime in the middle of March. Stores in the Wichita area also have stopped selling smoking accessories. The Menagerie, a gift shop in Wichita, has changed its clientele, according to one of its officials. "We weed to be a gift shop that sold a few waterbeds, and now we're a waterbed store that sells a few gifts," manager Don Hirsch said. The store had begun to change its image before the law was passed, Hirsch said. I gave us a kick in the denim. He said, The Menagerie sold the paraphernalia items it had in stock and did not order any more. "We still have some smoking accessories left, a few tobacco pipes," Hirsch said. "We also have a few hat clips with feathers, some wood pipes and some little boxes." "I don't sell anything I would consider paranormalia." Sgt. Pepper's of Wichita also has stopped selling paraphernalia. the law affected our traffic. We don't sell anything in that line at all any more," employee Jean Lambert said. "We had a big sale when the law passed and got rid of everything." due to the downtown fire last Wednesday . . . SMOKE SALE! DAMAGE We continue our sale of slightly smoke damaged merchandise. We've established some very substantial markdowns to clear this stuff out to make room for the new spring goods which are arriving daily. SUITS 20% to 60% off SPORT COATS 20% to 60% off DRESS SHIRTS 20% to 50% off OUTER COATS 50% off LONDON FOGS 25% off SWEATERS 50% off PENDLETON SHIRTS 34.99 KNIT SHIRTS 20% off FLANNEL P.J.s 25% off ROBES 25% off DRESS SLACKS 40% off JACKETS 33% to 50% off Whitenight's 会 Town Shop 839 Massachusetts downtown Due to these unanticipated circumstances, no coupons please. THE QUEST OF THE SECRET CITY sweepstakes T here's a city in Europe-you could travel there free. So unravel these riddles, and uncover its key. A S N 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 TO PLAY THE GAME: 2 TO PICK! A peer of each the riddles that will appear here each week in February. Write your answer in the blanks below each riddle. The letters with numbers below them correspond to the numbered spaces in the master key. As you answer, please use all the spaces in the name and location of a secret city in Europe. Send us the solution, and you and a friend could win a trip there, free. ENTER SWEETSKAPTES NATIONAL SWEETSKAPTES 2. Grand prize oasis of two regular round-trip economy airlines to the secret city, 30-day Eurasian pass; American Youth Hostels passes, two backpacks and $100 in cash 3. Card: Your answer along with your name and address 4. Secret City Sweetkaptes card: 9/2/28 with your name and address 5. National organization will receive a poster as an entry prize 6. Poster must be received by 3/15/28. Enter as often as you wish, but each entry must be mailed separately. 7. A random drawing of a correct answer will be awarded: 9/2/28 when the organizing organization whose decision is final 8. Proof of ownership, prohibited, tax or otherwise restricts 9. At potential winners may be required to sign an attestation of eligibility to verify compliance with the rules within 30 days of receipt of same. For a list of prize winners, send self-addressed, stamped envelope to Knight Street, Norwalk, CT 06951. WHAT AM I? Upon a staff I sit, I tell the name and pitch, Not one, not two, but three, Instruct the symphony. (Answer to Week #1 Riddle: SNAIL) GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEES MAKE GOOD COMPANY. GF GENERAL FOODS $ \textcircled{c} $ General Foods Corporation 1962 General Foods INTERNATIONAL COFFEE Snusse Mocha IMAGE STYLE INMART COFFEE BEVERAGE General Foods INTERNATIONAL COFFEE Cappuccino IMAGE STYLE INMART COFFEE BEVERAGE General Foods INTERNATIONAL COFFEE Irish Mocha Mint IMAGE STYLE INMART COFFEE BEVERAGE General Foods INTERNATIONAL COFFEE Café Vienna IMAGE STYLE INMART COFFEE BEVERAGE General Foods INTERNATIONAL COFFEE CAFÉ FRANÇAIS IMAGE STYLE INMART COFFEE BEVERAGE kansas union bookstores PADRE ISLAND THE BEST PRICES ON SPRING BREAK ESCAPES DELUXE: Accommodations in the deluxe Balearic Marina condominium right on the Gulf. Each unit has a full kitchen living room with private baths and includes use of a swimming pool. $129.00 STANDARD: Sand Castle Resort is located right on the bay just four hours from the Gulf. Each large apartment has a fully equipped kitchenette and a private bathroom. PACKAGE INCLUDES: FOR INFO CALL. - Sports activities OPTIONS: - Poolside welcome party - 8 days/7 nights lodging 842-6689 6-10pm Datyona * PF Lauderdale * Key Largo Padie Island * Nassau Bahamas Bahamas Islands Cruise * Mexico - Transportation $99.00 Bahama Islands Cruise • Mexico 109.00 per person Matamoros, Mexico side trip SUMMIT TOUR University-Community Service Scholarship Award As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift. Qualifications term). *Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. - Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term) - Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. Applications - Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Tuesday, February 16, 1982 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held February 23, 1982. * More information and applications available in the SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477. SITKA A. Back stay reinforced for additional durability A Back size reinforced for additional durability B Toolbox, thread used on shoe里. Keep resilient wear and decay resistance C Heavy reinforced weather-guard coat for superior strength and durability D Double layer midside of leather and full cushioned Micro-Lite gire extra firm support and rigness. E Heavy reinforced leather gire wetsuit. F Heavy reinforced double made of film. Insulate Surfur® to last a lifetime. G Reinforced spring steel shank is unbreakable, extra long for full support under the arch. H Reinforced absorbent pearlescron for added support and comfort within the boot. I Ankle pad. Both sides of an ankle are cushioned and protected by 1/2 thickness. J Heavy duty insulae includes an attached rib to provide maximum strength and comfort with the boot. K Reinforced absorbent pearlescron and inside foot comfort. L Doofer. Weel construction. For a strong, durable, and water-resistant boot. M Box toe is heavy duty to provide safety and help maintain the form. N Free D: rings with tough nickel placed double iresl hooks allow fast facing and added protection. O Akimbo seam stitching and support long and warm. SKiip closure keeps shoes tight. P Below wetsuit. To guard against dust and dirt. R Keeps tongue keep in contact during durable useless use. S Skin stretch glove. Seam stitching to fit the natural curve of instep. T Skin scrape glove. Leather covered foam rubber padding cushions with tendons for smooth injury fit. The Dexter Boot Sitka R S O A F B G C H D M E L K J I M F Are 819 Mass. 84 Hours: Sitka Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen 843-3470 Where Styles Happen urs. M-Sat 9:00-5:30 Thurs. till 8:30 Available in both Men's & Women's sizes. Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 10, 1982 True pioneer woman remains a mystery By NEAL McCHRISTY Staff Reporter The stereotypes of women settlers have ranged from invisible women to unliken ones, John Mack Faragher, assistant professor of history at Mount Holyoke College, said in a speech at the Kansas University yesterday. About 80 people heard Faragher speak on "History from the Inside out: Writing the History of the West." In his speech, Faragher said longheld views of pioneer women's roles are changing. Faragher's speech was sponsored by the Women's Studies programs, the department of history and the Center for Humanistic Studies Faragher as a mentor. The book, *Overland Trail*, a book on the roles people who settled the western frontier. "I think western movies are an interesting way to approach the subject of women in the west," he said. He used as one of his examples movies starring Clint Eastwood—the solitary man who helped win the frontier. "Important western movies of the 78s renewed with a vengeance that the West was a male preserve," he said. Historians write from a male viewpoint, Faragher said, but there are documents that refute the aterotypes and descriptions of the norms and books about the frontier woman. "Heartland," and "Butch Cassady and the Sundance Kid" are also examples in which women assume a background role, he said. Faragher quoted letters from a 32-year-old woman who settled in Central Illinois in the 1830s. He said these letters, from Lucinda Castenhear to Along with her husband and children, she settled on a farm in 1831. mother in Kentucky, gave a true account of the life of a pioneer woman. But she did, and the picture she painted to her mother was that of a woman struggling to be cheerful through hardship, Faragher said. She had seven children, including a newborn girl, by 1833, he said. This woman settler said that with the children about and the newborn in her lap she often could not find the time to write. "I have been distressed to think of my children not going to school, especially Louisa (the eldest)," Faragher quoted. The children were needed at home to do the farmwork, he said. Five years later, Casteen had eight children, and in February, 1839, when cholera was rampant, Louisa became ill. Louisa died from a disease with no known cure and no physician present, but her family is deeply mourned. "Women's material like Lucinda's, often more than so men's, evokes the qualities of everyday life." Faragher said. "We need a history that is written from the inside out, as well as the bottom up." "If we are to write the history of farm women—as well as farm men—we must find a way of linking the worlds of farmers and frontiersmen." Views change, Faragher said, and perhaps a realistic portrayal of female, as well as male pioneer roles, is in the offing. Efforts begin to update Med Center billing By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter Miles of bureaucratic red tape previously encountered by patients at the University of Kansas Medical Center when paying their bills will soon be reduced through the use of a new computer network. Keith Nitcher, KU director of business affairs, said this week that an initial $250,000 allocation from the university would go to Mesa Men. Center in booming,斌营 its antiquated billing and admitting systems. The previous system was completely outdated, University officials said when they asked for the appropriation of funds. "It's really an antiquated set of systems that have been patched together, really just held together by manual effort," Richard von Ende, executive secretary to the University, said last fall. Under the old system every bill, even those few that had been typed by a computer, had to have more information typed onto them. Additional charges for drugs, blood, tests or other special services had to be typed onto the patient's bill and tailled by the Med Center's computer department. This program has lengthy and inefficient, obsolete shell. Under the new system, all billing and admission will be typed into computer terminals at the Med Center and carried to computers owned by a selected company. Nitcher said this phasing out of the Med Center's present computers should save the cost of upkeep and the cost of new computers. A delay in bidding to find a suitable computer firm slowed the start of the program by one week. Tom Greecson, associate business affairs director, said yesterday. The contract is to be a work and award begun next week. Total costs for the project may be more than $800,000. "The original money was just to initiate the start of the program. It will cost much more than just that," Nitcher said. Extra funding for the program will come from savings realized as the new year begins. Rare, valuable books preserved with care By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter Spencer Library has the best possible environment for preserving materials in its Special Collections Library, Bill Mitchell, associate Special Collections librarian, said recently. Special Collections has old, rare and very expensive books and materials such as Babylonian clay tablets, a page from the Gutenberg Bible, a European Renaissance Collection with books from 1450 to 1702 and Oriental literature written on palm leaves. These books and materials require special treatment, Mitchell said. "ENIVIRONMENTAL controls of temperature, humidity and light are the best things that could be done for any book," he said. Mitchell said the rate of a book's chemical deterioration doubled with every 10 degree increase in temperature. The temperature on the two floors of Special Collections is kept at 70 degrees year round. For preserving books, the colder the better. Chemical deterioration occurs when chemicals are added to a book's materials during the manufacturing process or when the book is externally affected by air pollution. He said the Spencer Collection had HUMIDITY IS also a very important factor in preserving books. many books that had been in Chicago libraries during the 19th and early 20th centuries that were falling apart because of the air pollution in the heavy industrial area. Without constant, moderate relative humidity, books with too much moisture sweat and those with enough moisture would tear apart. "Ultra-violet light is also harmful to books, so the library's flourescent lights have filters on them and are likely to be whenever possible." Mitch said. "Students might think we want them to work in the dark because the lights in Special Collections are always off, but we always turn the lights on when they go into the stacks." The collection's librarians can only try to counter the books' deterioration process and keep them as near to their original state as possible, because there is not enough money to do anything more, he said. Mitchell said the books in Special Collections were available to anyone who wanted to use them. "The Special Collections library is used by the broadest range of people, from a kid who wants to read children's literature to some of the world's foremost scholars," he said. zip and city: ACADEMIC CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day 841.0101 808 W 24th forecast Feb. 27 B41 DIET HOW TO ATTEMPT THE Losing Game THE MOVIE The Center it’s a Natural! 353 View Now Medical Center TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK Balloon-a-Gram Use Kansan Classified Balloon-a-Gram WANT TO BE OCCUPIED? SENNA BALLON-A-GRAM 83115 10644 Fax # 83115 10727 F. No. 1221 Phone # 83115 10727 VALID ID CARDS Instantly - Laminated - Color available at I - DENT SYSTEMS Room 114 AAA Room 841-5905 LOW COST PENETR'S INSURANCE LUW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley Prudential TONIGHT CELEBRATE HUMP NIGHT AT take TIME OUT 25' DRAWS 7-10 PM 75' SCHOONERS ALL NIGHT 842 7870 843 8771 Luke Healthanner THE PLACE TO PARTY John E. Dudley 247 7610 Prudential 2408 IOWA TIME OUT Present This Coupon And Receive NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA AND VIDEO GAME CENTER Now Playing All New Ms. PACMAN! All New COUPON ANY SIZE PIZZA $¹⁰⁰ OFF Nr.23627 Thats Right Ms. PACMAN!! COUPON Expires 2/28/82 Limit one coupon per person - Entry Fee is one can of unopened racquetballs submitted with completed entry form. Present This Coupon And Receive Two FREE VIDEO GAME PLAYS Expires 2/28/02 - Play is available for men and women in three classes provided there are enough entrants: advanced, intermediate, and novice. - Play begins Sunday, February 14. Entry forms are available in 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546. OPEN DAILY 10 am-11:45 p.m. SUN. Noon-11:45 p.m. - Entry Deadline is Thursday, February 11, 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson. Regular Pizza Prices LARGE Double Cheese '4.95 MEDIUM Double Cheese '3.95 SMALL Double Cheese '2.95 TINY Double Cheese '1.95 Additional Meat or Garden Topping 75' ea. Large 65' ea. Medium 55' ea. Small 45' ea. Tiny Tie In With Us Recreation Services Rac Racquetball Singles Tournament Enjoy Coke Number Company accepted with this Offer Enjoy Coke 100 years of service 96 will conduct a seminar he is a Senior Fellow on the Financial Accounting Standards Board, and former dean of the Jessie H. Jones Graduate School of Administration at Rice University and former Arthur Young Distinguished Professor at the University of Kansas. Robert Sterling is a leading scholar in accounting theory and . . . Satellite Union Robert Sterling The School of Business announces the second speaker in its 1981-82 Colloquium Series 12:30 p.m., Friday, February 12 of Standard Selling in Accounting" "The Role and Accomplishments Southeast Conference Room Satellite Uleiver All faculty and students are welcome. Contact Renate R. Mat Dalton (4-500) for additional information. Nine third lines for the nine clue verses to help you win a vacation for 2 in Daytona Beach, Florida. 1. Is this geologist's dream BUSCH CASSIDY BUSCH CASSIDY RIDES AGAIN! CAMPUS CONTEST 2. A close brush with a rope 4. With snow on the tow 5. He shares with his pet 3. Its beauty astounding 7. If the train you were tryin' 8. Says BUSCH* , "Water's the wors 9. Since there's no pretty 'maid' (Look for another clue ad in this space next week.) nth si BUSCH HEAD FOR THE MOUNTAINS BUSCH BUSCH Beer of America, Imported Street, Redmond, WA Anheuser-Busch, Inc. Brewers of BUSCH Beer • St. Louis, Missouri, USA University Daily Kansan, February 10, 1982 n th st Vacation housing could be cut By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter A lack of interest in vacation housing in the residence halls during the 1981-82 semester break has prompted discussion by the Association of University Residence Halls about the merits of continuing it. The executive board of AURH asked its committee on contracts to draw up a recommendation not to offer vacation and to hire an AURH president, said recently. Because no definite action had yet been taken, the Residential Programs Advisory Board agreed yesterday to offer vacation housing for the coming spring break. If sufficient interest is open, one hall will be kept open. "It's not to our economic advantage to keep the hall open for maybe 13 residents." Darrow said. the recommendation will be put before the general assembly of AURH sometime this month for discussion and consideration. The AURH contracts committee, said. DARROW SAID she supported discontinuing vacation housing because she thought all hill residents were the only costs for the few students who stay. Darrow's contention that the residents are subsidizing the program is well-founded, but it is unlikely that the funds could be obtained from other sources, said Fred McEhlene, director of residential programs. "There's just not that much money around." he said. Under current policy, vacation housing is offered over Thanksgiving. $ 3^{1/2} \mathrm{^{c}} $ COPIES Service Beyond Duplication HOUSE OF USHE 838 MASS. — 842-3610 ATTENTION KU Students and Chamber Music Patrons attending the concert by the Juilliard String Quartet. A free shuttle bus is available for transportation between Murphy Hall and Plymouth Congregational Church Bus will leave "N" Zone Parking Lot, across from Murphy Hall, at 7:30 p.m. and will return immediately following the concert. Free parking available in "N" zone The Jullard Concert is at 8:00 p.m. Thursday, February 11, at Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont. Tickets are on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. V arts festival K3T1 and semester and spring breaks, if sufficient interest is shown. McElhenie said that fewer than 16 students had indicated they wanted to stay in the halls during last semester and were under special reasons, the halls not be kept. "It takes a minimum of 50 residents per night to meet salary and make some kind of dent in the utility costs," McEhlenie said. He said that in addition to increased utility costs, desk and security personnel were required 24 hours a day to keep the ball open. Because the halls were closed over semester break, students staying in Lawrence had to find alternative housing. McELHENIE SAID that many took advantage of special rates offered by the All Seasons Motel, 2309 Iowa St. Sherry Easton, assistant manager of All Seasons, said that about 125 students stayed at the hotel during final week and through break. EASTON SAID the cost was $13 a day for a single room. "We probably had close to 40 that stayed the whole time," Easton said. She said that the motel would continue to offer specials during vacation periods. All Seasons was the only hotel to offer special rates during semester break. Other area hotels said they would offer special rates in the future. The daily rate at the residence halls when they stayed open was $9. Food service was not included with either accommodation. "It's a time of the year that business is normally slow, so it's good for them and it's good for us," Easton said. WHEN THE prospect of ending vacation housing was brought up at yesterday's meeting of the residential advisory board, J.J. Wilson, director of housing, said that at one time it wasn't a problem. VACATION HOUSING at KU has a long history. Students used to be offered housing in buildings that have long since been torn down. a problem. "Hotel Eldridge used to love to take them. It may be that we're returning to that kind of situation." Wilson said. Men were housed in Oread Hall, a former Army barracks west of Memorial Stadium, which was demolished in 1977. Women were housed in Hodder Hall, a former private residence, which used to be at 1115 Louisiana St. The site is now a vacant lot. "We have to be fiscally responsible," he said. "There are many institutions that absolutely close. My concern is that the students have some viable options. Our one's come up with the solution for vacation housing yet." Since those times, McElheneir said, inflation has made vacation housing PENTE MEMO MOMS team now uses a set built in 1967, even though the average life of an oar is five years. The nameless figures wrapped in hais, scarves, coats and gloves while directing parking at KU basketball are members of the KU crew team. Crew team gets funds from directing traffic the crew team is working to earn $200 more to buy a boat from Purdue University for $4,000. The boat could cost $10,000 new, he said. THE CLASSIC GAME OF SKILL 1982 LAWRENCE CHAMPIONSHIP Jack Smallley, Salina graduate student and crew team member, said that crew team members had been working at concession stands at the football games. At the beginning of the basketball season, they were working with officers from the sports offices at the basketball games. The crew members do not direct campus traffic, which is the job of experienced officers, Lt. E. W. Fenestmaker, field operations supervisor for KU Parking Services, said. AT GAMMONS "They're basically out there to direct traffic within the parking lot," he said. Fenstemaker said about 22 crew members worked from 5 to 7:30 p.m. directing cars into the parking lots AT GAMMONS MONDAY FEBRUARY 15, 1982 Smalley said the money they earned would pay for boat maintenance and their coach's salary. 8:00 p.m. Because the crew team is a club sport, it does not receive money from the University. The team does not make donations from parents and alumni. Maintenance and repair is a big problem for the crew team, Smiley said, because the useful life of the equipment is short and the equipment cost is high. Officially Sanctioned Qualifying Tournament 1st PRIZE: Round trip all expense paid to Dallas and lodging for 2 at PLAZA OF THE MIRROR HOTEL Smalley said that one new oar cost about $200. For that reason, the crew & Deluxe Pente Board inscribed "Lawrence City Champion" "The kids work hard out there. They're real conscientious," he said. Cliff Elliott, crew team coach, said the Kansas State University crew team was impressed by traffic while he was coaching there. When he came to KU in the fall of 1980, he brought the idea with him. 2nd PRIZE: Deluxe Pente Board from Footlights 3rd PRIZE: A keg of beer from Gammons You may qualify for: PLUS 1st PRIZE: $5,000 & Trip for 2 to London BUS 1982 WORLD OPEN 1982 WORLD OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP IN DALLAS FEBRUARY 27 & 28 Teleflora A one of a kind Ceramic Vase Pente Trophy Pre-register at Gammons and Footlights co-sponsored by Gammons and Footlights. Stella Holia OPEN SUNDAY, FEB. 14 TIL NOON Open 8:30-5:30 Mon-Sat It's a beautiful floral arrangement that comes in an exquisite palette. This elegant keepake is decorated with our custom-designed candle holders. So send a Valentine that will always be cherry-bellied. Telefiliar's way to get your valentine or visit your Telefiliar and you can send it anywhere you like. Because there no better way to say this Valentine Day. Flower Shoppe Love That Lasts. Send The Lovebird Bouquet. Valentine's Day, Feb.14. This Valentine's Day, send a gift of loewen in a gift of love. Telefonier la Lovebasket Bannuet. 1101 Mass. 841-0800 - Luncheon Specials Weekdays Through February. Cornucopia Restaurant Cornucopia Salad with Soup and Bread. $2.50 - Now Featuring: Weekend Breakfast Specials Saturday: Breakfast Enchiladas $3.75 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Sunday: Sweetheart French Toast with fresh strawberry sauce & real whipped cream. $3.75 Open 7 days a week 11-10 weekdays 1801 Massachusetts 842-9637 10-10 weekew Trailridge Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. oth. 813-7333 Boyd's Coins Antiques Clay Ring Bull Sword - Trade Gold Sword - Coins Silver Sword - Coins 712 Lane Hamilton Limestone House 91-04-2-273 The Best Way Into Their Heart is With A Haircut From The Silver Clipper The Silver Clipper specializes in personalized haircuts for men and women. ❤ Present your KUID and receive $2.00 off on a shampoo, haircut and blowdry. Hours: Hours, Monday, Tuesday, Friday. Saturday 9-5 Wednesday & Thursday 9-7 2120 W. 25th St. 2120 w. 23th St Holiday Plaza ❤️ --and less use for them THE KU GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in 4067, Wescoe Hall. 9TH BEST WARRIORS WeaverS Gnc Serving Laurence Since 1857 3 Ways to Charge at Weaver's Weaver's Charge Account MasterCard VTSA* Valentine's Day Sunday, Feb. 14 Saving My Love For You ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ Valentine Gift from JOCKEY INTERNATIONAL. Valentine Briefs Smooth comfortable 100% nylon tricolor, packaged in a special "Saving My Love For You" giving box, with exclusive Jockey tailoring for proper fit and support with the Fashion-Knit waistband. 5.00 Red Lo-Rise Briefs, Boxers & Scants from 4.00 Red or White Valentine Knit Shirt 12.00 Valentine Socks 3.00 Valentine Boxers Valentine Boxers Tapered construction with attached straps. Packed in a Clever Beating Heart "Saving My Love For You" giving box. 8.00 Valentine Boxes 4.50 100% Cotton Made in Japan 100 Men's Shop—1st Floor Bath Kilt Gift Wrapped FREE Handy Quick Cover Wrap Around 100% cotton terry. Adjustable front and elastic back assures snug fit. For You, printed on pockets. White. One size fits all. 7.50 on campus TODAY THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a dutch lunch for members from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Cork II of the THE UNIVERSITY FORUM will meet at 11:48 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. Joe Eaglerman, professor of metrology will speak. THE STUDENT SENATE will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW There will be a DUNEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. THE MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the Kansas Union. There is a $ 5 P.M. DEADLINE for those interested in participating in the Recreation Services RACQETBALL SINGLES TOURNAMENT. A COLUMBIA PICTURE THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will present "The Ladder of Creation, and 'Generation at 7:30 p.m. in 2009 Dyne Hall" VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1065 PAUW SALLY NEWWA FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG CALCULA MIDWEST MUSEUM OF ART 216 S. W. 49th ST. 10am-5pm Midt Sat Sun 7-15 HILLCREST 1 9TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 812-840-8400 Entralling... CHARIOTS OF FIRE HILLCREST 2 5TH AND 10TH AUGUST 11 AM TO 7 PM The mystery of "The Bird" The danger of "P psycho" VENOM R HILLCREST 579-204-1000 THEATRE AND ICON FOUNDATION HEART LAND P.O. Box 388 EDWARD AVE. MAT SAT SUN 2:15 100 Whose life is it anyway R ? CINEMA 2 SEVEN PHONE NUMBER 822-9000 THEY ALL LAUGHED ABNEY MARTHA GILBERT Eat 7:00 - 10:30 Sat. Sun 2:00 2013 AND JUNE FRIDAY 9:45-12:45 MED RQ Pharmacy Footnotes by O. Newton Kin by O. Newton King R.Ph. There is no denying that infectious mononucleosis is a serious illness. However, in most cases it is difficult to distinguish between the after effects. The rate of recovery depends on the patient's psychological outlook as well as diet and lifestyle. If you are not sure of "mono" is not exactly known. As a result, the cure and method of transfusion may not be sufficient to surety. You may be able to get it from kissing or from sharing the same utensils as someone who has the disease as a carrier. KING PHARMACY is a full service pharmacy with a large surgical supply section. It we carry homeopathic medicines, medical supplies, and a great variety of supports and prostheses. We are certified orthopedic nurses. We are happy to make home, hospital, or physician's visit fees. See us at 112 West 6th Street, 2nd Floor, 94-4354 6411-8506; Nine: 6/9 We Honor Student Insurance Claims HANDY HINT: NARRING HINT. Do not participate in contact sessions or supervise with "mono" or other diseases that affect the spice. KING PHARMACY Lawrence Medical Plaza 1112 W. 6th 843-4516 Mon-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-4 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 10. 1982 Foreigners share family life By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter While many students head for the slopes or the beach for spring break, others will be learning about the American family. Foreign students will have the opportunity to live with an American family in either Kansas or Missouri during the break in March. The Homestay Program, sponsored by the Office of Foreign Student Services, is designed to give students from other countries a chance to learn what an American family is like. Diana was an assistant director, said yesterday. "Many of these students are interested in learning how Americans live and in sharing their cultures in return," she said. "It also gives American families the opportunity to learn more about students from different lands and to make new friends." Monday was the first day students could sign up for the 13-year-old program. Stewart said the office is in the process of contacting host families from past years and new families that expressed interest in hosting a student. However, she said, more families are needed to make the program a success. Host families do not have to have students attending KU. student Stewart said the office tries to match students and families who have common interests. The office sends the student's name and an introductory letter from the student to the family, she said. she said. About 35 to 50 students are expected to take part in the program this year. Stewart said. There were about 35 students involved in the Homestay Program last Thanksgiving. There are about 1,600 foreign students from 96 countries enrolled at KU. After the visit, the families and students evaluate their experiences and report them to the foreign student office. The designated time for the stay is March 13-17, but a student may stay longer if the family wishes. The student must have transportation to the home. Steve said. "Students and families who have participated in past homestays have been very positive about the experience." Stewart said. Anyone interested in the Homestay Program should contact Stewart in the Office of Foreign Student Services, 112 Strong Hall or call 864-3617. Debaters take tourney honors The Robert F. Kennedy Harvard University Debate Tournament in Cambridge, Mass., proved easy game for two KU debaters last weekend. Zac Grant, Manhattan senior, and Mark Gidley, Houston junior, took first place in the tournament, in competition with other schools from across the country. Grant said that at Harvard, the debate team was 62 in the preliminary rounds and then went on to win its next four matches to capture the trophy. "We beat some very impressive teams in the tournament," he said. "We beat North Carolina, Northwestern, Tennessee, Georgetown, Dartmouth and others." Individually, Grant finished sixth and cleddy took third. Their combined score was 209. In a tournament at Dartmouth a day teams and shelters Grant and Gidley were the only team to take ten honors at both tournaments. to take top honor a boost for himself, "It was the best weekend that we've ever had," Grant said. While Grant and Gidley were debating in the East, a host of other KU debaters were competing in the Southwest. Lionard Parson, director of the debate team, said that Roger Payne, Sand Springs, Okla., junior, and Paul Leader, Derby junior, won first place in the senior division of the Baylor University Tournament in Waco, Texas. In the junior division, Gary Gainer, Houston freshman, and Eric Christensen, Nampa, Idaho, sophomore, finished third. Two teams from KU tied for fourth place in the junior division. David Lemke, Kansas City, Mio., freshman, and Jim Reed, St. Louis freshman, composed one team; John Andra, Wichita freshman, and Cindy Marcotte, Bend sophomore, composed the other. Parson said he was pleased with the hard performances of the KU debated team. "We had an excellent weekend. What more can I say?" he said. He said the debate team was funded by Student Senate and the KU administration. "The debaters also have to spend much of their own money," he said. The debaters are preparing for the Heart of America Tournament to be held later this month by KU. The tournament has been labeled by some debaters as the best in the country, Grant said. "Side by Side by Sondheim" by Stephen Sondheim Feb. 18, 19, & 20 at 8:00 p.m. Feb. 21 at 2:00 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union "Rats" & "Scenes from Soweto" by Israel Horowitz by Steve Wilmer Feb. 25 & 27, March 3, & 5 at 8:00 p.m. 100 Smith Hall, Religion Bldg. "Taken in Marriage' by Thomas Babe "Taken in Marriage" With KUID, tickets are: $2.50 for one show $5.00 for two shows $7.50 for three shows eb. 24 & 26, March 4 & 6 at 8:00 p.m. General Admission: $15.90 for one show. Bight Room. Kansen Union $7.00 for two shows $10.50 for three shows General Admission: $3.50 for one show College to broaden honors program Tickets on sale now at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union. For more information call 864-3477. For more information call 864-3477. SUA Theater Series Smokehouse Junior level courses will be offered by spring 1983 and both junior and senior level courses will be offered by fall 1983. Smokehouse Our Valentine Weekend Celebration Any Pit BBQ LOG Sandwich (our large Sandwich) Enjoy Coke $3.19 Reg. price $3.75 No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Downtown Lawrence 719 Massachusetts St. Lawrence, Kansas Feb. 10 thru Feb. 14 A junior or senior wishing to belong to the program will have to recommend himself or be recommended as a faculty member, orgran said. Come See Bruce The MOOSE! By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter Katzman said he had to recruit faculty members to teach the seminars and allow students time to free their schedules for them. He said faculty members already were planning their schedules for this fall. Katzman is meeting with the department chairmen so they can determine the impact a faculty member taking time to teach an interdisciplinary seminar would have on the department. Juniors and seniors will be able to take part in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Honors Program starting next year, David Katzman, director of the program, said yesterday. continue to take it more "I think it's a great move," he said. "It gives a lot of people the Jeff Bragalone, Leavenworth sophomore and president of the Lambda Sigma fraternity he needed to know he could continue to take honors courses. "I encourage anyone that's at all interested in learning for the sake of learning and not just in getting a degree to take advantage of these," Bragalone said. "I've really enjoyed the honors classes I've taken." "In an honour course I can assume they're at a more advanced level," Kateman said. "I can cover more information, they can provide better evaluation." Now the program is open to only freshmen and sophomores who come into the program mostly on the merits of their high school performance. This makes it interesting students who improve independently during their college years to experience honor work, Katzman said. Extra-curricular lectures and exchange also would be an important function of the honors program, he said. Katzman said undergraduate research and independent work were two important aspects of honors course work. He said the seminars would put greater responsibility on the student and provide mutual exchange between students and faculty members. O said, "We're expanding to a four-year program to change that thrust," Katzman said. Kaitlan Sousa There are now 450 freshman and sophomore honors students in the program. Sm Honors courses in some departments are available now for juniors and seniors who want to graduate with honors in their field, but the expanded honors program will offer interdisciplinary honors seminars, Katzman said. Students would not be restricted to honors work in their major, but could take honors courses in other fields as well. opportunity to take honors classes who didn't do too well early in college. It's a fantastic opportunity." Enjoy Coke Tuesday, Feb. 16, 3:30 p.m. Room 504 Summerfield Hall Southeast Conference Room Satellite Union Monday, Feb. 15, 3:30 p.m. - Representatives from the KU School of Business will discuss the M.B.A. and other graduate programs in business available to those who do not have undergraduate business training. Attention NonBusiness Undergraduates - Information will be provided and questions answered about admission requirements, programs of study, and job placement at meetings being held: - information is also available at 202 Summerfield, or call 864-3795. room 504 Summerfield Hall DELUXE MAKE A SPRING BREAK SUN ESCAPE! DAYTONA BEACH means the beautiful Whitehite Inn. A spacious high rise resort each room having a private ocean front terrace. Restaurant and cocktail lounge all located on the oceanfront. $11900 ECONOMY - Welcome Party - 8 Days/7 Nights Lodging BOTH PACKAGES INCLUDE: Beach Motel located on the beach. Each room is complete with two double beds, tel- phone and internet. - Welcome Party - Sports Activities - Sports Activities - All Taxes Datyona *Fr* Lauderdale *Key Largo Padie Island *Nassau Bahamas* Bahama Islands Cruise *Mexico* - All Taxes $99.00 FOR INFO CALL OPTIONS INCLUDE: 842-6689 6-10pm person - Side Trip To Disney Wor .CLUDE: lodging ies .CLUDE: To Disney World Roundtrip Bus - Roundtrip Bus Only $10590 SUMMIT TOURY Only $105요 MASTER CHARGE FADS LAWRENCE 717 MASS. 842-9688 MON, SAT, TUE, WED, THU THURS. TILL 8:30 Our Valentine Treat for you! CONSOLIDATION SALE We are consolidating all the winter merchandise from our stores and bringing it to Lawrence for three days only. Feb. 11-13th. Don't miss fantastic bargains like these. Entire stock of winter blouses now $3-5 Entire stock of winter pants now $5.9 All sweaters now $2-7 Weekend Special LEE Jeans $23.99 Entire stock of Sasson Sweatshirts now $9.99 MASTER CHARGE LAYAWAY VISA FADS FASHIONS LAWRENCE 719 MASS. 842-6969 MON SAT 10:30-5:30 TELL 8:30 TOPEKA 122 WASS. 822-2639 FARLAWENCA M-F 10:30-SAT TIL 5:30 TELL 8:30 SUN 1-5 pnts University Daily Kansan. February 10. 1982 1. Margaret Polz, city employee, adjusts one of the flow meters for the Lawrence water supply. Treatment plant quenches city's thirst By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter In a noisy old brick factory near the Kansas River, Calvin Albert mixed more than one billion gallons of water Lawrence residents to drink last year. The oldest of two local plants, it supplies a little more than half of the city's drinking water. Albert is plant supervisor at the city's water treatment plant at Third and Indiana streets. Water for the plant comes straight from the Kansas River, sucked in through the iron grating in a 12-foot concrete cone that pokes up through the bundled against the recent chill, Albert stepped along a low catwalk above a circular concrete tank. The cloudy water had been spiked with a few gallons of water from the city's wells. Insulated by the earth, the well water was warmer and kept this bit of river from freezing. In the circular tank, the largest bits of river sediment started to fall to the bottom. The water was too murky to see clearly and slowly swept the sediment into a pit. Although the treatment tanks are uncovered, Albert rarely finds animals in them. "Sometimes we'll find a cat floating IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 843-9803 in here, or once a possum, but not too often," he said. "But the biggest animals we ever found were a couple of drunk guys swimming in here." The clear water at the top of the tank was drawn away. It gurgled through a series of concrete channels that were encrusted with shards of ice. Albert walked out of a storage shed next to the second holding tank, his boots leaving purple stains in the snow. The color was from potassium permanganate, the first chemical added to the water. Albert went into a large noisy building. A pink funnel vibrating with 70 tons of lime hung from the ceiling, and other funnels, some green, some blue. "It produces oxygen and helps with taste and odor," he said. The funnel ended in a waist-high metal box. Albert opened a tiny door in its side to reveal broken lime dropping onto a conveyor belt The lime helps to soften the water," he said. "If raises the pH, or alkalinity of the water, so we don't deposit cal carbonate and plug up all the lines." He opened another little door in the machine to reveal that the lime had been crushed and moistened. Blades curried it into an oozing batter before it "In a factory, ordinarily, you don't recognize your raw material when it comes out," he said. "Here it's still water." "It keeps anything in the water in suspension so that it doesn't settle out in the system," Albert said. The last thing added to the water is sodium hexameta-ohosphate. The image of a dusty, haggard farmer, with divining rod in hand, searching for some sign of water may persist in rural America. But it is being challenged by the complex machines of geologists. By TOMHUTTON Staff Reporter Search for water is a blast Prospectors for low-lying sources of water now have the advantage because of a technique recently developed by two KU geologists. The new method involves firing .22 caliber bullets into the ground. Don Steele, associate professor of geology, and Ralph Knapp, assistant scientist for the Kansas Geological Survey, have worked for six months to perfect a technique in which the vibrations from a standard .22 caliber bullet are measured when the bullet enters the ground. The vibrations show Staff Reporter USING VIBRATIONS to detect underground resources is not a new technique, Steeple said. In the 1920s oil companies began using vibrations from explosions to discover crude oil beneath the earth's surface. The firing of a rifle uses the same principle but on a much smaller scale. But discovering water is not as easy as firing bullets into the ground, Steeples said. Neither is it as inexpensive. Steepses said the expense of the new method, which lessens the possibility of drilling a dry hole, may be prohibitive for individuals. dings to the American Geophysical Union Conference in San Francisco last December and has received many requests for information since then. "We use one $100,000 piece of equipment that amplifies and filters the vibrations," he said. "It helps us to interpret the findings." "We've had requests for more information from Malaysia, South Korea, Canada, England, as well as from all over the United States," he said. Such initial enthusiasm, indicating a possible future for his technique, pleased Steelees. He presented his preliminary fin- "There is great enthusiasm in having other people request information," Steepsel said. "The more people we talk to with it, the sooner we'll find more uses." where water-bearing rock formations are located within 25 feet below the base of the hill. Other uses already under investigation by geologists for these shallow seismic studies include studies of underground rock formations that support buildings and dams. Archaeologists are also able to use the new technique to discover relics without unsuccessful digging. Russian exhibit displayed at Spencer Books and pamphlets written during the period of Russian history portrayed in the movie "Reds" are now on display in an exhibition at Spencer Research The exhibition focuses on the life of John Reed, an American newspaper reporter who was in Russia during the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. Warren Beatty plays Reed in the recently released movie. For Your Valentine and the Romantic New You MERLE NORMAN The Place for the Custom Fare 701 Mass 841-5324 Michael Gebert, Wichita junior, prepared the exhibit. Gebert, who works in Special Collections at Spencer, said he became interested in the book after someone came to the library and requested to see some of Reed's poems. "I had seen the film and liked it," he said, "and so I started digging for other materials from that time period to see how accurate the film was." After researching the period, Gebert said, he thought the movie "Reds" was fairly accurate. THE EXHIBITION, he said, displays a poem Reed wrote while attending The Third Anniversary of the Victorious ISLAMIC REVOLUTION in IRAN will be celebrated Saturday,February 13,1982 6:00 - 8:00 P.M. "Looks good, Feels good" The haircut is located at 810 W 23rd. We're open 10 a.m to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Hair cuts are by appointment only, please. Call now at 843-2696 for your appointment and every day you'll say your hair "Looks good, Feels good" 810 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas (913) 843-2696 the hairst Jayhawk Room, K.U. Union Film, Speech (English language), Refreshments Theresa Schmidt Announces the Opening of: the haircut with Lee Lane and Mary Traul Elniff. Remember your last hair cut? Look good? But what about the day after? Back to the same old thing (Right)? That’s because your stylist didn’t take the time to show you how to keep that great look between hair cuts. Not at the haircut! At the hairdresser, Lawrence’s finest stylists know how to keep your hair looking great every day. We also carry a full line at Redken hair care products to help you keep your hair its healthiest ALFRED LEE You'll Love Our Style. Headmasters. 809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Reed went to Russia and wrote "Ten Days that Shook the World", a first-hand account of the Bolshevik Revolution. CONSTANTINUS ALEXANDRIA 475-505 AD NOW SHOWING The account has received the praise of many Western historians, Gebert said. ROB CULCZONE AND PENTHOUSE FILMS INTERNATIONAL PRESENT CALIGULA THE MOST EXTRORDINARY PERSONAL EXPERIENCE YOU MAY EVER HAVE! CALIGULA SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE ON PENTHOUSE RECORDS THE ANALYSIS FILM RELEASING CORPORATEX: Varsity While Reed was covering the war in Europe, he became involved with the International Workers of the World and the Socialist Party. Gebert said. The Kansas Union Bookstores The Kansas Union Bookstores are currently paying 6% of total purchases from the fall of '81 (July 1, 1981 to Dec. 31, 1981). These are period 70 receipts. They may be redeemed at the Customer Service Desk at the Main Bookstore or at the Satellite Shop, with your student ID. Period 70 receipts will be redeemed until June 30, 1982. KU. BOOKSTORE Period No. 70 23452/0 101 266 18/16/01 2.78 MUS 2.86 MUS 7.B MUS 7.B MUS 9.10 MUS 7.85 T Harvard University and an article by Reed about U.S. intervention in the first World War. Many happy Return Downtown 843-1065 At the end of the war, Reed was indicted for treason in the United States. He died in Russia in 1920 by typhus and a bullet, being buried with honors in the Kremlin. After graduating from Harvard, Reed quickly became the highest-paid reporter in the United States, Gebert said. He achieved recognition with a series of stories recounting his experience with democracy with revolutionary Pancho Villa. It also includes work by Reed's friends and contemporaries, including a Eugene O'Neill play and pamphlets by Joseph Stalin; Emma Goldman, a Russian anarchist; and Grigor Zinoviev, a Russian communist leader. kansas main union level 2, satellite shop union bookstores ku HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE HARVEST SPACE, 872 N.E. NEW HAMPTON • 8:00 PM - 1:30 PM FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION THE PRESTON MECALL COMPANY 314 N. 3rd 811-6067 COME 'N' GET IT! REG. $4.85 Country Style Chicken Fried Steak served with Salad Mashed Potatoes and Cream Gravy $2.99 $4.85 NOW with this add P NOW with this Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner • Daily Buffet other expire 2/28/82 PAM'S PLACE 2907 W. 6th 841-6844 Mon.-Sat. 6 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday 6 a.m.-8 p.m. Presents TONIGHT SUA FILMS "an exceedingly funny picture. bold, delicate, flaskish逗趣感和Occasional, nightmarish." — New York ZAZIE a film by Louis Malle director of MURMUR of the HEART 7:30 p.m. WOODRUFF §1.50 --- Selling something? Place a want ad Love That Lasts. Love That Lasts. Send The Lovebird Bouquet Valentine's Day, Feb.14. Order Early $17.50 and up 3 sizes available UNIVERSITY FLORAL 2103 N. 9800 D. Terrace Lawrence, KS 66044 (917) 843-6990 MINT STERLING 14K GOLD FILLED CENTENARY OF THE INVESTMENT MUSEUM IN NEW YORK CITY --- Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 10, 1982 Discontinued air service alters free trip flights By LISA GUTIERREZ By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter KU students who won free trips to Mexico last month in a contest sponsored by Texas International Airlines may have to change their flight plans. Trips must now be made by the last day of February, because the airline is terminating its air service to Kansas City, according to Bruce Hicks, staff vice president of public relations for Texas International. "We didn't know we were pulling out of the market at the time of the contest," Hicks said. "In fact, we'd certainly hoped it would turn business aces." The service termination was announced on Jan. 28, five days after the airline gave away 69 trips to Mexico and U.S. territories. The records in Overland Park, he said. TRIPS WERE awarded to the first 50 people who showed up at the record store in bathing suits. Hicks said the Houston-based airline, which has serviced Kansas City since June 15, 1978, terminated its service because of economic reasons. "For some months we have not been boarding as many people as we'd like," he said. "It's never met our expectations." He said the air traffic controller's strike in August had an adverse impact on the service. People now must use their round-trip tickets before services end on Feb. 28. Hicks said. "Fewer controllers means fewer flights," he said. "And in order to do some new飞ying from Houston, we can give us some slips in the least expensive cars." Many of the 50 people who won trips were KU students, he said. Only 28 people have been notified of the changes in flight deadlines and service terminations. Hicks said, because the students had won the tickets, the students who had won the tickets. "They were originally told they had to travel by Feb.28," he said. BUT BECAUSE many were students who had spring breaks during March, the airline required to extend the deadline to April 15, Hicks said. "That was all fine and good until they made a determination a week later to suspend services," he said. Labor officials review KU's affirmative action By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter Labor Department officials are conducting the first review of KU's affirmative action policies, Mike Edwards, director of affirmative action, The Office of the Federal Contract Compliance Program has reviewed specific KU policies before, such as TITLE IX, but has never reviewed KU's affirmative action policies generally, Edwards said. "This is routine. They have been routinely reviewing educational institutions." he said. The OFCC has reviewed, or is in the process of reviewing, all the Kansas Board of Regents' institutions except Kansas Technical Institute, Edwards In January, the OFCP began looking at KU's affirmative action plans and goals to see if they were sufficient. It will also check KU for its implementation of these plans and goals. KU's affirmative action plan includes policies for salaries and benefits, recruitment and selection, and training, transfer and promotions. There are separate policies for administra- tion, unclassified staff and staff staff. The first stage of the review's three-stage process is a desk audit, Edwards in the desk-audit review, the OFCCP reviews the written affirmative action plan, guidelines for hiring, work force analysis, and job group and availability analysis, among other things. Edwards said. "Basically, we're still in the desk audit stage," he said. This stage could take as long as two months. Edwards sent the desk-suited materiality report to the mid-afternoon and expects the office to complete the review by March 1. Then the OFCP will begin an on-site review. Edwards said. During the on-site review, representatives from the OFCCP will spend from several days to several weeks in March interviewing University officials, employees and students. In the final stage, the OFCCP will determine whether changes will have to be made. KUSFC PRESENTS: NEW WAVE HAIRCUTS THE SNOWBS AGAINST THE SLOBBS. Caddyshack Ask for Paul Travis Mon-Fri. 9-8, Sat. 9-4 18O2 Mass 842-3114 Feb. 12 & 13 (Fri. & Sat.) at 7, 9, & 11 p.m. in DYCHE AUD. (next to the Union Tickets: $1.50 seats are limited (next to the Union) SHIRD DIMENSIONS A UNIQUE PROGRAM FOR THE FUTURE PROFESSIONAL LEADERS OF THE AMERICAN JEWISH COMMUNITY The Baltimore institute for Jewish Communication is a leading partner in the research and development of Maryland and the Baltimore Institute College in offering professional education in Social Sciences (M.S.W.) and in Jewish Studies (M.S.W.) placments in Georgia-Washington places in Georgia-Washington make this most annual program make this most annual program Graduates of the institute are now working in reading, writing, States and Heightened awareness and qualified MISS. STREET DELL 641 MASSACHUSETTS Valentine Weekend Special Buy Your Valentine A Sausage Sandwich $1.50 Hot or Mild Enjoy Coke Offer good No cond accepts with this offer. By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter West Library plan delayed Dean Jim Ranz was planning funds for the $23 million library were requested in last year's University legislature but had not been allocated. The Kansas Legislature probably won't allocate planning money for a new West Library this year, the KU dean of libraries said recently. SAMUEL H. ASHER (818)-421-5808 Pie "In the last 100 years this is probably the worst time to be asking for money, when government funnels it is being cut everywhere," Ranz said. Even though the Legislature has not yet allocated any money for the library, he said, it hired the academic staff. The library's Mitchell last year to study the plans. "The study is now in process, and it alone will cost the University $100.000." Ranz said. THE WEST LIBRARY, which is to be built where the military science building now stands, was endorsed by the University administration and the Board of Regents in 1977 when they also endorsed the renovation of Watson Library, he said. It has not been decided where the military science building would be relocated. Watson, he said, is used mainly by students and faculty in the humanities and social sciences; the West Library will be designed for students as well as the sciences of professional school, including the School of Engineering. "Presently, the School of Engineering is trying to raise private mouses to build more space in the new West Library is built." "The engineering library's facilities are atrocious," Ranz said. "The library is very cramped, and the lighting is poor." After the library is built, Ranz said, the engineering library will be turned into classrooms. Enjoy Coke a On the night of Friday, June 19, Mike McAfee looked outside the kitchen window of his trailer house and watched debris blow by. Crisis not gone with the wind By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter "I think it's a tornado," he said to his wife, Susan. Shean helped his house move and explore the land. Staff Reporter Mike Reese said that he left his unharmed sons Jason, 10, and Dustin, 15 months, in the bedroom of their trailer house and walked into the living room where his wife, Jeannie, and son Mike, 14, were trapped under a television and couch. Peach pulled the T.V. and couch off his wife and son. An ambulance arrived 10 minutes later and took his wife and son to the hospital, where they were treated for minor injuries. But although most of the residents and owners of these buildings have recovered, some mental and physical scars linger. People whose homes and businesses were destroyed by last summer's tornado have rebuilt them now. The most severely damaged buildings were 1000 W. 31st St.; 1500s in the area of 27th Street and Lawrence Avenue; K-Mart, 3106 W. St.; Commerce Plaza, Gas and Mini-Mart, 3049 I. St.; Jim Clark Motors, and Jan's Interiors, their Furnishings Inc., 716 Connexit St. Lyman Wiley, president of Jim Clark Motors, 2121 W. 29th St. Terrace, was at a golf course that night when his wife called at about 7:30 to tell him a tornado hit his business. He arrived at his 10-year-old firm to find a destroyed show room, demolished cars and fallen lights and fences. Wiley also began putting things back together as soon as he could. The day after the tornado, the management of Jim Clark Motors, including Wiley, began a three-day 24-hour surveillance of the destroyed car lot and showroom. The surveillance could not stop all the vandals, however, as good ornaments, wheel covers and other parts were removed from damaged cars left in the lot. Wiley said. The first week after the tornado struck was traumatic for the McAfee family. Laundry detergent in the room left its mark on the eyes of Mike McAfee and his son, age 6. The detergent burned 90 percent of their eye coverings, McAfee said, blinding them for two weeks. The two have since recovered their vision, he After the tornado, victims moved their belongings into a storeroom at Gasliight Village and cleaned up what was broken. Some began looking for new homes. By Monday, Tom Fish moved into an apartment at Meadowbrook Apartments. Two months later he moved into an apartment at his home apartment, his present residence. Aster the federal government denied Gov. John Carlin's first request for financial aid on July 11, President Reagan, on the recommendation of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, declared Lawrence a disaster area on July 18. Homeowners were then eligible for loans of up to $260,000—$196,000 from the federal government and $65,000 from the state. The tornado damaged $18 million of property in Lawrence. "I never figured out why," he said. Unlike Reese, most of the owners of the destroyed businesses didn't need financial aid. Most of the trailer houses were insured. Mike Reese wasn't so lucky, however. Because his house wasn't insured, he was given a grant from the state. However, he was denied a federal loan. Jan McCullough found a temporary location for Jan's Interior. Draperies and other furniture are also in use. Roger Flory's gas attendants at the Commerce Plaza, Gas and Mini-Mart were pumping gas within a week. The rest of the plaza opened Sept. 15. K-Mart, the most severely damaged business, with a torn-off roof, was the last business to reopen. Stanley Pittman, made 's own only victim, was in K-Mart. reopening with T-shirts that read. "K-Mart: I survived the 1981 Lawrence Tornado." susan McKelvey, a K-Mart Corp. publicity director, said it was the store manager's decision to sell a local item such as the T-shirts. K-Mart christened its Nov. 19 K-Mart manager Ron Swanns refused to comment on the T-shirts. Hubbel said the T-shirts were only used to us who survived it and didn't get hurt. "I think that K-Mart is trying to capitalize, but I'm not offended" Alicia Fitzgerald. "Fish called the T-shirts a "good gimmick" and a "badge of courage." He said he'd probably wear one if he knew it, moving to move away from Lawrence. Although the victims are in new homes and are back in business, they say they can't completely forget July 19. Susan McAfee still dreams about the tornado. Phil Rankin and Fay Sanders have physical reminders of the tornado as they walk to their home. Rankin, the assistant director of personnel at the University of Kansas, was driving in his car when its windshield caved in. He then alerted fellow Skywarm volunteers of the tornado, broadcasting over his face. As windshield recognized by Gov. John Carlin and the National Weather Service for his heroic warning, has not regained vision in his right eye. Sanders, a custodian for the KU office of housing, suffered a back injury and lost her trailer home during the tornado. She said she still had a lot of pain in her back, which was broken in two places. Sanders is retiring from her job because of her injury, but said she was planning to retire anyway. Effective Listening Program Get the most out of your classes, by remembering more GO Thursdav and Tuesday Two Sessions February 11 and 16 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. of what you hear. For registration and payment of fees contact: The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064. professional Hairstyling for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters Saturday, February 13, 1982 5:00-10:00 p.m., Community Building, Eleventh and Vermont --flowers. Tickets available at the KU Office of Minority Affairs, 324 Strong Hall, the International Club Office, Room 115B, Kansas Union, SUA Office and Sunday OMEKWE-864-6095. An Evening of Entertainment and Involvement In Black History, Arts, and Culture $3.50 for Adults, $2.00 for Children AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION PRESENTS: African Night This week send our FTD Day 4. Happy Valentine's Day Glass make ARTS & juquer B Valer Hearts & Flowers Bouquet. It's romantic. And savs all And says in the things you've been meaning to say. So call or visit us today Because everyentine deserves flowers Valentine's Day is Sunday. February 14. You're sure to capture her heart with the romantic fresh flowers Heart Stick Pin, and exclusive FTD Glass Heart Dish that malt up our FTD HEARTS FLOWERS™ Bougu westRioge FLORAL PHONE 749-2860 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 6TH AND KASOLD helping you say it right. RALEIGH·FUJI·PUCH FTD RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841-6642 We Service All Bikes One Day Repair Service Bicycle Valentine's Day Special Bring your valentine out for a sweetheart parfait! Bocky's Sweetheart Parfaits for 89* Offer good thru Sunday Feb. 14 冰激淋 Bucky's 2120 W. 9th The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Presents The First Edition of Chamber Music The Arts "Chamber music in America can be dated pre- and post-judiillation...The Judiillation is the yardstick against which all other groups are measured..." 2 Juilliard String Quartet 8:00 pm Thursday, February 11. 1982 Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont, Lawrence Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats general Admission/doors open at 7:30 For reservations, call 913/864-3882 Student and Senior Citizen Discounts Available Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission A University Arts Festival Presentation University Daily Kansan, February 10, 1982 ad, "Kwrence Page 11 e th al s haveado asjured. twannis arts. viving to ended," actor Kansas, s wind f l fellow ornado, odsheldshield rankin, and the lis heroic on in his 8-2138 U office curry and the tor- pain of pain in two her job she was Call 864-4358 The University Daily CLASSIFIED RATES one tire two tires three tires four tires five tires six tires eight tires nineteen tires 10 works of word 10 works of word 20 works of word 40 works of word 60 works of word 80 works of word 90 works of word 10 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS Found terms 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 Kranan business office at 843-458. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kanasi will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS POKER AND CHFSS LESSONS. 841-0996. tp KOA Laundromat. Free dry with 75% wash By the Airport. East highway 24. 842-38177 Your name Your love Your life Name Your Flame Write it in wax 843-9593 1405 Mass. WAXMAN THE ETC SHOP 10 West 10th of the Wooly Candy Store) Vintage and classic contemporary clothing-jewelry, purses, hats, dresses and shoes, small kit shoes and skirts. 2-12 Silver Clipper—with KU ID you always get $2.00 off on shampoo-haircut, blowdry Holiday Pin, 25th & 84th, i822-8 2-11 FOR RENT Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf JUDICIES INCLUDED. Large house, appliances and laundry. Call 841-7692. Close to campus. Studiosat atmosphere, International meals, crazy roommates with Christian perspectives looking for six cooperative group members. CULTURES INCLUDE: Large bedrooms. HAMOVER PLACE. Completely furnished, with 6th and 12th on Mass. Only 3 blocks from KU. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your wap. timed by mail or at 842-8110 or 842-8125. gmail.com PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect for roommates features wood burning fireplace, wood-burning stove, water dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen, large laundry room, 9-9-6-30 daily at 2208 Princeton Bldd, or phone 842-275 for additional information. If you need more details, call. Brand new 3-bedroom houses, $245 and $450, $417-379 or $417-725. 2-11 2-Br. apt, on bus route, convenient to shopping. Complete kitchen carpet, draps, central air-heat, garage available. Shown by appointment: Call 641-861-2-12 Bc. Apt., 1st floor of house, near campus and downtown, Available March 1, $200 per month plus 1' utilities. $82-9945. 2-10 Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt. with balcony, pool and outdoor kitchen, foot and water divided. Cleared to campus, and on bus route $36 per month. WALKING BROWN INFRA – 12th & Creedt 82-200 QN CAMPUS. New completely immaculate downstairs room featuring Flexible Bedroom, Free-standing guest age! Located on 13th & Ohio. Only two rooms available. Call 842-355-841 or 842-355-835. Sub-lease 2 Br. apt, complete kitchen carpet-drapes, central air-heat. Call 841- 0968. 2-12 Eloor grades have opened up a farmhouse. No propane bottles—natural gas. 5 rooms + hair. In good condition, 15 minutes from ground. Ref. required. 704-8938. 2-12 800 nm. Barge 2 Barium. In an older house at 1017 Bloody Island. Available Feb. 1. Only 225 g. mo. with a 200 g dp. Utilities 649. 4414. Abstraction gel. Call 649- 4414. DESPERATE—MUST SUBLEASE 6 mo. old 1 bedroom apt. Call Andy at 841-6080 and about ask #88 2-12 Cozy 3 Bdm, unfortuned apt. in older house at 314 W 11th (14th & Tern.) available now. Only 275.00 km with 290.00 mile landlord. Absolutely no charge. Call 749-4141. **2-10** Large, modern 18-inch, unfurished gpt, in apt 8+ xplain at 1201 Roche Island, available now. sow, in apt 160.00 moss, with 200.00 dep. sow, in apt 150.00 moss, Absolutely kooky! Call 794-4941 2-10 Warm peaceful room in house well furnished. Easy to study, reduced for travel. Don't pass this one up from school back from Union. Old habits necessary. 2-10 Roommate Wanted. Large, old house. 12th & Ohio. $75 a month rent plus 1/5 utilities. Phone 841-8104. 2-12 Two bedroom apartment, two utility, two blocks from KU. 3 blocks from town central, air equipped kitchen, carpet and draps. $250/month. 104 Tenn. Call 842-3424. 1-212 Female coompatant wanted *Jawkower* horses 2. rent, utilities incl. Call 842-3322. 2-10 FACULTY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3 br. house, 2712 University Drive. All appliances. Rental: $45/month. #84-6300 84-6300 For sublease. 2, B. apt. $310 + elect. Available now. Telephone: 841-818-381 2-22 Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in newer fourplex. 1 room, 1 bath, carpeted, wooded. 220 per month. 843-8571 or 1-782-2716. 2-19 Summer sublease: 6-1 to 8-15/2 BR/1900A Kansas City/842-4513 DUPLEX-GREAT LOCATION 809 Ohio, 2- birm. stove, refrigerator, $250 per month. Available now: 1-796-6853. 2-15 3 bedroom apartment. Close to campus, carport, off street parking, no pets. Referees, water, electricity paid $200 a month. $200 deposit. 842-5704. 2-18 An apartment Roommate Wanted (Female) One Bedroom and Loft. Split $255 Rent and Electricity. Call 749-2454. 2-12 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! The Western Civilization notes make sense to use them-13. An study guide, makes sense to use them-14. An study guide, ar炭ation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization availing these materials." Critter, 19. and Read Books Alternator, starter and generator specialists, Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-9069, 3800 W. 6th. 26" Motocast 12 speed bicycle - Red-nk motor, pregr and crank 200.00 must include: $89.99 FOR SALE Jim Bluebush Bike racks- for sale $129.00 - $722.00 812 - $749.00 DCM type stereo speakers. $25/pair. Call 843-2641 after 5.00. 2-12 63 GMC Truck V8 4-speed, new paint job Dependable. runs well. The Presson McCall Company, 314 North 3rd, 841-606-2 2-12 T-aler for sale or rent, 8' x 22' homemade, $1500 or $130 month, 843-5341, 2-11 FOR SALE YASICAH FI-51m SLR- FOR SALE YASICAH FI-51m SLR- for sale release $299.00 Call ID: 842-7744 release $299.00 Call ID: 842-7744 Pair 3–way Floor speakers with 10" woofer's $2–pay HELEC-televis 80-watt bwckboard Helec-televis 80-watt bwckboard Cannan mount lens with case and FILTOR- tube. $750. Call 411-8400. Ack for Chris or Bob. B-12 Brand new gold carpet, 1-8 x 12 or 4 x 6, 864-1670. 2-10 Hey video game buffs! Home video game system. Fairchild. Nine cartridges plus unit. $200.00. 843-8756. 2-12 Guild Electric Guitar solid body, Schalers, Humbucking P/U Handdell case $200 Fender Head, 50 watt $100. 749-2464 2-15 1975 Opel Manta-2-door, fuel injection, new interior, automatic, air conditioned. Good condition. $1590 - 864-2004. 2-12 For Sale--Turntable, 8-track, AM-FM Stereo with speakers. Recent tune-up $150.00. 842-8836 2-15 1958 Mobile Home, 14 x 70, 3 bdms, At- stove + refrigerator, 7 x 10 shed x 10$, Lot rent is 65.00/month, water paid 843-1758 after 5:00 p.m. Ski boots - men-sizes 9 with carrier, like new $25.00. Phone 843-8224 evening. 2-12 Minolta 260 camera. 328 must sell. 180 mm lens. taxi buses 441-2186. Must sell. best 2-10 takeouts 841-2186 FOUND A set of keys, 6 keys on the ring, were found Thurs., Feb. 4, between Potters Lake A set of keys, 6 keys on the ring, were found Thurs. Feb. 4, between Potters Lake & Spencer Research Library. For information: 843-4679 9-10 Black white Female pup- with red collar. Call 641.6385. 2-10 Found at 140 Nenh Tenn. Sec of keys in black leather case. Call 842-8778 2-11 Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Personable. Contact Dan at the Exchange. 842-9593. 3-12 Person interested in doing old house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable of owning tools and to participate in cooperative living. Call Darryl 841-836-8386, tt Use your spare time to earn money for those "extra" Aggressive self-starters - only Field of total health and fitness. For appointment, call 842-8870. 2-11 Stockbuck trainee. College grad—Exciting opportunity for hard work, honest, amitious and enthusiastic individual. Req P.O. Box 151 Red Bank, N.C. 67018. (610) 257-8934 SUMMER CAMP JOB'S in the Northeast For a free listing, send a self-addressed, stamped (53) envire to Midwest Camp (Midwest Camp) at 804-261-7900, HEIGHTS MO 60343. 2-12 OVERSEAS JOBES~Summer/year/ear Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia, All Fields, $500-$1200 monthly, Sightseeing, Traveling, Bc Box & Bc-1-K-3, Com- land, Mar CA, 92625 CRUSIS WORKS, New York, instituctori, Office Counselors, Carnegie, Worldwide; Counsellors, Nassau, New York, OPENINGS, OPENING GUIDE TO CRUSIS WORLD, 153 box 609, Sacramento, 912-748-2626. JOBS IN ALASKA* Summer/year-round. High pay $800-2000 monthly. All. 1982 Employer lists, information guide $4.95 P.O. Box 60152, Milisay, WA 94088 94088 2-12 Student Hourly. Work Study. Clerk Typist. $3.35 per hour, 8-12 hours per week. Starting immediately. Call or come by the Assistance Center: 644-6044, 121 Siding St. 2-12 Work at a girls camp this summer. Positions are available in the following areas (WSI and SCI certificate): Horse Program Crafts Facility, Contact Kaw Valley Girl Girl Camp, Call 312-973-3100, weekdays 660644, or call 912-373-3100. wednesday and friday morning at the Montgomery High School alumni meeting Thursday. Friday, February 18th at the Montgomery High School alumni meeting HOLY MARY HILL CAMPUS SUMMER CAMP COUNSELORS. Overwinter Mountains has openings for recreational campers to participate in activities and hiking trips. art/crafts, pioneering, music, photography, drama, dance, general counselors, information avonov Rosen, Point O'Pines Camp, 221 Harvard Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 210 Harvard, Swarthmore, PA 210 Clerk/typist position available for Mon- RESEARCH ASSISTANT/PROGRAMMER Supportive Educational Services. To develop and maintain these require programming; in coordinate data collection and to do documentation of designs which provide for evaluation of program outcomes, reply to Michael Bryant analysis outcomes, reply to Michael Bryant analysis outcomes. LOST ORGT FEMALE CAT -Calice with grey and LOST orange tiger markings, white paws, neck. Brown flee crayons. Mild face milk-jane. Blue sclera 14th and 15th ROW. REWARD 81-440-786, 86-394-38 2-11 NOTICE Get back in the Boogie in your own music of. Music, Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and theory lessons. All levels. teach times Music 181-0817. Call Kurt at Music 181-0817. 2-16 Athletic Women and Men—the KU Crew team is recruiting new rowers. Coach Cliff 841-5587 2-11 PERSONAL MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tf Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom mads portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio, 749-1611. tf Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-161. **tf** Skillee's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Willford Skillee Endaly: 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tf SKI THRPS SKI THRPS SKI THRPS SKI THRPS WINTERKAMP, DILLON AND OTHERS. Economical packages every day at school breaks. Call Ski Etc. 841-8568 today. Select you party outfits early. Barb's "and Hand Rose, 842-476-511. Indiana." A sweettheart portrait for Valentines Day turns a simple thought into a lasting memory. Swells Studio 749-1611. **2-12** you are my Valentine my on-ly Val-en-tine Bring this card to third floor Bailey Hall the 10th thru the 12th and win 1 free-local Singing Valentine with the purchase of any in- or out-of-state call Sponsored by M.T.S.A. --schneider Wine & Keg Shop - The Brest supplier of strong kegs, 1610 W. 23rd. c. The Kegger—Weekly Specials on kgs!! Call 841-9454-1610 *王 23rd.* to tf Valentine Parties~50% formal, suits, tuxes, tails, shoes, jewelry, hats. Well we'll help you put together your outfit. Barb's two Hand Rose. 511 Indiana. 842-746-2. 2-11 TUTORING-MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER-SCIENCE Call: 841-499-0968 B.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics, or call 841-475-176 (ask for Robert). tf GREEN'S CASE SALE. LONG NECK PABST $6.49, LONG NECK BUSCH $7.99. GREEN'S 10W WEST 23rd. 2-12 OPTIMIST'S '82 2 WEEKS ONLY Available SPECIAL STUDENT Jathaw Bookstore DISCOUNT or call Jeff 749-2111 OPTIMIST'S 62 COUPON BOOK Over $950 In Values Don't just lend a song or a bunch of hot air (Balloons) Seed a personalized Love Note (Noodles) Send a last meal a good attempt). Call now for a new delivery and performance. 2-12 6888 Learn how to learn about microcomputers, using systems, word and data processing. Build your own software, word and data processing. With 9:00 am to 3:00 pm Tuesday and Thursday, Monday to Friday. Mail $250 to: Mass. St. Lawrence. Call 842-9295 - 1218 SKI STEAMBOAT CHEAP: $33 per day, per person, inc. lifts, 4, 6 or 8 guests. Call Collect (303) 879-6868. 2-15 Come STROKE IT with the KU Crew team. Recruiting now. Call Conch Cliff Elliott 841-5587. 2-11 Get a head start on your spring break fun at T.A.N. Ltd. Call 641-6232 for appointment or additional information. 2-10 Tuxedo—20% off, Burby's Second-Hand Rose. 155 Ivory Collection. 929-8746. 2-12 NEED CREDIT: Get Visa-Mastercard, no check. Check Guaranteed. It's simple, legal. Free details! Write: Credititlon, Box 334-FR, NY. N580768. Effective Listening Programs - Two sessions. February 11 and 12, 7:30 to 9:30 pm. Come to the Student Assistance Center 121 Strong for registration and fee payment. 2-11 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- tt 843.4821 Have a Heart! We Help Heart Survivors through the Nation! At the United Union for 256 Feb. 10, 8:30-3:00 All Proceeds will go to the American Heart Association --schneider Wine & Keg Shop - The Brest supplier of strong kegs, 1610 W. 23rd. c. PARTY!!! Only 80 rooms left in Indy for the party and we have ween. Join us for the party at PARTY inn, Summer for the party. Must be married & res. to Lawrence Travel Hotel 841-211-89. 2-10 EVERY CAR IN STOCK 99.95 $ A MILE FREIGHT ON MILES FREE THEN ONLY 86 A MILE Special weekends rates. We are now leasing trucks & vans. We accept Master Card VISA. Located at 703 W. 9th Lease one of our cars, It is the cheaper ther- a bus fare home! Reserve your car now, for moving break! LEASE A LEMON 749-4225 SURGICAL SCRUB SUITS Thinking of marriage? Involved in a serious debate, Ms. O'Brien is a group for Jews and non-Jewish parthers. Partners对她 Cipan Capier. Episcopal Chaplain 864-3948. or Ellen Kart. 821-3948. Chaplain 864-3948. Make your next party dance or function event. Call 812-657-1000. CO. The sound professional. For dotel call 814-0289 or write P.O. Box 1205. Lines: KS 2-10 Pants or Shirts $10 each Want to make great money while going to school? Do a job in your living group. Work for your own and make a good investment. Sound system and book-audio equipment are essential. Only serious Inquiries please. **2.12** Gift Shop Lawrence Memorial Hospital Y.F. 'imn't sure what V.O. is—Y.F. never SMACKED—The only thing Drag about Y.F. is his profs 2-12 Hurt your back or neck when you slipped on the ice? Don't delay proper treatment. For modern chiropractic care call Dr. Johnson at Accepting Love Conegium, 2-125 CG Jongnam Ave. 2-12 325 Maine 50r draws-10-12 Monday-Thursday. The Exchange 3406 1086 2-11 Order your singing Valentines on third floor Bailey—Feb 8-12 between 10:30-3:00. Sponsored by Music Therapy Student Asso. 2-12 It may be cold, but you can warm someone's day with a VALENTINE'S DAY SPECIAL EDITION BALLOON-A-GRAM. Call and arrange for delivery 841-5848. 2-12 Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center. 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064 2-11 THE EXCHANGE A Private Club Fire Place • Videos Great Drinks at Great Prices 2406 lowa Memberships Available **SPECTRUM OPTICAL - Do you have a screw** Broken lens? Broken lenses? Close one day service on lins in most cases. Open m. e. M. c. 4113/4114. E 7. 18 2-12 Engineering students freshmen then seniors; you do remember how to do anything but engineering. The Engineering Seminar 8 am p.m. on Thursday; and the Engineering Seminar 8 pm. on Friday; and the Engineering actually laugh, dance, and have fun. But hiring them is not easy. Tickets in Learned Hall; Deans Office; Dept. Offices; or by 12:30 pm. PARTY FAOVRS—glassware, sportwear, High quality, low cost. Call for St. Pai's Day spectals. University Photography 843- 2-15 SPRING BREAK MAZATLAN $188 Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, 210th and 2-26 Let me handle all your travel HOLIDAY TRAVEL 841-8100. 2449 Iowa Drafting, (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience; competitively prized. Also Script Lettering for certificates. 841-7941. 3-8 In the Holiday Plaza Guitar Lessons: Learn to play now from experienced teacher. Reasonable. Call Mark 841-2695. 2-12 Shopping Center CHEAP RECORDS. Some new, some used. Fri, Feb. 12 noon-5. KJHK 2-12 31/2 $3\frac{1}{2}$ self service copies now at ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th and Iowa 842-2001 Collectors records: Zep, Floyd, Wohre, Who, 843-5826 after 3. 2-15 Uniting Nations EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 25e Draws with 1.00 cover at Ichabod's 2-10 Professional tutoring in COMPUTER SCIENCE. Private terminal facilities Group rates available. Call John 749-3620 2-11 Wow, you ought to see our hookers, price just right, you'll get snookered. 9:00-3:00 on Wed. 75s each are all you pay. The Sanctuary. 2-10 Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 846-0464. 2-11 TYPING It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. If YOU ARE NEEDED! Monroe Central Committee is looking for commitment Christian field in working with students in a related field and for a two or three year voluntary service term. Wants to offer opportunities all over the world waiting for applications. health and nutrition, agriculture and MCC representative will be interviewing on January 12 in Abeve B in the Union. **2-15** TYPING PLUS. Thes, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling. English proficiency. Foreign language. American B1-812-6244 Experienced typist. Torm paper, papers, these are all handwritten in ink and will convey spelling, writing speed, and will correct spelling. 430-824-7544 Rapid Reading Workshop- five sessions. February 17, 22, 24. March 8, 9-10am. Come to the Student Assistance Center for help. For registration and fee payment. 2-16 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, mull-correct Selective Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tf All kissed Kyle McNorton! All kissed Kyle McNorton! 2-10 Experienced typist. Theses, term papers, ete. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf Z. Frissbee. I need a ride to and from South Padre island for Spring Break. Will share driving gas and beverage. Cailor 864-684-484, 3-16 Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. IBM. B9见p. 9月4-2647. Ann Dt Walmers Unite, Saturday Night. Don't forgo your sleep if you want to sleep overnight, or if you dawn without our underwear. Try in-you-lit! love it Proheadhugger, HUG. M.S., Kev the Row, 210-438-7955. Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting selecric. Call Donna at 842-2744. tf Experienced typet -thesis, dissertations, papers mine. IBM correcting selectric. Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf RIVER CITY WOMEN'S HEALTH COLLECTIVE is a group of campus and community colleges where we are collegiate women health health. If you are interested; call us at 718-254-3090 or visit www.women'shealth.com If you can help attend our February meet-up at 7 p.m in the Room, Union. Room 101. Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric, Elite or Pica. 842- 5644 2-26 QUALITY TYING: THERM, Manuscripts, Dessertations; IBM Selectric; Girl Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 please. TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 411-699-8898 (t) B.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics) or call 841-4716 (a) KAFT, M. for ABET). tf Get that job with a professionally prepared resume by a local corporate recruiter. Learn the latest job hunting techniques. 841-5664 2-14 WRITING A RESUME? What to say to say to say! 17. Stop by The House of Uber and Uber to see what it is like on resume for Uber. Uber 838 Bustermouth-9-8 3-9 Sat.-NOON Sun-3 TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-5675. tf SERVICES OFFERED FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. If rm Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, letters, legal, etc. Deg 834-9592 2-10 EXPERIENCED TYPIST would like to type experience. 841-8525 2-15 Professional typing. Dissertation, thesis. Resume, letter, legal, ete. 843-952-9891 www.pressrelease.com Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping their thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 842-2081 for more info. 2:36 Quality typing and word processing avail- able. Encore Copy Corp, Copy 328, 882-2001. Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied Call evenings: 841- 7915. 2-18 TYPNING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Correction, Sellectric, full-time ttyp, spelling correction to composition assistance. Emergency service service. 841-2607. -38. Former medical research secretary will type term papers, theses, books. Call Nancy 841-5802. 2-23 WANTED Female roommate to share large 2-bdrm. Permit non-smoker.请 quiet, studious, grate.1730 plus jy. until. On bus route. Keep trying.Call 811-456-2000. Keep trying. 3 bdm, dplx, digax, putio, fireplace, micro- wire, d/w, w/c, e cable, and w/d hookups, 155 mo + 1/3 use, on bus route. 842-0361. 2-11 Roommate to share modern 2 bedroom apartment 3 blocks from campus. 12-room a month + utilities 843-8628 Jane 2-17 Non-mooking male to share fully furnished 2 bdrm. duplex; $75/month + 1½ utility Close to campus; call after 7 pm @ 843-5815 2-10 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment, 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 + ½ utilies. 749-2438 2+12 Non-smoking female to share 3-br. house, close to campus. 83.33 + 1/3 util. 841-9779. No pets. 2-12 Wanted Romaine to share a 4-bedroom bungalow Wanted Romaine to share a 4-bedroom bungalow 2123 FOX CIRCLE, Miami, FL 33128 Matt Matz 842-688-6980 Sull-have 2 bedrooms apt on bus route. Move in 2 days low price. Matt 842-143-483 or 842-143-485. People who want to send a unique Valentine's day gift, Fill it with your own message and fill it with a special edition Valentine's Day Balloon-a-day. 2-12 *Catering* 2-12 1- to 2 share 3 BH room. Prefer female, non-HR. Requires & mississippi. Eyes 749-3300-128 1- to 2 share 3 BH room. Prefer female, non-HR. Requires & mississippi. Eyes 749-3300-128 Female wanted to share 2 bedroom furnished apt. $125 mo. + ½ utilities. Call 841-8241 Car Pool from Shawnee Daily. M-F 7-30- 7:30 - 6:19, 5:19-8:00 2-10 Established band healing bass and key- board harmonica. Call 749-8018 or 842-8641. Work with Bach, Mendelssohn, and Female roommate (to share two bedrooms) 1000 square feet, 824 sq ft, 1200 acre, 4 months¹, utilities 841-4451 - 616 ¹ www.moisture.com $100 a month + $25 for a roommate for furnished apt. $110/month Roommates for furnished apt. downstairs. Call 842-7900, keep trying. 2-11 Roommates needed for a 2 bed apartment. No deposit needed and on the bus route. "all for more detail Bob 746-3832. 2-16 Roommate wanted to share 2 bdmr. apt. No deposit or lease. $75 plus I$_2 utilities. 842-7422. 2-16 "Happy Say Valentine's Day" ♥ ... in the special Valentine's classified section of the Kansan The first 15 words are $2.25 plus 2c for each additional word Say it in a display for $4.00 per column inch All Valentine's messages must be in the Kansan office (118 Flint) by 5:00 February 10. Sports Page 12 University Daily Kansan, February 10, 1982 'Hawks lose tough one By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor The Kansas-Missouri game last night was an instant replay of a game held less that three weeks ago. Once the Tigers got the lead in the second half, they went into a stall, holding for a foul. The ball went into the net on 000 seconds. In the two teams' last meeting in Columbia, Missouri did the same thing and beat the other team. JUST LIKE the last encounter, the Tigers were led by senior forward Ricky Frazier. Frazier, who was celebrating his 36th birthday, scored two and 10 of Missouri's 12 points in half ball. Frazer, despite being sick for the last 10 days, hit all eight of his shots from the floor and all four from the free throw line. His two free throws to the basket in Missouri up 42-8, a聘 KU could not overcome. "Our only real problem defensively was stopping Ricky Frazier," Kansas Coach Ted Owens said. "We had some problems covering the net, and Ricky was able to take advantage of it." With 12:27 remaining in the game and Missouri leading 3834, he took a time out. After a timeout, he went to work on it. "BASICALLY, the is to keep them away from the basket (referring to KU's defense)." Missouri Coach Norm Stewart said about the stall. "We wanted to keep them away from the basket so that we'd have a little more opportunity to get it to the basket." *When they KU) stood packed in there 15 feet from the hole, we we're not going to get the good knob.* The reason the Jayhawks stayed packed into their zone early in the second half was that co-captain Tony Guy and center Brian Martin had each picked up four fouls. "With Brian Martin and Tony Guy in four trouble, I was not unhappy with Missouri's stall." WITH 12:03 LEFT in the game, Martin's team scored against Gaye, and it closed the gap from Guye and him, closing the gap to 7:58. Frazier's 12-foot jumper put Missouri up by four. Jeff Dishman, who finished with 10 points, tipped in a missed shot by Tad Boyle to cut the lead back to two. David Magley, who had 7 points and 2 rebounds, put the Jayhawks within two, 42-40. Magley, after blocking Marvin McCrary's free throws with 3-27 left by hitting one of two free throws with 3-27 left. Although there was no more scoring in the game, it didn't action gave Martin a steal with 1:12 left gave KU a chance to take the lead. HOWEVER, Magley misfired on a jumper with 50 seconds left on the clock. When Missouri missed three free throws within 10 seconds the Jayhawks had one last shot. The Jayhawks chance went awry when, with seven seconds left, the ball was slapped out of Mark Summers' hands and a mad Steve Siliconowicz came up with the ball. The last play was designed to go to Guy. "It's tough to lose two games such as we have to Missouri." Guy said. KANSAS 205 MISSOURI 3 offers the following Missouri forward Ricky Frazier dribbles around Kansas guard Lance Hill as KU's DJ Dishman looks on. The Tigers down the jayhawks, 42-41. Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS. Eastern Conference Team W L W L Pct. GB Boston 21 34 17 14 0.58 Philadelphia 24 34 192 1% Washington 24 24 560 11 % New Jersey 24 24 500 10 % New York 22 27 458 13 Milwaukee 23 14 702 Detroit 19 17 682 %13 Indiana 19 19 622 %13 Illinois 20 20 417 %13 Chicago 20 20 372 %13 Cleveland 11 16 239 %13 Western Conference San Antonio 30 17 638 Denver 25 22 452 Houston 25 22 452 Uskh 15 31 328 14½ Kansas City 15 31 328 14½ Dallas 15 32 394 Pacific Grasslands Seattle 24 13 723 Los Angeles 34 13 708 % San Francisco 24 15 723 Golden State 26 20 543 % Phoenix 24 20 543 Phoenix 24 20 543 North Carolina 24 13 723 Kansas City 24 20 543 20 % YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Jayland Angeles 130, Atlanta 117 Boston Boston 125, New York 124 Brooklet 128, Chicago 123 Washington 122, San Antonio 118 Detroit Detroit 114, New York 105 Team Team W L W. Pct. GR Missouri Missouri 9 2 750 2 Oklahoma State Oklahoma State 5 3 625 3 Oklahoma State Oklahoma State 5 4 600 4 Nebraska Nebraska 3 4 400 4 Oklahoma Oklahoma 3 6 333 25% Kansas Kansas 3 6 233 15% Louisiana Louisiana 2 8 111 7% Number. Number in parentheses indicates UFT ranking. Missouri (4) 42, Kansas 41 Hockey Montreal 16 11 12 7 256 158 149 Boston 31 11 17 12 224 169 78 Buffalo 29 17 19 212 172 67 89 Quebec 17 20 19 214 172 67 89 Hamburg 16 14 13 182 182 233 46 | team | W | L | T | G | FG | GA | Pts. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Philadelphia | 28 | 10 | 6 | 641 | 172 | 74 | 14 | | Philadelphia | 25 | 11 | 6 | 218 | 188 | 74 | 13 | | Yankees | 25 | 21 | 8 | 390 | 212 | 56 | 14 | | Yankees | 25 | 21 | 8 | 390 | 212 | 56 | 14 | | St. Louis | 18 | 11 | 8 | 209 | 189 | 32 | 19 | Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference British Diphone Minnesota 22 17 16 18 234 200 60 St. Louis 22 17 16 18 234 200 60 Washington 20 16 13 14 209 254 50 Chicago 20 16 10 12 249 254 50 Toronto 20 16 10 12 249 254 50 Calgary 16 19 10 14 214 250 42 Campbell Conference Sydney City 15 23 26 27 28 29 Edinburgh 30 24 18 10 313 227 80 Calgary 30 24 18 10 313 227 80 Vancouver 18 36 11 198 200 94 Los Angeles 18 36 11 198 200 94 Chicago 18 36 11 198 200 94 MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Soccer MISL STANDINGS Team W 15 L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 15 16 5 730 - Baltimore 15 16 727 - New York 13 5 722 1 Buffalo 11 11 380 1 Cleveland 8 11 330 1 Philadelphia 7 18 364 9% New Jersey 7 14 363 9% All-Star Game Wales Conference 4, Campbell Conference 2 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 10 3 878 Wichita 13 10 878 % 8% Dover 10 11 798 % 8% Memphis 10 14 417 10% 14% Phoenix 8 14 417 10% 14 Kansas City 10 18 250 10% 14 25 MISSOUR SUMMIT 23 Ricky Frazier, center, Mark Summers and Jon Sundvold all go for the loose ball that killed Kansas' last chance last night. Steve Stipanovich picked up the loose ball with 3 seconds left to ice the game. JOHN EISELE/Kansan Staff etc. Intramurals Basketball YESTERDAY RESULTS Greek Men Mexican No Greek Letters. 54 buckets, 38 pounds Independent Met Run & Gum #57, Write Up #42 Aransas州 64, The Silvers 33 Florida State 12, The Rangers 26 Pam Mem. Doorbuster 26 Longshus 33, LEO 33 Kernan's Toads 2, Mac Crush 19 The Floor Sweeps 40, Warriors 38 Kernan's Toads 2, Mac Crush 19 Independent Men Rec.B Seale2 7 Tylwhackers 6 Busch Leagurs 46, Sagrubsh Celtics 27 The Syndicate 50 The Attachments 20 Kimbo 39 Kyle 15 Your Mother 2 Gonda (Fart II) 4 Allegnacht 34, E M. Blue 21 Carpenters 48, Garment H-attlers 30 Kooper 42 Kyle 15 Thomas sets sights on winning NCAA title Greek Men Rv MIKE ARDIS The meet was over for all practical purposes, and the KU women's swim team had it wrapped up. In the final event, the 400-yard freestyle relay, Coach Gary Kempf had switched members of the 'A' and 'B' relay teams and both fell behind. Sports Writer Tammy Thomas, swimming the last leg for the 'A' team, began to make a move on the others. In four lengths of the pool, she had made up a large cap and finished fourth. "That was a hell of a swim," Kemp said. THE FIRST PERSON of a reay team has the task of getting the team into first place, into another team. But Thomas likes to swim last, the position with the most pressure of winning or losing the game. He usually does it with a side step. "I perform well under pressure," she said, shrugging her shoulders. In her best event, the 50-yard freestyle, Thomas swims in the wake of another swimmer, Jill Sterkel, who attends the University of Texas. Both are 2; both are juniors. Sterkel, until January, had not been beaten in either the 50-meter or 50-yard freestyle. East Germany's Caren Metschuck beat Sterkel in an international meet. "To swain against her is an honor," she said. "When I swain against her I get intimidated and I wake up." When Thomas swam against Sterkel in Austin this year, Thomas didn't look at her before the rain. "I KNEW I IF I looked over at her I would be intimidated by her," she said. "I swarm to close but her I thought she was further ahead of me. When I looked up at the results, I couldn't believe An athlete's fame is fleeting, and a swimmer's even more so. Thomas is well aware of this. Rec B J-Fry 42, Pickers 8 The Maxed Duelers 40, The Cap 36 Lancers 2. The Scoops 12 Arbisoned 30, H, Skywalker 1 Fj B 39, Mudhens 31 Milton 33, Mushroom Machine 12 Art Bryant 81, K Bear Ballers 25 Bridgewater, Great White Hope 10 "This is it," she said of her chance to get recognition. "But out you're never never." You say. Your team's everyone. You're four years away. At 6 foot 1, Thomas stands out among swimmers. She said her height had never bothered her and at times it had been an advantage when the other swimmers had to look up at her on the "It kind of scares me. I've only got one more year, it's been part of me for so long." After next year Thomas will go to school at the University of Kansas Medical Center where she Last week the NCAA released the best times recorded in meets this year. Thomas was tied for second with a time of 23.4 in the 50-yard freestyle, and was picked first. Thomas finds time to believe "THAT REALLY surprised me," she said. "I thought. Oh, they must have made a mistake." our minds. But I have a lot of confidence," she said. "I'm pretty hard on myself. I get disappointed with my performances. A lot of times I have to keep my goals in sight." At one point last year Thomas was ranked seventh. She said part of the reason she had trouble believing her success was her attitude toward herself. Thomas sets her goals in terms of times rather than places. "I don't like to set place goals," she said. "That's a way of limiting yourself. Only at meets like the Big Eight, where places are in important for your own sense of what to think about it. And I always look at the times." "EVER IF I would break 50 in the 100 'I'd probably be hard on myself." Thomas said. even then I took a picture of Thomas. Thomas said her goal was to break 50 seconds in the 100 freestyle, something few swimmers have accomplished. Kempt said Thomas has not gained the attention she may deserve because only top officers have been charged. "We're not in what people consider the prime swimming area," he said. "Tummy really hasn't felt that tight." This year, Thomas will get chance when she swims the 50 freestyle in the NCAA, along with other events. She has a good chance to win the 50 freestyle. Sterkel and the Texas team will This is the first year the NCAA is offering championships in women's sports but not all schools such as Texas will participate in the AIAW championships. "Tammy has a lot of talent. She wants to swim well. Swimming is very competitive and you have to look at people better than you like she looks at Sterkel." WHEN THE IDEA of winning the NCAA is brought up, Thomas brews in with a smile. "I've thought about it," she said. "It." something I wish for. I don't know if I believe it for a couple of days. It would have to sink in." But she has mixed feelings about not competing against Sterkel to win the championships. "It would make me feel good to swim against her, but to win would also make me feel good." Thomas will probably face Sterkel twice next year—once in a dual meet, and a few days later in an individual match. Although Thomas has watched Sterkel and her race times throughout the season, Thomas said she did not know her opponent personally. "I don't know if she knows who I am," Thomas said. "I've said hi' to her and smiled at her, but I've never talked to her. I don't know if I'm ready to New tied for second in the nation, Thomas has but one more year to make her mark. She approaches it cautiously, not sure if she's ready for it or deserves it. She looks at the wake ahead of her, and wonders if she can catch up and move ahead into the house. P KU swimmer Tammy Thomas adjusts her cap before last Saturday's meet against Arkansas. Thomas is tied for second in the nation in the 50-yard freestyle. Kansan Staff icked up believe it k in." not com- mionships. n against el good," vice nextays later el and her mas said ly. Thomas but I've ready to omas has . She ap ready for her, and ahead into KANSAN Thursday, February 11, 1982 Vol.92, No.94 USPS 650-640 University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily s. Thomas TRACEY THOMPSON/Kansan Staff In freezing temperatures, Craig Rice attempts to round up his horses at Westermain Farms in north Lawrence. Westermain is owned by KU ma. professor Paul Moster. Fights in Towers prompt tighter patrol By JAN BOUTTE and BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporters Recent fights at the Jayhawker Towers prompted the KU director of housing yesterday to ask for additional security patrols from the KUpolice department. J. J. Wilson, director of housing, met with Jim Denney, director of KU police, to discuss possible solutions to the recent fighting at the Towers. Wilson and Denney agreed that the KU police would be patrolling the Towers this weekend, while police and housing officials worked on a more permanent solution. During the past three weekends, KU police were called to the Towers twice because of fights that broke out at private parties. "Somebody got beered up and did something they wouldn't have done ordinarily," Wilson said. Early in the morning on Sunday, Jan. 24, police responded to a call concerning a fight in Tower A. Several students were badly bruised and one student was injured. Police from Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. After investigating the incident for two weeks, KU police sent reports to the Douglas County district attorney's office, where a decision would whether charges should be filed. Denney said. Last weekend another fight broke out during a party in Tower A. No notice report was filed. These two fights and other incident led to his decision to ask for increased police patrols, But Denney said extra police patrols of the Towers would strain his already short-handed force. Because of the extra work load caused by basketball games, KU officers now work 44 to 48 Denney said that a solution to the problem lies in the individual apartment owners controlling the energy usage. "It if it was rampant crime and rampant violence like robbs, raps and muggings, I'd say yes, we need a cop there. But we're not talking about that," Demey said. Watson, Commission had 1977 confrontation By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter City commissioners in 1977 wanted to fire City Manager Burd Watson because they thought he was making policy in addition to implement former Mayor Marte Ararguesi and yesterday. "I think it was 4+1 if we had taken a vote," she said. "We had a confrontation with Buford. We told him we would run the town—we were the policymakers, he was the administrator." policy makers, he was better than BatWatson said yesterday. "That's when they set up the evaluation system. There was not a request for a resignation." Reques. of a Mgr. Vice-President. Former Mayor Ed Carter said, "Six months later we gave him an absolute vote of confidence and gave him a hall of a raise." Carter did not say he had been on the verge of wanting to fire Watson. The most recent evaluation of Watson's performance by the commission was last October. The commission suggested many areas in which they wanted Watson to improve. She said those issues discussed last fail still were relevant to the present dispute. were like this: Watson, who was not given a raise after the last evaluation, has said that he was trying to comply with the commissioner's wishes. In the last week, all five people who served on the commission in 1977 said Watson was a good city manager and they wanted him to keep his job. per. This past weekend it was revealed that Commissars had written to him and asked him to resign. Because of an editing error, yesterday's Kansan said Gleason said he would fire Watson at that time. It should have said Gleason said he would move to fire Watson. The commission, which discussed Watson's performance at this week's meeting, will meet in closed session on Feb. 18 to consider Watson's job performance. In response to Gleason's letter, a group that included the letter is forming a petition drive to remove it. Argersinger said she supported Watson but had not decided whether to support the effort to recall Gleason. Argeringer said she had difficulty stating particular reasons for having wanted to fire Waltham. "You never know which straw it is that breaks the camel's back" she said. "It was a lot of employee discontent, a lot of citizen discontent, a lot of feeling they didn't have their hands on things." remember saying to him, "Buford, your job is as long as you let the team run the club." "We wanted the commission to make policy and the city manager to do the administration." Yesterday, Commissioner Don Binns said, "We told him in no uncertain terms that it was his job to run the city and the commissioners to play politics." The changes in Watson's role included removing him from a direct role in labor relations and removing him from a local radio talk show. Watson said he did not want to comment on each specific item in the 1977 commission's report. Argerstein said the commission lowered Watson's profile in Lawrence. One of the problems was with labor relations. "Ine expression we used more was 'profile'," she said. "We were hearing, 'he is too powerful, he is too powerful, he is too powerful.'" One of the problems and features "The workers are talking to organize a union with men" "Bims said." "We removed him from being the negotiator between employees and the city." between employees and the city. Argersinger said, "This eliminated Buford as a major employer." Carter commented on Watson's previous position as a negotiator with employees. During that period, changes were made in the structure of local government, Carter said. "We completely reorganized city government," he said. We split government into two. "It put him in an impossible position," he said. "The president of the company does not sit down and negotiate with employees. It created a lot of hard feelings." MacNeil, Lehrer comment on journalism, accept award See WATSON page 5 By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter Robert MacNeil and Jim Lehrer, editors and co-anchors of the MacNeil/Lehrer Report, yesterday criticized television news programming for simplification and catering to attention spans. MacNeil and Lehrer, who are public television journalists, were at the University of Kansas to accept the William Allen White Award for Journalistic Merit from the School of Jour It is the first time in the award's 33-year history that it has been shared by two journalists. The award is given annually to journalists who exemplify White, the late Emperor Gazette editor, and his "service to his profession and his country." the award presentation followed a luncheon at the Kansas Union Ballroom, at which both MacNeil and Lehrer commented on television journalism. "IF JESUS CHRIST appeared on earth and began to talk to the multitudes, TV would cut away for livelier pictures," MacNeil said yesterday. MaeNell described the television medium as a "prisoner of its own commercial success," and said that television nightly new programs were broadcast daily, but presented events but did not link them together. "Nothing can replace the talking head (the single newsman) for getting over the news," he said. "When you say, 'I love you,' or 'I hate you,'—to get the message across, you don't need a window over your shoulder flashing cartoons." MacNeil is a native Canadian who began his career working for radio stations, and later moved to England as an aspiring playwright before returning to journalism. THEY HIRED REPORTERS but not researchers, and assigned them to cover specific issues, not specific institutions such as the White House or the State Department. The format of two interviewers discussing a single topic each night allows them to introduce guests "as editorial logic requires," MacNeil said. One is able to adjust his questions while the other With money from public stations WNET in New York and WETA in Washington, D.C., they began the MacNeil/Lehrer report in October with a slightly different outlook. "We created a new form of journalism," MacNell said. story to another. He also criticized the way television deliberately distracts with the use of pictures from the expensive anchor talent it hires. MacNeil said they wanted an in-depth program which did not rush to get from one to another. In his speech, Lehrer, a Wichita native and a University of Missouri graduate, said that William Allen White would roll over in his grave if he knew about some of today's journalism. WHITE WAS A KU alumnus and editor of the Emporia Gazette, for whom the School of Journalism was named. The merit award is awarded only on Feb. 10, in honor of White's birthday. Lehner said that he felt honored to receive such a prestigious award and that he had read many books on the subject. "He'd be particularly annoyed that reporters could sum up nuclear disarmament in 20 seconds." Lehrer said of White. "He also would be upset by public opinion polls that list only politicians, ayatollahs and lawyers below journalists in respect." Lehrer said White's advice to journalists today would be "to work harder, hardier, try harder, and remember the responsibilities that go along with freedom of the press." At a reception held later in the Flint Hall, they discussed MacNeil and Lehrer discussed some criticisms. "PEOPLE THINK I doole too much," MacNeil said. The two met while covering the Senate Watergate Hearings for public television's National Public Affairs Center for Television, the National Democratic Folk Award in 1974 for their coverage of it. "And people think I'm dumb." Lehrer said he said that one views counted the number of times he had spoken. MacNiel said that one-sixth of the cost of producing the program was paid by Exxon and AT&T and that $5 million of the $7 million it cost to produce the show came from public television They also said criticism came many times from people more knowledgeable about a topic than others. Public broadcasting officials warned Congress yesterday that administration proposals to cut money for public broadcasting threatened its very existence. Because their program is a news show, the two don't expect all of their money to come from corporations. They said that the money they did receive influence the type of programming they had. "An adequate federal share of support for public broadcasting is essential for our survival." Edward Pflitzer, president of the Correctional Association, told the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee. "AT&T AND EXXON is the cleanest money we'll ever get," Lehrer said. THE NEW BUDGET also calls for funds to be slashed to 885 million by 1985. The administration has proposed cutting $21 million from the 1983 budget for the Corporation. The remaining one-fourth of the cost is covered by government grants, which are in danger of falling. MacNeil and Lehrer said that they did not See LEHRER page 5 FRACEY THOMPSON/Kansan Staff William Allen White award winners Robert MacNeil (left) and Jim Lehrer (center) talk with Brett Wood, Springfield, Ill., senior, after the awards banquet in the Union Ballroom yesterday. Weather COLD It will be partly cloudy today with a high of 31 degrees and a chance for light snow this evening, according to the National Weather Service in Denver. The warming trend will continue into the weekend with Saturday's rainfall at 40%. Senate delays fee decision Staff Reporter By ANN LOWRY The Student Senate sidestepped a resolution to hold a student referendum on the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board's $3 campus fee, which the university is currently ruling out the effectiveness of a referendum. weeks. LOREN BUSY, holdover senator and co-sponsor of the bill, said that the two weeks until the next Senate meeting, and then the four weeks allowed the elections come to a close the referendum could have an effect on Chancellor Gene A. Budig's 1983 budget recommendation to the Kansas Board of Residents in March. The Senate did, however, vote to send the bill to the Senate Sports Committee to clarify its wording. The sports committee can then present the bill to Senate again at its next meeting in two weeks. affairs and KUAC member, said at the last Senate meeting that KUAC had passed the fee increase for another year to help offset its budget deficit. for the four student members of the team David Amber, the vice chancellor for students "The chancellor assured us he'd allow Senateample time to sit down and debate this thing."He said. "I can't believe it." "Somebody has successfully aet on this thing. Students will not have a concrete voice except they are confident. Abbott said the KUAC would meet next week and make their recommendations to Budig, who would in turn go to the Regents with his recommendations. "NOW THE CHANCELLOR is going to have no choice but to recommend to the Regents, and they're not going to have the voice that we—the alumni, faculty, staff, students, everyone on the KUAC—wanted the students to have," Abbott said. The Senate also voted not to suspend the rules to allow a bill to provide supplemental funding for the Associated Students of Kansas onto the floor. Senate's Finance and Auditing Committee had voted unanimously against passing the bill to Senate Tuesday. The bill would have provided $360 from the Senate's $55,000 unallocated account to hire a second KU ASK campus director. The bill stated KU needed a second campus director to allow the KU delegation to maintain influence in Topeka while building the KU delegation's membership. "It's surprising to me that students would not even think of considering the bill on the floor." Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Salvadoran soldiers charged with killing American nuns SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - Six Salvadoran soldiers, including two new suspects, were arrested in the killings of three American nurses during a 14-month prison sentence. The six, all of them in El Salvador's National Guard, were flown in U.S. loaned helicopters to Zacatecote, which is near the site where the crash occurred. women's bodies were damaged. Witnesses said the six suspects, handcuffed in pairs and dressed in a mixture of civilian and military clothes, were guarded by at least 30 heavily armed soldiers as they were hustled into the civilian courtroom. The unlawful slayings of the four American women have been cited by the opponents of the ruling civil-military regime as proof of the government's actions. The judge in Zacatecoluca has until Saturday to consider the evidence and to decide whether further investigations are necessary. One court observer said it could be "weeks or months" before any indictments were handed down in the case. Six guardsmen were jailed April 29 in the slayings of the missionaries. But two of the suspects arraigned were not among the six originally jailed, military sources said. Democrats propose altered budget WASHINGTON—Congressional democrats said they wanted no part of the Republican's 1983 budget plan and they intended to present several other proposals. Robert Byrd, Senate Democratic candidate, announced he had asked Reagan to withdraw his fiscal 1983 budget based on "phony figures," and he and 18 other Republicans voted against it. House Speaker Thomas O'Neill promised that mainstream House Democrats would present their own alternative soon. Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., a member of Byrd's group, was the first to respond to Reagan's challenge of "put up or shut up." He proposed Tuesday to freeze spending for military and most social programs at current levels for a year and reduce the tax cuts enacted last year. no hooligans plan got positive reactions from Republican congressmen as well. Senate Governor Leader Howard Baker called the plan 'interesting and important.' No injuries in Lansing prison fire LANSWING - A fire that broke through the roofline at two Kansas State Penitentiary findings was under control three hours after it started. There were no injuries in the fire, which started in the prison chapel and engineer maintenance building area. Firefighters from Lansing and Leavenworth battled the blaze continuously to keep it from spreading to the "highly volatile" paint and furniture refinishing shop, said Linda Moppin, administrative assistant for the KSP director. The cause of the fire is unknown, Moppin said, but officials will begin investigating the fire soon. The prison was in a "lock down" situation to account for all prisoners and to enable KSP officers to fight the fire. Beagan may ask for missile sales AMMAN, Jordan—Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said yesterday that President Reagan may ask Congress to permit missile sales to Jordan in what a senior defense official called growing U.S. willingness to make more Arab friends. In addition to the sale of Mobile Hawk missiles, the official said Weinberger would consider a request by Jordan's King Hussein to buy advanced The statements by Weinberger and the official, who were traveling in Jordan, signaled that the United States no longer would refrain from selling weapons to Syrian rebels. weanerglers a three-day visit to Jordan is the third stop on a week-long Middle East tour, during which he secured agreement with Saudi Arabia to establish a joint U.S.-Saiudi military commission, a move likely to cause concern in Israel. Fed calls for money supply growth WASHINGTON—Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker said yesterday that the Fed was sticking to its basic money supply target for 1982, a move he called "unacceptable." In his semiannual testimony to Congress, Volcker said the Federal Reserve Board's Open Market Committee had formally adopted a target for interest rates. Vulcker said that projected budget deficits could be a threat in economic recovery and he urged lawmakers to reduce the $1.5 billion deficit Reagan promised. However, Volker took the House Banking Committee that the president, in the fiscal 1983 budget he sent Congress this week, had proposed some Poland food rations getting worse WARSAW. Poland—A martial law sentence sentenced four more Solidarity leaders to prison terms yesterday and the military regime warned Poles to stay away from the new attacks. Solidarity action with slogans such as: "The winter is yours. Spring will be ours. Solidarity." Reporters returning from the Baltic port of Gdansk said support for Solidarity and hostility toward authorities were evident in much of Poland. The official Polish news agency PAP said that food shortages were getting worse and that rationing of meat, potatoes and other staples would be more Kissinger doing fine after surgery BOSTON - Secondary Secretary of State Henry Kissinger underwent a triple heart bypass operation yesterday to repair blocked and narrowed arteries. The operation at Massachusetts General Hospital lasted four hours. Kissinger was sedated afterwards and was not expected to wake until this morning. "We are all very pleased thus far," said W. Gerald Austen, the hospital's chief of surgery. "I think we agree the major risk is over with the surgery In bypass surgery, new sections of blood vessel taken from elsewhere in the body are grafted on the old, blocked ones to free up blood flow. Kissinger served as national security adviser to Richard Nixon and secretary of state to both Nixon and Gerald Ford. U of I official being tried for theft MOUNT VERNON, III.—Four women testified yesterday that a former administrator accused of embezzling more than $600,000 from the University of Illinois wined and dined them and paid them thousands of dollars for evenings that sometimes included sex. Robert N. Parker is accused of embezzling $00,000 from the university and its fundraising arm, the U of F Foundation, to a dormant third account, Mr. Parker said. He admitted that he took the money, but he pleaded not guilty to 157 counts of felony theft and is expected to present an insanity defense. Parker, a top financial administrator at the university, resigned under pressure last June. Computer proposal may be unnecessary Bv ANN WYLIE A policy recommended by the Academic Computing Committee to make computers equally available to students in all University departments may not be necessary, the committee chairman said yesterday. Staff Reporter "Maybe the committee was wrong. Maybe we were fooling ourselves," Dean Lebesky, chairman of the committee, director of geological survey, said. "I know of no student who was denied access to the computer system if they asked. We weren't responding to a request." "We were responding to a policy question." Students in some departments, such as English and the romantic languages, may not know that word processing is available. Lebeshtky said. "I THINK the problem is that there was no defined policy." The policy would make University computers available to all students to use for word processing or papers, theses, and dissertations, but the students would have to pay for using them. Lebestv said. Students whose departments used computers, such as science departments, would know that word processing was available and would be able to get funding for it from their departments. Lebesky said. Word processing for these could cost between $150 and $80, Ernest Angio, chairman of the University Senate and president of college of geology and civil engineering, said. The committee decided that the problem with word processing was a "have-have-not" situation, Lebestky said. Lebesky said the English department probably would not have a large computer budget and its students might not know about word processing. STUDENTS IN other departments would not know about word processing nor have access to it if they did want to use it, because their departments received little computer funding, he said. Balloon-a-Gram "Proud to the Occasion" SEND A BALLOON-a-GRAM! P.O. Box 3122 Lawrence KS 60044 Meadowlands But the English department is not having that problem, Jack Oruch, associate professor of English, said. Departments receive computer budgets of between $200 and $25,000 a year. Angino said. THE ENGLISH department has had five people ask for the receive funds for word processing. It has $2,500 allocated for computer use, and word-processing a thesis from beginning to end costs about $800. Orchid said. Two years ago, a student asked Orchut about word processing for her dissertation. He arranged to get funds through the associate dean of the English department and announced the need for students learning to all graduate students in English. "We have never had a problem getting enough money. We have also never had many people involved (inressing for their thesis)." he said. Since then, every graduate student in the English department who has asked for computer funding has received it, Oruch said. The recommended policy will prevent students in the English department from using a computer for their theses, rather than make the computer more available to them, Orchuck said. "It will be too bad for us if it will mean that there will be a charge for using word processing," he said. VALID ID CARDS Instantly - Laminated - Color available at I DENT SYSTEMS Room 114A Room 190 841-5905 REALISTIC Entry Deadline for the Recreation Services racquetball singles tournament is 5:00 p.m. today in 208 Robinson. "I DON'T know how much it would curtail. I'm sure fewer people would Students in departments that have high computer funding, such as the department of physics, are also worried about the policy. "I was hoping to be done before they passed something like that," Leland Herder, Oblong, Ill., graduate student, said. Herder said he couldn't for疼助 to pay up to $500 for process his thesis out of the salary he received as a research assistant. BREecca Pyles, Lawrence graduate student, said she thought the proposed policy was unfair. You're taking about the research that University of Kansas, Kansas State students, especially in computer science, write articles in the She said graduate students needed the advantages that a word-processing thesis would give. and send them to national journals." she said. OTHER COLLEGES and universities in Kansas have different policies on student use of university computers for word processing. Kansas State University doesn't charge students for word-processing theses on the university's central computer, but does charge them for paper, Tom Gallagher, director of K-State's computing center, said. Emporia State University does not have the word-processing function available on its computers, Lloyd Edwards, director of Emporia's data processing and educational measurements department, said. borgen's LIQUOR STORE 917 Iowa 842-3990 Located next to Rusty's in Hillcrest Shopping Center THINKING ABOUT WOMEN'S LIVES: Books by and about Women EVENT: Reading Group DATE: Wednesday, February 17, 1982 TIME: 7:00 p.m. The agenda is open, so feel free to suggest your favorite reading materials. For further information call the Women's Center at 864-3552. PLACE: Gallery Room Lawrence Public Library GRADUATING ENGINEERS: Sign up now for a look at one of the year's best job offers We offer civilian career opportunities that stress immediate "hands-on" responsibility—your chance for recognition, reward and professional growth right from the start. Mare Island is an engineer's kind of world. We're the third largest active naval shipyard in the U.S. and the West Coast's oldest and best known naval institution. And, we've located in one of the world's best places to live and work—the heart of Northern California! San Francisco is just a bay away. . . the famous wine country is right next door. . . and sailing or skiing are as close as next week-end! To get complete information, contact your placement office and sign up now for an interview. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS FEBRUARY 25,1982. MARE ISLAND NAVAL SHIPYARD Vallejo, California An Equal Opportunity Employer U. S. Citizenhip Required VALLEJO BERKELEY SAN FRANCISCO University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 Page 3 servities on others for doesn't seessing central rm for of K- State considers taxes on beer. cigarettes mals, " neededressing By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter The Kansas Legislature-taking its lead from Congress—is considering imposing "sin taxes" on beer and cigarettes. But some of the tax revenues might go to help social programs, such as alcohol and drug abuse treatment, that have been reduced by federal budget cuts. "With changes at the federal level, the cuts coming down, and the philosophy of 'New Federalism', the state needs to help local public health agencies," State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, said yesterday. Chronister on Monday introduced a bill in the House of Representatives that would increase the state sales tax on cigarettes by 2 cents a package. Another bill, which would raise the tax on beer by 10 cents a gallon, was heard in a House committee last week. Chronister's proposal would raise the cigarette tax from 11 cents to 13 cents a package. She said the 2-event increase would raise about $6 million. Half of the money would go into the state's general resource fund. Of the remaining money, $2.5 million would be returned to county public health departments and would be allocated for biomedical research at Kansas universities and colleges. Chronister said some of the research money probably would go to cancer researchers. State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, a member of the House Public Health and Welfare Committee, said she thought most of the research funds were intended for a cancer research project at Kansas State University. She said Chronister had taken the complaint to see the project and was sent weeks after the legislative session began. Branson said she was not opposed to sin taxes to raise money for public health departments, but said they could expand the tax that would broaden the tax base. "These things might help as a sort of Band-Aid here and there, but they cannot take the place of a severance tax and allow them as sales and income taxes," she said. "I have mixed feelings about using sin taxes when the money should come from the state general fund." Chronister said she expected much opposition to the tax from the state tobacco industry. Paul Coleman, lobbyist for the Kansas Tobacco-Candy Distributors and Vendors, Inc., declined to comment on the industry's lobbying efforts until the bill comes before the House Assessment and Taxation Committee. Chronister said she was not sure how much the tax would increase the retail cost of cigarettes. "It might raise it by a nickel," she said. The committee held hearings last week on a proposed 10-cent-a-gallon increase in state sales tax on beer. The committee approved the proposal to state alcohol and drug abuse programs. "The beer tax to help fund alcohol and drug abuse programs is logical as a user's tax," she said. But lobbyists for the beer industry objected to the tax, saying it associated beer with alcoholism. "The whole concept of earmarking taxes for one industry is bad government policy," said Mark Boranyak, a Master's student in Beans Bear Whole-sellers Association. The Lawrence Knights of Columbus have planned a sweetheart contest as a special attraction for their first Sweetheart Dance Friday. The informal dance, to be held on the first floor of the Knights Hall, 2206 E. 23rd R. will be open to the public. The first 50 girls to arrive will be given roses by the organization, Duane Van Anne said. The Knights have asked KU fraternities to enter one of their little sisters in the context. Little sisters are required in social functions with the fraternities. Knights to hold weekend dance Calling the competition a "personality contest," Van Anne said the winner would be chosen by crowd applause. LOW COST RENTER S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley 842 7870 843 8771 Prudential (843) 8770 North Atlantic The Knights sponsor a dance each week, which Van Anne said was usually country-western. Sound on Wheels will provide music for the dance. Couples will be charged $3 and singles, $2. Van Anne said that the dancers will be charged $1.50 and draws $0 cents. Van Anne said that prizes from local beer distributors would be given out throughout the night. IN-ROOM MOVIES • WATERBEDS • MIRRORS TONIGHT, THURSDAY, FEB. 11 DANCE, DANCE, DANCE **Boyd's Coins-Antiques** *Clare Ring* - Gold *Clare Trade* - Trade *Gold - Silver - Coin* - 731 New Hampshire 914 Washington 914/8247 AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 8439803 LOW THURSDAY DRINKATHON $1.00 at the Door 25c DRAWS ALTITUDE COOKING R&B,BLUES,REGGAE It Could Only Happen at .. THE HAWK 1340 Ohio DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE TONIGHT SPANK PRODUCTIONS Box 212 Rt.4 Lawrence, Ks. ALI BABA of lootrence SPANK PRODUCTIONS mid-east fine foods HAVE LUNCH AT ALI BABA WITH THIS COUPON 10% OFF TACO BELL (good noon to 3 p.m., 2/11 to 2/18) EVERY Lawrence Thursday Tacos 49¢ each 1408 West 23rd St. good only at this location 00:00 A M 00:00 F M and Saturday 10:00 A M 2:00 A M Sunday: Thursday 10:00 A.M.-1:00 A.M., Friday and Saturday 10:00 A.M.-2:00 A.M. took two speakers, valued at $750, and two other speakers, an amplifier, a cassette player, a turntable and an amplifier for $500. There are no suspects, police said. BURGLARS also store more than $800 worth of clothing and tools from the Farmers Co-Operative Association, 23rd and Haskell streets, sometime between 5 p.m. Monday and 7 a.m. Tuesday, police said. On the record A Douglas County district judge sentenced two Phi Kappa Theta fraternity members to 50 hours of community service work yesterday. Sweetheart Contest Challenge! Another reason why tomorrow is taking shape at a company called TRW. Private Club Private Golf Government PUBLIC PUBLIC PUBLIC Government PUBLIC $150 per person Government PUBLIC $150 per person $1.50 per person, 50 draws Entertainment by: RICHARD GREENLEE SOUND OF WHEELS TRW College Relations Bldg. R5/B196, Dept. UK/2/82 One Space Park Drive Redondo Beach, California 90278 Cover charge $3.00 per couple $2.00 per man KU POLICE reported a burglary of a Malott Hall lab Wednesday afternoon. Police said that burglaries stole more than $500 worth of lab equipment, after possibly using a key for picking the locks. There are no suspects. Tie InWith Us Recreation Services Racquetball Doubles Tournament Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H U.S. Citizenship Required A Company Called TRW - Play is available for men and women in three classes provided there are enough entrants: advanced, intermediate and novice. Christopher Murray, Tonganoxic freshman, and Robert S. Murphy, Washington, Iowa, freshman, pleaded guilty to charges of temporary deprivation of property for stealing Gibson's 10-cheetah cat. Jan. 15, 2008, a judge issued a plea against the fraternity's basement along in with stolen road sign signs. - Entry fee is one can of unopened racquetballs submitted with completed entry form. - Entry deadline is Thursday, Feb. 18 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson - Play begins Sunday, Feb. 21. Entry forms are available in 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546. The challenge for those who dare... is at Burglaries stole almost 2,300 worth of stereo equipment from 746 Ohio St. about 7 p.m., Tuesday police said. After kicking in the door, Burglaries First Annual Knights of Columbus Sweetheart Dance Friday, February 12th 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Doors open at 8 o'clock lenge... TRW TRW Challenge! For some, it's a once-in-a-life-time experience. For others, like the professionals at TRW, it's an everyday reality. These knowledge-intensive men and women operate as a team to reach the highest pinnacles of technical excellence. They recognize the value of the individual to the group effort in reaching the top in a variety of technical disciplines — From large data base software systems, communications spacecraft, and alternative energy sources to scientific satellites, high energy lasers, and microelectronics. So, if you're a rugged individualist with a strong desire to pit your skills against complex technical problems, look into TRW. We'll give you the experience you need to become an engineering professional of the highest calibre. Now that you've mastered the basics and conquered one mountain, we invite you to scale ours. TRW will be on campus February 18 & 19 to interview graduates in Engineering and Scientific disciplines at all degree levels MOTORSPORTS to interview graduates in Engineering and Scientific disciplines at all degree levels. Contact the placement office to schedule your appointment, or write to: on ape J. appointment, or write to: AND VIDEO GAME CENTER All New NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA Now Playing Ms. PACMAN! All New Thats Right Ms. PACMAN!! COUPON Present This Coupon And Receive Two FREE VIDEO GAME PLAYS Enfrest 2/28/02 Present This Coupon And Receive ANY SIZE PIZZA $1'00 OFF Expires 2/8/95 Limit one coupon per person COUPON Regular Pizza Prices LARGE Double Cheese '4.95 MEDIUM Double Cheese '3.95 SMALL Double Cheese '2.95 TINY Double Cheese '1.95 Additional Meat or Garden Topping 75' ea. Large 65' ea. Medium 55' ea. Small 45' ea. Tiny OPEN DAILY 10 am-11:45 p.m. SUN. Noon-11:45 p.m. No other Coupons accepted with this Offer Coke Opinion University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 Fireworks in City Hall This isn't the Fourth of July, but there have still been plenty of fireworks at Lawrence City Hall this week. For those who haven't been paying attention to the goings on there, here is a list of some of the week's events: City Commissioner Tom Gleason sent City Manager Buford Watson a letter asking him to resign. Watson refused. Ed Carter, a former Lawrence mayor, asked Gleason to resign. Gleason refused. A host of Lawrence citizens suggested that Gleason be recalled. And the commission met in a closed executive session to schedule a closed executive session to figure out what to do about the whole, sticky mess. The local media has covered these events in breathless detail, but generally, the stories have been like charcoal fires—the sheds a lot of heat, but very little light. And it is not totally the media's fault that stories on the City Hall contremetries have been confusing. The events themselves have been confusing. they say he is sleepwalking through the job he has held for so long. The controversy surrounds Buford Watson a man who has been city manager since 1970. Another group says Gleason is irresponsible and it implies that he is the tool of a neighborhood cartel that also dominates the city. No matter how these accusations are reconciled, three questions will remain: What has Watson done—or not done—that would warrant his possible termination? Did Gleason the authority to unilaterally ask for Watson's resignation? And should a public matter, such as the hiring and firing of a city manager, be decided behind closed doors? Of course, Watson works for the commission, and according to state law, his case can be decided in private, as can any other personnel problem. When the commissioners emerge from their special meeting next Thursday, we can only hope that we will have answers to a few of these questions. And we can only hope that they will leave the fireworks alone at least until this July. However, this is not just any problem. And Watson is not just any employee. He holds one of the most powerful positions in city government and he has held it for a very, very long time. GENTLEMEN, IN THE 1983 BUDGET WE MUST WEATHER THE STORM, STAY WITH THE SHIP... Valentines revive fifth grade love It had been so many years since I had bothered to observe St. Valentine's Day with any zeal, that I was surprised the other night in Watson Library to see a friend writing messages on the backs of paper valentines. The valentines were adorned with furzy animals relicking on the front of them. "What are those things?" I asked. She looked up and smiled. "Bears." "Oh, yeah." Strange how one forgets children's make-believe companions. The bears were not grizzlies with jagged, snarling teeth, of course, but cute little innocent-faced creatures, like the ones who live in the magical story illustrations of Dr. Seuss. One of the valentines was in the shape of a house inhabited by a bunch of bears. There were bears at every window, a bear perched in the doorway and one swinging on the eaves. I was charmed. The bears brought back memories as sweet as the scent from a honey jar. For the first time in a long while, I remembered one of the rituals of grade school. When we had pasted concentric hearts on the front and printed our names in large letters across the top, the valentine sacks were clipped, all in a row and probably alphabetically, to a wire which stretched across the top of the classroom blackboard. The lace-fringed days of childhood, Valentine's day meant shiny, blunt scissors and crisp, red construction paper—and, we hoped, artful interaction between the two. We took pains to dress them in plain brown paper bags with denim and white paper and had folded and cut into symmetrical designs. There the sacks hung for some days, empty but open to promise. We each took particular pride in the appearance of our own and stole glances at it during class. At home we punched perforated valentines out of a book with big, slick pages, dutifully signed them and matched them up with the appropriate envelopes. All of the valentines in the book were different, and by the time we had decided on the right ones to give most of our classmates, the only punch-outs left were small ones that weren't very clever. We gave those to the classmates we liked the least. But we unquestioningly abided by the rule, and the rule was, everybody in the MICHAEL ROSS BEN JONES class got a valentine from everybody else in class. Love in the fifth grade was egallitarian. But to send a valentine to someone in a different homeroom was another matter. That was a voluntary declaration of affection, and, in the fifth grade, a sure sign of serious love. It meant, plain and simple, that you were "in love" with Debbie, or Debbie was in love with you. Either way, you were in for a lot of ribbing. There was no chance to hide one of these voluntary valentines, either, because everyone had to empty their sacks and open all their valentines during the classroom party that afternoon. Your pals were sure to crowd around, trying to repress smirks until you found the card they somehow knew was in the sack. but beneath the embarrassment and the baiting there was a growing meaning that we all Then came the dreaded moment when you pulled out Debbie's valentine, and suddenly you understood why all the guys were grimming. You were so angry about the protestations that your nails didn't believe at all. understood. Secretly they envised you, and secretly you savored it. Aloofness between the sexes had to be kept up for appearance's sake, and no one else could. Boys and boys were beginning to like each other. Our teachers saw the inherent dangers in our growing tendencies to be discrimination, so after sixth grade there were no more school Valentine's Day celebrations with compulsory cards. For the first time, we had to accept responsibility for choosing our sweethearts. Valentine's Day now took on a terrible significance. You might like Becky, the brown-haired girl who sat two rows up in geography class—and you could safely watch the back of her head not gracefully as she answered a question from the teacher—but how could you know whether she would accept a valentine from you, especially without spilling the news to all her friends? It is possible that your boss wanted of a commitment, and those of us boys who were prudent and timid never wrote Becky's name on an envelope again. Which explains why I had let the custom lapse for so long. But when I saw my friend with a stack of friendly-bear-filled valentines scattered before her in the spacious, carpeted confines of modern Watson Library, suddenly it seemed so long ago since the winter spent in small schoolrooms with narrow-boarded pine floors. The contrast struck me and left me wanting to send out some valentines this year, to narrow the tap that separates us from those years of platinic "be mines." I realized valentines again were safe to give. At this stage in life, it chocolates and flowers that tell you into trouble. So I resolved to buy a whole stack of valentines with cute little bears on them and mail them out to some of the girl friends in my junior school. I made sure they about it see it. Sometimes you just have to grin and bear it. Letters to the Editor Handicapped should get prison reform funds To the Editor: Your February 1 ediorial "A Chance for Reform," concerning the state prison system, while obviously well intended and probably genuinely motivated, missed the mark. Prisons are political high priorities. However, the fact that even the best U.S. prisons are grossly inhumane seldom enters anyone's mind, unless of course, one is a convicted offender serving time, or a close friend or relative of one. Construction is only the tip of the cost iceberg. While $70 million is a lot of money in a state this size, the day to day operations will be damaging costs for the future. And what of the benefits? Except for the relatively few persons who really are so dangerous that they must be removed from the community for our safety and for theirs, there are numerous alternatives. Prisons are utter failures. They began as an experiment, a great U.S. experiment that was transported to other nations. The U.S. is the third most prison oriented of the industrialized nations of the world. We are out-distanced only by Russia and South Africa. Prisons are many things. But they are not what our leaders say they are, nor do they accomplish the objectives stated in the law or on the floors of the Kansas Legislature. Prisons are illusions! Prisons are monuments to elected officials' needs to demonstrate to the public that they are doing something about crime. There is a terrify devastating aspect of our prisons. It is that they capture our imaginations and our support when other human needs with a similar investment or less would do so much Prisons are monumental symbols of our willingness to believe in the words of our leaders who understand neither the nature of the crime or the persons who commit crimes. We have in Kanas at least 5,000 pre-school handcapped children. Less than half of these are kindergarteners. develop close to their physical and mental potential. But these children aren't old enough to vote. Even if they were, they might not be able to. Their parents, with few exceptions, do not un- wear a tie or make no requests for the state's involvement. The legislators will, willingly, vote money to launch Kansas further into the world of big prisons. These same legislators insist that the state cannot afford programs that will help one of the most needful population groups in our state. ForrestSwall Assistant professor of social welfare News staff also paid To the Editor: I somehow fail to be persuaded by the meandering of the writer of "Setting bad precedents." Correct me if I am wrong, but I believe that the very editors of the University Daily Kansan, who launched that missive barb at the justices on the KU Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals, are in fact themselves guilty of accepting money for their very own "opportunity to serve." A phone call to the offices of the Kansas (I feel I would undoubtedly unleash an entire army.) I feel I should if he shares his identity), revealed that the editor-in-chief accepts $800 per semester for her sacrifice, and the campus editor must go begging for his $500 per semester. News staff also pair Now, this question may sound rather trite, but is there any substantial difference between the right for the justices to receive remuneration for their services and the rights of the editors to receive remuneration for their efforts? Perhaps you editors might empathize more if you were to imagine performing your duties without pay or credit. James Fenimore Cooper once said that "the press, like fire, is an excellent servant, but a terrible master." If you would be interested in an author who has been a trusted servant, Kansan should not be paid for their opportunity Douglas P. Murray Clay Center law studen Douglas F. Martin, Sharing the load to further their journalistic careers, I shall be glad to oblige, free of charge, of course. I read with rather mixed feeling the news of law students resigning from the traffic court because of the rejection of a proposal to pay them salaries. I had some occasion to serve in school committees that were somehow time-consuming to an extent and in some instances fortuitously costly, as committee members had been scheduled for meetings when meetings are scheduled during lunch hours. Dear Editor: I would not prejudge the merit of the dissatisfaction of the resigning student justices as I have no idea about their docket loads and the nature of the decisions they are leaving are also initially non-remunerative. It may be of the larger student interest for the resigning parties to clarify whether a commitment was earlier made that their positions were irrelevant and their conduct when the proposal was disapproved. I recall no instance wherein committee members, faculty or student alike, grumbled for lack of remuneration on either the use of precious time or interchange of expertise. Probably some accommodation could be reached as not to upset traditionally gratuitous services to the University constituency. The duties at the traffic court could possibly be parcelled out among the staff of a class of law students deciding traffic cases to spread the burden to a broader group. Student justices, on the other hand, would probably welcome this traffic court opportunity as a public service training minuta for their future preoccupation after their Green Edwin P. Acoba Nueva Cejia, Philippines, graduate student Proposed war memorial will not honor Vietnam vets They're ignoring the Vietnam vets again. This time the government is trying to honor the vets and try to win back their trust. It all started in 1980 when Congress commissioned the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund to design and build, with private capital, a suitable memorial on the Mall in Washington to "honor and recognize the men and women . . . who served in the Vietnam Ross Perot of Dallas, chairman of Electronic Data Systems, contributed much of the W.J. ANDREWS M. M. M. M. capital, including the funds necessary to a national memorial design competition. There were 1,421 entries, including some by Vietnam vets. A Memorial Fund jury selected the winning design, submitted by Maya Ying Lin, a Yale architecture student from Ohio. In an artist's conception, the black-granite memorial's appearance in Constitutional Gardens, between the bright-white monuments to Washington and Lincoln, is one of ignominy. The 400-foot long tapering wall would look like a giant pillar on the ground. One architecture critic said the memorial would look like an erosion control project. The design caused quite a stir. James H. Webb, Jr., Marine platoon leader in Vietnam and author of "Fields of Fire," resigned from the National Sponsoring Committee of the Navy and in protest. And he criticized the total absence of vets on the design selection jury. Jan. C. Scruggs, president of the Memorial Fund, countered that Webb declined an appointment to the jury. But Washington columnist Patrick Buchanan reported that apparently no Vietnam veterans were allowed on the jury. Perot took one look at the design, then immediately commissored a poll to结 out our recommendations. So now the memorial is on hold. Finally, Rep. Henry J. Hyde, R-III, circulated a letter and gathered enough support to force Interior Secretary James G. Watt to convene the meeting that had been given preliminary approval June 10. Is this how Washington wants to honor its Vietnam vets: build a memorial unmarked, diminished from view and dark? In the case of the 65,792 American soldiers who died were memorial was there to be the word Vietnam. It was not even planned for the American flag to fly at the memorial site. The names of the 65,792 American soldiers who died were memorialized on the dark face of the memorial. It appears that the Washington eggs have inflated beyond reason again. They seem to have forgotten that the memorial isn't to honor the victims, and not to honor the patriotic veterans, not the politicians. But the memorial seems designed for politicians, for the government and administrations that Jekyll-and-Hyde'd their way through a war they never intended to win. They even want to forget about it by building a suppressive memorial. However, the spoils of the Vietnam war didn't show in the faces of the troops. Not until their trust of command had been tainted and then subverted by politics. To honor these men will take a much more substantial effort than has been made so far. Many were duty-bound regulars. Many just followed orders. Many were just teenagers: the kind Michael Herr's *Apocalypse Now* or gumball-gumbers with one foot in their graves." More than a design contest whose end result is politically founded. More than an oppressive, wailing wall for post-Vietnamization policies has its cataracts on the Hill. But it will take time. They'll probably select a new selection turv. It would be best to go back and start the process from the beginning. Start all over again the right way before we go too far. Keep our goals in mind. Maybe that's what they should have done twenty years ago in Vietnam. The University Daily KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom-864-4810 Business Office-864-4358 USPS 659-460) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday and Tuesday. Mail in subscriptions are by mail to the University of Kansas address, USPS 659-460) Subscriptions by mail are at $1 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $2 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $8 a semester. During the student activity fee, Postmaster send changes of address to the University Daily Kanan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas. Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Nateaine Julie Editorial Editor Tracee Handlson Editorial Editor Karen Schlueter Campus Editor Gene George Associate Campus Editor Jane Neufeld Assistant Campus Editors Rebecca Chuney Assignment Editor Steve Rohraut Sports Editor Ron Haggstrom Associate Sports Editor Gino Strippoli Entertainment Editor Coral Beach Makeup Editor Lina Massboth, Lilian Daven, Sharon Appelman Free Editor Elden Markey, Teresa Riverdian, Liam Mascho Photo Editor Ben Bigger Staff Photographers Jon Hardesty, John Hankammer, John Gladze, Bob Greenspan, Tracy Thompson, McDonald Retail Sales Manager Ann Hembergner National Sales Manager Howard Stalinny Campaign Manager Vera Pala Classified Manager Sharon Burns Production Manager Larry Lehmann Retail Assistant John Egan Retail Representatives Barb Baum, Larry Burtmater, Susan Cooksey, Richard Bagua, Jerry Grimes, Amy Jones, Matthew Langan, Philip Marchella, Lt. Mc-Mahon, Mike Myers, Kathryn Meyen, Rob O'Blary, Mike Pearl, Mackey Jnyer, Jane Wendroff * Campus Interns ... Sales and Marketing Adviser General Manager and News Adviser John Oberzan . Rick Musser University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 Page 5 Watson From page one The city manager was given the operation of the city, and the commission sets the policies, he Federal grants and community development funds were put in a different office. he said. "Once we took a look at the evaluation system and saw what he was responsible for and saw what he got blamed for, we set out his duties more clearly." Carter said. Watson said he welcomed the evaluation process and was satisfied with it. The nature of the evaluation can vary according to who's doing the grading, he said. "We decided rather than threatening the man manager like Tom Gleason did, to put our own hands on him." Former Commissioner Jack Rose said yesterday the basic problem was in the company. Lehrer From page one always leave the program with the same attitudes toward issues that they had before the program. The complexities of today's problems and the amount of information available makes them work hard to understand things that are happening in the world. Lehrer said. "The more you know, the less opinionated you can be," he said. SenEx From page one after investing $17,000 of their constituents' money into their organization. John Keightley, The Senate increased its funding for ASK from zero to $17 million to 40 cents the year, making the amount $17.00 billion. "For the amount of service $300 would provide, it is a phenomenal service to the students," Kittner said. Club members keep interest in gymnastics alive MUSIC By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter Although the KU gymnastics team no longer receives University funding, it is still generating interest. "We have a lot of people interested in gymnastics, but not interested in competition. They're doing it because they want to." Bob Lockwood, coach, said recently. Only two members remain from the original competing team, but the gymnastics club has 36 members, 10 of whom compete against other non-funded schools. Rhonda Stroble, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, stretches out before the KU gymnastic team's first meet last Saturday. The team is now operating without University funding. "The Big Eight has a good gymnastics program and it's too bad that none of the Kansas schools compete," said Kathy Ross, Lake Quirav junior, and a member of the competing She said that all but one of the 1980 Men's Olympiad champions were chosen from the Big Eight conference. Kelly Hinton, Lawrence junior and member of the competing team, said that after the athletic department stopped funding, gymmasts decided to form a club. BOB GREENSPAN/Kansan Staff The athletic department stopped funding the gymnastics team in August 1980. The department also cut funds from several other departments, hoping to avoid a deficit. "The sport was doing real well. They just figured by cutting gymnastics, they would hurt the least amount of people," said Mark Lander. "N.Y., junior and assistant coach volunteer." He said the club had applied for money from the Student Senate to receive a portion of the activity fee. Team members said they had filed Lockwood said he didn't think the Williams Fund, a privately funded athletic scholarship fund in the athletic department, would contribute to the gymnastics team unless the gymnastics team became part of the athletic department. the papers too late and did not receive money this past year. "If they would give that support, we wanted to one home meet," Lock wood said. He said the money also would go for the powdered chalk the bar gymnasts put on their Gymnasial talent does not come easily and without pain, he said. One of the women said she had to shave her hands with a razor because the callouses get hard and begin to hurt. Accidents do not happen often, said Debby Hibberd. Overland Park sophomore and team member. "If you can't do it that well, you get a spot." he said. "You pretty much know what your level is." A spot is someone who supervises the stunt in boots of preventing an accident. The gymnastics team is concerned about injuries from another standpoint, too. "Nine people doesn't make a team," Hinton said. "If someone puts hurt, you're in trouble." Not all of the team members are physical education majors who have been doing gymnastics. Hinton said that she competed in gymnastics in sixth grade before she broke her shoulder and was out for seven years. She then became active with the gym and participated in track at KU her freshman year. She tried to get on the gymnastics team, but she was told her adviseed she to take HPP 100 in gymnastics. "When the team was cut, we decided to form a club," she said. involved in gymnastics again this year. "When you do it, all through high school, you start missing it," she said. "It takes a lot of my time, but it's fun." Lander said that the lack of funding had persuaded some people not to participate in the event. "There are a lot of girls I know who would combut me, but I want to wash the time if I can compete." Lander agreed with Lockwood that the club members really wanted to do gymnastics. "They're here because they want to be and that's why we'll make it," he said. Despite the financial setbacks, the team plans on three or four meets this spring, and hopes to get back on track. If practice makes perfect, the team should do just fine. The club practices twice weekly and the competing members practice for two and one-half hours, Monday through Friday. Grinder Man Famous Grinder Man Sandwiches MINI MAXI approx. 6 111 THE GRINDER A combination of three Italian means, Italian cheese, garnished with chopped picles, romaines and Italian dressing. HEA A toast American ham, pancake cheese, garnished with Italian onions and peppers. Served hot PEPPERED DEEF Mildly spiced beef coated with black pepper and baked, served with mazorolla cheese, lettuce, mayonnaise, garnished with chopped tomato sauce ITALIAN MEATBALL Mildly seasoned Italian mealtables, mazorolla cheese, with a tangy tamarillo sauce. Served hot ITALIAN SAUSAGE Spicy Italian sausage, mazorolla cheese, with a tangy tamarillo sauce. Served hot COMBINATION MEATBALL Mildly seasoned Italian mealtables, spicy sausage, mazorolla cheese, with a tangy tamarillo sauce Served hot COPOCOLLO BLACK Spicy pork, coated and cured in whole black peppers, provolone cheese with lettuce, Italian dressing, garnished with onions. Served hot COPOCOLLO RED Mildly spiced pork, coated and cured in red peppers, provolone cheese with lettuce, Italian dressing, garnished with onions. Served hot GENOA A mild italian salami with provolone cheese, lettuce, Italian dressing, garnished with onions. SICILIAN RED A spicy sicilian salmon, similar in taste to pepperoni, with provolone cheese, lettuce, Italian dressing, garnished with onions ITALIAN STYLE HAM American ham with provolone cheese, lettuce, Italian dressing, garnished with onions. NOW OPEN! approx. 6' 111. VEGETARIAN 1.35 2.35 Proviolane cheese with lettuce, garnished with PROVOLONE & SAUCE ... 1.35 A mild Italian cheese, melted with a tangy tomato sauce. Served hot MOZZARELLA & SAUCE ... 1.35 Tasty Italian cheese, melted with a tangy tomato sauce. Served hot PEPPERONI & PROVOLONE ... 1.45 Spicy pepperoni and melted provolone cheese with a tangy tomato sauce. Served hot PEPPERONI & MOZZARELLA ... 1.45 Spicy pepperoni and melted mazarella cheese with a tangy tomato sauce. Served hot AMERICAN HAM ... 1.75 American ham with big-eye Swiss cheese, mayonnaise lettuce, garnished with chopped tomatoes. HAM ON RYE ... 1.75 American ham with big-eye Swiss cheese, with mustard ROAST BEEF ... 1.85 Roast beef with big-eye Swiss cheese, mayonnaise lettuce, garnished with chopped tomatoes. TURKEY ... 1.65 Daked turkey breast with big-eye Swiss cheese, mayonnaise lettuce, garnished with chopped tomatoes. CLUB ... 1.85 Any two meats, ham loaf beef or turkey served with big-eye Swiss cheese, mayonnaise lettuce, and garnished with chopped tomatoes. PASTRAMI ... 1.75 A peperoned beef with big-eye Swiss cheese, with mustard on an a yee roll. Served hot REUBEN ... 2.05 Corned beef top round with big-eye Swiss cheese, honeradle mustard on an a yee roll, garnished with sauerkraut. Served hot CANADIAN BACON ... 1.85 Sliced Canadian bacon with mazarella cheese, lettuce, mayonnaise, garnished with chopped tomatoes. Served hot THE PARTY We plan it to be Six Feet Long A combination of Italian meat, tangy cheeses, garnished with lettuce, onions, hot peppers, sliced tomato and special dressing. Must be ordered 3 days in advance. Serves 25-30 people HOT DOG ... .70 All beef hot dog served the way you like it KRAUT DOG ... .80 All beef hot dog garnished with mustard and NOW OPEN TO SERVE YOU! Drive Thru Call in Orders Available 27th and Iowa 842-2480 Fri., Sat. 11-10 p.m.dine-in 11-1 a.m. drive-thru Sun.-Thurs. 11-10 p.m. The Grinder Man 50¢ off Any mini-sandwich and drink Limit 3 per coupon Expiration date—February 15, 1982 Deliver to Campus Living Groups Sun.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m. $5.00 min. $1.00 off Any maxi-sandwich and drink Limit 3 per coupon Expiration date—February 15, 1982 ATOMIC Notice to Engineers May & Summer Graduates MASON & HANGER - SILAS MASON CO., INC. Engineers & Contractors Since 1827 May have the career for you. 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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 Nurses can take self-pace option Junior college or hospital nursing graduates with associates degrees are being offered the chance to complete a bachelor of science degree in nursing with only one year of extra work, an official at the University of Kansas College of Health Sciences said yesterday. "This program allows the graduates to further their education in nursing in a program that they can work on at their own pace," she said. "We dean for undergraduate programs at the School of Nursing, said. The program started last fall, consists of five equivalency tests for the nurses and an intense eight-week program, Geiss said. The first test, over medical and surgical techniques, checks the nurses on theory and practice of surgical methods, Geiss said. This test also covers care of adults. The second test that students must pass is equivalent to two courses in mental health nursing. Covering the psychological and emotional problems of patients, the test checks the ability of nurses to react in certain emotional situations, Geiss said. sard. The third test, on pediatrics, covers the care and special needs of hospitalized children. The fourth area, general obstetrics, tests the nurses' ability to care for expecting mothers before, during and after delivery of the The final area is one that differs greatly between curricula, Geiss said. This area, community health, is emphasized great in some programs and hardly at all in others. Students work with chronically ill patients who need daily home attention. "Nurses need to know how to deal with the chronically ill person or the diabetic who needs daily injections," Geiss said. The advantage of this type of program is that the nurses can work on the different tests at their own times while holding a job. Gaise said. About 25 nurses will graduate from the program this year with a bachelor's degree, Geiss said. This course will probably rise in the near future. The class, called a "transition course" by Doris Getgey, dean of the School of Nursing, prepares the nurse for a hospital setting. KU auto fleet resembles used car lot By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter The diversity of vehicles owned by the University of Kansas could match that of any used car lot. The 28 cars in the motor pool of KU's Facilities Operations include Ford Granadas, Chevrolet Chevettes and Plymouth Volares. And new AMC Concordes are on their way. The motor pool cars are only a part of the 240 vehicles owned by the University, Rosie Danielson, manager of the motor pool, said yesterday. "The MOTOR POOL FLEET is similar to a Hertz rent-a-car service," Danielson said. "The cars are rented by the staff and faculty for state business." "A lot of them are used by professors who teach classes in Leavenworth and Kansas City." Danielson said that the cars were rented at 22 cents a mile. The one van in the fleet rents for 26 cents a mile. Rental fees for the motor pool cars CAMP and save ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841-0101 808 W 24th 841-0101 808 W 24th offer expires Feb. 28, 1982 are paid out of departmental funds, she said. "Each department is billed monthly when they use it (the motor pool)." Danielson said. "We handle no cash." Dimelson said. We are moving the motor pool cars are housed across from the Computer Center. "The others are more or less owned by individual departments," she said, referring to the 214 other University vehicles. TWO UNIVERSITY BOAT trailers are used by the Kansas biological survey department when fishing exotic species in the lake to gather specimens, Danielson said. A 33-passenger bus used mainly by the track team and the women's basketball team, is also rented out through the motor pool. Danielson said the men's basketball team also used the bus for transportation to the airport when they played away games. "But we don't normally go over the road with the men's basketball team," she said. 1350 H. 3rd COUNTRY Inn $2.00 OFF Chick or Steak M-Th only 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 1350 H. 3rd COUNTRY Inn $1.00 OFF Chick or Steak Fri. & Sat. 9-4 Expires 2/28/82 Sun. 11-4 Included in the list of University vehicles is a 1982 white Buick Electra used by one person—Chancellor Gene A. Budig. "The new cars are white," Danielson said. "I think the last chancellor decided that it was easier to go with white." She said that when cars were never parked, it usually had 80,000 to 90,000 miles on the road. THE RESPONSIBILITY OF maintaining the 240 campus vehicles rests with John Kautz, physical plant supervisor of vehicle maintenance. He is assisted by four mechanics, two helpers and two KU students. the KEGGER the KEGGER COORS LONGNECKS the KEGGER WEEK 2016 JANUARY 25 the KEUGER WILMINGTON, DEC 20TH JULY ANNOUNCEMENTS 841-9450 DOMINO'S PIZZA Weekend Special! Good on Friday, Saturday or Sunday only. Use this coupon toward a mouth wetting pizza this weekend. Plus get 2 free cups of Pea with any purchase. No coupon necessary, just ask. Hours 4:30-1:00 Sun, Thurs 4:30-2:00 Fri & Sat Our drivers carry less than $10,000 in limited delivery area. We use only 100% real dairy cheese. $2.00 $2.00 off any 167.2 item or more cheese One cup per pizza 5:30-8:30 Good Friday Saturday or Sunday only. Fast, Free Delivery Good at locations listed. 1998s (430) 2 As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20,1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift. DOMINO'S PIZZA University-Community Service Scholarship Award Qualifications - Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term). *Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. Q - Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. Applications - Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Tuesday, February 16, 1982 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held February 23, 1982. * More information and applications available in the SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477. Summer work abroad offered The Council on International Education Exchange is sponsoring work camps where students will work in exchange for room and board, Anita Herzfeld, study abroad director, said yesterday. The chance to visit and work in a foreign country this summer is available to students through a new website by the KU office of study abroad. She said the camps offered students who did not have the money to study abroad a chance to go to another country. The work may be house construction, renovating a house for use as a community center, activities with senior citizens or working on a nature reservation, she said. Work experience or knowledge of the language would be useful, Herzfeld said, but are not necessary. Students will work eight-hour days, five days a week. She said it might be possible for students to arrange weekend trips. The countries involved in the program are Denmark, Sweden, Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Mexico. Arrangements for the job and housing will be made before the student leaves. She said that it was a structured program, but that the conditions of living and working would be spartan and quietly background might be necessary. She said living arrangements might be in student hostels or with families. The application deadline is March 15 for Mexico and May 1 for the European countries. There is an application fee of $125. Applicants will be notified by CIEE within three weeks after their applications are received. Good experiences abound More information on the work camps is available through the office of study abroad. 108 Strong Hall. KU alumni generosity aids taxpayers Alumni who donate to the University of Kansas have saved taxpayers much of the burden of supporting the state's largest university, Todd Seymour, Kansas University Endowment Association president, said recently. "There is something this place engenders in its alumni that makes them want to give money," Seymour would tell it, "that it was, we would bottle it and sell it." Since 1891, alumni have given $102 million to the University, which has been funneled through the Endowment Association, Seymour said. "We've been averaging about $1.5 million each year," he said. He said alumni probably gave generously because they had had extremely good experiences at the University and wanted KU to flourish. He said that 97 percent of the money was restricted in some way by its donors, and that student scholarships probably receive the majority of the Each year an average of $3 million is spent on scholarships, Seymour said. Student loans and money for library acquisitions, he said, were also areas to which gift money went. "Without the generous gifts of someone, I would not be the same." Syrrogr said. About half of the campus special-use buildings, such as Spencer Art Museum and Danforth Chapel, were made by them. They given to the University, he said. Out of the University's 890 acres of land, 935 acres were bought by alumni and given to the state, saving taxpayers from their amount of money, Seymour said. COUPON VISTABURGER AND SALAD BAR only $150 with this coupon Regular $2.35 Burger TABLE TWO --means the beautiful Whitehite Inn. A spacious high rise resort each room having a private ocean front garden, gameroom restaurant and cocktail lounge all located on the oceanfront Limit 1 order per coupon. One coupon per customer. Not valid in combination with any other offer. 1527 W. 6th Offer good 1 1 AM-8 PM Daily Inside Dining Room Only Coupon effective 2/11 - 2/14 Vista RESTAURANTS DELUXE DAYTONA BEACH MAKE A SPRING BREAK SUN ESCAPE! $11900 ECONOMY ESCAPE! BOTH PACKAGES INCLUDE: • 8 Days/7 Nights Lodging • Welcome Party • Sports Activities • All Taxes OPTIONS INCLUDE: • Side Trip To Disney World • Roundtrip Bus Only $10599 $89.00 Beach Hotel located directly on the beach. Each room is complete with two double beds, teléfono wireless, free Wi-Fi, and a bar. Datyona * Pt Lauderdale * Key Largo Paddle Island * Nassau Bahamas Bahamas Islands * Mexico FOR INFO CALL 842-6689 6-10pm per person SUMMIT TOUR LUDE: ging E: y World SUMMIT TOUR STOP BY OR CALL US FOR OUR Hearts & Flowers Bouquet. Valentine's Day is Sunday, February 14. You're sure to capture her heart with the romantic fresh flowers, Heart Stick Pin, and exclusive FTD Glass Heart Dish that make up our FTD HEARTS & FLOWERS™ Bouquet. Happy Valentine's Day It's romantic. And says all the things you've been meaning to say. So call or visit us today. Because every Valentine deserves flowers. Owens FLOWER SHOP 97TH & INDIANA Lawrence, Kansa 843-6111 OUBUYA helping you say it right. University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 Page 13 si Researchers explore diabetes Fat Excesses of it have been linked to high blood pressure, coronary diseases and recently to a disease that caused more than 32,000 deaths in 1890. People who are overweight, especially those who carry excess weight above the waist, are more likely to develop diabetes, according to researchers at the Medical College of Wisconsin. While the effect of fat on diabetics is being investigated by Wisconsin researchers, many other problems linked with diabetes are being researched at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. THIS RESEARCH is done by scientists looking for the source of diabetes and an eventual cure for the disease. Researchers have discovered that obese people, particularly American men with "pot bellies," are more likely to develop diabetes. ALTHOUGH MEN are more susceptible to the disease, according to the Wisconsin report, women who carry extra weight above the waist are also more susceptible. Sixteen women, whose extra weight was distributed in the waist, chest and arms, were tested by the Wisconsin Center to have warning signs of diabetes. The warning signs, which affect the body's ability to metabolize sugar, are high blood levels of glucose, insulin and fatty acids. JON BARR, a KU resident associate of biochemistry and diabetes researcher, is investigating the effect of diabetes on kidneys. BARR SAID there was an obvious difference between sections of mem- brance from diabetic specimens "and from healthy subjects. He said this difference linked diabetes with kidney problems and possible kidney failure in patients." ANOTHER RESEARCH program at the Med Center deals with the effect of diabetes on the cardiovascular system. Ruben Bunag, professor of pharmacology at the Med Center, has linked diabetes with high blood pressure in laboratory rats. His findings indicate that diabetics could also have a risk of high blood pressure. "Our research so far indicates that some of the effects on the cardiovascular system occur through diabetic reactions, which we theorize are caused by a malfunction in the brain," he said. Diabetic researchers have theorized that the hypothalamus gland, located in the medulla oblongata of the brainstem, controls 'Abdication' reveals secrets By ERLEEN J. CHRISTENSEN Contributing Reviewer "THE ABDICATION" BY RUTH WOLLEF Directed by Steven Vincent Directed by Steven Vincent Performances in the Inge Theatre: Feb. 12, 13, 14—8 p.m. Three queens, a king, a cardinal and the pope off stage. "The Abdication" packs the stage with powerful public figures, but it is private secrets—hidden hopes, fears and deeds—that explode on stage. The plot is simple: Christina, recently-abducted queen of Sweden, has arrived at the Vatican. Azzolino, a cardinal who is in line for the papacy, is her confessor. It is he who must decide if her conversion to Catholicism is real, whether she ought to be allowed asylum at the Vatican. "The Abdication" demands a great deal of Lisa G. Heffley and Tom Roberts as they play Christina and Azzolino, and the two perform together brilliantly. When Christina initially storms into the Vatican anteroom in which the play is set, she loses her position but lacking in royal majesty. But as Heffley develops the role of a woman torn by the conflicts between her masculine and feminine nature and plagued by nightmasks full of memories and fears, Heffley's portrayal of Christina's character seems more and more suitable. By the time Christina and Azzolino are locked in their struggle as two powerful but tormented people learning to trust and respect each other, Hefley's Christina and Roberts' Azzolino seem so right that the two no longer seem actors but the characters themselves. Azolillo probes such questions as "Why did you never marry?" and "Why did you become a Catholic?" with the relentlessness of a Freudian psychologist, getting Christina to reveal memories and fears she never had articulated. And playwright Wolff has woven those memories and fears Review into flashback scenes, which director Steven Vincent stages extremely effectively, allowing the characters of memory to flow between the actions of Christina and Azolino without interruiting them. found in these scenes with adviser and father-figure Oxensterna, and with childhood friends, Ebba, Charles and Magnus. The conflict between the different parts of Christina's personality are woven in with these flashbacks. The play has not one, but three Christmas. As the play progresses, the Christmas are not merely the young girl-Tina, the young queen-Chris, and the abdicated queen-Christina, but the three aspects of a personality struggling for integration. The short flashbacks are much more than necessary explanations of Christina's historical background. These vignettes of the childhood and youth of a queen give intimate glimpses into a woman's development. The answers to the questions that Azzolino asks Christina in the Vatican can be The casting of the minor characters also is excellent. Gretchen Kehde as Tina is meek, submissive, feminine and good. Elizabeth L. Blankard as Chris is daring, self-confident and firm. Yet the iron-willed queen who says she would be king and appoints her rejected suitor, Charles, as her heir and successor, has a vulnerability much like that of the good little girl who must take her dead sister Azalea into the throne. The disparate sides of Christina's nature to the surface, the interaction between the The rich marble sets look somber and grand; they compliment a fine play, well-acted and directed. Only the pendent for many students at University Theatre productions, detracts from the quality of "The Abdication." THE SNOBS AGAINST THE SLOBS. THE SNUBB RUNNING THE CLEAR! Caddyshack Aerial Prent Production CADDYSHACK CHEVY CHASE-RODNEY DANGERFIELD TED KIGHT-MICHAEL O'KEEF BILL MURRAY DELI PROGRAM Original Songs by BALZAN & COOPER; Playlist by CROWN FUNNY MANDARIN Written by RACHA LEYNOR; PICTURES BY HAPPY MAN & DOUGLEMAN Leisure Programme Produced by DOUGLEMAN Feb. 12 & 13 (Fri. & Sat.) at 7,9,&11 p.m. IN-DYCHE AUD in DYCHE AUD. (next to the Union) Tickets: $1.50 (next to the Union) BASF 90 Professional II 301 High base seats are limited With Professional II you'll hear all of the music and none of the tape. And I'm sure what you really want in a gigs. BASF Chrome. The world's quietest tape is like no tape at all. BASF 2 For $875 REG. $5.99 Each 3 AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASS now in our 35th year Effective Feb.15 Robinson North Gym will be closed for repairs. 9P Attention NonBusiness Undergraduates - Representatives from the KU School of Business will discuss the M.B.A, and other graduate programs in business available to those who do not have undergraduate business training. - Information is also available at 202 Summerfield, or call 864-3795. - Information will be provided and questions answered about admission requirements, programs of study, and job placement at meetings being held: Tuesday, Feb. 16, 3:30 p.m. Room 504 Summerfield Hall Monday, Feb. 15, 3:30 p.m. Southeast Conference Room Satellite Union The Arts The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Proudly Presents The Chamber Orchestra of Chambers... 2 "Chamber music in America can be dated pre- and post-Juilliard... The Juilliard is the yardstick against which all other groups are measured..." The First Family of Chamber Music Juilliard String Quartet 3:00 pm Thursday, February 11. 1982 Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont, Lawrence Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats general Admission/door open at 7:30 For reservations, call 913/864-3882 Student and Senior Class Discounts Available Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission A University Arts Festival Presentation Cold spell blamed on Arctic system Rv. JIM LEHNER By JIM LEHNEI Staff Reporter A high-pressure system stranded over Alaska, instead of the normal low-pressure one, is the main reason why the Lawrence area has had a winder, Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology, said yesterday. Eagleman, speaking at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, said that the high-pressure system that usually gave the area a mild winter was much farther south giving Alaska relatively warm weather and causing subzero weather here. "We've been experiencing a colder than normal winter," he said. "However, we've been lucky in the summer as far as snowstorms are concerned." "Masurable snowfall on the ground is only three inches here compared to 20 inches in St. Louis and more than 40 inches in Minnesota. Surprisingly, to the south of us in Wichita there are nine inches on the ground, and some parts of Oklahoma have more snow that we do." Eagleman said the bitterly cold winter was a result of a low-pressure system that had been in the area. "Heavy snows have fallen as a consequence in the North Central states such as North Dakota and Minnesota and tornadoes have spawned in the southern states in Oklahoma, Arkansas and Mississippi," he said. 'Many times when it snows in the Lawrence area we have winds that come in from the east because the major storm is located to the south Eagleman said that when forecasting snow, a meteorologist would look for the low-pressure area and be centered for the next 36 hours. Joe Eagleman TRACEY THOMPSON/Kansan Staff "We've been on the edge of a lot of snowstorms, and being in a cyclonic area for storms 'a storm or system of winds that rotate near a center of air atmosphere pressure," in Lawrence more difficult than on the coasts, because storm systems sometimes originate here," he said. Eaglemen said that a westerly flow of air would bring relief from the recent boom of cold air, raising temperatures in the area, said the warm air from the south and clear skies would prevail at leastthroughtomorrow. MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY Forcasting inclement weather such as floods, tornadoes and blizzards has become easier, he said, because of more trained meteorologists. One thing that had pleased Eagleman was the increase in professional meteorologists that forecast the weather on television. "I remember a few years back there were no trained meteorologists in the area at all." MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL EXA RACK 900 YEARS BUT SIDE SPIRITTING. BIZAKAR BIZARRE... ALL SEATS $3.00 Downtown 842-1085 Varsity Palmuline: 843-1063 Would You Like To Be The Student Senate Elections Committee Chairperson? Nominations are now being taken for the Student Senate Elections chairperson position. If you are interested in serving as chairperson of this committee, drop by the Student Senate Office, 105B Kansas Union, and sign up. Nominations are due by Monday, February 15, at 5:00 pm in the Student Senate Office. Self Nominations are welcome. Should you need further information about the responsibilities of the Student Senate Elections Committee Chairperson, feel free to contact the Senate Office at 864-3710. THURSDAY SPECIALS MEN'S NIGHT 25' DRAWS From 9 p.m. to Midnight MEN'S NIGHT FRIDAY SPECIALS Spiced Brailed Shrimp $1.50 1/4 lb. 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Over 500 types pipes Famous brand pipe tobacco Pioneer Meerschaum Butz-Choguin SCHRADE pocket knives PIPES Savinell GBD 1 yr. guarantee for loss SAVINELLI quartz pine lighters PIPE The Bookmark's In the Malls Shopping Center PIPE & TOBACCO SHOP 842-7152 --- COMMONWEALTH THEATRES CRANDAVY DOWNTOWN A COLUMBIA PICTURE PAULM SALLY NEWMAN FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PG VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1085 CALIGULA FESTIVAL DE CINEMA Y TELÉTRICA CINEMAS DEL CENTRO 760-214-8000 Lun. 10:30 - 20 Mes. 10:30 - 21 Sat. 9:30 - 15 HILLCREST 2 917-804-3000 HP HILLCREST BASE THE history of "The Birth" The dance of "Pischo" VENOM HILLCREST ENTHRALLING... CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Ever 7.15-9.25 M Sat Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 2 The mothers of "The Rish" The danger of "Pocchie" Ever 7.15-9.25 Mal Sat Sun 2:15 VENOM R HILLCREST 2 HEY BAND Ever 7.20-8.20 MAT SAT SUN 2:15 CINEMA 1 RICHARD DRAYFUSS in Whose life is it anyway? Ever 7.20-8.20 Sat Sun 2:00 CINEMA 2 THEY ARE UNKNOWN APRIL Ever 7.30-8.30 Sat Sun 2:00 HILLCREST 970 326 1004 HEART READ EVEN. 1:30 & 8:00 MAT. SAT SUN 2:15 Whose life is it anyway? 1.79.9 20:30, Sun 2.00 CINEMA 2 TELEPHONE 353-746-9000 THEY ALL LUNCHED MUSICIAN BEN GLANZMAN Friday 7:30-8:30 Saturday 7:30-2:00 University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 State song may be replaced BKKEVINHELLIKER By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter George Stawitz wrote only three songs in his life, two just for the fun of it and one called "Dear Dog." Dear Dog was Home on the Ramp" as the state song. Although Stawitz, a life-long Topea resident, is dead, his 77-year-old son, Emul, plans to lobby for a bill introduced in the Kansas Senate last Monday that would unseat "Home on the Range." the state song since 1947. Stawitz hopes to persuade the Legislature to pass the bill, sponsored at his request by State Sen. Elwain Pomeroy, R-Topeka, by playing a version of his father's song for the legislators. "My father's song talks about Kansas a lot more than 'Home on the Range.' " "My father wasn't exactly a musician," Stawitz, a Topea resident, said yesterday. "But my family are all Kansans clean to the bone, you might Stawitz took his father, who was a postal clerk for nearly 50 years, wrote the song shortly before he died about 15 years ago, at the age of 82. Since then, the song has been copyrighted and recorded by a church choir. Stawitz said. State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said he was not sure how the Legislature would react to the idea of a song, but thought it humorous. "Home on the Range" is a good situation, and said. "But maybe it's time for a new tute." Solbach said "Home on the Range" might be perceived as more an international song than a state song in Sweden, but the number one hit in Sweden in 1898. But Dennis Quinn, a KU professor of English and director of the Integrated Humanities Program, said he thought any threat to abolish "Home on the Range" from state song status would be serious. "They're playing with dynamite if they go around changing state songs," Quinn said. "I would think there would be considerable public outcry. " 'Home on the Range' is a beautiful song. It has a remarkable melody. It certainly describes Kansas and identifies us as a western state, which I like. "I would regret very much having it changed. I can't believe the Legislature has made such a mistake." He said the Legislature might be COME TO TIME OUT TONIGHT AND ENJOY BIG 64 OZ. PITCHERS OF COORS AT A SUPER PRICE 8-9 PM $1.50 PITCHERS, 9-10 $1.75, 10-midnight $2.00 THURSDAY NIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT TIME OUT Look For Our Grand Opening Tomorrow! AT take TIME OUT THE PLACE TO PARTY WP Everyone loves Winter Park. It is one of the few areas where beginners can skip from the very top of the mountain. The Mary Jane area offers some of the best intermediate and expert terrain anywhere. Our deluxe condominium units offer full kitchen, fireplace, swimming pool, sauna and jacuzzi. SPRING BREAK SKI ESCAPE 3/14-15 2408 IOWA $199 WINTER PARK 3 full days lift tickets 3 full days ski rental 3 full days ski rental Ski only 6 days/5 mghs in a deluxe condominium with kitchen Ski party Optional Party Bus in many areas All taxes and service charges Party Bus Option $89 3 full days lift tickets For More Details: Call 842-6689 6-10 p.m. SUMMIT TOUR impressed that a life-long Kansan wrote "Kansas," as old Kansas, "the STUNNING Finance & Accounting Majors "There are many states in old America Wanted: Finance and Accounting Majors (BBAs and MBAAs). As the lead bank within the Republic of Texas Corporation, a 31-member board of directors controls a financial base in excess of $10 billion. That's why we are always on the lookout for talented individuals with a determination to keep us on top of the banking industry — no matter how far we are from it. We are developing an investment Program prepares you for that challenge. Our Republic is still the land of opportunity! And we all have one we call our home; If you feel this program is what your career needs, consider these qualifications: an MBA with nine (9) hours of accounting or a BBA with twelve (12) hours of accounting. We also look for good personal selling skills and a GPA of 3.0 or better. If you can meet these qualifications, you should be looking at a career in the land of opportunity — RepublicBank Dallas. Some like North and West, some like East on the beach The College Graduate Development Program at RepublicBank Dallas was designed specifically for those individuals with an interest in commercial lending. It exposes young bankers to the diversity of opportunities in banking at RepublicBank Dallas. Formal instruction along with on-the-job training prepares young bankers for lending assignments. Our training includes seminars, workshops, and internships in different department, working with our top lender officers. CHEMICAL EQUIPMENT INDUSTRIAL GROUP An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H/V Collect on our contact information your Placement Office regarding our upcoming campus events RepublicBank Dallas ONE BILL would extend to 1993, the deadline to attain health standards set for 1981, seriously weaken the act, she said. But here's one state I'll claim for all my own X "This bill would allow auto emissions to double," McCullough said. The Clean Air Act is currently under study by the House Environment and Public Works subcommittee. The committee has been holding meetings on the bill and now is in closed conference to decide what will be sent to the House for a vote. Meanwhile, she said, the Commitment to Clean Air Resolution entered in the House of Representatives last year would basically reintroduce the 1970 act and the 1977 amendment for approval. "Reagan mentioned this one in this State of the Union address and called it a compromise." Congress considers Clean Air Act They greet you and fill you with delight." McCullough said that about four bills had been submitted and that two of them had tried to weaken the act. Quinn said, "You don't mind a little corminess in state songs, especially for the youngsters," he added. This section is divided into three parts: first, those areas where very little additional pollution is allowed, such as in national parks; second, those areas where pollution would be controlled; and third, those areas where even more development would be allowed. In their splendor beautiful and bright Waving fields of corn not to you each much. ... dear old Kansas, re the corn and pumpkins grow, dreaming, always scheming To Kansah I know. Mid the golden wheat fields Waits a girl with heart so心 Now I'm yearning to be returning To Kansas where skies are ever blue. Out in Kansas where the golden Kansas should be concerned with the section of the bill dealing with air that is cleaner than present standards require, she said. support from business groups but congressional and environmental forces opposed it. McCallough said she was convinced Congress would either amend or pass the Clean Air Act because it was an election year. Rose McCullough, Northern Plains lobbist for the National Sierra Club, spoke at a KU Sierra Club meeting in support of the Clean Air Act, which is facing a 1982 deadline for be extended. The Clean Air Act was passed in 1970 and amended in 1977. Faced with a renewal deadline extended to 1982, Reagan submitted his own proposal for the act in August 1981, asking for significant loosening of regulations in the clean air legislation. The proposal received A national lobbyist for the Clean Air Act, now under congressional study for extension, said last night a report critic about a strong bill heinred passed. "Lou Harris did a poll on the question of the bill," she said, and "80 percent of the people polled would have even if they had to pay more for it." Use Kansan Classified Effective Listening Program Get the most out of your classes, by remembering more of what you hear. Two Sessions Thursday and Tuesday February 11 and 16 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. For registration and payment of fees contact The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064. --or stop by our downtown office. 900 Mass. AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION PRESENTS: African Night An Evening of Entertainment and Involvement In Black History, Arts, and Culture Saturday, February 13, 1982 5:00-10:00 p.m., Community Building, Eleventh and Vermont $3.50 for Adults, $2.00 for Children Tickets available at the KU Office of Minority Affairs, 324 Strong Hall, the International Club Office, Room 115B, Kansas Union, SUA Office and Sunday OMEKWE-864-6095. Sponsored by the African Students Association We'll get you the Lowest Air fares ALFAROBI Or we'll pay you the difference! We guarantee that if you find there was a lower fare than the one used for your car, we will reimburse you the difference. We are the only company making this guarantee. We can do it because we know how to manage it. Roundtrip from Kansas City First Class Coach Special Fare Atlanta $418 $342 $224 Boston 630 530 264 Chicago 408 296 118 Dallas 332 298 118 Denver 428 306 178 Houston 402 306 119 Los Angeles 820 592 199 Miami 610 508 238 New Orleans 404 320 192 New York 752 542 258 Orlando 544 454 238 Phoenix 628 470 215 San Francisco 882 636 325 Seattle 892 636 318 Washington 552 394 209 Honolulu 1232 724 541 Anchorage 1105 849 550 Acapulco 668 490 245 Frankfurt 3146 1316 649 London 2566 710 545 Amsterdam 2638 778 517 Puerto Valtaria 646 462 258 Tampa 552 444 198 Pizza Fares subject to change without notice. Seat availability is limited for certain Maupintour travel service Kansas Union 749-0700 Azerbaijan Society of Bovet Agents ASTA LILL HILY WOWS SMOKY HILL ART EXHIBITION ART EXHIBITION SMOKY HILL SMOKY HILL ART EXHIBITION NEC Smoky Hill urled Art Exhibition ATTENTION ARTISTS Smoky HIll $1,800 CASH AWARDS Slide entries due March 1, 1982 For Entry Forms, Write Hays Arts Council Box 896 Havs. KS 67601 See your alternatives in: Tired of your present living situation? What is a Scholarship Hall Really Like? An audio-visual production by the ALL SCHOLARSHIP HALL COUNCIL & OFFICE OF RESIDENTIAL PROGRAMS THURSDAY, FEB. 11th, 7:30 p.m., PARLOR A,KANSAS UNION Valentine's Day Special Bring your valentine out for a sweetheart parfait! Sweetheart Parfaits for 89° Bocky's Offer good thru Sunday Feb.14 100% Bucky's 2120 W.9th SUA FILMS Presents TONIGHT "★★★★" —Richard Freedman, Newhouse Newspapers "A MARVELOUS FILM!" —Rex Reed, Syndicated Columnist CADDIE ...a true story 7:30 p.m. From ATLANTIC RELEASING CORP. FRIDAY & SATURDAY mon Oncle d'Amérique FRI.—7:00 SAT.—3:30, 9:30 $1.50 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 Page 9 --- ently En- sub- been i now decide for a 8.774 Springboard to better education University Scholars look for knowledge By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter In the big pool of KU undergraduates, there lies a little pool, 20 students strong, that might send out ripples to move the rest of the water. The students are University Scholars, chosen from various schools and departments throughout the University of Kansas and enrolled in the Map of Knowledge, a course designed to give them an appreciation of various areas of knowledge and the methods used to study them, according to the instructor of the course, Michael Young, associate professor of philosophy. UNIVERSITY SCHOLARS is one of many programs to be implemented as the result of recommendations by the Report of the Commission on the Improvement of Undergraduate Education, which was released Dec. 4. "They represent an exciting beginning to some very positive developments in the undergraduate program," Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs and the commission, said recently. Although KU has not had a Rhodes Scholar since 1976, administrators say the University Scholars program is in its final ground for potential national scholarships. "There's more to it than 20 students," Frances Hellier, chairman of the committee that selected the scholars, said. "We're also setting an example that is much more important than if we were just electing a student a Rhodes Scholar." THIS IS the first semester for the program, which is funded by the Kansas University Endowment Association About 600 students competed last semester for the 20 positions. Outstanding sophomores will be eligible each year to become University Scholars. Students recommend themselves or are recommended by faculty members. Selections are based on college and high school transcripts, faculty evaluations and a statement by the students. Diabetes Association Meeting. "Home Blood Glucose Testing" "Home Blood Glucose Testing" Tuesday, Feb 11 Lawrence Room Lawrence Memorial Hospital Lawrence Room As a scholar, the student receives two hours credit for the Map of Knowledge course and one hour of credit for work with a faculty mentor. They are then offered a position in the relationship with the mentor, for the rest of their undergraduate career. Young said he hoped the class would serve as a springboard for better undergraduate education throughout the University. HE SAID more and better remedial courses were needed. "You don't do that in the same way you teach the Map of Knowledge." Young said, "But the more fact that we're singling out a group of students and saying, 'We're going to put ourselves out for you,' I hope will encourage other people to put themselves out for other groups of students." Because the students study widely diversified areas, Young said he hoped to foster in the Scholars an appreciation for the nature of different areas of learning. "It's delightful," Young said of the course. "There are 20 people with 20 good hands and one with different hands and different feet, so speak to each of those people and ap- In conducting the course, Young is not introducing the usual lessons of math, science and literature, but the nature of the study of these areas and others and how they differ and are related. precitate the virtues of each mind is tremendous. Someone who likes to teach couldn't possibly ask for a more exciting task." FOR EXAMPLE, the students aren't learning algebraic equations, but rather the thinking that is behind the way such equations are worked out. Virginia Hunnel, Lawrence junior described the first few classes. "First of all, we started to dig into mathematics—not the technical details—but to be specific, we'd like to see it a scandal that deals with abstracts," she said. "Now we're into natural sciences and we see differences in the way the two are approached. Math starts with basic rules and a person applies their knowledge to the rules. We are investigating science in a way that you would not in a biology class. In science, you work backward. You use your knowledge and experiment and then come up with the rules." Cindy Pattay, Parsons sophomore, said an example of questions explored were: Why is science science and not a math? What mathematics? what makes it distinctive? "ITTS CURIOUS to be a class where the overall is considered and not the fine details. It's such an opportunity. It keeps me working hard. It's so different from what I've been doing," Hunnel said. "In my own mind I've been trying to work toward this without help. Here, I'm hearing other people's minds working toward this too." Young said he tried to use a sampling of different areas for the students to consider and called on other faculty members to help when needed. The class also will explore the life of the mind and try to understand it more broadly. "THE PURSUIT of knowledge is only one thing that we do with our minds." Young said. "It's very different from musical performance, for example, where your aim is not to know something but to perform a piece of music. I want to develop an appreciation for this life of the mind." "The only reasonable way to prepare 'people to do well in graduate schools and fellowship competitions and to work with the best possible education.' Younne said. Patton said she wanted to try her hand at getting a Rhodes Scholarship. "I would love to have the chance to apply, to see if I could meet their requirements," she said. Hunnel said the program in itself was beneficial. "I AM GLAD for this opportunity," she said. "I think people are pleased to see the University do it. "If it has courses like 002 in mathematics for those who need that to be all they can be, and if there are those in a position to move ahead and they have something like this to help them be all they can be, it is to be applauded, to see the University deal with a variety of students." JERRY HARPER ATTORNEY 901 KENTUCKY Suite 204 841-9485 MASS. STREET DELL OAK MASSACHUSETTS Buy Your Valentine A Sausage Sandwich Valentine Weekend Special $ \mathrm{1.50} $ Hot or Mild How to Wear At the Losing Game DIET CENTER 123 Earl Natural 841 DIET 845 Iowa Historic Medical Center SANDWICH Offer good No coupons accepted with this offer. Enjoy Coke now thru Sun., Feb. 14 Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 841-DIET Large Selection of Ladies' and Men's Swimwear Now Available At Swim Quick. 7920 Santa Fe, Downtown 649-8456 Overland Park 649-7845 SWIM QUIK BEACHWEAR Give Your Sweetheart A Nauti-Body For Valentines Day 2 Lines of Equipment Olympic Weights Indoor Jogging Track Whirlpool Sauna Individual Programs Supervised Instruction Supervised Kidle Corral Tanning Booth Nautilus FITNESS CENTER Southern Hills Mail 1601 W. 23rd 749-1501 Get It While It's Hot Special 3 Month Gift Certifica $69.00 Cornucopia Restaurant - Luncheon Specials Weekdays Through February. Cornucopia Salad with Soup and Bread. $2.50 Now Featuring: Weekend Breakfast Specials 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday: Breakfast Enchiladas $3.75 Sunday: Sweetkeent French Toast with fresh strawberry sauce & real whipped cream. $3.75 $3.75 Open 7 days a week 11-10 weeksdays 10-10 weekends 1801 Massachusetts 842-9637 on campus TODAY There is a 5 P.M. ENTRY DEADLINE for the Recreation Hall and RACQUETBALL TOURNAMENT. Sign up in 208 Robinson Center. THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will present "The Ladder of Creation" and "Generation upon Generation" beginning at 7:30 p.m. in 308 Dyche Hall. THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF KANSAS will meet at 8 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT COLLOQUIUM will feature John Dolis speaking on "Thoreau's Walden: The Poetics of Fire" at 8 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW THE UNDERGRADEUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. Workshop to examine minerals Ruth Genrich, the museum's director of public education, encouraged amateur rock collectors and anyone else who was interested to bring to the workshop rocks they wanted identified. The Lawrence Gem and Mineral Club will present a workshop, "Gems and Mineral: Leave No Stone Unturned," at the KU Museum of Natural History. Mr. Bills Thursday Night Feb.11th "We would like people to register in advance in the public education office for the workshop," he said, and a registrar just before the workshop begins," Gen民 said yesterday. 5Oc Bottles from 8-12 Special Drawings for Beer, Shirts, & Hats. 7 SNA FILMS Presents SUNDAY AN IMPORTANT NEW FILM FROM POLAND "EXTRAORDINARY. A political epic, compassionate and as bitterly funny as a cartoon... big, fascinating risky film that testifies not only to the Mavridon contemporary. Polish life. *VINCENT CARANT* The New York Times АНДРЕЛ МАJОВАС MAN OF MARBLE Part of the proceeds go to KU Friends of Solidarity 2:00 p.m. SUNDAY $1.50 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM --- SUA FILMS Presents CUTTER'S WAY (originally called CUTTER AND BONE) is acclaimed as one of the best films of the year even though it has been seen by few people. It is a mystery thriller about three friends on the trail of a rich industrialist who sets out to retrieve a stolen car, and for the super characterizations of John Heard as an embriated Viet Nam Vet. Jeff Bridges as his laidback pal and Lisa Eichhorn as Bridges equally laidback wife, and for the outstanding direction of Ivan Paser. This is what Time Magazine; Andrew Sarris, Village Voice; J Hoberman, Village Voice; Carrie Rickey, Village Voice; Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times; Shaun Bonge, Los Angeles Times; ONE OF THE BEST FILMS OF THE YEAR. Sheila Benson, Los Angeles Times; Seth Cagin, Soho News; Bruce McCabe, Boston Globe "Back in March, I called 'Cutter's Way' the best-directed Hollywood movie of the year.Nothing has appeared since that can remotely touch it . . an unqualified triumph." -J. Hoberman, Village Voice Cutter's Way FRI - 3:30, 9:30 $1.50 FRI 3:50, 9:30 SAT 7:00 Friday & Saturday, Feb. 11 & 12 SAT - 7:00 WOODRUFF AUDITORUM Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 Scoreboard Basketball Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Team W L Pct GB Boston 34 14 76% - Baltimore 34 14 76% - Washington 24 24 300 % New Jersey 24 24 340 % New York 22 27 11% Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee 13 38 702 Detroit 13 19 174 13 Arizona 15 27 131 Indiana 20 29 408 14 Chicago 10 26 408 14 Chicago 10 36 234 12 San Antonio 30 25 17 638 3 Houston 28 22 25 638 5 Oklahoma 25 22 25 638 3 Utah 16 31 31 340 14 Kansas City 16 31 31 340 14 Kansas City 14 33 14 398 14 Seattle 34 13 723 Los Angeles 34 13 723 Los Angeles 27 19 6% Golden State 26 20 545 Phoenix 26 20 545 Phoenix 14 14 7% New Jersey 113, Delaware 180 Illinois 94, Ohio 112 Portland 104, Indiana 91 Washington 115, Dallas 102 Washington 115, Dallas 102 Utah 131, Denver 180 Utah 131, Denver 180 Team W W 1 Pct. GB Missouri 9 3 1 667 Illinois 9 3 1 667 Nebraska 5 4 556 3½ Okahanna State 5 4 556 3½ Oklahoma State 5 4 556 3½ Kansas 3 2 633 3½ Iowa State 3 2 633 3½ Michigan 3 2 800 3½ YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Number in parentheses indicates UPI Note: Number in parentheses indicates ranking. Kansas 68, Kansas State 14 (58) Nebraska 75, Oklahoma State 63 Colorado 74, Iowa State 64 PUTTLE STATES Virginia 19, North Carolina State 36 Falcon 13, Virginia 58 Kentucky 9, (56) Missouri 49 LST 73,庐州县 111(68) LST 73,庐州县 111(68) Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference British Diphonor Campbell Conference Norris Division Montreal 31 11 11 12 26 254 158 74 Boston 31 17 17 26 284 184 69 Buffalo 30 17 9 9 261 172 69 Chicago 30 19 9 9 280 185 69 Hartford 40 26 10 15 185 178 69 Minnesota 22 17 16 16 324 200 60 St. Louis 22 17 16 5 224 200 54 Columbus 22 17 16 5 224 200 54 Chicago 26 10 10 10 245 260 45 Toronto 26 10 10 10 245 260 45 Philadelphia 19 15 14 14 284 255 43 Team H 14 L 1 W T GF 64 PAts. Washington 19 20 5 18 64 Philadelphia 14 29 5 18 64 NY Rangers 25 21 9 203 115 59 New York 25 21 9 203 115 59 Washington 15 28 9 209 118 59 Erdmerton 38 13 10 10 313 227 80 Calgary 25 14 13 13 215 204 53 Vancouver 19 16 11 11 291 204 39 Colorado 19 16 11 11 281 204 39 Colorado 11 12 9 16 167 215 17 Hartford 1, Pittsburgh 3 Buffalo 4, Winnipesau 3 Vancouver 4, Toronto 1 New York Rangers 3, St Louis 3 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Eastern Division Team W 15 Pct GR Pittsburgh 15 5 727 Baltimore 15 5 727 New York 14 5 727 Buffalo 14 5 728 Philadelphia 9 16 304 Philadelphia 9 16 304 New Jersey 5 14 303 St. Louis 20 10 870 9 Louisiana 15 11 361 9 Deerver 10 11 414 9 Memphis 10 11 417 9 Phoenix 10 14 410 10 Kansas City 6 18 103 14 'Mean Joe' Greene quits after 13 years YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 13, Buffalo 9 By United Press International "I wasn't able to do the things I felt I had to spend during a lunchon the Steelers belly." PITTSBURGH-Defensive tackle Joe Greene, the man coach Chuck Noll said set the standards of excellence for the four-time NFL champion Pittsburgh Steelers, announced yesterday that he was retiring after 13 seasons because he could no longer live up to his own expectations. ATTENTION HARVEST BESTAURANT Commercial Cuisine IN THE MARKETPLACE AT 123 BROADWAY KU Students and Chamber Music Patrons attending the concert by the Juilliard String Quartet. A free shuttle bus is available for transportation between Murphy Hall and Plymouth Congregational Church Bus will leave "N" Zone Parking Lot, across from Murphy Hall, at 7:30 p.m. and will return immediately following the concert. Free parking available in "N" zone The Jailhouse Concert is at 8:00 a.m. Thursday, February II, at Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont. Tickets are now on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. Arts Festival Called "Mean Joe" through the first half of his career because of his crushing tackles and intimidating play, Greene was named to the Pro Bowl team 10 times. He also was the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year in 1969 and was the NFL Player of the Year in 1972 and 1974. He is a virtual shoinion for the Pro Football Hall of Fame when he becomes eligible in 1987. K CITIES FESTIVAL FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Free Estimates THE PRESTON MEC ALL COMPANY 311 N. 3rd 811-6067 GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL University of Arizona offers more than 40 courses, anthropology, art, bilingual education, folk music and folk dance, history, political science, sociology, Spanish language and literature and intensive Six-week session. June 28 August 6. 1982. fully accredited graduate and undergraduate program. Tuition $360. Room and board in Mexican home. $395. FEO/AA V Kansas State upset; Sooners. Buffs win By United Press International Write Guadalajara Summer School Big Eight scoring leaders David Little and Chuckie Barnett scored 20 points each to lead Oklahoma to a 88-58 upset of 14-hranked Kansas State last night, the Sooners' 11th consecutive victory at home. Robert L. Nugent 205 University of Arizona Tucson 85721 (602) 626-4729 Kansas State entered the scoring with the first basket and led 4-2 in the opening minutes, but it was all Oklahoma from there. The Sooners, 14-7 and 5-4, took their biggest lead at 7-52 of the first half when Barnett hit a dunk to put Oklahoma up by 16, which was the size of Oklahoma's lead at the ball. In other Big Eight action, sophomores Jay Humphries and Vince Kelley combined for 42 points last night, 26 of them in the second half, to pace Colorado to a 74-64 conference victory over Iowa State. Kansas State 16-5 and 6-3, was led by Randy Reed and Tjankovik with 12 wins. Colorado trailed 35-32 at inter- mission, before Humphries, a 6-3 guard, hit three straight jump shots to put Colorado ahead. The Cyclones came back to lead 39-38, but Colcado took the lead again and never trailed. Kelley was the game's high scorer with 22 points and Humphries added 20 for the Buffs, who are now 2-8. Guard Joe Washington chipped in 11 points. Ron Harris had 21 points for the 2-7 Cyclones, and Barry Saves added 18. At Lincoln, Neb., Jack More scored a season-beginning 25 points, including a 15 of 15 foul shooting performance, to power Oklahoma State. A 75-43 victory over Oklahoma State. Moore's performance, which included 19 second-half points, helped lift the Huskers into a three-way tie for third place in the big Eight race with Oklahoma at 54. Both the Cornhuskers and Cowboys are 13-8 this season. 1974 Junior center Terry Smith bolstered the Husker attack with a career-high 15 points and seven rebounds, while Jerry Crawford scored 12 scores and 10 points respectively. Leroy Combs led the Cowboys with 13 points. Jay Humphries GO Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters Quarters 611 W. 9th 843-2138 PETER SAYER Place a Kansan want add Cell 864.4358 Vince Kelley Call 864-4358. $ 3^{1 / 2} \text{¢}$ COPIES COPIES HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. — 842-3610 Your time. That what it takes to help others through Peace Corps. To pass along skilled trades like carpentry or welding. To demonstrate better methods of farming or family planning. To work on schools and irrigation systems. A year or two can make a world of difference. Don't you think it's about time you called? "LACEMENT OFF CARRUTH-O'LEARY FEB 18th, 19th IT'S ABOUT TIME. Don't forget FRIDAY NIGHT SHRIMP PEEL Only $1.50 per 1/4 pound Special Drink Prices 4 p.m.-8 p.m. Also 95c Drinks 8-12 Thursday is Ladies Night at Mingles $5.00 for all you can drink from 8 to 12 MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE MINGLES LOUNGE 2222 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Ks. 842-7030 Ext. 136 Two new members to our staff Diana Matthews Jayne Naas ANNOUNCING We wish to extend an invitation to you to come in and meet them at .. hair lords formerly of Uppercut styling for men and women 1017 1/2 Mass. 841-8276 etc. Intramurals Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Greek Men Res. A. Rec. A Zips 41, Slidgerface 33 Hengermen 46, Fiji A 39 Independent Men Greek Men Bac R LF. 34. The Band-Ita 32 LB. 36. The Band-Ita 32 C. 9, D. 8, Cuffia Bb. and the Herd 31 G B.C. 30. Triple Niggle II G. B.C. 43. Grumman Drives 43 G. B.C. 47. Grumman Drives 47 Nec, B Vaillant Tahmine 24 Thehings 29, Goldblens 28 Vodnum Nodes 34, Wardz 17 Heery H's 35, Quan 33 Independent Men Rec.B Georgia 4, Vandals 39 Graces '14 Face 7, Software 31 Cunninghaga Lingata 44, Mme Murdes 16 Jeky '14 Face 8, Software 31 Dog 32, The Broombusters 26 Dog 31, The Broombusters 26 The Wrath 7 Lakers 60, Debry and The Spartans 22 Jeky 44, Adalabator Institute 34 The Commands's 31, the Run and Guns 41 Melissa 52, The Broombusters 22 Melissa 52, The Broombusters 22 Bullets Bombers 45, Geon 43 Lorey and the Lireurs 60, F. A Wooldgecko Theta Waters 45, Mariborosa 39 D.P. X 42, South Wind Sparks 39 Virgil Starkell's Thunderder Herd 40, Maxwell's Dempres 32 Kings defeat Lakers By United Press International Drew hit 11 of 14 shots from the field and also dished out 7 assists to help the Kings snap a nine-game losing streak to the Lakers. The win over the Lakers was the first in three seasons for the Kings. KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Larry Drew scored 25 points and guarding shoots Ernie Grunfeld and Mike Woodson combined for 40 more to give the Kansas City Kings a 125-126 victory yesterday over the Los Angeles Lakers. Grunfeld added 22 and Woodson had 18 for the Kings, who posted only their second victory in their last 10 games. Drew and Woodson combined for 23 of Kansas City's 32 third-quarter points to move the dugs from a seven-point deficit to three, despite 70 percent shooting from the field in the third quarter by the Lakers. The Kings then outscored Los Angeles 10-2 during the opening 3 minutes of the game to put the game away at 99-80. Grunfeld scored 16 points and Eddie Johnson scored 8 in that final period, as the team leaded scores of up to 25 points in snapping a three-game Los Angeles winning streak. By United Press International Foster signs for $10 million Harris and Jim Kern to the Cincinnati Reds. NEW YORK-George Foster, the most prolific run producer in the major leagues over the last six seasons, yesterday signed a five-year contract with the New York Mets that could be worth more than $10 million. The transaction completed a trade that sent catcher Alex Trevino and pitchers Greg The 33-year-old Foster's contract is the largest in Mets history and included a "sizable signing bonus," several incentive bonuses and an attendance clause. Metts General Manager Frank Cashen said he has赚了 money after calling the neighborhood of million" but that the clauses could bring in much more revenue. Five Sessions Mondays and Wednesdays 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. Improve your reading speed and concentration. For registration and payment of fees contact: February 17,22,24 March 1,3 The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4084. Bitten By The Love Bug??? From Our From Our "Love Island" Treat It With A Card Or Gift Featuring Candy Casual Wear Bouquets Lone Muas Sweaters Cards & Posters Get your Valentine something special at the Jayhawk Bookstore SQUARE PARK 1420 CRESCENT 843-3826 footlights PENTE NOMO THE CLASSIC GAME OF SKILL 1982 LAWRENCE CITY CHAMPIONSHIP CITY CHAMPIONSHIP AT GAMMONS MONDAY FEBRUARY 15,1982 8:00 p.m. Officially Sanctioned Qualifying Tournament la PRZE. Round tie all expenses & Deluxe Pente Board inscribed "Lawrence City Champion" 2nd PRIZE: Deluxe Pente Board from Footlights 3rd PRIZE: A keg of beer from Gammons You may qualify for: 1982 WORLD OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP IN DALLAS FEBRUARY 27 & 28 1st PRIZE: $5,000 & Trip for 2 to London PLUS A one of a kind Ceramic Vase Pente Trophy Pre-register at Gammons and Footlights co-sponsored by Gammons and Footlights. University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 Page 11 and Eddie period, as 25 points Angeles ames. for 23 of points to en-point 78 lead, on the Lakers. Angeles es of the away at From page 12 ncinnati tract is included several endance Frank could $10 sould $10 Recruiting Kansas also recruited four linebackers. The Jayhawks lose Kyle McNorton and Chris Toburen this year to graduation, but Mike Arbanas and Edie Simmons have both had playtime at those positions. Dane Griffin, 6-3, 205. "He's been in our summer camps," Fambread said of the Lawrence High linebacker. "We know quite a bit about him." Darnell Billom, 6-3, 22. Williamis paired high school ball at Sumner High in Kansas City. "He's an all-around good athlete," Fambroub said. "We expect him to step in and play for us and contribute quickly." Lyndall Yarnell, 6-2, 185. Yarnell, who played prep ball at Washburn Rural in Topeka, was the city's defensive player of the year. Yarrell was also a first-team all- Centennial League, allichet and aliaHQ and all-Team All-Stars. Tony Berry, 6-1, 175. Berry, a linebacker from Assumption High School in East St. Louis, Ill., was a Parade All-American and intercepted more than 30 passes in his pre career. He was recruited by 125 schools. Fambrough also said that Troy Richardson, a punter from Edison High, is coming to Kansas next fall as a walkon. "There was a lot of pressure on me," Berry said, "but I'd also have to say "He's one of the outstanding punters in the California area," Fambrough said. "He's got a good chance to replace Bucky (Scribner)." In the end, Kansas will fill its allotment for scholarship athletes and be forced to turn down some players. "This is just about what we expected. We tried to avoid getting more commitments than we could sign, and we did. "We also hope to have a large number of walkons." RECRUTING NOTES: Nebraska signed 28 recruits yesterday, including three Kansas players. Missouri signed 11 players, but just one Kansas player, the Tigers traced back from Emporia. The Tigers recruited heavily from St. Louis this year. "We're real close." Fambrough said. Oklahoma announced the signing of just nine recruits yesterday, but the Sooners are expected to pick up quite a few more today. Oklahoma State announced the signing of 21 players yesterday, but only two from Oklahoma. Iowa State signed 26 players, eight of them junior college transfers. The Cyclones' defense has mascots Alvin Baker, Alvin Beker, a defensive bishop from Garden City Junior College. Robert Mimbs, 6-4, 180. Mimbs, a defensive play, played high school ball at Wandyote High in Kansas City, Kan. Kansas State picked up nine recruits yesterday. from Independence, Kan., will sign letters tomorrow with Kansas, according to their coaches. Both are encouraging teachers to join them for the summer celebrity. Colorado inked 10 of the state's top prospects, including Barry Redington, a 218-pound linebacker and offensive tackle. Colorado signed a total of 13 prep athletes and announced the transfer of 15 junior college players. that all the attention was nice. Making a decision was tough, but I think I'll be happy at KU. Coach Farnbrough was the nicest guy I met of the coaches I The University Daily In addition to these 26, three more were expected to sign last night. They are Charles Cooper, a backbone from Raytown South; Sean Kearney, a backbone from Raytown South; and Willie Pless, a 64-20, 120 point linebacker from Aniston, Ala. John Martel, a lineman from Pittsburg, and Chip Schuler, a lineman Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES KANSAN WANT ADS one tie two tweaks four five six seven eight nine ten 15 words or fewer $2.25 $2.25 $2.75 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25 $6.00 15 words or fewer $2.25 $2.25 $2.75 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25 $3.25 $6.00 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday Thursday Tuesday Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS POPU can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 804-4338. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS ERRORS POKER AND CHFSS LESSONS. 841-0996 ff KOA Laundromat. Free dry with 75 wash. By the Airport. East highways 842-3827. THE ETC. SHOP 10 West 9th, west of the Candy Store) Vintage and classic content-mentory clothing—clothing, pures, hats, jackets, dresses, shoes, salt, ammunition, 2-12 TIME 1-22 FOR RENT Silver Clipper—with KUID you always get $2.00 off on shampoo-haircut, blowy Holiday Plaza, 21th and Iowa 842-1822. 2-11 The Kanansa will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. *Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with nets. Bedroom, kitchen, security & downflow* *No pets. Phone 841-350-6967*. for rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. **tf** HANOVER PLACE. COMPLETE furnished, mobile and 2 indirm. between two rooms. Only 3 beds in KU. DONT DELAY. Reserve your apt. DONT HUNT. A four-month waft-room. 811-1212 or 812-4557 ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished townhouses available immediately; flexible lease options available. Location on 13th & Ohio. Only two short blocks from the Union. Call 842-424-7600. PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect room layout, in a large, enclosed garage, with electricoter, wacker/dryer hookups, fully-equipped master suite, with master bath, 3-5-30 daily at 2298 Princeton Blvd., or 442-827-3524 for additional information. **Studios atmosphere, International meals, kingsize, comfortable furniture with a warm coat menus.** On room kit $120 terminally ill children and adults. **laundry and laundry.** Call 841-7692. **Cookbook.** Call 841-7692. Brand new 3-bedroom houses. $345 and $450. 841-5797 or 841-7251. 2-11 large, modern B-124, unfurnished apt. in argent, modern B-124 at 1023 Rhode Island, available paints. 190.00 m² with 200.00 m² paymnts. utilities. at 1844.00 278-4441-277 More grades have opened up a farbright path for students. In 2016, the Lawrence Institute required, 749-585 calls. In 2017, the Lawrence Institute required, 749-585 calls. Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt. furnished, carpeted & draped, and pet-friendly. Open plan layout. Close to campus, and on bus route. $345 per month. HEADWARD BOOK 15th & Creatifl 842-520-1900 DESPERATE—MUST SUBLEASE 6 me, old 1 bedroom apt. Call Andy at 841-6099 and ask about #B8 2-17* Be 341, on bus quote; convenient to sleep in central air-heat garage. Available. Shipping from US. two bedroom apartment, low utilities, two blocks from KU 3 blocks from town, airlift, equipped kitchen, carpet and drags. $260 million. 1948 Train 84-422. $425. 3 Bidm. unfurried apt. in older phone at 314 W. 118 (14th & Temp.) available now. Only 275 m. with 200.00 dm. in stock. Length. Absorbant. Reach 7-491-7449. Sub-lease 2 Br. apt. complete kitchen carpet-drapes. central air-entrance. Call 2-12 Roommate Wanted: Large, old house, 12th & Ohio $75 a month rent plus 1/5 utilities. Phone 841-8104 2-12 Extra size 2 bedroom apartment in newer four-room, 1 and 2 baths, carpeted, wooded area, 220 per month, 843-8571 or 1-782- 3716 2-19 For sublease. 2 Br. apt. $310 + Avail. now telephone: 841-8138. 2-22 Large 2 Bath. apt in an older house at 1012 Riode Island. Available Feb. 1. Only 225 b. a mo. with a 200.0 dep. Utilities pd. by. Landmark. Absolutely no phone call. Call 1-277 Summer: sublance: 6-1 to 8-15/2 BR /1900A Kentucky: 842-4513. 8 FACULTY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PUNCH 3 br houseware. 2121 invoice Drive. All appliances unused. Call 475-700. 841-1590 842-6360 DUPLEX—GREAT LOCATION 809 Ohio, 2- bdrm, stove, refrigerator, $250 per month. Available now. -1-763-6853. 2-15 autost act. cloct to campus at 19 W. 14h. available M. L. 1892 $500.00 m. with a $0.00 deposit. Absolutely no pets. Call 781-414 or 811-5701 2-17 b bedroom apartment. Close to campus, carpet, off street parking, no pets. Referees, water, electricity paid $500 a month. $300 deposit. 842-5704. 2-18 For rent 3 bdrm. apt. $250 a month. Avail. March 1. Near campus. 749-179. 210 Apartment Roommate Wanted (Female) 2-12 And Electricity Call 749-2454 2-12 FOR SALE 3-Bedroom Apt. close to campus, tax-exempt building. 8'x10' floorplan. W/ &eep; lease paid $350 per month. $200 deposits required. Call (714) 262-9482. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes use of materials from Western Civilization to use them 1). As study guide. 2). For class preparation in Western Civilization, available now at Towson River. The material is now online. Alternator, starter and generator specialties. AUTO-MOTOR ELECTRIC - 841-900-2600, AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC 26" Motel, Borea 12 spiced Bicycle - Red. KM 90 km/h. Pkg prg & crank $200.00 mtl pkg prg & crank $200.00 mtl DCM type stereo speakers. $250 pair. Call 843-2641 after 5-90. 2-12 G3 GMC Truck V4 4-spread, new paint job. Company, 314 North 3rd, Burlington 646-6017 - 2-85 Trailer for sale or rent, 8' x 22' homemade, $150 or $130宅, 843-3414 2-11 FOR SALE: YASHICA, FR-1, 35mm SLR- CAM with lens. Fuji X-Pro3. Price: release $289. Call: 200-847-7444 www.yashica.com Pair 3-way floor speakers with *10* woofer- $25; pair ELECTROVICE 80 wat boot Booth 3-wheel booth; pair BOSCH 40 wat boot Cannan lamp base with case and FILTER-3$1. Pioneer CT-500 cassette deck-$25; Pioneer CT-600 cassette deck-$25 Hedy vio- game buffs! Home video game cardtails at $200.00, 843-785-72 2-12 Guild Electric Guitar solid body Schatzes Fender Head w 50 wait 710 - 749-246-2 - 1-15 Fender Head w 50 wait 710 - 749-246-2 - 1-15 1975 Opel Manta-2-door, fuel injection, new interior, automatic, air conditioned. Good condition. $1590--864-2004. 2-12 For Sale - Turntable, 8-track. AM-FM Stereo Recorders. Recent tune-up. $215. 84-832-9000 2-15 1979 Mobile Henry, 14 x 7, 30 lb. 2-6 cu. ft. AC power supply. 1985 Motorola, 14 x 7, 30 lb. 2-6 cu. ft. rent is $65/month. water pay. $83. 1979 Motorola, 14 x 7, 30 lb. 2-6 cu. ft. rent is $65/month. water pay. $83. new $2.50. Phone 843-8224 events. 2-12 CATHERINE JAMES' KLEE-Sale of cotton dresses and silk blouses. $1 price. All swimwear. West of Windsor. Hole at Pizza. 841-5263 Car Starso Ploner Super Tuner and Ploner Starso Ploner 50~New Alvarque Airs guitar 493-297 2-15 5 ne. Ludwig Drum set, excellent condition. 16 Cymbals, eagle equip. 16 Hammered Electric. Burial Jeep, cars and trucks, available from Dodge. Ext 3540 for information on how to purchase a burial jeep. 74 Blu Newg 9.5m² oil engine runs good 6000 watt motor must sell Call Adam or Tom 8000 watt must sell Call Adam or Tom 12,000 watt must sell Call Adam or Tom FOUND Found at 1403 Tenn. Set of keys in black leather case. No. B48-8278. 2-11 HELP WANTED O. Box 151 Red Bask, N.J. 07931, 0-800-CRUISES. SORTING, RAILING EXPEDITIONS. Needed: Sports instruction; Office, Training; Medical care; Senior, Career. Send $9.95 for APPLICATION. OPENINGS, GUIDE to CRUISEGOLD, BOX 60129, Saranewton, MN 3-12 OVERSEAS JOBS- Summer/year/ round Europe, S. Amer, Australia, Asia. Field,费沃 $200-$120 monthly, Sightseeing. Mar. De, CA 94252 JC Box-32 - K-1, 3-3 Mar. DAI, CA 94252 Use your space time to earn money for the Field or total health and fitness. For ap- proach to be considered, you must: 1. Be a registered athlete. Student Organizations work study position in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities. 250 Strong Hair Day mornings in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities. 250 Strong Hair Day applications available in 250 Strong Hair Hall. OAL Person interested in doing old house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable of having own tools and equipment in participate in cooperative training. Call Darryl 841-8386. li Stockbroker训娘. College grade - Exc- tremely motivated and enthusiastic individual. Submit applications and enthusiasm to the instructor. JOBS IN ALASKA * salary year-round, high in PA $800-2,000 per month; in industry and more 1982 Employer information, guide information Alcove, P.O. Box 61052. Salary Yield 2-12 SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Northeast. For a free listing, send a self-addressed, stamped (37) envelope to Midwest Camp Campground. Call 403-691-2352. Mounts MO 80344. MAIN-2 12/21 Work at a girls camp this summer. Positions include St. John's School, SIU certificate, Home President Director and instructor for Raw Valley Girl Scout Council. P O Box 706, Topkapi, Kazakhstan. (813) 542-2691. info.rawvalleygirlscout.org RESEARCH ASSISTANT/PROGRAMMER Supportive Educational Resources to develop these require programming; to coordinate with researchers to develop research questions and designs which program. To draft written reports on analysis outcomes. Help with reports 864-391-7, 2-12 The Sanctuary has openings for cocktail waitresses. We must appear, please serve and able to work late hours. Must be looking for co-ordination work. Apply in 2-17 Clerk tisky or secretary. Excellent tisky and willing worker for 12 to 20 hours per week. Must be KU student. Contact Beth Marolis, 114 strong 844-8482. EOAE. 2-15 Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Personable. Contact Dan at the Exchange. 825-9533. 3-12 LOST LOST FEMALE CAT-Cat-allo with grey and grey tiger marking虎臀, paw neck, waist, back. Last seen near 12480 Ridge Island. Last seen near 12480 Rhode Island. REWARD 811-4407, 864-3594 2-11 NOTICE Lost bus pass and other id. on 2-3-82 Please call Sarah 749-1274 for reference. 2-16 Get back to the Boogle in your own style of music. Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, from your records. All levels. teach times from your records. Call Kurt at 2-16 Music. 841-0817. Athletic Women and Men—the KU Crew team is recruiting new rowers. Coach Cliff Elliott 841-5587. 2-11 Instant passport, via, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. tt Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 799-1611. tf Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfried Skillet Kudus. 1906. Mass. 843-8186. tf Give Yourself A Valentine! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ Everything with red in it 20% off! Feb. 8-13 Katy's Cellar Shoppe SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, WINTERKAMP, DILLON AND OTHERS. Economical packages every weekday and school breaks. Call Ski Elt. 841-8368 today. (Inside the Marketplace Mall) A sweetheart portrait for Valentine Day turns a simple thought into a lasting memory. Swells Studio 749-1611. 2-12 Next-to-New Clothing for Women 745 New Hampshire Select your party outfits early. Barb's Second Hand Rose 842-4746. 51 Indiana. Valuable Mathematics 450, formula, muxes, tuxes, Handling of the Differential Equations 382, Second Hand Handling 311 Indian Maths 366, TUTURING MATHS, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, B.S. in Physics, M.A. in mathematics, B.S. in Physics, M.A. in mathematics, OPTIMIST'S '82 COUPON BOOK Over $500 in Values Don't just send a song or a bunch of hot air (Ballons). Send a personal Love Note. Don't send a long message least a good attempt! Call now for a Valentine's delivery and performance 2-12 2-12 Jayhawk Bookstore or call Jeff 749-211 The Keeger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!! Call 841-2650-1610. W. 32RL. Have a Heart is a Helping Heart Business will participate in the National for 256 Feb. 10-12 8:30-3:30. All Proceeds will go to the American Heart Association. GREEN'S CASE SALE. LONG NECK PABST $8.49, LONG NECK BUSCH $7.99, GREEN'S 810 WEST 23rd. 2-12 SKI STEAMHOAT CHEAP: $33 per day, per person, ins. lifts 4, 6 or 8 guests. Call (203) 679-6886. 2-15 Learn how to learn about microcomputers. Learn about the systems, systems, system, systems, word and data processing, processes, with 9:00 am to 4:30, Tuesday and Thursday. Learn about the computer science curriculum, Maze. Scl. Lawrence Call 824-996-9981 *** ** Pants or Shirts $10 each SURGICAL SCRUB SUITS Gift Shop Lawrence Memorial Hospital MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-644-641 EARLY STUDENTS TWITH THE KU Crew team Come STROKE IT with the KU Crew team Recruiting now. Call Coach Cliff Emanuel 2-11 E-211 TRAVEL CENTER INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS - Force Increasing * Space Limited * * Computersized Reservations & Ticketing * Foreign Language Assistance * Passport Applications * Host Assistance - Custom Declaration Forms - Baggage & Travel Insurance - Travel Credit Card Application 841-7117 FREE PARKING *HOME OF THE NEON PALM TREE* 1601 West 23rd St. SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER Tuxes—20% off. Barb's Second-Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-746-474. 2-1" 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 2-12 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT. 843-4837. tf Y.F. isn't sure what V.O. is--Y.F. never SMACKED--The only thing Drag about Y.F. is his profs. 2-12 Effective Effective Programs - Two sessions. February 11 and 16, 7-30 to 9:30 pm. Come to the Student Assistance Center. 121 Strong for registration and fee payment. 2-11 NEED CREDIT! Get Vixe-Mastercard, no credit checks. Guaranteed! It's simple, legal. free details! Write: Creditille, Box 344-FF, Rive N. N 03870. Thinking of marriage? We are forming a serious relationship. --- Proudly Announce The 2nd Annual Valentines Nightite-Nipa Pala Party! WHO: You know who you are WHEN: The 5th Belt WHENE: You know where WHY: To get them ATTITUDE: THE ABSOLUTELY required. FINGERING: The newly expanded Kissing Booth, Booga Queen and King Contests. Ned and Beezie, Hood, D. Matt, Weibowei, Hugger, M.S. Moon, and Kevin. Want to make great money while going to college? Meet the people who live living groups. Work for yourself and make a good investment. Sound system and bounce room; Call 741-839-1492 for ask for information. --- Hurt your back or neck when you slipped on the kee? Don't delay proper treatment. For modern chiropractic care call Dr Johnson at 843-2165. Accepting Loews Bank Card $2.12 you are my Val-en-tine Bring this card to third floor Bailey Hall the 10th thru the 12th and win 1 free-local Singing Valentine with the purchase of any in- or out-of-state call. Sponsored by M.T.S.A. --- Order your singing Valentines on third floor Bayley - Feb 8-12 between 10:30-3:30. Sponsored by Music Therapy Student Assoc. 2-12 It may be cold, but you can warm someone's day with a VALENTINE'S DAY SPECIAL EDITION BALLOON-COA Call and arrange for backup 841-3868. 2-15 - want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors - Student Assistance Center. 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064. 2-11 SPECTRUM OPTICAL- Do you have a screwdriver? Broken lens? Broken frame? One day service on lenses in most cases. Open 10-6, M-S 11131, 4 1113. E-7. 21h 50r draws-10-12 Monday-Thursday. The Exchange, 2404 Iowa 2-11 Valentine Special Send a bouquet of balloons for your special Valentine. One dozen balloons complete with candy, card & message delivered. Balloon Extravaganza now serving the Lawrence area. Orders must be placed by February 13, 1982. WHAT IS A SCHOLARSHIP HALL Call 913/541-8870 Days, leave message or call after 6 p.m. PARTY FAVORS-glassware sportwear High quality low cost. Call for St. Pat's Day special! University Photography 843-215 Engineering students freshmen then seniors. Do you remember how to do anything but mechanical engineering? The Engineering Sem-Formal 8 pm Fri. at the Engineering Sem-Formal 10 am Fri. at the Engineering actually laugh, dance, and have fun. The engineering faculty don't miss it! Tickets in Learned Hall, Dept. Office, Dept. Offices, or by 2-12 WHAT IS A SCHOOLRIDHIP HALL REALLY USES LANDSLING AN AUDIO-VISUAL PRODUCTION THURSDAY, FEB 11, 7:30 AM Collectors records: Zep, Floyd, Stones Who, 1886-1930 7.45 CHEAP RECORDS. Some new, some used. Fri, Feb. 12 noon-5, KJHK Studios. 2-12 Rapid, Reading Workbook-Five sessions. February 17, 22, March 1, 4, 7, 3:0-8:00 pm come to the Student Assistance Center for registration and payment. 2-16 YOU ARE NEEDED! Monroe Central Committee is looking for committed Christie staff or related field of interest for a two or three person internship. Put your knowledge into action? MCC has opportunities all over the state to serve social services, education, health and militia, agriculture and food safety. MCC representative will be interviewing on Wednesday, 10 am in Alcee B in the Union. 2-15 Happy Birthday ROBIN (Wolfgang) Coke adds life to "THE BOYS in the Band." Love, your low video-exposed; cheesecake invading; raceback raucational; and M. M. 2-11! HEATING BILLS too high? Do you have your thermostat down to 50 degrees? Out of money, of heat and out of luck? Call 864-810 and tell us about it. Yes its true! Fred, Red, the Unknown Roommate. Joe Jankas and his slant are invited to see you. You know who we are welcome to join us in "going astray" 2-12 Tonight! K.C. comedy shop at Ichabodbs 110 cover. 150 pitcher! Open mike to anyone wishing to become a star (or dart) overnight! 2-11 10 the Whole Hog: Happy February 11th! How about a pizza in Hooterville to celebrate? BJ. 2-11 West Coast Saloon Presents: Wake Field Come hear one of Topeka's finest, tonite only at the Coast. $1 cover after 7 p.m. 2222 Iowa 841-BREW Z. Fribrader Robertson St. 8:30-10 am 2-12 Save 10% on Penite sets from Footlights when you mention this ad. Footlights, 25th lowe. Where can you get good drinks, good music, a roaring fire and have lots of fun? The Exchange (a private club) 2406 Iowa 2-12 TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Calib. 481-1999me (b.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics) or call 864-4176 (ask for M.A.) tt Old, new, used, useable and reusable. Crabs to bathes, suits to shirts, joans to clothes of this and much more at West- Eastern. $10-$25 TUE-SAT 9:00-12:00 1:00-3:00 2-17 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 Get that job with a professionally prepared resume by a, local corporate recruiter. Learn the latest job hunting techniques. 841-5664. 2-14 Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, for it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-3001, 250a and 1-26. Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212. Guitar Lessons: Learn to play now from experienced teacher. Reasonable. Call Mark 841-2095. 2-12 WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Stop by The House of Ulster and pick up our PREREQUISITE brochure on resumes. Mail your resume to usuz@ucleruniversity, 8-Mar 9-3, NOSON-3, NOSON-3. ENLARGEMENTS Another Encore exclusive: Education Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa 842-2001 Drifting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years competitively prized. Also Script Lettering for certificates. 841-7944. 3-8 TYPING Professional tutoring in COMPUTER SCI- ENCE for College students available. Call John 760-242-9181 Want to have a tutor? List our list of advisors. Assistance Accession Bail Hall, 844-864-064 9-11 TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, résumes. AmE. English composition, grammar, ap Lit. English translation. English students or Americans. 814-6254. It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. tt Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations IBM correcting electric. Call Donna at 842-2744. tf Experienced typist. Thesis, term papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tt Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting Selective. Micrite or Elite. Or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544 Mrs. Wright. If Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal form, graphics, editing, m-correct Seletric. Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tf QUALITY TYPING: Themes, Manuscripts, Dissertations; IMB Selective; Girl Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 please. ence: IBM. Before 9 p.m. 743-244. Ann. I Experienced typist,typing,IBM Correcting Selectric,Elite or Picn. 842-25 42-26 Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations. term papers, misc. IBM correcting eletric. Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2210. TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II, Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-5675. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST would like to type anything. 841-8525. 2-15 For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4986. ff Professional typing, Dissertation, thesis, term paper, resume, letter, legal, etc. Deb. 843-9592 2-11 Graduate students time of typing, retyping and retyping your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by processuring it at Encore Call 842-2901 for more info. 2-26 Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call evenings. 841-7915. 2-18 Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps, 25th and Iowa, 842-2001. 2-26 TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Corp. Solitaire, full-time typetime, spelling correction to composition assistance. Emergency service available. 841-2907. 3-88 Non-smoking female to share 3-br. house, close to campus. 83.33 + 1/3 util. 841-9779. No pets. 2-12 Farmer medical research secretary will type term papers, theses, books. Call Nancy 841-5802. 2-23 WANTED Roommate to share modern 2 bedroom apartment 3 blocks from campus $137.50 a month + utilities $832.68 2-17 3 bdm: plpx, digax, patio, fireplace, micro- wave, d w. e. a cable and w/d hookups, 15 mS. + 1/3 until, on bus route. 842-0681. 3.11 2 roommates $150 + deposit 1 each. Beautiful house and excellent location. 1905 Indiana. 842-4630. 2-17 Roommate needed immediately. $12 apart- ment, 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 + $1 utilities. 749-2438. 2-12 Wanted Roommate to share 4-bedroom home with 3 grades. $110 plus 1% gratuity. $217 Barker. Call Matt $64-840 evening. Sub-base 2-bed unit, on bus. bus. Move 10.397 2 hour deal in today, low price Call 842-1434 or 841- 8467 4-16 People who want to send a unique Valentine's Day gift. Compose your own message and I will deliver it with a special call. Valentine's Day Balloon-Small - Call 841-212 848- Female wanted to share 2 bedroom furnished apt. $125 mo. + ½ utilities. Call 819-9241. 2,45 1-2 to share 3 BR house. Perform Female. 4th & 8th bathrooms. Vegetation. Elevations 4th & 8th bathrooms. Vegetation. Elevations Established hand seating basis and key- board access. Call 749-0891 or 824-8841. Phone: 749-0891 or 824-8841. Female roommate to share nike two-bedroom furniture. 10 nike two-bedroom 3250 sq ft. 3100 acre. 2 units. 841-455-3267 5-16 Roommates for furnished airti $10/month + roommate call. Call 841-455-3267 keep trying 2-11 Roommate needed for a 2 bedroom apt. No deposit needed and on the bus route. Call for more detail B749-3183. 2-16 Roommate wanted: to share 2 bdm. apt. No deposit or lease. $75 plus 12 utilities. 842-7422 2-16 Need roommate to share Mall's Apt. Bend $173, heat paid, private room, fireplace, 2-17 place. Call 749-0924. 2-17 Page 12 University Daily Kansan, February 11, 1982 Kansas quickly fills quota on letter-of-intent day By TRACEE HAMILTON Managing Editor Outstanding. Kansas' new recruiting class is just that—the best since Don Fambrough returned as head coach and maybe the best ever. "The difference is the numbers," Fambrighau said yesterday. "The year before last, we had outstanding talent—25 percent of our roster — this is the first of a kind for me." By yesterday at 4 p.m., the Jayhawks had added 26 new players to their ranks. In addition, three players were expected to sign last night and two more are expected to sign tomorrow, bringing KU's total to 31. The NCAA allows 30 scholarship recruits each season. Linemen dominate this year's list, as they did last year. Fambourg said last week that he wanted to strengthen the line—both offensive and defensive—and give it the depth that Kansas has at other positions. The linemen are: Craig Kirkschau, 6-1, 270. Kirschbaum transferred to KU this semester from Wadford Junior College in Forest Park. Kirkschau is a member of the KU faculty. Larry Conner, 6-3, 24. Conner is a defensive lineman from Southeast High School. Phil Forte, 8-15, 21-49. a defensive end, played prep ball at Raytown High in Raytown, Mo., and was the area's defensive player of the year. Steve Nave, 6-4, 225. Nave is from Coffeyville and attended Coffeyville High School. Bund Rode, 6-4, 225. Bunde, an offensive tackle from Topeka West High School, chose Kansas over K-State. Jerry Quick, 64; 275. Or As fambrough puts it, "two . . . seven . . . five (pause for emphasis) He's huge, tremendous . . ." (here Fambrough breaks off with a satisfied grin). Quick, who played at Chapmanal High in Anthony, Kan., will play on the defensive line. Of the 26 recruits who signed yesterday, eight were running backs. Although Kansas is ripe with backfield talent at tailback, the Jahywahs lacked depth at fullback last season. E.J. Jones, 6-1 and 210 pounds, was the largest of the KU contenders for the position. And after Jones replaced Brad Butts at the position, he rarely sat out a play for the rest of the season. The sudden death of Chris Emerson involved Kansas 'need for a strong fullback.' The running backs are: Mark Henderson, 6-1, 215. A Lawrence High product, Henderson will probably be used at backhack. "We watched Mark for a couple years," Fambridge said. "He's strong, an excellent blocker and a real smart kid." Jan Demby, 5-10. 165. Demby. Henderson's teammate, is academically ineligible for a scholarship, but will attend Kansas nxtcx! Kat Pelley, 6-2, 240. Kelley, a versatile back from Ellsworth, Iowa, Junior College, can play either tailback 1982 Kansas Recruits Jeff Anderson, running back Tony Berry, defensive back Rod Bundie, lineman Larry Conner, lineman Charles Cooper, running back Jan Demby, running back Richard Estell, wide receiver Dave Geroux, running back Dane Griffin, running back Seth Hively, running back Travis Hardy, running back Steff Hobs, running back Pat Kiley, running back Craig Kirschbaum, lineman Ken Major, quarterback Liam Linton, lineman Robert Mimbs, defensive back Steve Nave, lineman Paul Oswald, running back Marshall Pinkney, running back Willem Schoene, center Jerry Quick, lineman Quarter, checkerboard Troy Richardson, punter Chip Schuler, lineman Lyndall Yarnell, running back Wayne Ziegler, running back or backfall, according to Fambrough. Kansas offensive lineman Paul Fairchild also attended jucu at Ellsworth in Iowa Falls. Dave Gereon, 6-4, 215. Gereon, who can also play either back position, is the latest in a strong list of recruits from Edison High in Hunting Beach, Calif. Edison, which had one of the top high school teams in the country last year, has taken part in such as Frank and Troy Sreuer, Dino and Kerrwin Bill and Bell Malasavi. "Geroux reminds me of Tony Davis, who used to play for Nebraska," Fambrough said. "He's a tough, aggressive runner." Kansas competed with several other major teams, including Southern Californiers and Gervous. Marshall Pinkney, 6-3, 205. Pinkney, of Miramar High in West Hollywood, Fla., is a Blue Chip running back. Travis Hardy, 6-1, 19. Hardy, of Boulder Fairview High in Colorado, chose Kansas over Wyoming, Colorado and Arizona. Hardy was an All-State running back last season, rushing for 1,200 on the season for Fairview High, which finished with a 10-2 record. Paul Oswald, 8-4, 245. Oswald played high school ball at Hayden High in Topeka. Steff Hobbs, 6-1, 17. Hobbs played prep ball in Broomfield, Colo. Kansas also recruited four quarterbacks, although several may be moved to other positions when they come to Kansas. The quarterbacks are: Tom Quick, 6-4, 170. Quick, of Blue Springs High School in Lee's Summit, Mo. probably will be tried at wide receiver next year. Blue Springs Coach Fred Merrell said that although last fall was quick's first season of varvity ball, the senior had distinguished himself. "In 25 years of coaching, he's the best passer I've seen," Merrell said. "KU is going to try him at wide receiver. He has a 38-inch vertical jump. He's a good athlete and gave us outstanding leadership." Wayne Ziegler, 6-1, 10-1. Ziegler, of Nickelson Hill, Kentucky, to several members of Fambride to Fambride. Ken Major, 64-, 201. Major also coach. Coach Bill Workman at Edison High. "He's similar to Frank Seurer," Fambrough said. "He's run the same type of offence, had the same coaching and has a strong arm. He's intelligent, and has the height and size you're looking for." Steve Cole, 6-1, 170. Cole played high school ball at Hickman Mills High School. "We'll start him off at quarterback, but he's also a complete player on both sides." Kansas, flush with ends, signed only two, a wide receiver and a tight end. Richard Estell, 6-3, 190. One of Kansas' biggest recruiting coups, the Jayhawks fought off Nebraska and Missouri, among others, for Estell. "He's another David Verser type," Fambrigh said of Estell, who played high school football at Harmon in Kansas City, Kan. Jeff Anderson, 6-3, 210. Anderson, of Evergreen High, Evergreen, Colo., will play at tight end for Kansas. See RECRUITING page 11 THE BEST PRICE • 76 Lines of Quality Audio • Complete Service • Discount Prices • Mail Order Selection, Price, Quality, Service... Three "State of the Art" showrooms; two large mass manufacturers showrooms; one budget manufacturers area, as well as, our mail order facility and wholesale warehouse. Shop every major dealer of audio components in the midwest or compare more lines of quality audio at the Gramophone Shop! KIEF'S DISCOUNT RESOURCES ENTER Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, Ks. 842-1811 shop MY SON PLAYS WITH KU JOHN HAMAME NERMANSSON Dane Griffin, left, Jan Demby and Mark Henderson of Lawrence sign national letter of intents with the Kansas Jayhawks as Henderson's father looks on. Make Your Old Jeans Count For New Ones At KING Jeans levis Trade-In Jean Sale Limited Time Only King of Jeans Will Give You $3 For any old jeans you have regardless of condition, toward the purchase of any jeans or pants in the store regardless of price. - One trade-In allowed per new jean, but no limit on total trade-in transactions (In other words, 3 trade-ins will get you $12 off 3 new jeans.) - All trade-ins will be donated to charity So, gather up all those old, scrungy jeans you have no use for and make them count for new ones at KING of Jeans3x SS 740 Massachusetts rLevi's *Coupons not accepted on trade-in transactions Rent it. Call us. 864-4358 d 240 G R/Kansan Staff Javhawks KANSAN Friday, February 12, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 95 USPS 650-640 University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily Bowling Green athletic director takes KU post By BARE EHLH Staff Reporter and GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor Jim Lessig, athletic director at Bowling Green University in Ohio for four years, was named this morning as athletic director at the University of Kansas. He will replace Bob Marcum, who resigned from the position as a similar position at the University of South Carolina. "I'm impressed with the community and its being a small college town," Lessig, 46, said in a newspaper interview. "Everyone I talked to seemed to love this place—there has to be a reason." LESSIG GRADUATED from Bowling Green in 1967 and received a master's degree in school administration and speech from Bowling Green in 1967. Lessig, a Canton, Ohio, native joined the Bowling Green athletic department in August 1978 after seven years in the school's Alumni and Athletic Department. A Ice hockey committee while at Bowline College In 1969, Lessig joined former Bowling Green basketball coach Bill Fitch at the University of Minnesota. When Fitch was hired to coach the Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA, Lessig went along as an assistant coach, head scout and host of special promotions. He left coaching in 1971. Lessig talked about his plans as athletic director last night and about how the students fit into it. He said he would sit back at first because he was unable at KU would know more about the University. I will spend a lot of time talking to the staff 'My belief is that the student body is the backbone of any athletic program. Student support is infectious.' Jim Lessig, newly named KU athletic director and coaches," he said. He also said he hoped to learn from them. "MY BELIEF that the student body is the backbone, of any athletic program," he said. Lessig also gave some of his reasons for coming to KU. "Student support is infectious. If it gets student support, then it's on its way." "The KU academic institution is recognized nationwide, and that is very important to me. They are in a very prestigious athletic conference and when you have this combination, it's great." David Addins, student body president and member of the KUAC search committee, described Lessig as a "very articulate, very handsome, outgoing and confident man." "His background in radio and TV will serve us," Cline said. "He can speak off-the-cuff and on-bus." ADKINS SAID THAT the contacts Lessig had made would help the University, as would his experience in dealing with alumni. He said alumni support represented one-third of the budget. "I think a lot of people, including students, will like him very much." Arkansas said. Joe Menzel, sports editor of the B.G. News of Bowling Green University, said that Leshag had been offered the position of athletic director at the University of Maryland last year but had Bowling Green has an extensive sports program including golf, swimming, wrestling, soccer, track and tennis. Its ice hockey team is ranked seventh in the nation. Bowling Green's football record last season was 5-5-1 and its basketball record is 13-8. Mavor looks askance at radio show RvSTEPHENBLAIR Staff Reporter Bowling Green is scheduled to play KU in basketball next season. A question about a closed meeting posed to a Lawrence city commissioner on a live radio show has prompted the mayor to challenge the propriety of such questions. On Wednesday morning, Commissioner Don Binns responded to a question by KIJW station official Bob Newton about the commission's executive session Tuesday. Item 4 of the city's agenda for next Tuesday's commission meeting reads, "Mayor (Marci) Francisco requests discussion of the City Commission radio program (KLWN)." DURING THE closed session last Tuesday that Newton asked about, the commission said, would need to do more. It was disclosed last weekend that Commission Tom Gleason had written a letter to Mr. Duncan that he agreed with. Gleason said this week he would move to fire Watson at the executive session next Thursday. Binns said he thought the mayor wanted to Binn's he thought the mayor wanted to discuss the program to run him silent. "The only reason I can figure she wants to talk about the radio program is to impose a gag rule," he said. "She wants to gag the commission, but I was elected by the people." After Newton asked Binns to report on the closed session, Francisco called the station and complained on the air about the question. NEWTON CONFIRMED this, and played a tape of Francisco's statement. On the tape, Francisco said, "Some of those issues are held in executive session because they're personnel matters or they are matters with legal implications." Francisco also said on the tape that she didn't think that commissioners should be asked about what happened during a closed session. She said in another instance had put Bins in an awkward position. A commissioner should speak for the commission as a whole when reporting on executive sessions, and not give his views as an individual, Francisco said on the tape. According to Newton, Blins replied on the program that he thought the closed session was a mistake. case of time. Newton defended his question to Binns. aintain we have the right to ask, and h See RADIO page five Licensing of Jayhawk creates havoc Staff Reporter By ANNE CALOVICH If the Jayhawk is confused, it's understandable. Almost everyone who is involved in licensing him is confused, too. Manufacturers who produce anything with the Jayhawk or the word "Jayhawks" on it must be licensed to use the design and must pay a royalty fee to the University of Kansas before they can But not all manufacturers have agreed to pay a royalty fee, and many more do not even know it. There is no copyright on the Jayhawk, and the motives behind its licensing are disputed. Muggy said that as long as one manufacturer refunds the deposit, royalty fee, the licensing was waived. BILL MUGGY, manager of the Jayhawk Bookstore, said recently he would take part in a class action suit against KU if the licensing process continued because he thought it was Also save Word, manager of the Kansas Union bookstores, said some manufacturers refused to pay but were still manufacturing Jayhawk merchandise, while others compiled and paid the "It's not equitable," Word said. He said it could take 15 years to find manufacturers nationwide who might be manufacturing Jayhawk merchandise without the knowledge of the University. In the meantime, Word said, he is involved in lengthy negotiations with manufacturers who BUT FOR NOW, the Jayhawk isn't making much money for KU. According to Word, royalties collected from July to December of last year totaled $793. That figure is a long way "The time will come when we'll be forced to sue them to cease and desist," Word said. from the $385,000 that UCLA collected from manufacturers in 1980 for use of the Bruin. UCLA began a mascot-licensing trend five years ago when it began charging for use of its robotics. The trend has picked up momentum during the past two or three years, and frequent lawsuits are rising. Wald said the most important reason for the licensing agreement at KU was to control the use of it. "We want to make certain the Jayhawk is used in good taste," he said. "That is to say, we don't want a Jayhawk roachclip coming out on the market." But Muggy said he objected to the principle behind licensing and thought KU had other lawyers for it. "IT UNDULY and unfairly creates a competitive edge in favor of the University, only the university UMass Above, over all other universities, whether they're in Lawrence or out of state," Muggy said. "It takes away a fair competitive price when one institution doesn't have to pay and a private institution does." "WOBDY KNOWS...THE TROUBLES I'VE SEEN..." KANSAS UNIVERSITY But Word said an exemption was written into the licensing agreement, exempting businesses within two blocks of University property from the license. In addition, an area that included the Jayhawk bookstore. "We have specifically written in the exclusion because of him (Muggy) to ensure that no one could even point a finger or even think that KU was trying to quiet competition," Word said. "IT SURPRISES ME, in light of the fact that I was never once informed of any of the negotiation efforts on a direct effort, either through the general counsel's office or on a direct approach through the bookstore," Muggy said. He said he wrote to the University's general counsel twice regarding the matter, but never received a response. But Muggy said he was never told that he was exempt from the royalty fee at any time. Vickie Thomas, KU general counsel, said she was not aware of an such correspondence. Muggy said he would fight the licensing along with other Lawrence and Kansas City merchants even after he was informed he was exempt from it. He said he had been boycoting, and would continue to boycott, those manufacturers who paid royalties to KU. "I have found substitutions in all instances," Muirey said. Another problem is that no one seems to know where the money from royalties will finally end. They don't have any idea. AND THE STATUS of the Jayhawk at study. somewhere along the line that its copyright "KU-'fanciful bird'" was copyrighted in 1946. The copyright expired in 1974, and no attempt was made to renew it. After a copyright expires, it cannot be renewed, and so three years elapsed before any formal claim was put on the Jawhawk. It is now registered as a servicemark. Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas Union, said he thought the copyright Even without a copyright, Thomas said, what KU was doing by licensing the Jayhawk was proper. She said she was reviewing several manuscripts and having licensing of manufacturers by universities. In a recent case, the University of Pittsburgh tried to prohibit Champion Products, Inc. from marketing clothing with the words "Pitt," the University of Pittsburgh's logo, and an annual printable on it, and lost. THE U.S. DISTRICT Court's decision in favor of Champion stated that Pittsburgh had not previously challenged Champion, which had been selling such clothing for year. But Word said KU was justified in seeking licensure. "Even during the three-year period of time (when there was no copyright), we were still granting permission to 'Jayahwks' on billboards, sums. whatever, if it was in good taste," he said. "We have just decided, in the last two or three years, that a royalty should be paid. The royalty portion is not the primary thing about a licensing agreement in the first place." Wichita State University has been selling cups and T-shirts with a picture of a Shocker strangling a Jayhawk on the items without a license. Jack Gillette, manager of the Wichita Bookstore and designer of the logo, said he thought KU, Kansas State, would have an agreement that the three schools could use each other's logos without permission. But the control on the Jayhawk is not tight. WORD SAID that was not so. He had licensed the design, he said, but exempted Wichita State from a fee because it was a fellow Board of Regents school. He said, however, that the manufacturer was not yet licensed and he was trying to find out who the manufacturer was. However, John Novotny, national marketing manager for the cups division of Packer Plastics Inc., which manufactures the cups, said no license was needed because the Jayhawk on the design was drawn differently from the service-marked, Jayhawk. When notified of this, Thomas said she would have to look at the design, and Word said that variations of the Jayhawk would still fall under licensing agreements. Word said he allowed this particular design because it was done in good school spirit. He also said that he had objected to only two designs submitted so far under the licensing agreement and that he objected because the quality of the designs were poor. ... THE early morning sun rises over a snow-covered field and abandoned farm west of Lawrence yesterday. Staff Reporter By ANN WYLIE KU. state seek plane money The University of Kansas and the Kansas Attorney General's office are attempting to recover money from the plaintiff's purchase in 1988. Neil Woitmerman asked to Attorney General Bob Stephan, said yesterday. The airplane's previous owner had borrowed money to pay for the plane, but did not repay the loan when he sold the airplane to KU. The University was liable to repay his loan last Vickie Thomas, KU general counsel, said the University decided to buy the airplane for $20,000, rather than to continue leasing it from Daley Palace, a Phoenix, Ariz., insurance incarcerate. THE PLANE has been used for physicians at the University of Kansas Medical Center in its medical education outreach program. Daley originally had borrowed $250,000 from the General Electric Credit Corp. to buy the plane. He still owed $160,000 on the loan at the time of the sale, Thomas said. "He didn't use the proceeds of the sale to pay that loan off," she said. "The University became aware of the credit corporation's interest in the plane as the transaction was taking place." Thomas said the University was left without a The University also has continued to pursue Daley. "we're continuing to assist the University counsel on it." Weermann said. "No action is on the desk." clear title to the plane, and the General Electric Credit Corp. threatened to repossess the plane if KU refused to pay the loan. KU has since sued the credit corporation for a clear title to the plane. "We're still pursing Daley to collect the balance." "WE ENTERED into a settlement with the University," Gerald L. Cooley, the credit corporation's attorney, said. "It was something less than what was owed. The Kansas University Endowment Association paid for the lien on the plane with privately raised money. No state money was lost, Thomas said. Woerman said Dailey was deeply in debt, but the university could work out a payment with him. Daley's debts total about $2.7 million. One said someone in the state's Department of Administration wrote the check for the plane. Because of an oversight at KU, the check was made by a pilot and did not include General Credit Corp. Weather SNOW Skies will clear and the chance of snow will decrease by this afternoon, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Today's high will be in the mid- to upper 20s. Winds will be from the west at 5 to 15 mph. tonight will have a high of 5 to 10 under clear to partly cloudy skies. warmer, with highs in the mid-30s to 40s and lows in the upper teens. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Lower interest rates linked to budget deficit, Dole says SAN FRANCISCO—The federal budget deficit and interest rates are directly linked, and the budget deficit must be reduced to achieve lower interest rates, Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., said yesterday. Dole said, "I just hope Congress doesn't give up and do nothing." Dole was in San Francisco to address a meeting of Pizza Hut Inc. He took Dole said tax law needed to be revised "to make sure everybody gets a chance to pay a little something." President Reagan, he said, is absolutely opposed to increasing taxes, and Uncle Same wants only his fair share. Uncle Sam said that the inflation rate would drop to 7 percent before the end of the year. With Roughness on plan on line, Dole said the inflation rate would drop to 7 percent before the end of the year. Lansing inmate charged after fire TOPEKA-A 31-year-old inmate at the Kansas State Penitentiary was charged yesterday in Leavenworth District Court with aggravated arson in connection with a blaze that engulfed two prison buildings Wednesday. Robert Carty, of Montgomery County, was charged, but KSP officials will not discuss how the fire was set, according to Linda Moppin, administrative prosecutor. Carty has been at the Laming institution since March 23, 1881, when he was admitted to serve a 15-year to life sentence on a conviction of one count of murder. Inmates and prison employees escaped serious injury in the blaze, which occurred in the channel and the engineering maintenance building area. Pole promises fewer restrictions MADRID, Spain—Polisin Deputy Foreign Minister Jozef Wjiazak said yesterday the Warsaw regime intended to lift most martial law restrictions in less than three weeks, but warned that U.S. actions toward Poland could change that, prolonging the crackdown. Welacje called a news conference to respond to Western criticism at the 35-nation European security conference, paralyzed on its third day by the He repeated the Warsaw government's promise that martial law, imposed Dec. 13, was temporary and said that most restrictions would be lifted at the end of the war. Underground opponents of the military regime yesterday called on Poles to observe the two-month anniversary of the military crackdown with a silent protest. House group going to El Salvador WASHINGTON-U. S. House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, expressing doubts about the U.S. policy of aiding government forces in El Salvador, said yesterday that he was sending a fact-finding delegation to the war-torn country. country." "I don't know whether we're going on the right road, to be perfectly truthful," O'Neill said. "I would hate to see something of this nature slip into the Vietnam situation." O'Neill, a Massachusetts Democrat, said the El Salvador issue was too serious for Democrats to oppose the administration policy automatically. O'Neill also called on the governor to The speaker received briefings on the El Salvador situation Tuesday from the CLA and the State Department, and from the House Intelligence Committee. Reagan adamant on military budget WASHINGTON—President Reagan yesterday ruled out any military spending cuts in 1983, despite mounting congressional sentiment that money for the Pentagon should be pared to hold down a projected $91.5 billion federal deficit. Former President Gerald Ford said yesterday that Reagan's economic policies were good, but that some defense spending could be less effective and the project could fail. "To reduce the defense budget could result in some reduction of the deficit buildup," he said. The budget contains sharp new reductions in spending for social programs and an $18 billion increase in military funding, while projecting a deficit that some experts say is based somewhat optimistically on an early end to the current recession. carry on discussion. Asked if he would contemplate cuts in his proposed $215.9 billion Pentagon spending proposal, Reagan said, "No. I feel very strongly about defense spending." Inmates moved to avoid race war PETROTS, Tenn.—Two black Brushy Mountain State Prison inmates, wounded in a hail of gunfire from a gang of white convicts, and a third who escaped the bullets, will be transferred amid fears that a brewing war might explode, officials will说 yesterday. The leader of the black gang, Barney Conley, was denied a transfer to the Tennessee State Prison in Nashville, although prison staff members said he was marked for death in the continuing feud between rival gangs of black and white convicts. "This puts Barney in a bad situation," prison counselor Steve Jacks said yesterday. "Until we get him moved, the sparks are still here. I think right Seven white inmates sawed through their bars Monday night, overpowered four guards, shot two black inmates to death and wounded two others. Khomeini orders prisoner review "One of the biggest problems and shortcomings of our country is the lack of Islamic judges and people who can propagate Islam," Khomeini said, adding that he wanted a list of those deserving amnesty readied within two months. Tehran Radio said. In a message on the third anniversary of Iran's Islamic revolution, Ayatollah Ruballah Khomeini yesterday ordered added to review the status of the nuclear program. The ayatollah's comment about justice in Iran appeared to acknowledge criticism leveled against the revolutionary courts for summary executions of more than 2,000 dissidents since the overthrow of President Abdolhassan Bani-Sadr last June. The exact number of fifteen entries is indeterminate. You them. The number is, in summiness, left it unclear whether any of the dissidents currently held in jail will判断 clear the test. 'Reds' nominated for 12 Oscars The exact number of prisoners in Iran was not immediately known. HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Warren Beatty's epit "Reds," and Henry Fonda's touching "On Golden Pond," led the nominees announced yesterday for Oscars to be presented at next month's 54th annual Academy Awards show. betty pick up three nominations for "Reds"—the saga of American journalist John Reed and his firsthand report on the Russian Bolshevik The picture is competing for 12 awards, including best picture and Diane Kenton for best actress. Fonda and Katharine Hepburn were nominated as best actor and actress for their triumphs as an aging couple facing the husband's death in "On Golden Pond." The picture won 10 nominations, including best picture and Jane Fonda for best supporting actress. Correction Yesterday's Kansan incorrectly identified the man in a photograph at the top of page 1. He is David Allford, not Craig Rice, as reported. The Kansan regrets the error. Committee hears auto natural gas plans By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter At a presentation before the Kansas House Transportation Committee, Nick Paige, director of marketing for Advanced Fuel Systems Inc., said natural gas was cheaper, safer and better for the environment that gasoline. TOPEKA-Natural gas is the "fuel of the future" and could cut automobile fuel costs by two-thirds, a natural gas industry spokesman said yesterday. company's film presentation said there were now more than 400,000 vehicles worldwide that used natural gas. ADVANCED FUEL SYSTEMS is a Wichita-based company that manufactures and sells equipment for converting vehicles to natural gas. The Compressed natural gas can be used as part of an alternate fuel system. A second carburetor is installed on top of the regular carburetor in a car engine, and the driver can switch from one fuel to the other with a dashboard control. Paige said that it would cost about $1,200 to convert one car to natural gas but that the lower fuel costs could make the installment charges in about 15 months. He said natural gas cost about half as much as gasoline. The average cost of natural gas was 35 to 60 cents per 100 cubic feet, the rough equivalent of one THE FILM PRESENTATION said there were proven reserves of natural gas that would last for 115 years, and more was potentially available from coal, garbage, sewage and animal waste. gallon, before decontrol. Company literature said that even when natural gas prices were decontrolled, they would remain substantially less than gasoline because gasoline prices also would rise. Paige said it would probably be two or three years before individuals could own cars fueled by natural gas. Several large companies with fleets of cars, school buses or trucks now own vehicles that use natural gas. Other countries, including Canada, New Zealand and Italy, already had been converting both private public vehicles to natural gas, Paige "Canada passed a federal law to convert 200,000 vehicles by 1985," he said, "but they're offering a $800 incentive." civily. It was unlikely there would be such a rebate program in the United States, he said. Paige said there were lower maintenance costs with natural gas because of fewer oil changes, cleaner spark plugs and a longer engine life. This is because natural gas burns cleanly and does not produce hydrocarbons Effective Feb.15 Robinson North Gym will be closed for repairs. R "Chariots of Fire DISCOUNT Tickets On sale now SUA Kansas Union WINTER PARK SPRING BREAK SKI ESCAPE 3/14-1 WP Everyone loves Winter Park. It is one of the few areas where beginners can skip from the very top of the mountain. The Mary Jane area offers some of the best intermediate and expert terrain anywhere. Our deluxe condominium units offer full kitchen, fireplace, swimming pool, sauna and jacuzzi. $199 6 days/5 nights in a deluxe condominium with kitchen and fireplace 3 full days lift tickets 3 full days ski rental Ski party Optional Party Bus in many areas All taxes and service charges Party Bus Option $89 For More Details: Call 842-6689 6-10 p.m. --- SUMMIT TOUR --- Miller times starring Miller High Life "Gee, it must be great to be in a fraternity." Miller HIGH LIFE Miller HIGH LIFE Mille HIGH LIFE Miller HIGH LIFE Miller HIGH LIFE Miller HIGH LIFE Miller HIGH LIFE ©1981 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Ws. University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Page 3 OMNI WINTER WAREHOUSE SALE! A Special Truckload of Stereo Equipment has just arrived at Omni. Receivers 1.5 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 8.0 9.0 10.0 11.0 12.0 13.0 14.0 15.0 16.0 17.0 18.0 19.0 20.0 21.0 22.0 23.0 24.0 25.0 26.0 27.0 28.0 29.0 30.0 31.0 32.0 33.0 34.0 35.0 36.0 37.0 38.0 39.0 40.0 41.0 42.0 43.0 44.0 45.0 46.0 47.0 48.0 49.0 50.0 51.0 52.0 53.0 54.0 55.0 56.0 57.0 58.0 59.0 60.0 61.0 62.0 63.0 64.0 65.0 66.0 67.0 68.0 69.0 70.0 71.0 72.0 73.0 74.0 75.0 76.0 77.0 78.0 79.0 80.0 81.0 82.0 83.0 84.0 85.0 86.0 87.0 88.0 89.0 90.0 91.0 92.0 93.0 94.0 95.0 96.0 97.0 98.0 99.0 Regular Price Warehouse Price • Scan 325R 20 watt receiver with DC amplifier 249.95 149.95 • JVC RS 11 25 watt receiver 260.00 189.95 • Sony STR VX 3 35 watt receiver with linear amplifier 330.00 249.95 • Hitachi HTA 5000 45 watt digital receiver with linear amplifier 499.95 329.95 • JVC RS 77 Digital 60 watt receiver 560.00 360.00 PHONEX Amps & Boosters | | Regular Price | Warehouse Price | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | • DOM 41C | 49.95 | 19.95 | | • Eca C 290 | 89.95 | 39.95 | | 20 watt booster with graphic | | | | • Jensen A 30 | 99.95 | 59.95 | | 30 watt EGA 3000 | 149.95 | 89.95 | | 30 watt per channel amp with equalizer | | | | • Clarion EQB 1501 | 159.95 | 99.95 | | 25 watt boosters with Graphic Equalizer | | | | • Jensen A 124 | 199.95 | 99.95 | | 100 watt per channel amp | | | | • Honener AD 30 | 129.95 | 99.95 | | 15 watt per channel amp with graphic equalizer | | | | • Clarion EQB 3001 | 199.95 | 129.95 | | 35 watt per channel with graphic equalizer | | | | • Jensen AD 50 | 199.95 | 139.95 | | 25 watt per channel booster with graphic equalizer | | | Amps & Tuners Amps & Tuners Select from 5 different amplifiers in stock and receive the matching tuner absolutely free-save up to $300,00. Maxell Cassette Tape 50% off Memorex and IDK Video Iape 25% off Home Stereo Speakers (priced in pats) Regular Price Worstworth Price *QL302 B 82* 8' 2 way speaker 149.95 69.95 *QL1003* 10' 3 way speaker 199.95 99.95 *Hinfel HSA 2081* R 2 way speaker 199.95 109.95 Rosewood cabinet 100.00 *ESS Tanga 208* 2' 2 way speakers 300.00 150.00 Attic OT10 400.00 200.00 12' 2 way floor standing 600.00 300.00 *JVC SK 1000* Deluxe 13' 3 way speaker system 600.00 300.00 Attic OT12 600.00 350.00 12' 3 way floor standing speaker 700.00 350.00 *Dynaclo A 250* 10' 3 way speaker 700.00 350.00 *Dynaclo A 300* Tower speaker 1000.00 500.00 (priced in pairs) --- Turntables Regular Price Warehouse Price •Htachi HT-205 99.95 69.95 Belt drive semi automatic 109.95 79.95 Belt drive semi automatic 159.95 109.95 •Htachi HT-405 159.95 109.95 Direct drive semi automatic 189.95 129.95 Guitar locked direct drive 249.95 189.95 •VJC QLF-61 249.95 189.95 Guitar locked fully automatic 350.00 250.00 •VJC LE 350.00 Direct trucking automatic with cartridge 4.10 Tape Decks 10 Regular Price Warranty Price • Hitachi DE 10 149.95 119.95 Cassette deck • VGV KD D7 199.95 149.95 Cassette deck • Axis CSM 13 249.95 149.95 Cassette deck • Hitachi DE 55 259.95 169.95 Slimline cassette deck with soft touch control • VGV KD D3 229.95 185.95 Music scan • Hitachi DE 65 349.95 249.95 Repair head cassette deck • Axis KD III 399.95 299.95 Auto reverse cassette deck VGV KD D8 399.95 299.95 Direct drive deluxe cassette deck • Sany TC FK7 Deluxe 550.00 350.00 quart lock direct drive cassette deck Personal Stereo Regular Price Warehouse Price *Technidyne HPS 120 Cassette player with headphones 99.95 69.95 *Sony SRF-40W FM Walkman 99.95 79.95 *Sony Walkman III Cassette player with headphones 179.95 159.95 *Akai PM-01 249.95 189.95 Cassette player with FM pack and headphones 249.95 219.95 *Sony Walkman III Deluxe cassette player with headphones Portable Stereo Regular Price Warehouse Price • JVC RC 204 cassette recorder 99.95 69.95 • JVC RC 202 cassette recorder 129.95 89.95 • Deluxe AM FM mono cassette recorder 129.95 129.95 • Honeywell KT AM FM stereo cassette recorder 129.95 129.95 • JVC RC M50 AM FM stereo cassette recorder 419.95 319.95 • JVC PC 50W portable stereo system 649.95 499.95 with separate amp, further cassette deck and speakers with three OMNI ELECTRONICS THIS WEEKEND ONLY! 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HOURS 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Monday thru Friday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday Noon·5 p.m. Sunday VISA* 841-1073 OMNI ELECTRONICS Sale prices and quantities limited to store stock 6th & FIRESIDE COURT, LAWRENCE, KS ACROSS FROM SUNSET DRIVE-IN Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Opinion Better than nothing Student sports fans who are disenchanted with the rising price of student football and basketball tickets may be offered a break next year. The Ticket and Ticket Policy Committee of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation is recommending a package deal for students who buy season tickets next year. The package may not be the year's biggest bargain, the price per game is still increasing slightly, but it at least tries to give students a little more for their money. The ticket package, which includes both a football and a basketball season ticket, would cost $45. Individually, the basketball ticket would cost $22 for 11 games and the football ticket would cost $25 for six games. This year's football season ticket cost $25.50 for seven games, and the basketball ticket cost $28 for 16 games. A $2 saving for the package may not sound like much of a bargain, but the package includes 14 basketball games, three more than the number included in next year's individual basketball season ticket. The committee is sending the recommendation to KUAC for consideration at its next meeting. At $2 a basketball game, the ticket package represents an $8 saving for students able to attend the vacation games. The three extra games are the exhibition game played during Thanksgiving vacation and the two games scheduled during Christmas break. The committee's motives may not be entirely altruistic. Rising season ticket prices have not done much to fill the stadium and field house and it's no secret that the athletic program needs more money. It was inevitable that ticket prices would increase. But it is comforting to know, that, in the process of rounding up more money for athletics, KUAC may be able to offer students a little something extra too. Religious beliefs somersault when students leave home Memories and 2-year-olds are somewhat alike. Just when we want to be left alone, they start making trouble. Wednesday, as I was crunching down the sidewalk in front of Watson Library, one of the old thoughts of its tiny, dark crib and blared in my head. A hymn, sung by a chorus of my boyhood, echoed between the ears: "Hills of God, break four in singing. Gleam, white luster of the heart, wings by angels stirred from sleeping." I chased off the wandering choir and thought on my own: Whoever wrote about A. P. JEFF THOMAS those holy hills probably did not have Mount Olympus and did not thunderbring fear among KU students. KU students aren't too special in their indifference toward the spiritual; it seems to be a state of the age group at most times at most schools. A study in 1974 of about 2,000 students at the University of California at Berkeley concluded that their most frequent spiritual trip was "experimentation with no religion at all." Of course, we may have brought our family's religion with us as freshmen, but only for a visit. On about the second trip home with dirty laundry, many of us happened to forget to bring the flare-legged jeans and much of the religious habit back to school. Nearly 70 percent of the seniors surveyed had been raised as Protestants or Catholics; about 20 percent held those convictions by the time they graduated. Of course the numbers would be a bit different for a university in Kansas in 1982. Still, the point of the study is probably as true for us today. "The college experience, as might be expected, seems to be a time of 'making up' with others in a religious, 'religion,' the survey's authors concluded." For students at Berkeley in the '70s and in Lawrence in the '80s, the decision for many is that religion isn't going to be the main tune in their lives. For several years, I've been one of those students who is confidently uninvolved in religion. Or, at least, most of the time. As I wasmailing my last application to a graduate school this week, a quick, silent prayer played through my mind. "Please, let me see this one." "I caught myself and pulled back. I was speaking to a deity I didn't even pretend to believe in. I've heard friends do the same. Evidently, even the hardcore uncle of my uncle knew that he should right stress, whisper a prayer—just in case. It's not that we begin believing again. It's a dislohence with ourselves, a sin of insincerity. It is a dislohence with ourselves, a sin of insincerity. But in a deeper shadow of the anger is fear. We feel our convictions slip and our uncertainty frightens us. Many of us have already seen our religious beliefs sasomersault since leaving the hometown. Now, once in a while, we catch ourselves wavering back into the old ways. We catch our hearts and our minds rrowing out of sten with each other. The statistics say that eventually the two will settle down and join each other—on the old side of the tracks. If we were raised in a church, the chances are that within 10 years we'll be thinking closely along those lines again. Whether we like the prospect or not, it appears that the religious feelings we have have that shape our behavior. Many of us will probably go through two broad phases of religious commitment. The first, as children, was a time when adults were responsible for us. The other, independent adulthood, will be a time when others raise us and children, will be our responsibility. College is a unique passage in the flux. These are the years when our prime responsibility is to ourselves and only to others, so we need time for many when religion isn't as crucial. We should wonder whether the changes in our spiritual beliefs will be more the result of our situation in life than of careful thought. Will only the weight of others depending on us matter? Do we really have faith in ourselves? If we do return to the fold, will our convictions have honestly and thoroughly deepened? But those aren't questions for a columnist to answer for anyone else. The answers can only come from each reader. Our belief or unbelief should mean more than convenience. Somehow they should be related to the truth as we see it. Literary slight unforgivable Letters to the Editor My writing of this letter is an endeavor to convey my superlative dismay—nay, my extreme rage—at having all human sensibility rent asunder by the incoherency concerning Ken that you were benevolent enough to present to your inquisitive reading public on Feb. 2. To the Editor: Feb. 2, in fact, happens to be the 100th anniversary of the birth of James Joyce, of whom even individuals of your own exquisite tastes have quite possibly heard. An article concerning James Joyce (an august individual to say the very least) and his estimate contributions to literature would have been a presentation worthy of much laudation. And when one considers that this memorable work is actually a public publication of the first copies of his "Ulysses" and "Finegans Wake," works of a rather significant stature, it becomes quite obvious that there has been a blatant and incompetent miscarriage of priority by the individual or individuals responsible for the article cleverly and unassessed "Kaesey's 'Cuckoo's Nest' hatchedera." The knowledge that Kesey was a devastatingly overrated "acid-prompted" "jester" of little "depth, breadth and insight" does not excuse the excruciating lack of breadth, depth and insight. and sense in the printed column by W.J. Andrew, who, I think, conceals his first two names in order that we may encounter difficulty locating his listing in the telephone book, for the Who could possibly imagine that even a writer of Kesey's meagre capability would be so "deftly" deal with in such an incohesive display of the strivings of an inferior candidate for the long dead Beat Generation? Who would be capable of believing that a newspaper affilitated by James Joyce, with a utmost certaintypletely ignore James Joyce, a personage of the utmost genius, and his works, which have each meant so incredibly much to us and to literature? Andrews' piece moves ploddingly from one nonsensical "insight" to another: "Kesaw is a jock ... you get manhandled in time." Cassady and Jack Kerouze don't last the trip, but their relationship has the nervous system? Or perhaps the malformed child of one striving to impress through a bit of hilarious alliteration. I shall not continue my discourse concerning this prosaic incoherency, for its creator, in all probability, already feels overwhelmed by overwhelming embarrassment of his ramblings. purpose of an oral chastising for his ridiculous, preposterous posturing. Oddd J. Newman Topeka freshman And what university newspaper would flant and dangle this ignorance in our saddened faces by replacing a feature on Joyce with an essay by Clayton H. McGraw, a stupenyfingly inferior writer? I do much wonder. CHEN THE COLUMBUS DEPARTMENT FIRST BY THE INDUCE COMPANY'S MEDIA SCHOOL BUR STOP DO YOU THINK ITLL EVER COME? SENATE LIBERAL SCHOOL ADLAI STEVENSON LUNCH BOX SENATE Pot Shots Lucrative career opportunities flourish in the back pass industry, filled magazines in the background hospital wards. “Fix lawnmowers for fun and profit!” beckons one ad in bold, black type. A drawing of a man, beaming as the crouches beside a lawnmower, illustrates the “fun” part. For only $9.55 plus 95 cents tax, you, too, can learn to repair small engines. Those who yearn to work with nature can Liu D Bottom raise earthworms, grow ginseng or make up to $40,000 a year from an herb farm—even in a rural area. The industrious person can earn up to $40 a day tying fish files at home and up to $60 a day molding concrete fence posts for a company in Excelsior, Mo. For only $10, the professionally inclined can become a doctor of Nutripathy. A fast-learner can master upholstery, auctioneing or piano tuning in just a few easy lessons. Musical knowledge is unnecessary. Last Wednesday a forgotten part of my past came back to haunt me. It is clear why enrollments are declining at institutions of higher education. Enterprising high school graduates know that a college degree no longer ensures success. Instead of making the emotional and financial investment demanded of a college student, the smart ones are clipping newspaper items for fun and profit. You see, I had a bad habit of collecting parking tickets on campus. I knew I was guilty so I would go to Hoch and pay my $7.50, each time swearing that I would never park on campus again. Of course, I did and I got ticketed . . . However, there was one time I knew I wore innocent and I wasn't about to fork over $7.50. R. Brom Abbott so I went through the process of filling out my anomation for anopeal. That was more than two years ago. After a year I assumed the entire incident had been forgotten. After two years I knew it to be. But last Wednesday I got a notice from the traffic court that my appeal was denied. Needless to say I was shocked to learn the same court that has been catching a lot of heat lately because members wanted to be paid $4 an hour was two years behind. I cast my memory back to my parking ticket days to remember the circumstances behind my innocence. The more I thought about it, the worse those pseudo-judges would enjoy eating me alive. They'd eat me alive, not because I am guilty, but because I simply cannot remember that one day over two years ago enough to say the ravenous curiosity of those law students. "That face, those eyes, that smile!" That is hardly a fitting greeting for a sleepy-eyed, just-awakened kook of a KU student. But every morning, while I flake for my toast to pop up and my corn flakes to get deliciously soggy, I confront that message as my first piece of literature for the day. I appears on the back of the cereal box as Dan Besson the punch line for one of those "special offers." For an investment of $3.50 (and two boxed pictures) of the company is offering a mirror with its logo. By looking into the mirror, I could, presumably, emulate the images that appear regularly on the front of the box. You know, the loving couple, the cute little kid with dimples, the macho cowboy—all American people with corn-frank flakes on their faces. As I sit at the breakfast table in a groggy daze, the offer is not too appealing. After just being coldly awakened from my treasured slumber, with baggy eyes, messy hair and an uncompromising disposition, it's hard to imagine myself on the front of a corn flakes box. Sorry, Madison Avenue, no sale this time around. Cable TV gobbling up best of viewing diet Bv DESMOND SMITH New York Times Special Features TORONTO—The three major commercial television networks, ABC, CBS and NBC, which have dominated the United States' viewing landscape, are slowly back out of over-the-air broadcasting. Like corporate "asset-strippers," they are taking the most saleable aspects of their programming—sports, news, women's programs, the performing arts—and repackaging them for the new cable television audiences. So far, the parent corporations that own the three networks have announced the formation of six new cable networks, and there will be more to follow. Moreover, in search of programming, developers can schedule of the punitive public broadcasting system with potentially devastating effect. The implications for non-cable viewers are deeply disturbing. Cable television now reaches only 27 percent of U.S. homes. Already there are millions of impoverished Americans who literally cannot afford cable television at any price. And there are millions more—those who live in sparsely populated regions—who don't have and will never be offered cable service because the costs of wiring these areas is simply too orobitative. Only a year or so ago, Arthur Taylor, then president of CBS Inc., warned that if nothing was done to stop the spread of cable television, the public would soon by paying for programs they received "free" from the networks. Times have changed. Last year, Taylor attended the cable convention in Los Angeles as the new head of RCTV, a cultural cable channel jointly owned by RCA, parent company of NBC, and Rockefeller Center Inc. Taylor announced that British Broadcasting Corp. programs similar to the acclaimed "Masterpiece Theater" would form the core of RCTV's schedule. Thus, viewers will quite literally be paying for what they had previously seen for free over public TV. Almost overnight, or so it seems, all that is "cultural" in the performing arts has left commercial broadcasting. Yet as we look closely, we can see that Leonard Bernstein, who once graced the CBS television network's prime time, is busing tapley of Beethoven's symphonies with the Philharmonic for CBS Cable. Twenty years ago, more than 1.6 million people in the New York City area saw a two and a half-hour performance of "Vienna" on WCBS-TV. This year, Joseph Papp's production of "A Midsummer Night's Dream" will be seen only by CBS Cable subscribers. The networks might argue that Walt Whitman had it all wrong when he said, "To have great poets there must be great audiences, too." Much of the new cable programming is aimed at "class" rather than "mass" audiences, at the "up-scale" viewer rather than the audience-at-large. The television universe, nobody wants the South Bronx; everybody is competing for Fairfield County. But what about sports? It is here that asset-stripping will have a profound impact. ABC and Getty Oil, which owns the Entertainment and Sports Network, have announced that they will develop a cable sports television service that will offer subscribers "blockbuster" sports Most Americans now get their basic news service from television. What happens as the networks shift into cable? ABC recently announced that it would begin in the around-the-clock Westinghouse. Roone Arledge, head of ABC News and Sports, suggests that ABC correspondents will be able to provide longer reports on cable—hour-long interviews, for How do the network moguls propose to do that without impairing their present network schedules? National Hockey League games without the playoffs? U.S. tennis championships without the finals? A capsule of the World Series on regular TV, but entire games on cable? Will the already overworked network news team stretch themselves even thinner, or will it continue to grow? junked? The silent dismantling of the antiquated national television system has begun. It will cost viewers money to enter the new TV world. Of course, there is no "right to view" in the Constitution. But as America shifts into the new rich-and-poor TV world, someone ought to be asking the hard question: Do we really want a television system that offers a feast for a privileged minority, a famine to the rest of the nation? (Desmond Smith, a producer with Canadian Broadcasting Corp. News, writes frequently for the New York Times.) KANSAN (USS 6594) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday for students in grades 8-12. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas $7, second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas $6 or $7 a year in Douglas County and $1 for each year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 per student. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Postmaster: Send change of address to the University Postmaster, 1200 Hail. The University Kansas Lawrence, KS 65093 Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Nateleau Jude Manager Education Tracey Hamill Karen Reed Katherine Campus Editor George Gene Associate Campus Editor Jane Nardell Associate Campus Editor Joe Beiben, Rebecca Strohbaum Assignment Editor Steven Hobrata Assistant Sports Editor Ron Haggotteman Associate Sports Editor Steve Simpson Entertainment Editor Lauren Mansfield, Carla Beach Retail Sales Manager Sharon Appelpier National Sales Manager Howard Shanklink Campus Sales Manager Larry Bodin Classified Manager Larry Jacobson Tearaway Manager Brian Borum Retail Sales Representatives Brian Borum, Lamar Cooker, Susan Cookery, Jim Grune, Jerry Grune, Amy Jones, Matthew Langan, Philippa McClellan, Liz McKhone, Mindy Moore, Kathlyn Myers, Katrina Snyder, Jane Wendertner Sasnjer, Jane Wendertner Business and Marketing Advisor John Obernan Sales and Marketing Advisor General Manager and News Agent... Rick Miner ated cost of Con- chic- hing t a r a the ian for n th si University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Page 5 Radio From page one has every right to decide whether he wants to answer. He said "WE EVE GOT AN elected commissioner on the board and we'll ask them anything we goddamn well." But Francisco said that disclosing matters discussed in closed session had legal implications, and that commissioners should speak to them as a whole when they revealed such matters. A commissioner was not on the program to determine that he or she thought as an individual, she said. Newton disagreed. "Most of the time commissioners make it clear which hat they're wearing," he said. "Marci Francisco gives her own opinion when she's on there." Francisco emphasized that she was not trying to change commission policy about what companies should do. She only wanted to find out what the purpose of the radio orrogram was, she said. HER UNDERSTANDING of the program was given in a presentation about what happened at the academy at the meeting. "I don't expect him to talk about what was not on the agenda." she said. Brian said Francisco restricted public comment at Tuesday's meeting to prevent people from leaving the room. "Her supporters and Gleason's are the very same people," he said. "Somebody could have said, 'Let's pass a resolution concerning Tom and his letter,' she said. "If you're going to talk about it, talk about it," she said that the commission as a whole took action. Francisco said she restricted public comment to matters on which the commission as a whole was responsible. "I ALWAYS WANT the discussion to relate to what the commission as a whole can do. We have a place for public comments. We didn't even have that before I was mayor." This is not the first time that commissioners have wanted to make changes in KLWN's leadership. City manager Buford Watson used to appear nearly every week,be said. KU car pool helps students find rides "Woke up one Wednesday morning and no Buford," Newton said. "We asked what happened and they said, "We want to lower his profile." Binns said Wednesday that he and other commissioners in 1977 removed Watson from the radio program because they thought Watson's role had become too political. The radio program is called "Guest Spotlight" and features a different commissioner every Wednesday morning on a rotating basis, Newton said. By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter Car pooling, a system that helps people save gas, swept the nation three years ago, and a car pool program begun then at the University of Kansas remains popular. Lorna Zimmer, director of the Student Assistance Center, said recently that in the fall of 1978, many students contacted the center to request that a car pool system be started. "BY THE SPRING of 1979, we at the assistance center, with the help of the SUA, created the Car Pool Exchange program." Zimmer said. "We decided that it would be in the best interest of students to begin with a program of this type." Zimmer said that the Kansas Union donated material for a rider's board and allowed space in the front of the vehicle. "The Car Pool Exchange board is split into zones showing the eastern half of Kansas," she said. "There are cards that have information for the students to fill out." The board shows information such as what days a student wants to go to school, what time he wants to leave and whether the person has a phone that would like to share a ride with someone who does. Zimmer said that since the program began in 1980, membership has remained constant between 50 and 75 percent. Zimmer said that occasionally she would send out questionnaires asking students their opinions on the program. SHE SAID that most of the respondents said they were pleased with the program. But Oleva Galin, Olahe sophomore, said the program hadn't worked for her this semester. semester, but so far this semester, I haven't given any response from students," she said. "I think the problem that I face, that not many others face, is that in this area, the parking is considered relatively unsafe. Many people are also hesitant of whom they contact, because they're wary of getting someone who is unreliable or just plain crazy." ROBERT LAWSON. Topeka graduate student, has success in this semester with the car pool exchange. "I have difficulties with it because I have a special situation, not having to leave home until I p.m. each day. It still works for me on one day a week." Lawson said. "I feel if my situation were more normal, it would work up. Last semester, it worked out a lot." program. I just wish my schedule wasn't sci tight." James Bloomar, Topea freshman, said that he hasn't had any contact him to start a car pool. However, he has been commuting with a couple of his friends. "I haven't gotten any use from it yet, but it's a super idea, and I know of people who've had it done." WHEN THE program does work, Zimmer said, benefits can include more than a ride to cafe. "If your schedule coordinates with someone else, then there is no reason why it should not." "An interesting sidelight to this program has been the fact that many people have commented on the friendships they've made with the program," she said. "Another thing that I believe a program like this does is relieve tension in the student can be fun." TGIF at THE HAWK "Many of these people live miles from Lawrence, and they can relate with their driving partner about their problems and feel better when they get home. Many of these commuters have families, and it can be especially helpful if the riders are their friends." She said that the riders set their rates, and that if any problems occurred, riders were enclosed. VALID ID CARDS Instantly Laminated Color available at -DENT SYSTEMS Room 1144 Ramada Inn 841-5905 Balloon-a-Gram "Rise to the Occasion" SEND A BALLOON-A-GRAM! P.O. Box 3122 LAWRENCE, KS 68044 Masonville, KS 68044 12 is your lucky numb is your lucky number! You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1982 officer and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas: IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 843-9803 1. President 2. Vice President 9. Outdoor Recreation 3. Secretary 5. Films 6. Fine Arts 10. Public Relations 7. Forums 4. Treasurer 8. Indoor Recreation 11. Special Events 12. Travel Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union. Interviews will be held Saturday, February 27. Sign up deadline for applications is Friday, February 19, 5:00 p.m. SUA BRETT RIDGWAY PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THE THE ALL DAY PARTY BEGINS WITH 10* DRAWS FROM 2 TO 4 PM OF THE "NEW" GRAND OPENING TIME OUT THE GOOD TIMES CONTINUE WITH 25' DRAWS FROM 4 TO 8 PM Boyd's Coins-Antiques DRAWINGS FOR TIME OUT SHIRTS AND HATS TOO! Boyd's Coin-Antiques Gray Ring Guild Buy Silver, Gold Silver Vintage World Collection 711 New Hampshire Lake Hampton Kentucky 40423 91-812-8773 TIME OUT PARTYS INTO THE NIGHT WITH 50' DRAWS FROM 8 TO MIDNIGHT, AND THE COUNTRY MUSIC OF TERRY MIDDLETON ($1.00 COVER CHARGE DURING BAND) A 75' SCHOONERS 2 PM TO MIDNIGHT $1.50 PITCHERS ALL DAY take TIME OUT THE PLACE TO PARTY 2408 IOWA LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley 842 1780 842 1771 Prudential [Health Care Insurance] ATΩ MEN: ROSES ARE PINK VIOLETS ARE BLUE YOUR LITTLE SISTERS THINK THE WORLD OF YOU! HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY FTERS HEART BREAKERS We accept: KAROUSEL Hours: 10-6 Mon.-Sat. 10-8:30 Thurs. 1-5 Sun. 711 W. 23rd Malls Shopping Center VISA mass change carouse Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 12. 1982 Suds sales OK at ISU, Senate finds By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter The KU Student Senate learned this week that Iowa State University had begun selling beer in its coliseum this summer with favorable results, David Welch, body vice president, said yesterday. "It's a good step because other schools in the Big Eight are looking into that type of activity." Welch said. Beer is sold only at concerts and special events in Iowa State's Hilton Coliseum, Dan Forbes, assistant director of the Iowa State Senate, said. The Senate is part of Iowa state's administrative structure, he said. THE KU STUDENT Senate has asked Iowa State to send the University a report of the procedure followed to obtain permission to sell beer, Welch said. That information will be added to a file the Senate is keeping to back up its argument for allowing beer in Memorial Stadium. The Senate has tried both this year and last to have beaten sold in the House by the Republicans. the university of Kansas Alumni Association. Some members have expressed concern about possible damage to KU's reputation. "We have not experienced any problems." Forbes said, When sales began, vendors filled cups to the brim and fans spilled a lot of beer, he said. Vendors have since changed that practice. "We find it another source of income for the building," Forbes said. "With inflation the way it is, we have to look for all possible sources of income." HE SAID selling beer was quite profitable and required virtually no preparation. The only thing needed was a bottle of wine it into cups and take money, he said. Forbes said Iowa State started selling beer in the coliseum at a Kenny Rogers concert last summer. The administration thought students would either sneak cans in and end up throwing them, or drink so much before they came to the concert that they would get sick in the coliseum. To control the situation, beer is sold only in plastic cups at special beer stores. KU's Senate also has plans to control beer sales, Welch said. wants to buy beer must obtain a hand stamp at an identification station after showing two pieces of ID. BEER WOULD be sold only at three concession areas below the stadium. Individuals would need an ID for each beer purchased, and there would be a limit on the number of beers one person could purchase at one time. Welch said that if spectators in a section of the stadium got out of hand, the beer station nearest to it would be closed. Although the Senate is continuing to research the possibilities of selling beer here, Welch said, he doesn't know when KU would be ready. “It's a matter of getting the correct information and really researching this to make it an acceptable option,” he said. “At KU right now, it's not at that place.” "We don't even have an athletic director, and that hinges on him." Native culture to be featured at African Night tomorrow Food, art and culture will be part of "African Night" tomorrow. Adams Somiari, president of the group, said yesterday the events would start at 5 p.m. with a banquet of foods from different parts of Africa. "African Night," sponsored by the African Students Association, will be held at the Lawrence Community Building. 11th and Vermont streets There also will be four guest speakers. Arthur Drayton, professor of African studies, will talk about African literature. Mohamed Eld Hodir, professor of economics, will speak on economic development in Africa. JAMES MAYO, professor of architecture and urban design, will talk about planning strategy in Africa. John Janzen, professor of anthropology, will talk about current issues and culture in Africa. ken's. PIZZA. FREE PIZZA FREE COUPON Clip this coupon indeed at any Ken's Plaza location. When you buy one Ken's Pizza you will receive the next size smaller of equal value FREE. No Charge On Carry Out Orders Void With Other Promotions Offer expires February 18, 1982 1982 October 10. Ken's Offers You More For Less 30¢ Refills on any size soft drink $1.20 Refills on pitchers of soft drinks An Everyday Special drink offer good on dine-in only. Dr Rapper -FRIDAY-- Spiced Broiled Shrimp $1.50 1/4 lb. Free Hors D'oeuvres 4-7 -SATURDAY-- 10 p.m.-Midnight House Drinks $1.00 -SUNDAY SPECIALS-- 75' PITCHERS from 1 p.m.-5 p.m. 60 OUNCE SUPER SCHOONERS for only $1.75 Reg. $2.75-Anytime Sunday-- -MONDAY-- 50' PITCHERS from 7 p.m.-Midnight $1.00 Bar Drinks We invite all Club Members & Their Guests. Memberships Available 1401 West 7th 843-0540 the SANCTUARY --- HENRY'S RESTAURANT SIXTH & MISSOURI 843-2139 henrys CARRY-OUT VALENTINE'S SPECIAL Somarii said there also would be a fashion show of native costumes from the region. DRIVE-IN A display of African art will be open throughout the evening. Buy One Quarter Pounder and get A Medium Shake Free at Henry's Drive-In Good Feb. 12th-14th only The night will end with a show of African music and culture. Buy one delicious Henry's Quarter Pound and get a medium shake free! That's a mouth-watering quarter pound of ground beef smothered in lettuce, tomatoes and 1000 Island dressing plus a rich thick Henry's medium shake. Pickles, ketsup and mustard available upon request. Where else can you find a Valentine's Special this tempting? No where but Henry's! 第十五章 综合习题答案 Give Your Sweetheart A Nauti-Body For Valentines Day Somarii said the event would be open to the public. Tickets will be $5.50 for adults and $4.00 for kids. Get It While It's Hot Special 3 Month Gift Certificate $69.00 $69.0 Southern Hills Mall 1601 W. 23rd 749-1501 The activity is in conjunction with Black History Month. - 2 Lines of Equipment * Olympic Weights * Indoor Jogging Track * Whirlpool Sauna Individual Programs Supervised Instruction Supervised Kidle Corral Tanning Booth Nautilus FITNESS CENTERS Afro-American History-- Blueprint for Survival Tuesday. Fehruarv 16 Saturday. February 13 The University of Kansas Black History Month February 1982 *The Black Woman: Literature or Exploitation* **Baurdal-Baraud** **Lacatera**, 7:30 p.m. **International Room, Kansas Union** Speered to the office of Memorial Affairs **Big Eagle Room, Kansas Union** Speered to Big Eagle Room, **Sponsored by Student Association** Wednesday, February 17 African Night—Bangla, Speakers. African Film and Arts, 文化Display walks. 5:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Community Building. Fiveeth and Vermont St. $3.50 Dues. $2.00 Children Association by African Student Association Nigelian Music Of Entertainment—African Studies Lunch Table. 13 to 18 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., madden Room, Kansas University. Sponsored by African Studies Department Another event for Black History Gospel Entertracation—BSCI Church The inspirational Gospel Voices, and other area choirs, at 8 p.m. in Ballroom #1, Kinsen Union, *now* a change of time and place. Sponsored by the Black Student Union Mortimer and The Law Conference with Amara Institute, President National Bar Association. Registration and con- ference, 8:30 a.m. Green Hall, Lunch Hall, 12:30 p.m. in Kansas City, Union. Sign up at BSA.ALA.UA Cart Stations - 8 o.p.m. Temple Hall Caleforum. Sponsored by Temple Hall. Temple Hall Black Caucus. G.F.S F Black Caucus. Black Caucus. Black Office and the Union of Marymont. Saturday, February 20 Sunday, February 21 Saturday February 21 Coca-Cola舞会 8:00 p.m. $450.00 Seated Memorial Hall in New York, sponsored by an annual Art Commission Sponsored by the Office of Military Affairs and International Affairs. Dress code: Black. Murphy Business Suite. SSA and Office of Memorial Affairs Thursday, February 25 Tribute To The Black Woman. Ebony Sloyni and others. Forum Room, Kansas Union Office. m. sponsored by the Ebony Sloyni and Office of Memory at the Battery. Fidelity, Reddish The sounds and score of the Harman Renewal in a cabaret setting, Kansas State University Ebony Theatre Company, Kansas Room, Kansas Union. 805-263-3791, sponsored by the Office of Militant Attorneys. Friday, February 26 Scott DuPree, forums committee chairman for SUA, said Nelms was forced to postpone because of a conflict in his schedule. Friday, February 28 and Sunday, February 27 Nate and Seahou. From Sweeto. An evening of two one-and-a-half 10s. Smash Hilt. 8:30 p.m. Admission $3.50 public $2.50 students w/ hurl Saturday. February 27 Soul Feaden, the commission of Black History Month at Guests. Visitee嘉宾: Marwan Washington. KU Woman basketball team. Entertainment provided by Eileen Hawthorn ($320). Banquet fee: $8.20. Sponsored by Eileen Hawthorn Banquet. This ad paid for by the Black Student Union; funded in part from Student Activity Fees. Kizer Cummings jewelers I love you! There are times when you want a very special gift that will do very special things. . . You want it to be a symbol of how much you care. . . You want it to make someone feel special and loved. Free 14k gold dangling heart charm with purchase of 14k gold chain. Offer good thru Sat., Feb. 13, 1982 800 Massachusetts 749-4333 Hours: 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 'til 8:30 p.m. Thurs. The talk, originally scheduled for Feb. 16, has been rescheduled for Feb. 23. Month, a talk by the Rev. Ommie L. Nelms, director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Kansas City, has been postponed, a spokesman for Student Union Activities said yesterday. Ranid Reading Program Rapid Reading Program Improve your reading speed and concentration. Five Sessions Mondays and Wednesdays 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. February 17, 22, 24, March 1, 3 For registration and payment of fees contact: The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 824-4064. The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064. Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-435P SUA FILMS Presents FRIDAY & SATURDAY J. Hoberman, Village Voice ONE OF THE BEST FILMS OF THE YEAR. "Back in March, I called 'Cutter's Way the best-directed Hollywood movie of the year. Nothing has appeared since that can remotely touch it... an unqualified triumph." Time Magazine: Andrew Sarris, Village Voice: J. Hoberman, Village Voice: Carrie Rickey, Village Voice Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times: Sheila Benson. Los Angeles Times; Seth Cagin. Soho News; Bruce McCabe, Boston Globe Cutter's Way Fri.—3:30, 9:30 Sat.—7:00 1.50 Woodru $1.50 Woodruff "BEST FOREIGN FILM (1980)" -New York Film Critics Award Roger Corman Presents ALAIN RESNAI MON UNCLE D'AMERIQUE AIX AU CIEL D'EMMA ROUGE Directed by ALIAN RESNAI Screenplay Written by JEAN GRUBULT with Professor HENRI LABORTI NELLY BORGAULD PIERRE ADDITI PHILIPPE LAUDREAU GERARD DARRELU MARIE DUBKS Produced by PHILIPPE LAUDREAU MARIE DUBKS Produced by PHILIPPE LAUDREAU MARIE DUBKS Distributed by NAW WORLD INC. Inc. PC PARENTAL GUARANTE SUBLOTED Material may not be supplied for children Fri.—7:00 $1.50 Sat-3:30, 9:30 Woodruff TELL YOUR CHILDREN- before it's too late Reefer MADNESS THE WEED WITH ROOTS IN HELL plus: 3 classic POPEYE cartoons 12:00 Midnight 12:00 Midnight $2.00 Woodruff Auditorium No refreshments allowed pnts University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Page 7 nimie L. nationali- ment of y, has in for vester- for Feb. mittee was conflict n p n th si Red Cross presents award to lifesaver Instincts praised Scott Rose, Salina junior, didn't believe the other swimmers at the Robinson Gymnasium pool Sept. 16 when she was wrong with the person in the water. Instead, he acted on instinct and went after the motionless body of Charlotte Guunardwa, Sri Lanka graduate student. Rose performed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and revived Guunardwa. Last night, Joey Bier, president of the Douglas County Division of the American Red Cross, presented Rose Anderson, a civilian honor given by the Red Cross. The award, a certificate of merit, will bear the signatures of President Reagan and the national president of the Red Cross. The certificate will be sent, said, "as soon as the president sets its course with Reaganomics." The award was presented at a dinner at the Sigma Nu fraternity, of which Rose is a member. “This award is not to be taken lightly,” Byers said. “We have been here for 16 years, and this is only the 10th one awarded.” Gunawardena entered the deep end of the pool and become frightened when she sees a monster. "I'm not a very good swimmer, just a beginner," she said. "When I couldn't touch, I panicked and swallowed lots of water." When Rose pulled Gunawardaen from the pool she was unconscious and he began mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. "I thought I was dead," Gunaward- a said, unconscious, unconscious, and I know anything. Bernard Taylor, Health, Physical Education and Recreation instructor, spoke at the dinner, commending Rose for his work. "It's not hard to practice on the plastic dummies and know the procedures," Taylor said. "The dif- ference that Huffman coated under firing-line activity." Taylor said Rose seemed to possess a sense trained lifeguards learn with experience. "We all were lucky that Scott didn't listen to the others around her at the pool," Taylor said. "He reacted to his sixth sense." The Douglas County District Court charged one KU student with forgery and two KU students with fraud during Tuesday, court records showed. On the record Howard B. Kershenbaum, b. Barton J. Bloom, 18, and John D. Fink, 19, all of 100 Naismith Drive, with a withdrew $500 check sent to Telemail TWA for two airline tickets to Tucson, Ariz. Kershenbaum was charged with forgery, and Bloom was charged with aiding and abetting. The men allegedly used a missing check that belonged to Faisal Ismail, Abu Ihabi, Jordan, sophomore. The suspects face a preliminary hearing March 3 in Douglas County District Court. Kersenbaum is free pending the hearing on $,000 bond. Bloom and Fink are out on $1,500 bond each. BURGLARS STOLE more than $300 worth of items from a residence at 1142 Indiana St. sometime between 9 p.m. tuesday and 9 p.m. Wednesday, entering the unlocked residence through the front door burglars took $786 in cash and a black patent leather purse valued at $20. First Annual Knights of Columbus Sweetheart Dance First Annual Knights of Columbus Sweetheart Dance Friday, February 12th 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Doors open at 8 o'clock Entrances and spectators are encouraged to enter their little sister in our Sweetheart Contest For $50 ladies through the door will receive a complimentary sweetheart rose Entertainment by: RICHARD GREENLEE SOUND OF WHEELS Cover charge $3.00 per couple Private Clubs: DANCE OPEN TO GENERAL PUBLIC $1.50 pitchers, 50¢ draws H For men & women . . TOUGH TRAIL HIKER COME TRY ON A PAIR! Reg. $100 RED WING For 1 Week Mon., Feb. 15th- Fri., Feb. 19th $80 Gordon's SHOE CENTER 815 Mass. 843-7628 Good friends stand up for you when you need them. Phone calls got you nowhere, but this should get her attention. A mission requiring split-second timing, perfect planning and most importantly, some sure stand-up guv IE Löwenbräu.Here's to good friends. MUNDERS 1982 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. Prepare For: April MCAT MCAT Call Days Evenings & Weekends: (913) 341-1220 collect Stanley H. KAPLAN Educational Center TEST PREPARATION EXAMS SINCE 1938 Class will be in Lawrence starting the last week in Feb. Stanley H KAPLAN Outside NY State CALL TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 This is GENTLEMAN'S QUARTERS 8th year anniversary! To help us celebrate. Take advantage of this COUPON OFFER $2.00 OFF on Shampoo Cut and Blow Dry OR $5.00 OFF on Haircut and Perm OFFER EXPIRES MARCH 20.1982. 611 W. 9th 843-2138 VIDEO GAME CENTER NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA AND VIDEO GAME CENTER All New Ms. PACMAN! All New Now Playing Thats Right Ms. PACMAN!! Present This Coupon And Receive Two FREE VIDEO GAME PLAYS Expires 2/28/82 COUPON Present This Coupon And Receive ANY SIZE PIZZA $1'00 OFF Expires 2/8/92 Limit one coupon per person COUPON Regular Pizza Prices LARGE Double Cheese '4.95 MEDIUM Double Cheese '3.95 SMALL Double Cheese '2.95 TINY Double Cheese '1.95 Additional Meat or Garden Topping 75° ea. Large 65° ea. Medium 55° ea. Small 45° ea. Tiny OPEN DAILY 10 am-11:45 p.m. SUN. Noon-11:45 p.m. No other Coupons accepted with this Offer Enjoy Coke Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Sukko Hirshing 1982 New York researchers say chocolate may actually cause feelings of love By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter Chocolate, the traditional gift of lovers on Valentine's Day, may actually cause feelings of love and not just happiness according to two New York researchers. The researchers, Donald Klein and Michael Liebwitz, both New York psychanalysts, believe there may be a connection between love and a substance found in chocolate. The connection, a natural chemical named phenylethamine, is found both in chocolate and in the brain. This chemical, similar to an amphetamine, is produced in the brain by emotions of love, the researchers said recently. This substance is also found in large amounts in chocolate. LAWRENCE AREA merchants and wholesalers are prepared for the onstaught of shoppers looking for lasts gift to boost phenylethamine levels. "We're now noticing an increase in our card and candy sales," Bob Davis, manager of Raney's Drugs downtown store, said. "But as a drugstore, we always expect a lot of last-minute sales." Raney's carries about 50 different kinds of Valentine's Day candy. Davis said dealing with seasonal holidays required foresight. "We sent our request in right after Valentine's Day last year and bought about $3,500 worth last August," Davis said. Candy sales have not been hit by the recession, at least in the Lawrence area, said Ken Abbott, manager of TPCA Inc., a Tapeck candy wholesaler. "We ship supplies to our customers on the basis of what they sold last year, plus a 10 percent increase," Abbott said. HAGMAN'S SUPPLIES more than 1,000 stores in Kansas with candy from Hersey, Brach and Schraft, said Abbott. "We're on the leg end of this business. We supply sweets for the sweets," Abbott said. Hagman is nearly out of its Valentine's day stock for the year, Abbott said. Strategy is a necessary part of the business, he said. "If you don't time things just right as far as supplies go, you can end up on your face." Abbott said. Hagman's began ordering candy for Valentine's Day last spring in May or June, Abbott said. Orders were taken in July and August. Although stores are forced to order several months in advance in preparation for Valentine's Day, the tradition goes back much further, to the Roman Empire and the advent of Christianity. The day was named after St. Valentine, a German priest who performed valiantly in assisting Christians. Helping a Christian in the Roman era was a crime punishable by death and Valentine was beheaded. Legend says that St. Valentine formed a friendship with his jailer's daughter and restored her sight. Before her death, she told to her titlename, "From your Valentine." St. Valentine was beheaded Feb. 14, A.D.270. The beheading of Valentine became part of the pagan celebration of Lupercalia. Lupercalia, a hunting festival and feast, continued for many years until Christianity spread over Rome. The Christians, knowing they could not eradicate the celebration, instead associated it with St. Valentine. The association with the saint did away with the hunting festival and the hunting season. Variety is available Valentine's Day brings out red gifts By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 Valentine's Day is enough to make many people see red. Indeed, a check at some local stores indicates there is a lot of red to be seen. SOME RED gifts for Valentine's Day can be found on campus. Students can buy a singing valentine on the third floor of Bailey Hall. For 50 cents, students from the Music Therapy department deliver a Valentine's song in Lawrence. Song choices are "Three Blind Mice." "O Christmas Tree" and "Big Spender," all adapted for Valentine's Day. soap, plastic heart boxes, X-rated valentines and T-shirts with hearts and a big zig-zag line like a heartbeat. It also looks like paint in the ship of a heart that blinks. The Kansas Union sells red and white stuffed animals. If these don't sound appealing, more tough alternatives are available downstairs. "It's a fun day. We are doing something fun for it," he said. dles, said that for $5, $9 and $13.50, he sold circular wax candles with names put on them by hand. BALLOON-A-GRAM is selling an unusual red and white balloon basket. The basket has helium balloons attached to it with six brightly colored roses and ribbons. The ribbons are red with white hearts, or white with red hearts. Bob Werts, owner of Waxman Can- PENDRAGON SELLS a heart-shaped piece of wood painted as a watermelon that people can use to hold pens, pencils or candles. The Massachusetts Street Delicatessen is adding a little something extra to its dishes, according to Aaron Zee, supervisor. In addition to the sandwiches it sells, candy hearts will be served on neonlies' plates "They are going absolutely crazy," Edward Minton, owner of Balloon-A-Gram. said. One of the most unusual items for sale at Pendragon is a white, heart-shaped frame that holds a glossy black strap and two muskrats in a tender embrace. The Bay Leaf has a set of fire-engine red ceramic dishes with contrasting white hearts, includes a cream bowl with mason jar and bread tray, coffee mug and ashtray. How I Saw At The Living Game DIET CENTER 111 5th Ave Natural! 841 DIET 829 Iowa Holiday Medical Center B41 DIET Many stores are finding themselves overstocked with the red merchandise on Feb. 14, draw close. Some, including the holiday items on sale, already put the holiday items on sale. Footlights sells Ziggy Valentine's MISS STREET DELL 1904 MASSACHUSETTS Valentine Weekend Special Buy Your Valentine A Sausage Sandwich Hot or Mild $1.50 Hot or Mild POTATOES Enjoy Coke Offer good No coupons accepted with this offer. now thru Sun., Feb. 14 RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR Rose's or Red's of varied hue . . . or perhaps Champagne for your love and you! Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor A New Concept That's Long Overdue Southwest Plaza Shopping Center Located behind Hardee's and next to Foodbarn 23rd & Iowa 842-9088 9:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR ❤️ PLACEMENT OFF CAPRUTH-O'LEARY FEB 18th, 19th TEACH A LESSON IN GOOD WILL PEACE CORPS The Third World needs teachers. So does Peace Corps The sciences, English, vocational skills, education specialties—all are vital needs in over 60 countries which host Peace Corps volunteers. Our teachers serve in many capacities elementary and secondary schools, universities, and trade schools. Even teacher training programs. If you want to help poor people help themself, call Peace Corps. It a lesson you'll never forget. SVA FILMS Selling something? Place a want da Call 864-4358 SUNDAY AaAaAaAaAa Presents SUNDAY AN IMPORTANT NEW FILM FROM POLAND ANDRZEJ WAJDAS MAN OF MARBLE **EXTRAORDINARY:** A political epic, compassionate and as bitterly funny as a cartoon...a big, fascinating risky film that testifies not only to Mc. Weidle's remarkable vision, but also to the vitality of contemporary Polish life." —VINCENT CARBY The New York Times "EXTRAORDINARY. Part of the proceeds go to 2:00 p.m. SUNDAY Re FRIENDS of SUNDAY 2:00 p.m. SUNDAY $1.50 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM --- Bucky's Valentine's Day Special Bring your valentine out for a sweetheart parfaith! Sweetheart Parfaits for 89c Mt. Rangoon Offer good thru Sunday Feb. 14 Bocky's 2120 W. 9th VALENTINE SPECIALS Helping Heart Introductory Offer 3 Months $59 Be slim, firm, fit, and help others, too! We will donate $5 to the American Heart Assn. for every charter program sold NOW thru FEBRUARY Available Facilities • SAFT Training centers NO Class Charge • Sauna • Thai Foot Health Exercises NO WORKER CHARGES exclusive for Women Call for information! Magic Mirror Westridge Shopping Center 601 Kasold 843-4040 OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Monday thru Friday 8:30am to 8:30pm Saturday 9am to 5pm Sunday 1pm nth SI 7 B University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Page 9 became motion of printing many over they tention, tine. it did and tention. order in y, the to the ant of Students' business great for florists By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Lawrence florists agree—Valentine's Day is the most bountiful day of the year. Sylvia Lawton, owner of University Floral, agreed with Harris. "It surpasses anything else. we have more business at Valentine's Day." Marissa Harris, manager of Southern Hills Floral & Gift, said. "In Lawrence, it is the busiest day," she said. "In a lot of places, Mother's Day is the most popular, but it's not here." LAWRENCE FLORISTS said that the student population made it their biggest holiday of the year. "Valentine's Day, especially for a college town, is the number one holiday of the year," said Kathy Caldwell, manager of Florence Lawlore. Albough more men send flowers than do women, Lawton said that more women were buying flowers every year. "We notice an increase in that every year," she said. "Girls, as well as boys, send flowers at college and high school age." The most popular flower requested at Valentine's Day is, of course, the rose. "We can never get enough of them," Lawton said. "Everybody wants them." HARRISE SAID, "Roses are the Valentine flower." "Spring flowers, carnations, potted plants, tulips and azaleas are all popular," he said. Don Randel, owner of Owens Flower Shop, said that spring flowers also were popular. Although Caldwell said that single flowers, such as single roses and carnations, were frequently more "At Valentine's Day, dozen orders increase because people feel that this is the time to put out a little more," she said. popular than bouquets, Harris said that orders for a dozen roses still were popular. Randel said that the price of roses always was higher at holiday times. Lawton attributed this to the growers. But local florists say these prices don't reflect a great increase over previous years. "Most stores in Lawrence are trying to keep the prices down," Caldwell said. Putting out a little more for special people means that Lawrence residents would pay anywhere from $37.50 to $43 for a dozen long-stemmed robes. "The grower is the one who makes them sick," she said. "He determines the price." New stamp a love New stamp a love Lovers can now stamp their letters with love. A new love stamp issued by the U.S. Postal Service is reminiscent of a love stamp issued in 1737 that featured the letters L-O-V-E. The latest love stamp is selling well in Lawrence, according to Barbara Kilmer, a window clerk at Vermont Street. Seventh and Vermont streets. "It's real popular since it's out right at Valentine's Day," Kilmer said yesterday. Kilmer said many people had requested the stamp and said when she saw someone with red envelopes or her hand, she sold the love stamp. But the stamp is not just for Valentine's Day, Kilmer said. The love stamp will be different from other commemorative stamps, which are usually issued only in certain quantities. This stamp will continue to be issued after Valentine's Day. The Postal Service wants people to be able to buy the stamp any time for special occasions, such as birthday and wedding anniversaries, Kilmer said. The Postal Service, after receiving thousands of requests for another love stamp, released this one Feb. 1. "A lot of people think they're pretty," Kilmer said of the love stamps. "I've heard no negative comments about them." Poet gave martyr new image though his real story differs By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter Valentine's Day is typified by big red hearts, Cupid and love messages. But historians say there is no real relationship between St. Valentine and the virgin Mary, who was a slave. St. Valentine was transformed into a patron saint of love in the 14th century by Geoffrey Chaucer, according to Jack KU associate professor of English Oruch said that in the poem "Parliament of Fowls," Chaucer combined the elements of birds, the start of spring and love with the day St. Valentine was martyred, Feb. 14, giving St. Valentine a new image. "Two legends suggest there may have two valentines, one a bishop in Tierni, Italy, and the other a priest in Rome," he said. In either case, ST. VALENTNE was said to have lived the last part of his life in Paris. As a priest, Oruch said, St. Valentine cured a blind child through prayer. He was then arrested by Roman authority and ordered to pray publicly to the Latin gods. When he refused, he was killed. In a second version, Valentine was a bishop who cured a crippled child through prayer and suffered the same fate. Oruch said he had wondered why St Valentine's death in mid-February was connected with spring and the mating of birds in Chaucer's poem. But, he said, he found that on most early English calendars, spring was marked as beginning in mid-February, and, in Chaucer's time, birds were nesting, mating or laying eggs, and flowers were blossoming. by Feb. 15. "Perhaps Chaucer spotted St. Valentine's name on his calendar," Orchard said, "and decided to roll all the elements of spring together on that EARLY 15TH-CENTURY poet John Lydgate became the first writer to use Valentine's name in the it is used today in the phrase "Be my valentine." One of the earliest practices on Valentine's Day was for men to write the names of women on slips of paper, then draw them from a jar. The woman whose name was drawn by a man became his valentine, and he paid special attention to her, many of the men gave their valentines gifts. By the end of the 15th century, "valentine" had become a synonym for "sweetheart." During the 1700s, one description of Valentine's Day told how groups of friends met to draw names and how, for several days, each man wore his valentine's name on his sleeve. The saying, "wearing his heart on his sleeve," probably came from this practice. LOVE A fad that has students tied up in knots is sheolacees bedded with hearts, alligators, rainbows and even the alphabet. The perfect Valentine's Day gift for that special someone. Popularity of shoelaces given boost with sales of bright, colorful hearts By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter It started with hearts Now people lace up their shoes with green alligators, rainbows, blue stars, green dollar signs, letters of the alphabet, teddy bears and tape rolls. Shoe laces printed with such colorful designs sell for under $2 in many Lawrence boutiques. The fad originated in a Boston shop, "Have a Heart," which specialized in items with hearts. When the owner saw how well the shoelaces were selling, she tried printing them with other designs marketing them across the country THE LACES CAME to Lawrence last summer and became a big hit at Christmas, area shoekeers said. Loretta Coon of Bowen's Hallmark Corp said that the first stock sold out quickly, but that since Christmas, sales have been up. The two dresses pair a week to six or eight pair. The laces with hearts are outsole only by the ones with 'gators, area shankeners said "People just think they're the cutest things they've ever seen." Con said. customers who bought the lacres were girls from junior high school- to college-age. things they ever seen, too said. The shopkeepers all said that the Kelly Lladigw of Footlights said customers were beginning to use the laces for more than their shoes. She said that the printed laces had caught on as hair ribbons with the college-age customers. Many were repeat customers, who collected the different designs in different colors and coordinated them daily with their outfits, they said. None of the Lawrence shops carried the original brand, Lacy's Laces, the same ones she bought. Special VALENTINE'S Wishes Little Shi-It. the time we've spent together has been great and those times ahead will be even better. I'm glad we go together. Yas, ys. P.S., Slyx is better. Oliver GDY. Ron, Don't ever go away. I need you more and more each day. I love you always! Dummy. Dear Rita. What in the world would I do without you, my dear friend. Thank me for being there when I needed you. Love, Nan. To the brothers of Kappa Alpha Psi, Phi Nu Pi If you read this just right You'll know what's up for Sunday night Happy Valentines Day. ALBEN CIMAIVE. We are our number patterter. They are very funny. We are your Valentine's Day. I love you. The Stirrer of the Orange Juice. Any, you will always be my Valentine. You are my Valentine. Ahue Shoebins—not inside your kicks and neutrush long enough to have a happy Valentine's day. From your secret sweetie. Laura and Earhy, Happy V-Day! Be mine Love va. Rickola. MICHAEL, I LOVE YOU APRIL Kevin, Roses are red. Violets are blue, could it be love, that I'm feeling with you? Your Valentine. Will. Roses are Red. Violets are blue. I want you to know I think a lot of you. Admiring Valentine. Tis the night before V-DAY, and all the girls are up. We all drink as a drank in a house. Dress for the evening is certain incuestr Ai Poodlebread's place with his sisters. At 10am our friends will party dawn — our friends will party Happy Valentine's Day *Cherry Day*, Debbie, and Huvvy-Huvvy! That to that to me *Hag!* Huvvy-Huvvy! Love, Scott My Dearest Lynn. You are the one that I love very much and you are the one I shall spend the rest of my life with. You are my partner. And I love you. You forre-Dannon. Dannon. HAPPY VALENTINE DAY JC. You are such a sweetie (soundless familiar) KIM GMD. You are my buddy, my only buddy. We'll never know "lil puppy dog" how much I wave you. You don't take my love. DAILY ALL MY LOVE KED Happy Valentine's Day to the greatest little sister in the world. I love you. Dee Ann. HAPPY VALENTINE'S to our much loved teacher, ZINNY FELTON Many thanks to the kids, cookies, cakes, enquiries and weekly writings. From these wild & crazy friends at the Boys' Depot Dean, Three and a half years ago we met, began our freshman year and grew to know everything I needed. We attended our graduation and the beginning of our career as one mindful woman and soul. There are as many people around you as my world ... my everything. I love you, sweetheart, and will always thank God that I am not alone. You are an amazing person, my lover and my husband. Eternally in our home. Happy Valentine Day, My love, Cheryl! MTC: You are my funny valentine. Save me a kiss on Sunday-Nat. To Cathy W. Your the sweetest thing that has ever happened to me. Always be mine! From Danny D. Son-I don't know what hit me, I just can’t bear it. We’ve been in a war with no cure. We’ve gone from a bar to a fun Sunday game. We’ve had our good friends over. We’re still wild of Forest you are wrong. If so, why would I keep my son for so long? I love You. You’ll be fine with us. I love You’s life. I will be fine with Son. I love You’s life. I will be fine with Son. I love You’s life. To one who has seen low many movies: Roses are red, mocks are blue. I know you hate much But the only one I have ever loved is You! All my love on Valentines Day P.I. Happy VI day to Hard V & Clunk low. TO-SAL & BTL The Tweets is in love. And BTL they—to them they one year ago, but the last time you saw it was quite a Fuku—they met in the RAN-SAAS line under a shower of Poke. There's real randy—and but I can remember when you've been through some great times. The yellows & pink—but also the bad times, the happy ones, the think that loves dumb, and you give out all your money. God you're not Greek. Now I love you two Knuckleheads. That usually prey easy—make myself a real quess! Happy VID, make myself a real quess! Signed. The Sometimes Lovable Woofs. Michael, I love you. April. HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY Cheri & Jerri but not Liz! P. Will you be my Valentine . . . and stuff like that? M. Chi Gira. We give thanks to God always for our prayers, constantly bearing in mind your work of faith and labor of love and Christ, the Lord our Lord Jesus Christ. Mu Chi Betas. Love, Kevin Beth. Happy Valentines Day: Glad you came down to see me! Love, Dee. Carlene, Be it Spanish or French Or English you speak, And though you may fly Off to far Mozambique, Never fear, never doubt. Don't worry or fret. I'm crazy about you and that you can wager Julie, Beth. To us your both so special and much we love you. You're much more we love you. Both and much everyday. So we thought we'd take this moment to show you a life with God and how happy she is with God. Dear Greg: Because our relationship is built on trust, we need to test each other. It is so wonderful to play games with and who lives up to it. You are the best. I am beautiful and beautiful. I love you. Love, Mindy DMB I hope you will be mine, because I have no other for my valentine. You know you really drive me nuts, from your Little Bugar Butt, you love, I.D.B Dave--Happy Valentine's Day. Thanks for 11 great months (a bit early). Beep-Beep-Beep Baby, we've had some bad times, but the good times are the best we've ever known. You'll never forget them to me. Always remember Eilah and the other two stuck. Happy Valentines Day! I love you. To all my munchkins: Happy Valentine's Day, GP. Love you muchly. OK, fine? Hugs and Kisses. A. Jawn. You're the greatest. It's been a fantastic year. I love you. Tim. Alice. Be my Valentine or I'll shove your face in the snow and tie you to my dog-sled. Love, Punker. Car—The nickname says it all. We think you're the best—Dearesians, Boge & Mittus. To the guys on Oliver's 10 South. Happy Valentine's Day. Love, D. L & W. Alice, Be my Valentine! Can you dig it? Peace. Love. Inner-consciousness. Can you relate? Love. Groovyman. Angel, happy Valentine's Day! I love you now and forever. Love Panda Bear. All. Be my Valentine, je taime! Chrta. My love, (MLS) your number one in my life, and I will love you forever. Happy Valentine Day. DMLS To my one and only Huggy Bunny, Thanks so much for always being there! I love you lots, Lisa Gary, Get payched for the Sock Hop! It's gonna be our best ever! Happy Valentine's Day! Love, Jan Julie and Jennifer—the best little sisters anyone could want! Happy Valentine's Day! Love, Jan Michael I will forever remember the kind words and the love that you always give to me. I Love You SHATZI Forever, N.P. "and in the midst of our host's moving arm, we found her standing on a man stood up, and equipping the said host's hand to the breast. She was a mocking voice: 'Hallow Statle'? The will be lost on the automated audience and I myself lost on the automated audience and I myself lost when he added, "wear high boots and his legs dirty the grace and charm of his hands." We wandered the wilds of Lake Woyongbeye, May we continue our hurried, but pleasant journey, ye do. --- Happy Valentines Day Debbie Looking forward to May 22nd Dear Cynthia—"Our" year has been the best of our lives. I've traveled across the country and the Golden Gate bridge together. I will always love you more than anything else (please you have incredible eyes and an amazing smile) you have incredible eyes and an amazing smile. Dear Skipy, I hope Ureve's a charm. Happy 3rd Valentine's. Love Always. Carol. It can be truly said, without any doubt, the secretaries in 118 Bronze are truly proud! Eric,吧 my Valentine. I'm sure you're still alive. You know that we should be together, And I'm not handin' you no jive—Your Fidget. JLo, Sandy, Slick Karen, Audeen, Mark Morgan, Jake Taylor, James Rutherford, VALENTINE'S DAY FROM B and D American Giorgio-Meet me any afternoon! Digging the champagne! Happy Valentine's Day from B and D To the girl from WATHEA through good, and bad. Nothing can stand in the way. Because you're the best I ever had. That's all I have to say. KYTE THE REV. I still remember. That day in September, Next thursday makes five, I amn't handing you no jive! Happy V.D! Love, Rocky. Booooo, Snunky, Speedy & Youi, we love you all. Thanks for everything. Happy VD. Love C & C. Chris, I luv you more each day. You've grown SUNSHINE to my heart. Be my Valentine forever. Luv Humpy Bunny. P.S. no more onion fighting Fluffy, Be my aly silly Valentine! Love & Ekimo kisses. Miss Kitty. MICHAEL- Will you be my Valentine? Con. You said. The greatest love is shown when a person lays down his life for his friends, and then you did it. I love you Jesus! WID. so I say the wrong things. I hope you'll read between the lines. I love you. C.D. Jarry I think of you so often When you're working with the coffins. We'll have many more good times Playing in Snow, joking around and "infilt" I love you! NANCY. May the next 10 months be as fantastic as the last ... Happy Valentine's Day. Love always TOM. Welcome Back Steve. Happy Valentine's Day to my qualified Jumper. Love, K.C. NAG. I've always thought your slope looked great on you. Now I hope you look great on the slopes. Happy Valentines Day. Love MTC. CHILD DOG.-Youre my favorite weenie. I love you. Let's have a hot lunch soon. Tell Herbert hello! Happy Valentines Day—Dawneale Happy Valentine's Day to a great lover. NANCY W. It's me again. Happy Valentines Day. Tom. P.S. Want to elope? (Be honest). Happy Valentine's Day to a great lover ... of carrots and peas, crabbing. Sugar Creek, and Canadian Mist from your close friend. Girl who is cut over there and just hilar! Babe. Thank you for ALL the great times you shared together. I wouldn't trade you, or your memory. HAPPY VALENNIS DAY. With Love They Him. (+1). K to Kathleenale, American Frontier Women, Drilly, Lo. Kay Sea and Laura, Have a GREAT Valentine's Day! Love, Mary Beth (alas, Nita). Dear Mush, Diane, Drea, Laura and Jeannie, Happy Valentines Day! LYM—weasle. How's the mouse? Laura Mirtwether, Happy Valentine's Day Sweethartt From Chocolate Man LADY DIANA. Although you are going to score the Age of Celeus minus Four, you still haven't quite reached the HILL. HAVE A HAPPY BIRTHDAY MIN DIC Gebb, Cottonwood, Gold dust, Pentimento, 406 D. Vall, Nichelini, 11th Jesse—Thanks I love you luk B. To my number one Theta, to my number one girl, XMG, be my valentine. Love, Love. Water Wonder. You're the best Valentine around. Don't study too hard! You'll do fine. "Keep Smiling." Love, NW Trudi. BEEP, BEEP, BEEP Dave (A $ \Phi^{\prime} $ 's, please point this out to her) To my little Snugglebear with the sexe little Tummy. PLLPLPLP! Behave yourself "《The Funhouse》. Love, snowflake. To my "physical" engineer: Happy Valentine's Day. I love you, honey! Your wild Irish rose. Pando—Let's work together to make this simetrical great. I've got lots of faith in us, I love you—Becky. Sweetie, last semester and this one have been great! Please be my Valentine. Love Gene H. To all my buddies on first door south JRP Thanks, for being there, when I need you and even when I don’t! Have a happy Valentine’s Day Bak—Roses are red. Violets are blue, you're my little sweetie and ISLE OF VIEW, Too! Geeb. Happy Valentine's day to: Wonder Woman, Bailer, Elmer. Betty Sue Deb. Bob, and Brenda from The Lone Stranger, Tonto, Captain Marbles, and Ron Zan. DAVID—Thinking of you, hosehead. Take off and have a happy Valentine's Day, ay' BTH. CHARLOTTE—Tramps like us, baby we were born to be sweethearts. Love always, BRUCE. CHRISTINE To our wonderful memories (piences & the Plaza), our magnificent aspirations (needlees & earrings), and our towns now lovely & beautiful.) PRINCE Jim, Here's to fun in the Kitchen and Jim, here's to fun in the Kitchen and the beginnings of a great Friendship. Love, Nan AMY JO—Happy 1st Sweeties Day Only 12 more days till our 8th and a big surprise. Love, Your Robby. AMY--HAPPY V-DAY SWEETIE I LOVE YOU TTM. Delbert—I love you more than GB, JP, DV or Mags combined. HAPPY VD, RD K.C. Happy Valentine's Day Remember Molly Mauresy, Winston Washington, D.C., Old Orchard Beach, San Diego, Glendale Park, Xplora, Ticentennial, Kansas City and Lawrence. Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Fire escape needed Officials, students worried about safety By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter A lack of money to furnish the Psychology lab building with a fire escape has left KU officials concerned for the safety of about 15 graduate students who use the office space on the second floor of the building. "Everyone on the executive vice chancellor down is concerned," Al Johnson, assistant to the vice chancellor, academic affairs, said yesterday. Administrators are not alone in their concern. in there were a fire, I would probably be fried very crissly," said Jim Clinger, Lawrence graduate student, who has an office in the Psychology lab building, which is south of Flint Hgl. Last summer, the state fire marshal said that the building needed a fire escape on the end. Johnson said. The only access to the upper floor is by a staircase on the east end of the building. "THEY DIDN'T GIVE A deadline," Johnson said. "It was a recommendation." But for the graduate teaching assistants using the building daily, a fire escape for the building has been too long in coming. "As long as there is no deadline from the state fire marshal, it kind of leaves it up to the discretion of the University," said Craig Duczak. Lawrence student and graduate representation faculty of communications studies. Dudczak said that the first formal FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Free Estimate THE PRESTON MCAIL COMPANY 3115 4th. 811-696-7600 GO Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters 811 W.118 643-2138 complaint about the building was complained Sept. 20, 1981. According to Thomas Beikeer, associate professor of speech and drama, both the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences office and Johnson were notified of the situation early in the fall semester. Tues.- Sat. 12-6 fashion eyeland 841-6000 Holiday Plan "THE FIRST THING they told us was that they recognized that there was a need, and they were looking into buying a used fire escape," Beisecker said. "Then we were told they would get a new fire escape. "As far as I'm concerned, we have people sitting up on there on second floor who have problems." Graduate teaching assistants from the departments of communication studies, political science, East Asian languages and cultures and the speech and drama occupy office space on the second floor. Jeanette Smiley, Columbia, Mo. graduate student, has occupied office space in the building since the beginning of the fall semester. "IM NOT REAL fond of the building, anyway," she said. "Every time I walk through the building, I'm reminded of it and getting out would be very difficult." She said that she thought about her unsafe surroundings every time she walked through the building. She said a fire in the east end of the building would cut off the only escape route for people on the second floor. Smiley said that there were only two windows on the upper floor. said. "The other is near the stairwell." If there is a fire in the well, that's it. "One has an air conditioner in it," she said. "(The air is a cooler, so it's better.)" Clinger said he didn't think about the problem too often. "I'm really here more than most of the other people," he said. "But I guess it doesn't bother me as much as it does others." ALTHOUGH MARY-ANN Leon, Albuquerque, N.M., graduate student, doesn't have an office in the building, she called the situation there scary. "We're talking about people who could be hurt in case of fire," she said. Leon, a graduate representative to division faculty of communications 'It's a number one priority, and the funds will undoubtedly be found.' —Thomas Anderson, direc. studies, said that as long as there was no deadline set for the provision of a fire escape, it was less likely that something would be done. tor of facilities operations "This is not totally unreasonable," she said, referring to the absence of a deadline. "But it doesn't make the problem any better." "There are people who, I think, have But the problem of equipping the Psychology lab building with a fire escape came down to lack of funds. the ability to do something about it and who haven't." KU OFFICIALS COULDN'T say when a fire escape would be provided, because the money for the project hasn't been found yet. "I would hope it be soon," said Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor. "There are three potential sources for the money." He said the funding could come from an annual appropriations fund that the Kansas Legislature distributed for improvements to the Board of Regents. "But the problem is they're never enough," he said. Cobb said the University either would have to "scrounge" from its own resources or use money from year-end sources. After funds are found for the project, it would be about 90 days before a fire escape would be built, said Thomas Berman, director of facilities operations. "It's a number one priority, and the funds will undoubtedly be found," he said. "As soon as the project is funded, we will proceed with it." Flea Market Quantrill's A 40-dealer market with a full line of antiques, collectables and bargains. A good place to take Mom when she visits. HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKETPLACE, WITH NEW NAME, @ 8 P.M. TAT 10 to 5 10 to 5 Weekends Only 3 1/2¢ COPIES Service Beyond Duplication HOUSE OF USHE 838 MASS. — 842-3610 New Hampshire More than 1,200 signatures have been collected on petitions asking that a fact-finding delegation be sent to Iran to investigate the Khomeini regime's civil rights practices, a spokesman for the Supporters of Moslem Students Society said yesterday. Amir, the spokesman and a KU student who asked that his last name not be used, for fear of retaliation by Khomeini supporters, said that Moslem Society members were encouraged by the response from students and faculty who had signed the petition. be sent to Iran to find out whether Khomeini's government is involved in torture and executions. Amir said some American students were interested in handing out literature and talking to others about simine the petition. Valentine's Special The petition drive, begun Feb. 1, is meant to send petitions and letters to the International Red Cross, Amnesty International, United Nations, asking that a delegation Country Style Chicken Fried Steak served with Salad. "I was not going to get involved politically," she said. "I have more of just a basic concern." Andrea Stammler, Lawrence freshman, said she signed the petition because she was concerned about the destruction of human life. Amir said the society had been contacting churches in the area about the petitions. During church services this Sunday, he said, we wanted to hand out information and ask people to sign the petition. Petitions urge Iran inquiry We Sell Service. We Sell Quality We Sell Fuji. RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT • LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 • (913) 841-6642 Candlelight Bridal Fair presented by Plymouth Handbell Ringers Fashions Flowers Wedding Music Table Settings Reception Table Sun. Feb. 14 2:00 p.m. Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont Donation $2.00 Tickets available at Rusty's, Raney's & at the door. This ad sponsored by Cambell's Clothing REG. $4.85 NOW with this ad Country Style Chicken Phead Seal served with sand, Mashed Potato and Reg. $4.85 REG. $4.85 With this, add $2.99 Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner • Daily Buffet offer expires 2.29.18 0 PAM'S PLACE 2907 W. 6th 841-6844 Monday, Feb. 15, 3:30 p.m. PP OPEN Mon. Sat. 6 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday 6 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday, B. S. 10:30-6:00pm Southeast Conference Room Satellite Union Come See Bruce The MOOSE! Smokehouse Our Valentine Weekend Celebration Any Pit BBQ LOG Sandwich (our large Sandwich) Enjoy Coke $3.19 Reg. price $3.75 No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Downtown Lawrence 719 Massachusetts St. Lawrence, Kansas Feb. 10th through Feb. 14 Attention NonBusiness Undergraduates *Information will be provided and questions answered about admission requirements, programs of study, and job placement at meetings being held: - Representatives from the KU School of Business will discuss the M.B.A. and other graduate programs in business available to those who do not have undergraduate business training. Tuesday, Feb. 16, 3:30 p.m. Room 504 Summerfield Hall - Information is also available at 202 Summerfield, or call 864-3795. Smokehouse Cafe' Elbridge Affordable Fun Dining For fun dining at an affordable price, dine at the Cafe' Erldridge. Choose from the many delicious homemade dishes prepared daily by our Chefs. Most meals at the Cafe' Erldridge cost between $50 and $100. An extraordinary price for a fun meal served in the pleasant atmosphere of the Cafe' Erldridge. The Cafe Eldridge is open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week. From 11 am to 11 pm, Mondays, Saturdays, and 11 am to 9 pm on Sundays. You can even call in for carry out. Whether it is a special occasion or you just want a delicious homemade meal, dine at the Cafe Eldridge. During February and the Cate, Eldridge features 99c cocktails from 9 pm to 14 pm 7th Massachusetts Baked Lasagne . 4.95 Hamburger Steak . 4.25 Humble Pie . 4.25 Hot Beef Sandwich . 3.95 Triple Cheese Omelette . 3.95 Ham @ Cheese Omelette . 3.50 Soup of the Day . 1.25 Grilled Cheese . 1.00 Homemade Pies for Dessert We really are hiring. Top Technical Graduates Have you wasted time interviewing with companies that came to your campus with no intention of hiring — companies that sent rejection letters to everyone they talked to, or maybe even cancelled the interview the day before it was scheduled? We don't think it's fair. That's why the Equipment Group of Texas Instruments wouldn't offer interviews unless we had something else to offer, too — CAREERS. We're as serious about hiring as you are about getting started in the business world. We're looking for engineers and computer science graduates to work on hundreds of small projects involved with government electronics at our Dallas, Austin and Sherman, Texas locations. If you're interested in state-of-the-art design, manufacturing or software development, drop by and talk to members of the Equipment Group (check our schedule with the Placement Office). If you miss us on Campus, send your resume to: Rich Rolls/Box 226015, M.S. 3186/Dallas, Texas 75266. Or call Rich, Bryan, Tom, Ed or Bobbie about opportunities with the TI Equipment Group: 800-527-3577. U. S. citizenship required TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED An equal opportunity employer M/F 10. 3.2.10 University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Page 11 S 1 Bill would make mopeds, cycles legally same By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter TOPEKA-Students who ride motorized bicycles to class may soon have to follow the parking and on-coming rules that apply to motorcycles. Motorized bikes, or mopeds, are now allowed on campus at any time and can be parked almost anywhere. But that may change if a bill sponsored by State Sen. Jane Eldride, R-Lawrence, nasses the Kansas Leisuristia. ELDREDGE WANTS mopeds, now regulated scarcelv more than bicycles. to gain the same legal status as motorcycles. If approved, her bill will require that mopeds be insured, and vehicles be operated by someone of legal driving age. "My son will probaby kill me," she said Tuesday. "He's been saving for a moped when he turns 14. But I don't think they're safe for kids that age." Besides requiring that drivers of mopeds be 16, the bill probably would result in a change in campus policy regarding the vehicles, Mary Ann Robinson, a sergeant with the KU police, said yesterday. "This is state property, and that would be a state law," she said. However, E.W. Fendetmaier, a field supervisor with the KU Parking Services, said he was unsure whether the mowers or mpeds would be charged by the law. "THE PHYSICAL, size of this vehicle won't change, and we've never had any complaints about them except people parking them to close to doors," he said. At a hearing of the Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee yesterday, Rick Davis, a representative for the Kansas Motorcycle Incorporated, opposed the poll but because mops were more like bicycles than motorcycles. Davis said 46 states, as well as the National Highway Traffic Safety Association, had drawn up laws for motorcycle riders from those regulating motorcycles. DAVIS SAID the two vehicles were not at all identical because mopeds accelerated to only 30 mph and then crashed, reached speeds of more than 100 mph. "The appealing thing about mopeds is that you don't spend an arm and a leg on insurance and registration fees," Willems said. Willems predicted that moped sales at Horizons, which have averaged about 259 a year for the last three years, would drop about 60 percent if the law required them to be insured and registered as motorcycles. However, Davis said the bill was designed to make moped driven safer, but would allow moped owners to "soup up" the traffic and improve traffic as legally as motorcycles. Another effect of the bill would be a decrease in moped sales, Hank Willems, manager of Horizons Honda-Harley Davidson, 1811 St. Sixth, said. "Permitting motorized bicyclists to ride down the middle of a traffic lane could substantially increase the likelihood of accidents," Davis said. WILLEMS SAID the law would scare "A lot of older people come in here and really hate motorcycles," he said, "but they buy a moped and love it. off older people who bought the cheap and were not fast-moving vehicles "The law might urge younger people onto bigger bikes. It might end up putting young people on machines that are actually more dangerous." Chester Sullivan, KU professor of English, said he probably would buy a motorcycle if he had to take out insurance on his moped. "I like my moped," he said, "but I think I'd go for something bigger if I had to insure it." Don't run around looking for a Valentine Present Get a Sweetheart of a deal at Running Racquet HEART TENNIS --from 8:00 to 12:00 Hours: Monday-Friday 10-6 Thursday 10-8:30 Saturday 10-5 Sunday 1-5 2024 W. 23rd 749-2157 2024 W. 23rd 749-2157 THE AFTIC HAPPY BIRTHDAY The Perfect Valentines Gift From $2.50 842-3963 FOLLOW THE MEMOIR TO THE BEST OF KIDS' LUNCHES. 927 Mass. Bring your "FUNNY VALENTINE" To The Sanctuary This Saturday 1 p.m.-9 p.m. CHAMPAGNE 50¢/Glass 9 p.m.-1 a.m. CHAMPAGNE PUNCH 50¢/Glass Burgers By Lori 10:00-2:30 1401 West 7th 843-0540 the SANCTUARY the SANCTUARY Lippincott MAKE A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE Photography Eli Reichman's There's an endless frontier of need out there, stretching from the Sahara to the Andes to the Atolls of the South Pacific. In 20 years, 80,000 Peace Corps volunteers have traveled to all of them, to work with people in over 60 countries. They've done everything from helping villagers dig wells and build houses to teaching them languages and skilled trades, to giving advice on farming and health care. Join a phenomenal tradition. The difference is a better world, and a better you. 1980 PLACEMENT OFF CARRUTH-O'LEARY FEB 18th, 19th All interested people are welcome to attend. *Another photojournalism Student's Association lecture. * This ad funded through Student Senate money. 8 p.m. Monday Feb. 15, Rm. 3 Drinking Myth of the Week GETTING DRUNK IS FUNNY Maybe in the old Charlie Chaplin movies . . but not in real life. Drunkenness is no funnier than any other illness or incapacity. incapacity. WHAT'S THE WORLD COMING TO! The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064 Male Strippers Mud Wrestling Julian X-Rated Movies Burlesque AND NOW MINGLES ANNOUNCES ITS WILDLIFE FRIDAY NIGHT SHRIMP PEEL PETER TURNER 2340 Iowa St. 841-4218 Everybody loves the taste. SHRIMP PEE ONLY $1.50 PER 1/4 POUND SPECIAL DRINK PRICES 4 PM-8 PM RATED: XXX TREMELY GOOD NO CAMERAS PLEASE! TACO TICO "I love the stretchy cheese!" Everyone finds something they love about our enchiladas. Some people love the high thick sauce. Others love the seasoned meat. This others love the fresh corn tortilla. Come in and try our enchiladas you love everything about them! MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE MINGLES LOUNGE 2222 W. 6th St Lawrence, Ks 842-7030 Ext 136 Saturday Night Everybody loves our Olé Enchiladas Friday Night 95' Well Drinks from 8:00 to 12:00 --- Candy is sweet and so is a Tune Flowers are great, and ob! a balloon! Thoughts of love we send to others Family, friends, and especially lovers. And when you want to look your best for all those Valentines Start first with what's atop your bead You know we'll help you shine This Valentines thought from Headmasters Should come as no surprise "It's hard to be cool and confident When your hair's banging down in your eyes!" With apologies to poets everywhere, Happy Valentines Day! You'll Love Our Style. Headmasters. 809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Page 12 University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 SUA Daytona trip canceled By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter A Student Union Activities spring break trip to Daytona Beach, Fla. traditionally popular with KU students looking for a midsemerian tan, was canceled this week because of lack of interest. Jill Remsberg, SUA travel chairman, said recently only five students registered for the trip, compared to about 80 last year. REMBSERM SAID THE Daytona Beach trip cost $270—a price many KU students were not willing to pay. But she said the trip to Padre Island, Texas, which cost $20 less, had attracted nearly 125 people. "People chose Padre Island over Daytona because it's cheaper," Remsberg said. "Students are hardpressed and looking for the best deal available, and Padre has that. Besides, KU students will be able to identify with other people from around the state who are supposed to be down there." The Padre Island trip usually has been successful, but the poor showing of the Daytona Beach trip was unexpected. "I'm very surprised with the low turnout for the Daytona Beach trip." Remsberg said. SUA had sponsored the race, which ended with good results the previous three years. She said that usually within the week before the Daytona Beach trip, a rash of people signed up. That did not happen this year. OTHER TRAVEL agencies in Lawrence have not experienced a drop in reservations for spring trips. Beverly Berens, supervisor of the Kansas Union branch of Maupintour Travel Service, said Maupintour usually worked with a lot of people who drove a round-trip airplane to Daxton Beach. where everyone else is," Berens said. Many people requested to go to Florida, Padre Island or one of several ski resorts. She said the only surprise she had seen this year was student interest in trips to Mexico. Berens said her office usually set up trips for people who wanted to travel individually. She said it was more difficult to make motel reservations for places like Padre Island because most resorts now require a $50 damage-fee deposit and some of the more expensive concessions were not accepting students. Another trip sponsored by SUA, the Ski Taos trips, has increased its numbers. George Wee, SUA program adviser, said the Ski Taos trips had shown a dramatic increase in the past two weeks. Weekend Arts TODAY "THE ABDICATION," a play by Ruth Wolff, will be staged nightly at 8 p.m. through Sunday at the William Inge Memorial Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall box office. SUNDAY TOMORROW Hall, and the International Club office. 115B of the Kansas Union. THE FILM, "MAN OF MARBLE" will be shown at 2 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Proceeds from the film's ticket sales will be used to purchase food packages to be sent to needy people in Poland. THE AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION will sponsor BLACK HISTORY MONTH AFRICAN NIGHT DINNER AND PROGRAM at the office of minority affairs, 234 Strong. Tickets are made at the office of minority affairs, 234 Strong. THE OPENING RECEPTION for the POSTERS by PHIL ROSCEK exhibition will be from 4 to 6 p.m. in the art and Design Centre. The exhibition is in conjunction with the University Arts Festival and will be on display through March 5. THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. SUNDAY TODAY TOMORROW THE SIMULATIONS GAMING GROUP will meet from 10 to 4 p.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union. on campus AMNSETY INTERNATIONAL will meet at 1 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union. THE MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. SUNDAY MORNING WORKSHIP will begin at 10 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread Ave. There will be a SUNDAY EVENING SUPPER at 5:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. You'll Love Our Style. 2 10 Head masters 809 Vermont, Lawrence, Kansas 60642 809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044 The Third Anniversary of the Victorious ISLAMIC REVOLUTION in IRAN will be celebrated Jayhawk Roon, K.V. Union saturday,February 13, 1982 6:00 - 8:00 P.M. IN BLOOM FOR VALENTINE'S DAY SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14 TULIPS Film, Speech (English language), Refreshments JONQUILS CYCLAMEN HYACINTHS MUMS AFRICAN CALCEOLARIA BEGONIAS OPEN SUNDAY, NOON TIL 5:00 PM VIOLETS PENCE GREENHOUSE Veterans push for Agent Orange bill 15TH & NEW YORK AZALEAS TOPEKA-Vietnam veterans yesterday asked a Kansas state Senate committee to approve a program to assist and study veterans who may be suffering from exposure to Agent Orange. By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter BUT AN agricultural pilot supported claims by the Veterans Administration and the Chemical Administration with evidence health agents Agent Orange with health problems. The pilot, Jim Floyd, representing the Kansas Agriculture Aviation Association, said he had used the same chemical to spray crops and range land in Kansas and other states for 12 years. Veterans testifying before the Public Health and Welfare Committee blame a string of problems, from cancer to insomnia, on Agent Orange, a defoliant sprayed over South Vietnam during the late 1960s. One woman, Jan Highy of Topeka, said the chemical had ruined her son's life. "My son is virtually a vegetable now," she said. "Others have been spraying it since 1484." Floyd said. "And we're a rather healthy group. The Legislature is simply chasing an Agent Orange ghost created by the news media." Solbach said he supported the "costless" part of the bill that calls for examinations of the veterans and also of farmers around the state who might be suffering from exposure to the chemical. State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said Floyd could be right, Solbach, a Vietnam veteran, said not enough information about Agent Orange existed to justify the potential $2.5 million program. But State Rep. Loren Hohman, D-Topeka, also a Vietnam veteran, said that through revenue and fundraising drives, the state could afford to care for resident veterans who may be suffering from the chemical. TOPEKA—A legislative committee assigned to study the state's prison system gave final approval to a fainter-grade upgrade the Kansas correctional system. "Those who are real victims might want to be looked after by the federal government," he said. Hohnan, a member of the House Ways and Means Committee said he would do everything in his power to help the Senate in the house if the Senate approved it. BUT HE said he did not think the state should be liable for treatment of victims. "All the statistics that I have suggest that Agent Orange is responsible for health problems. People have created this sickness." The bill's sponsor, State Sen. Roy Ehrlich, R-Hosington, said, "We don't want to lose the bank on account of a $2.5 million fiscal note. "I don't think $2 or $3 million to treat them would be asking too much. Why should we worry about this contamination came from?" ALTHOUGH a spokesman for the Division of Health said that a state program for victims of Agent Orange could cost the state about $1 million, one veteran said the program could save money ultimately. RANDY TRACKWELL, a Vietnam veteran, said be quietly watched American soldiers die while the government argued about what shape the table should be for peace talks. "We are all facing a deadly poison," he said, "a poison recklessly created by the chemical corporations in their zeal for profits; a poison which kills its victims by poisoning; a poison that cripples the unborn." The move ended nearly four weeks of work. Smith said that probably 22,000 of the 99,000 Vietnam veterans in Kansas had served in the part of Vietnam that was sprayed with 12 million gallons of Agent Orange from 1962 through 1970. "From my perspective . . . I cannot accept the risk level that we now expose inmates, staff and me at the state prison. We should obambsman, Preston Barton, said. the committee that their exposure to Agent Orange during the Vietnam war had resulted in symptoms印象的病症,numbness and skin rashes somnia,numbness and skin rashes A figure that large warrants care from the state, he said. But part of the plan did not meet the approval of Gov. John Carlin, who said he would oppose increasing the current mill levy, which is assessed against a fee to contractors for social welfare construction projects, to finance the new prisons. "Our families are in jeopardy because of governmental delay in finding an answer to Agent Orange," he said. RON SMITH, representing the Vietnam Veterans of America, said the state should not turn veterans away merely because the federal government had refused to take responsibility for them. the veteran, Bill Moore of Topeka, said state research into the effects of Agent Orange and treatment of veterans who are less expensive than waiting and letting the chemical take its toll on unborn children. Prison plan is approved by legislative committee In a related development, the state's prison system ombushad told a senate committee yesterday that the state is now safe for both inmates and employees. By United Press International "If this bill is not passed, I feel like the state is asking the veteran to give his life one more time." Barton testified before the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee, which is also studying problems within the state's prison system and is expected to submit its own report to the full legislature next week. Trackwell and other veterans told Included in the plan are suggestions that two new prisons be built within five to 10 years. And the committee endorsed Carlin's plan to build one of the medium-security prisons next to the Kansas State Penitentiary at Lansing. The Special Committee on Prison Construction recommended in its report that the mill levy be expanded to include prison buildings. But the committee did not say the mill levy will be increased to generate more dollars. Mennonite Central Committee YOU ARE NEEDED! MENNONITE CENTRAL COMMITTEE INTERVIEWING Alcove B. Kansas Union Monday, February 15 8:30 am - 4 pm MCC is looking for committed Christians willing to serve a 2 or 3 year voluntary service term in their major or related field of interest. Tickets available at the KU Office of Minority Affairs, 324 Strong Hall, the International Club Office, Room 115B, Kansas Union, SUA Office and Sunday OMEKWE-864-6095. MCC/A CHRISTIAN RESOURCE FOR MEETING HUMAN NEED. Sponsored by the African Students Association --co-sponsored by Gammons and Footlights. $3.50 for Adults, $2.00 for Children AFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION PRESENTS: An Evening of Entertainment and Involvement In Black History, Arts, and Culture Saturday, February 13, 1982 5:00-10:00 p.m., Community Building, Eleventh and Vermont African Night SANITATION WORKERS NEED LOVE TOO . . . The refuse collection and disposal industry has one of the highest rates of disabling injuries. You can help us lower this rate in Lawrence by following these suggestions: - Keep your package refuse under 65 lbs. (This helps avoid back problems and burns.) - Use plastic or metal containers of not more than 32 gallon capacity. Oil drums, paper bags, wicker baskets and fiberboard barrels are not acceptable as containers because of weight and handling problems. - Place broken glass and other sharp objects in a protective carton before storing it in your refuse bag. (Most injuries to children are avoidable.) - Be patient if you get behind one of the trucks. Don't tailgate but let the crew complete the work. Pay attention to traffic and oncoming traffic.* THANK YOU CITY OF LAWRENCE SANITATION DEPARTMENT Truck 1339 Massachusetts 842-3131 SPEEDBike Mick's College Sport - High tensile steel frame - Lightweight, 30 lbs - Cotterless crank Super quality at a very economical price. Nominations are now being taken for the Student Senate Elections chairperson position. If you are interested in serving as chairperson of this committee, drop by the Student Senate Office, 105B Kansas Union, and sign up. Would You Like To Be The Student Senate Elections Committee Chairperson? Nominations are due by Monday, February 15, at 5:00 pm in the Student Senate Office. Self Nominations are welcome. Should you need further information about the responsibilities of the Student Senate Elections Committee Chairperson, feel free to contact the Senate Office at 864-3710. PENTE THE CLASSIC GAME OF SKILL 1982 LAWRENCE CITY CHAMPIONSHIP AT GAMMONS ONDAY FEBRUARY 15. 19 SAMSUNG AT GAMMONS MONDAY FEBRUARY 15,1982 8:00 p.m. Officially Sanctioned Qualifying Tournament 1st PRIZE: Round trip all expense paid to Dallas and lodging for 2 at PLAZA OF THE MIRACLE HOTEL & Deluxe Pente Board inscribed "Lawrence City Champion" 'Lawrence City Champion' 2nd PRIZE: 3rd PRIZE: Deluxe Pente Board from Footlights A keg of beer from Gammons You may qualify for: 1982 WORLD OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP IN DALLAS FEBRUARY 27 & 28 1st PRIZE: $5,000 & Trip for 2 to London PLUS PLUS A one of a kind Ceramic Vase Pente Trophy Pre-register at Gammons and Footlights p nth sl University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Page 13 Visiting prof says Poland must save itself By CAROL LICHTI Staff Writer Bzhysek Cynukits, who legally left Poland two weeks ago with his family, said yesterday he did not want the job to become an international matter. Cynkutis, a member of the famous Teartor Laboratorium, a Polish experimental theater, has kept his arrival in the United States quiet. He left it to teach acting classes at the University of Kansas for the spring semester. "POLAND MUST stay Poland. We should be able to make our own mistakes. We can only save ourselves," Cynkutsa said. Cynkutis is very critical of those who try to interpret what the events in Poland mean to the East and West. He said Poland was being used politically by other nations and by the mass media for their own gains. He was hesitant to talk to the press. "It doesn't look nice now," Cynkus said about Solidarity under martial law. "It will not be like it was before. It can't be the same. The problem is how it can go on and still be valuable for us, its members and the whole nation." "THE PRESENCE of Solidarity in Polish life is like a new term, a new development in our history, not a copy of something that exists in either the past or the present." Although he now admires Solidarity, Cynkus said, he was not impressed with Solidarity's leader, Lech Wesla, the first time he heard him speak. "His language didn't fit with my education," he said. "But he learned very quickly, and now, when he is older, full pleasure. He domesticated me." Solidarity has created emotional responses in other countries, Cynkatas said, and that emotion is not always used in the most practical way. `Cynkuts called the West's threats to stop sending support to Poland a tragic joke.' If aid is not sent to the continent, the people also suffer, be said. Sending food to Poland is not what is needed, Cynkutis said. Medical supplies would be much more practical. "TO BE THERE is difficult," he said. "It is most difficult for people to lose their freedom." Cynkutis said he didn't think martial law would last much longer. He said Poland would change step by step. Some problems that need to be changed are the situations between students and universities, Cynkutis said. Universities have shut down, and the union for students no longer exists, be said. Two other problems, Cynkuts said, were work production and the agricultural situation. Cynkutis and his family were granted a year's leave, but despite Poland's support, he remained in the city. "Whatever will be in Poland," he said, "my place is there. It makes me rich. However, I have empty pockets." CVNKUTIS COULD have left Poland earlier by himself, but refused to leave without his family. He told Polish officials why he wanted to take his family "For almost five years now, I haven't traveled without my wife and children," Cynkutis said, "because of health, security and comfort. "There were precise regulations about what students able to leave university they were toursl Because all departure arrangements had been made before mortal law went into effect Dec. 13, he easier for Mr. Johnson to attend. The difficult part was taking his family with him. DEMYS KOCH Zbyszek Cynkutis JOHN EISELE/Xansan Stall MODDED PULLOVER MODDED ZIPPER CREW - Pullover hoods $10.00 (reg. $11.95) Three styles to choose from! CHECK OUT OUR SWEATS! ●Zipper hoods $13.95 We'll print almost anything - Crew neck $ 8.95 We'll print almost anything for you or your Valentine. You can design it yourself! "I TTOK a few more weeks for me to get out," he said. "It was something that seemed impossible, but everything is possible if you want it." MORRIS Sports 1016 MASSACHUSETTS Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thurs. till 8:30 Cynkutis' visit to KU was made possible by Robert Findley, professor of theatre, who worked two years to coordinate the visit. STOP BY OR CALL US FOR OUR Hearts & Flowers Bouquet. Findlay has traveled to Poland several times and has seen the Teatr Laboratorium perform. You're sure to capture her heart with the romantic fresh flowers, Heart Stick Pin, and exclusive FTD Glass Heart Dish that make up our FTD HEARTS G FLOWERS™ Bouquet. Valentine's Day is Sunday, February 14. It's romantic. And says all the things you've been meaning to say. So call or visit us today. Because every Valentine deserves flowers. After Dec. 13, when marital law was imposed in Poland, the possibility of Cynkuts coming to KU seemed very distant. Findlay said. "I didn't give up hope," Findlay said. "We are most pleased and fortunate to have him here." Cynkutis is teaching both faculty and students in Advanced Acting and Actor's Voice and Body courses. DUBAI helping you say it right. Owens FLOWER SHOP 9TH & INDIANA Lawrence, Kansas 68034 The Teatr Laboratorium is a nontraditional, experimental theatre that involves physical, vocal and mental discipline. KEGGER the KEGGER COORS LONGNECKS $7.00 241-9450 the MUGGER MUSIC CITY AMERICA 18 Variety of bills introduced More than 40 state representatives sponsored a bill introduced in the House on Wednesday that would limit investment in schools in either South Africa or Poland. State Rep. Norman Justice, D-Dallas,城里, drew up the 41-piece bill nearly a month ago. But at that time, he expressed a reluctance to introduce the bill until at least one other representative sponsored it. Among the 43 sponsors of the bill are State Reps, John Solbach, Betty Jo Charlton and Jessie Branson, all D-D Lawrence. The bill, sponsored by State Rep. Another bill introduced in the House on Wednesday would prohibit the practice of midwifery by any person not licensed by the state. Theo Cribb, D-Wichita, would establish a state council on midwifery, which is the practice of the first midwife as a means of employment. The council would be appointed by the governor and would assist the Secretary of Health and Welfare in practicing the practice and issuing licenses. The bill states that no childbirth shall take place under the guidance of a midwife unless transportation to a hospital is immediately available. The bill also states that any complication in the birth would be referred immediately to a physician with whom the licensed midwife must regularly collaborate and consult. -----VALENTINE WEEKEND SPECIAL---- - Order any one-topping 12" pizza and get 2 LARGE Cakes for only $540 SAVE 11.70 Offer Good Thru Man. Feb. 15 FREE, Fast Delivery! 842-3232 - Order any one-topping 16 " pizza and get 3 LARGE_Cokes for only $ 65 507 W. 14th (at the Wheel) Open till 1:00 a.m. every night Pyramid Pizza Atmosphere Notice to Engineers May & Summer Graduates May & Summer Graduates MASON & HANGER · SILAS MASON CO., INC. Engineers & Contractors Since 1827 May have the career for you. A prime contractor for the Dept. of Energy in nuclear weapon manufacture & assembly BS/MS ME, EE, IE & ChE Sign Up Today at Placement MIF AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER MIF Classic sise wrap, shawl collar to coat coordinates with twin print fitted gown, empire waist with elastic back, edged in self-ruffle. In navy and white and red and white. Sizes P-S-M-L. And-In case you've forgotten your Valentine, we haven't. We're open Sunday February 14th from 12 to 3. UNDERCOVER 21 W. 9th 749-0004 GIRLFRIEND For that "Special Someone" on Valentine's Day . . . A Card or Gift from the Jayhawk Bookstore Dragon 1420 CRESCENT 843-3826 EAGLE Ambassador Cards Argus Cards & Posters Paula's Love Pins Jayhawk Glassware & Souvenirs F-Shirts, Warm Ups; Jackets Stationery & Accessories University Daily Kansan, February 12.1982 All-sports ticket package is proposed By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter The ticket and ticket pricing committee of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation decided Tuesday to propose a new ticket purchasing option for a vote at the KUAC board meeting next week. The proposed option is expected to increase ticket sales. "We're trying to get an all-sports package," Richard Konzem, ticket manager, said yesterday. KUAC LOST $104,776 in expected revenue from student season tickets in basketball this year and is trying to find a way to increase student sales. Under the proposed option, students would be able to attend home basketball and football games during the season, including three during the Thanksgiving and Christmas breaks, for $45. If this proposal is accepted by the board, students also will have the option of buying tickets for the football and basketball games separately. Football tickets would cost $25, and basketball tickets would cost $22. Student season football tickets were $25.50 last fall, and student season basketball tickets were $28 last November. Single holiday game tickets COUNTRY Inn 1300 H. 3rd $2.00 OFF Chick or Steak M-Th only 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 COUNTRY Inn 1300 H. 3rd $1.00 OFF Chick or Steak Fri. & Sat. 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 Sun. 11-8 not included in the separate season ticket rate would remain at $3. "IT'S A CONVENIENCE deal where you can write your check at the beginning of the semester," Korzem said. Konzem said the basketball tickets were sold at a bad time of year because by November, students either had to pay money or were saving it for Christmas. He said he hoped more students would buy tickets if they were sold at the beginning of the semester in an all-sports package. A recent NCAA decision to increase the number of season basketball games by one game would allow, KU to schedule 14 home basketball games for next season. This would change the separate season ticket price to $2 per game. Last year, the season tickets for basketball were $1.75 per game. The six home games scheduled for next season would make the $25 football ticket cost about a $4 game. LAST YEAR'S SEASON ticket for Missouri fans paid the same amount on student season tickets as KU students did, but were able to attend one more football game and two more basketball games because of the schedule. Konzem said the ticket price complied with a KUAC guideline that requires student ticket prices to stay below 50 percent of the public ticket price. Konzem reports sports ticket price would be 33.5 percent of the public ticket price, Konzem said. ABBOTT ANOTHER high point of Higher Education Week would be an address by Emily Taylor, founder of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource and Career Center, at the 10th annual Higher Education Week banquet March 7. THE CHARGE for the banquet will be $6.75, $3.50 for students. Anyone may attend but reservations must be made to Student Senate or Student Senate office before March 3. The banquet will be in honor of recipients of the Outstanding Progressive Educator Award, the Reward Office Outstanding Award, the Higher Education Leadership award and the Fireman's Award. Speeches and question-answer periods at a forum between students and Kansas legislators will highlight KU's Higher Education Week the week in March, Brendan Abbott, former body vice president, said this week. Abbott said the committee coordinating the forum would find out today what it is going to do. ABBOTT AND HIS steering committee planned an Associated Union of Residence Hall dinner for Tuesday, November 18. The science fiction writing by James Gunn, professor of English, and a speech by an IBM representative sponsored by the KU School of Business' marketing department and Alpha Kappa Psi have seen planned. He said the forum was part of an effort to organize the work better than an organization he wasn't a member of. "It is appropriate we have such an outstanding person to be our guest speaker at a Higher Education Week banquet," Abbott said. At Colorado, for the same number of football and basketball games, students paid $40, or $5 less than the proposed ticket plan for KU students. "The entire steering committee is very enthralled," Abbott said. "We'd like to think we've broadened the week this year." "There's a tendency when you have a little girl, get in the same old rush." Abbott said. The University of Missouri and the University of Colorado are some other schools that offered an all-sports ticket last year. Concert Series will sponsor concerts by University bands and orchestras. Taylor founded the first University Commission on the Status of Women in the United States and now is the director of the office of women in higher education of the American Council on Education. Abbott, who started organizing the week as part of his vice presidential duties, said he was pleased with the plans. The steering committee also has asked John. John Carlin to declare the entire week higher Education Week, Abbott said. Although the steering committee was composed of representatives of several groups on campus besides the Senate, and they fund the week's activities, Abbott said. A family-plan ticket would be available again for next year's football games, Konem said. A husband, wife and up to four children would be admitted to the north bowl area of the stadium for $15 a game. Valentine Special One dozen balloons complete with candy, card & message delivered. Surprise your valentine with a beautiful heart box filled with chocolates, jelly bellies, fudge or dietetic candy! Send your own box of treats for ourours. From 96c to $16. Delivery and singing sweetheart delivery available. Send a bouquet of balloons for your special Valentine. Hearts and flowers sugar icings can be used to decorate cupcakes, fudge, hearts 8e cca., flowers 3e ea. Balloon Extravaganza now serving the Lawrence area. Cheekwood University 1001 W 23rd - Southern Hills Center - 749-1150 THE GROUND AGAINST THE CLOUD? Fill Your Heart With Chocolates football cost $25.50 for seven home games, an average cost of $3.64 each. THE SNOBS AGAINST THE SLOBS Call 913/541-8870 Days, leave message or call after 6 p.m. Orders must be placed by February 13.1982. Caddyshack From March 5 to 7, the University Legislators to highlight Higher Education Week CAFDHACK CHEY VANCE RODNEY DINGERFIELD TED KNIGHT MICHAEL O'KEEFE BILL MURRAY. Original song by JOHN FOOK, Piano composition by JOHN FOOK and the Orchestra of the University of Tennessee. Louisiane Foster Piano. Produced by JOHN FOOK. Discovery Channel. Produced by JOHN FOOK. DVD release by MAZARO LAMPS. b. 12 & 13 (Fri. & Sat.) at 7, 9, & 11 p.m. in DYCHE AUD. (next to the Union) Tickets: $1.50 seats are limited MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATI MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL SETS THE EMMA BACK 900 YEARS ALL SEATS $3.00 BIZARRE . . BUT SIDE SPLITTING. Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Patronize Kansan Advertisers NOW SHOWING The Year's Most Powerful Story of Love & Courage "JONI...may be the most moving human interest drama God has ever permitted me man to produce." "Joni portrays herself ... a sterling performance." —Mineapolis Star You've never met anyone quite like Joni STARRING JONI EARECKSON AS HERSELF EXECUTIVE PRODUCER WILLIAM F. BROWN PRODUCED BY FRANK A. JACOBSON A WORLD WIDE PICTURES RELEASE PRODUCED BY JAMES F. COLLISER SCREENPLAY BY JAMES F. COLLISER BASED ON THE BEST SELLING JOURNAL, BY JOHN LAROCHEW WITH JOSH MUSSER SHOWTIMES: EWENNIES 7/15 & 9:15 Matinees Sat. & Sun. at 2:00 & 4:00 JON KOWI BY JOHN CARRERSON WITH JOE MUSSER NOW thru Thursday Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 J0% COUPONS ACCEPTED NO OTHER PASSES clip and save ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 41 0101 808 W 24th CHAMPAGNE Meisner- Milstead Liquor 2104 B W 25th Holiday Plaza Lawrence, Kansas 66044 842 4490 J. HOOD BOOKSELLER FOR VALENTINES FINE BOOKS ❤️ GIFT CERTIFICATES Tues-Sat: 11am-6pm Sunday: 1pm-6pm Closed 1401 MASS. Monday 841-4644 B BAR-B-Q RIB SALE!! $8.25 SLAB $4.75 SHORT END $4.00 LONG END THE BUM STEER Includes French Fries, Bread and Pickle EAT IN OR CARRY OUT! BAR-B-Q 2554 Iowa Bring your sweetheart in for this Valentine's Special!! 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CHARIOTS OF FIRE PLC Lyft 7.19.4.20 Walgreens 7.19.4.20 HILLCREST 1 "AN UNCOMMONLY BEAUTIFUL FILM" HEART- LAND Whose life is it anyway HILLCREST 3 RAGTIME PJ = 7.45 only Mat. 2.90 ACADEMIC AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE JAMES CARNAY CINEMA 1 LAST UPDATE TOMA THEATER STATION You've never met a Soni like this JOIN FARECKSON AT 10:30AM JAMES COLLER Evergreen at 11:50 A.M. Mediterranean at 2:00 A.M. & 4:00 Adults $3.90 Children $2.90 NO OTHER PASSEN CINEMA 2 PAUL NEWMAN FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PIC A COLUMBIA PICTURE 1ever 7 304 9 30 Mtt. Sat 2 6 20 University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Page 15 concerts by ras. also has declare the on Week, aizing the residential with the mittee is d. "We'd the week KU track teams to hold meets Sunday itttee was of several e Senate, activities. By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer KU high jumper and basketball player Tyke Peacock, who is currently the top-ranked high jumper in the world, will be making his second and final track appearance in Allen Field House this year when the KU men's track team hosts Oklahoma State in a dual meet Sunday. The women's team will be in action too, hosting OSU and Arkansas THE MEN'S meet will feature some of the best athletes in the nation and the Big Eight. Four Jayhawks are rated in the top three in their events in the Big Eight including Peacock, long jumper Warren Wilhoite, pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham and springer Rodney Bullock. Oklahoma is strong on talent too. The Cowboys feature some of the fastest sprinters in the Big Eight, including James Butler, whose 5.99 timing in the 60-yard dash is the fastest in the conference year. OSU is also strong in the field. Cowboy pole vaulter Joe Dial vaulted 18-0 last week to set a conference record. According to KU men's track coach Bob Timmons, the meet Sunday will be an important one because of the quality of OSU's team. "It's the last meet we have before the Big Eight championships. Coffea said, 'Hopefully, our people will come around. We're ready for a good meet.' The leading performer for the women's team so far this year has been longer jumper Tudie McKnight. At last week's Mason-Dixon games in Louisville, Ky., McKnight went 19-6% to place first in the college division. The men's and women's meets are scheduled to start with the field events at 2 p.m. Admission is free. ST. LOUIS—After more than two months of digging back and forth, it took only about 15 minutes yesterday for Ozzie Smith to finally say yes and become a member of the St. Louis Cardinals. Smith, the gifted defensive shortstop of the San Diego Padres for the last four years, came to St. Louis in 2013 and earned thirdirds shortstop Garrison Templeton. The trade was finalized earlier this week after both sides agreed to a special arbitration hearing March THE WOMEN, who will also be making their last home appearance this season, are also expecting to have a meet, according to Coach Carla Coffey. Cards, Padres complete trade 30 in San Diego to set Smith's salary for a one-year contract. On top of all that, Timmons said, it would be the last home appearance for the Jayhawks this season, and the last game to qualify for the Big Eight indoor meet. Smith, who had invoked a no-trade clause in his San Diego contract to block the deal, will ask for $750,000—the amount he said it would pay him to leave the Padres—while the Cardinals will offer $450,000. TIMMONS SAID his team was looking forward to competing against the Cowboys again since they beat KU in the Missouri Invitational two weeks ago. By United Press International Smith, 27, has been the National League's Gold Glove shortstop the past two seasons despite playing with a last place team. He hit just .222 last year, but said that statistic was misleading. "They're a contender along with Iowa State to win the conference," Timmons said. "We feel like we have a good team and a shot at it too." The University Daily Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES "It's an important meet for a lot of guys," Timmons said. "Only 24 guys can compete in the Big Eight meet, and we have 65 on the team." one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twenty-three forty-five sixty-seven eighty-nine ten hundred一千二百三千四千五百六千七千八千九百一千二千三千四千五千六千七千八千九百一千二千三千四千五千六千七千八千九百一千二千三千四千五千六千七千八千九百一千二千三千四千五千六千七千八千九百一千二千三千四千五千六千七千八千九百一千二千三千四千五千六千七千八千九百一千二千三千四千五千六千七千八千九百一千二千三千四千五千六千七千八千九百一干 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS ERRORS *word* terms can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be *person* or simply by calling the Karsan business office at 843-458. $ ^{*} $ POKER AND CHFSS LESSONS. 841-0996. 11 *ROA Laudantine*. Free dry 75% w/ dry by the Airport. East highway 24. 812-387- 387. THE FTC. SHOP 10 West 9th, (west of the Candy Store) Vintage and classic contemporary clothing—jewelry, purses, hats, dresses, suits, bags, shoes and linens, art prints, 2-12 FOR RENT 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. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 HANOVER PLACE. Complete furnished, studios, & 2 bibmts. apts. Located between N.Y.C. & New York. NU. DON'T BELIEVE Reserve your room. Don't leave room. month-waister. 841-1121 or 842-3455. if PRINCIPLE PLACE PAYTO APARTMENTS. New available, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, perfect placement. 2 car garage with electric opi- ter, place 2 car garage with electric opi- ter, kitchen, quiet surroundings. Open house $30-$45 daily at 228 Princeton Blvd. or other locations. For rest to mature male student, quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private King Suite. Close to the Union. Reasona- ble. Large, modern 1021 Rhode Island, available now. Only 1000.00 km to 200.00 dep. Only 844.111 km to Absolutely no dep. Call 749-4114 2-17 Studios atmosphere, International meals, students, staff, equipment, looking for six cooperative group numbers, ULTILITIES INCLUDED. Large house, office, campus. Call 841-7629. Clever to campus. 2. Br. app. on bus route, convenient to shopping. Complete kitchen carpet, draps, central air-heat, garage available. Shown by appointment. Call 841-684-2. 2-12 Available now. Two bedroom gajacent 401, undermanned, carpeted & draped, all electric heater, 2 bathrooms, campus, and on bus route. $346 per month. MADEBLOOK HIGH 10 & Crestell 829-4200. ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished downsizes available immediately. Flexible room located on 13th and 18th. Only two locations: located on the Union, Call 842-414 or 841-2555. Poor grades have opened up a farmhouse. No propane gas bill—natural gas 5 rooms + bath. In good condition 15 minutes from parking. Ref required. 740-683-585 @ 8:00 pm. 2-12 Two bedroom laundry, low utilities, two clocks from KU. 3 $3 beds from town, cem- ral air, equipped kitchen, carpet and draps. $260 month. 116m Tcm. Call 842-442-12-8. Doormate Wanted: Large, old house, 12th & Ohio. $75 a month rent plus 1/5 utilities. Phone #814-8144. 2-12 Sub-beam 2 Br. apt. complete kitchen carpet-drapes, central air-heat. Call 841-21-6888. `DESPERATE--MUST SUBLEASE 6 mo. old` `1 bedroom apt. Call Andy at 841-6080 and` `~ask about x#88.` `2-12` 3 Bed 81bm, unfurnished apt. in older home at 314 W 118th (14th & Tenn.) available now. Only 275.00 m² with 290.00 dwp. **Bedroom** 799.00 m². **Annexity** 129.00 m². **Call** 749-4144. Note now. Telephone: 614-8138. 4-262 Large 2 hatch apt. in an older house. Small 2 hatch apt. in a new home, with a $900 dep. demand. Utilities pd. by city and county no pets. Can cat. 3414 **ACUITY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR** **LICENSE PURCHASE. 3 br. townhouse, 212** **luxury Drive. All appliance.** **INSTALLED MAIN route. $475/month.** 842-8260 842-8290 842-8190 Nitra nice 2 bedroom apartment in newer prairie, 1 and 2 baths, carpeted, wooded area, 220 per month, 843-8571 or 1-782- 3716. 2-19 2 bedrooms apartment. Close to campus, carpet, off street parking, no pets. Refrigerates, water, electricity paid $350 a month. $200 deposit. 842-370-340. 2-18 3. Bedfordst. Apt., close to campus, carpet, upright street parking. No pets. References. Waters & cloc. paid $30 mo. $30 deposit. $89-2540 2-19 Summer sublease: 6-1 to 8-15/2 BR /1900A Kentucky (842-451).2 Apartment Roommate Wanted (Female) One Bedroom and Lott. Split $255 Rent and Electricity Call 749-2454. 2-12 Studio art, set to carpent in 19 W. 140, Mar. 1, 1822, $100.00 mo. with a $200.00 deposit. Absolutely no pets. Call 3-414 or 814-9701. 2-17 *DIPLEX-GREAT LOCATION 809 Ohio, 2- barm, stove, refrigerator $250 per month. Available now. 1-796-6833 2-15 FOR SALE For rent 3 bbm, apt. $260 a month. Avail. March 1. Near campus. 749-1750. Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Sale items: 10% off. Same as guide. Makes sense to use them *11*. As study guide. 2. For class presentation, create caption preamble for each page of Westen Civilization 'available now at Town Crest, Twin Falls.' Alternator, starter and generator specialists, Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9000, $900 W. 6th. DCM type stereo speakers $250/pair. Call 843-2641 after 5:00. Company is well. The Presson McCall Company, 314 North 3rd, 841-607-2612. Pair 3-way Floor speakers with 10" woofers and 5" microphones. Price includes speaker=price, negligible. 120w Wizard Cannan mount lens with case and FILTER+ speaker=price. Call Aki at KCAC Beach-11-825 Call Aki at KCAC Beach-11-825 Hey video game buff! Home video game system. Failhard. Nine cartridges plus unit. $200.00. 843-8705. 2-12 Guild Electric Guitar solid body. Schalters. Guild Electric Dual Reverb guitar. Fendler Head 50 watt $100, $749-2445, 1-2515 1975 Opel Manta-2-door, fuel injection, new interior, fuel injection; air conditions for all models. For Sale - Turntable, 8-inch AM-FM Store speakers. Recent tune-up $150, $100- $150 1790 Mobile Home 14 x 70, 3 bumm. AC stone + refrigerator, 7 x 10 shelf $113.00. Lot rent is 65.00/month, water paid 843- 1758 after 5.00 p.m. Skip boats—men-size 9 with carrier, like new $25.00 • Phone 843-8224, 2-12 *JAMPS SALE--Group oil or swim dresses* *West of Kiel's Holey, Holden Park* 841-3125, 841-3126 Car Sterio Pioneer Super Tuner and Pioneer amplifier $55.00—New Alvares guitar $200.00 749-2374 2-15 5 p.e. Ludwig Drum set, excellent condition. Zildijian Cymbals, pearl equip. 110 Hanover Place apts. 2-15 74 Blue Nova, 6 cyl. engine, runs good, high mileage, New Radials, body in decem '80, 800 miles. Call Adam or Tom 844-6833 before noon Mon, Wed. Fri. 3-12 Acoustic model 118 bass amp. one 15 inch speaker. $450.00 Acoustic makes the best 841-2792 after 5.00. 2-18 FOUND I found a gold stocking cap in front of Allen Field House after the Missouri game. 841-2-16 9754 Stockbear trainee. College grads. Exciting ambitions and enthusiastic individual determination. RESORTS, RESORTS. SAILING EXPENDITIONS. Needs: Sports institutes, Offices for the Disabled, GUILD FOR CRUISE INFORMATION, OPENINGS, GUIDE FOR CRUISE INFORMATION, 153 box 60129, GUIDE 3-12 HELP WANTED OVERSEAS JOBS~Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia All Fields. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. Sightseeing W.C. 1920 mm² Box Box 35-i-1-K-3 Control Md. CA 98229 WTC Person interested in doing odd hour jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must have completed own town courses be willing to participate in cooperative living. Call Darryl 841-3826. SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Northeast: For a free listing, send a self-addressed, stamped (74), envelope to Midwest Camp Heights, MO 68043. 2-12 JOBS IN AL AMAKA! Summer/year-round half year job (60-200-month) position and pure hour job (150-300-hour) position. Employer information, information guide $4.90 P.O. Box 6152, Minneapolis, Minnesota 98688 98688 Clerk typist or secretary. Excellent typist and willing worker for 12 to 20 hours per week. Must be KU student. Contact Beth Marolis, 114 strong. 864-4822. EOA= 3:15 Student Hourly. Work Study. Clerk Ttypist $3.50 per hour. 8-12 hour per week. Starting immediately. Call or come by the Student Assistance Center, 684-6944, 12-12 Hall. 2-12 Work at a girls camp this summer. Position(s) are WSI and SCI certificate; Heron Programs WSI and SCI certification; Heron Programs Craft Director; Contract Kaw Valley Girl Girl Program; Kaw Valley Junior Crafts; 60664, or call 912-723-3007, weekdays. RESEARCH ASSISTANT PROGRAMMER Supportive Educational Services. To develop these require programming to coordinate development research questions and designs to develop research questions and designs to develop research questions and designs to draft written reports on analyses outcomes. Reply to Michael Bryan for comments. Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Personable. Contact Dan at the Exchange. 842-9539. The Sanctuary has openings for cocktail and brunch. Applicants should have neat appearance, please personality and able to work late hours. Must be look- able. Work will apply in January 16] 100 W. 21st St. 217 LOST Lost bus pass and order 2. on 3-82 Lost bus pass and order 2. on 2-16 Call for Sarah 749-749-2147 if found $200 Reward for Canon ABI 10 Lon. on Jan. 18 on 25th & Vermont. No questions asked. Manson Billfold Lost at 12:00 movie. Man that called about it Please call again! Monica 811-8651 2-16 NOTICE Gel back to the Bongie in your in-basket of music, Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and theory lessons. All Levels, teach tunes (Bongie), Call Kurt at Music 814-0817. **2-16** PERSONAL Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photo- graphics. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swella Studio. 749-1611. uf Skillful's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Willard Skilled Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tt you are my Val-en-tine my on-ly Val-en-time Bring this card to third floor Bailey Hall the 10th thru the 12th and win 1 free-local Singing Valentine with the purchase of any in- or out-of-state call. Sponsored by M.T.S.A. SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS Economical packages every weekend and school calls. Call Ski Eti. Ski 841-886-tube Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swella 749-1611. **tf** --invites you EVERY FRIDAY to TGIF with the KU Walmers A sweetheart portrait for Valentines Day turns a simple thought into a lasting memory. Swella Studio 749-3611. 2-12 SURGICAL SCRUB SUITS TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 541-9089 anytime, B.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics, or call 864-4176 (akk for Robert). If The Kogger-Weekly Specials on Kegs!! Call 841-9450-1610. W 32rd. Lawrence Memorial Hospital 225 Maine Pants or Shirts $10 each Gift Shop GREEN'S CASE SALE. LONG NECK PABST 56.49. LONG NECB BUSCH $7.99. GREEN'S 810 WEDDIE 23rd. 2-12 325 Maine 25c draws Noon—6 West Coast Saloon Don't just send a song or a bunch of hot music, but also include it with strings and percussion (or least a good attentions). Call now for a complete delivery and performance. 2-12 6888 2222 Iowa 841-BREW SKI STEAMBOAT CHEAP: $33 per day, per person, inc. lifts, 4, 6 or 8 guests. Call Collection (303) 879-6868. 2-15 MARY KAY COSMETICS - Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tf SPRING BREAK MAZATLAN $188 Let me handle all your trave- needs— call RHONDA HOLIDAY TRAVEL 841-8100. 2449 Iowa In the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center Tuxes-20% off. Barb's Second-Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 2-12 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-4821. tf Y.F isn't sure what V.O. is—Y.F never SMACKED—the only thing Drag about Y.F is his profs. 2-12 NEED CREDIT? Get Vui-Mastercard. no credit check. Guaranteed! It's simple, legal. Free details. Write: Creditfile, Box 334-FPY N.耳, MJ 63870. EVERY CAR IN STOCK $9.95 A DAY FIRST 50 MILES FREE THEN 100 MILES & A MILE Special weekends rates. We are now leasing trucks & vans. We accept Master Card Visa. Located at 705 W.9th Lease one unit, it's cheaper than a bus fare home! Reserve your car now. Check with us. LEASE A FREEMON 749-4225 *Thinking of marriage* are formed in a serious group of women forming a support group for Jews and other partners. *Contact Peter Capanian, Episcopal Chaplain 864-3948, or Elenk Eller, Chapman 864-3948.* Want to make great money while going to school full time? Try DJing parties for a good investment. Give a good investment. Sound system and bookings for sale. Call 741-8390 ask for Greg. Hurt your back or neck when you slipped on the ice? Don't delay proper treatment. Your in-propriate care call Dr. Johnson at 842-352-1100 or Blue Cross Insurance. 2-12 Order your singing Valentines on third floor of the Music Hall. Order online by addingMusic Therapy Student Aside, 125 It may be cold, but you can warm it naturally! The BALLOON BOAT A-GRAM Call and Answer BALLOON BOAT CALL and Answer Saturday Only Come in With a Heart On and get a free draw THE EXCHANGE THE 2406 IOWA SPECTRAL OPTICAL - You do have a screw looper! Broken lens? Broken frame? One day service on lens in most cases. Open 10-6, M-S 8,1413, 4.11 7. E-mail: 2-12 Engineering students freshmen then seniors. Do you remember how to do anything but engineering? Engineering Sem-Formal 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat. Engineers actually laugh, dance, and have engineers actually laugh,舞,and have engineers actually laugh,dance PARTY FAVORS - glaucoma, sportwear. High quality, low cost. Call for St. Pat's Day specials. University Photography 843- 5279. 2-15 CHEAP RECORDS. Some new, some used. Feb. Fri. 12 noon-5. JKHK 2-12 Fri. Feb 12 noon-3. PJKH Studios 2-12 Save 10% on P.JKH ads from Footlights when you mention this ad. Footlights 25th lowa. Rapid Reading Workshop - Five sessions February 17, 22, 4, March 1, 1 7:30-9:30 am. Come to the Student Assistance Center for registration for an payment. 2-16 YOU ARE NEEDED! Memonote Central Comms is looking for commensal tech professionals to their major or related field of interest for a two or three year opportunity. Please put your knowledge into action? MCC has opportunities all over the world waiting to be filled. Health and nutrition, agriculture and MCC representative will be interviewing on campus in Able B in the Union. 2-15 I need a ride to and from South Padre island for Spring Break. Will share driving, gas and beverage. Call Stu 864-6844. 2-16 Yes its true! Fred, Red, the Unknown Roommate, Jo Saakam and the shif are having a party. Friday the 12th. Those of us who are welcome are in *gong atary* in 2-13 HEATING HILLS too high? Do you have your thermometer to do degree? Out of money, out of heat and out of luck? Call 844-810 and tell us about it. 2-12 Z Prissbee Robinson Sat. 8.30-10.00 am. 2-12 Where can you get good drinks, good music, a roaring fire and have lots of fun? The Exchange (a private club) 2406 Iowa. 2-12 Collectors records: Zep. Floyd, Stones, Who, 483. 845. 582 after 3. 2-15 Marsha. Happy Valentine's Day. I love you. Shawn. 2-12 Old, new, used, usable and reusable Creators to bottles, suits to suits, skirts to skirted pants, dresses to dresses, riding ridge Change. KG 610. Kaulak 841-612. Hits. TUF-SAT. 9:00 1:00 1:50 2:17 DEAR TRI, GREETINGS from my favorite medium—a claub about my major-role. "You hope it helps you get there," he says. "I hope it be as fun for you as it has for me." "I'm not the only way away!" Happy Friday from your S.S. 2-12 You are a victim of "vitamin robbers." If you smoke, drink are on a dark table next to your bed. We have the most recommended pillows. We have the most recommended pillowers. Call us at 413-4300 or 814-2465. **FIXTURES** Call us at 413-4300 or 814-2465. He Grew - Do you remember what 3 weeks on tonight was? That'S OK, neither do I! What's that we get for hiring all of those people? That's right - Happy Birthday. Dove Joy, Love a. 2-12 Wanted, someone who loves drinking 56 itchers on Mondays at the Sanctuary 7:00 12:00 2-15 I. an Engineering student, am using my knowledge of engineering to do the dojo, I can dance, and believe in me. I have fun. The Engineering Sem- inar is for engineers-to-engineers. EAT S AND DIE HEY, YOU WALMERS? you set your pJ's motion motion motion motion ready for the Vday Nighttime PW DJ party. We Walmers that all she love Sandy-Barderhoff ICU SERVICES OFFERED It may not seem like it, but it's been a week since the pandemic arrived. But now the time has come to do more. We can still outcure your crowd at a King's Fest and don't worry about being dressed up and having Hunger 1237 at Ibibee or all of pitchers from TIGS from 4-0. 2-12 TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-4996 any time it's 10 a.m. in physics. Call 841-4996 in mathematics. Call 841-4996 in math. Get that job with a professionally prepared resume; by a local professional recruiter. Get the latest job hunting information. 841-5664 9-14 ENLARGEMENTS SAN JOAO COUNTY HOSPITALITY ASSOCIATION Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa 842-2001 Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in lwence—Largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212. EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 844-7683. 3-10 Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, 52nd and Ithaca. 2-26 WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it! Stop By the House of Uber and pick up our PIRATE resume on resumes 8-14. Visit us at iCareers.wsaukee. 8-14, 9-3, Sat.-Mon. 5-30. Guitar Lessons: Learn to play now from experienced teacher. Reasonable. Call Mark 841-2605. 2-12 Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience, competitively priced. Also Script Lettering for certificates. 814-7944. 3-8 TYPING IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE 842-2507. tf TYPING PLUS. Thems, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Antispace with composition, grammar, spelling, vocabulary. Foreign student (or Americans) 814-6254. Experienced typist. Theses, term papers. etc. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy. after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf Experienced typist. Tern papers, these, all miscellaneous. ICB Correctingete Mention, Elice or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-5054 Mrs. Wright. **tf** It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. ff Experienced typet-thesis, dissertations, term papers, mine. IBM correcting elecricle. Barb, after 5 p.m. b42-2310. tf Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting selective. Call Donna at 842-2744. **tf** QUALITY TYPING: Themes, Manuscripts; Dissertations; Ibm Electrical; Girl Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 please. TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting D. 843-5675. **tf** Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. IBM, BM. 9 p.m. p. 749-2647. Ann. tif Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric. Elite or Pica. 842- 5644. 2-20 EXPERIENCED TYPIST would like to type anything 841-8525 2-15 For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980 Graduate students tired of typing, retraining and retraining your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Knoote! Call 842-2601 for more. 2-800 Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied Call evenings, 841-7915. 2-18 TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Corp. Selective Sectile, full-time typem, spilling correction to composition assistance. Emergency service available. 841-2907-384 Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa. 842-2001. 2-26 Former medical secretary secretary will type paper, in muse, books. Call Nancy 844- 256-7300. Roommate to share modern 2 bedroom apartment 3 blocks from campus. $137.50 a month + utilities $43-8628 Jane. 2-17 WANTED Wanted Roommate to share 4-bedroom home Roommate to share 2-bedroom home. Barker Call me 842-684-8900. 2-12 Sub-bear 2 bdmr sit on bus route. Move home, low价, price. Call me 842-1348 2-12 2 roommates $150 + deposit 1 each. Beautiful house and excellent location. 1005 Indiana. 842-4630. 2-17 Female wanted to share 2 bedroom furnished apt. $125 mo. + $1₂ utilities Call 841-9241 2-15 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment, 2 cats, own bedroom. $174.50 + ½ utilities. 749-2438. 2-12 People who want to send a unique Valentine's Day gift. Compose your own message and it'll deliver with a special edition number. Bail-Boy Balloon-a-gram® 5848. $484. Call 2-12 I-2 to share 3 BR house. Prefer female room. Room size: 10'x10'. Fees: 749-500-328 & tih 6th & husband. Fees: 749-500-322 Established band sewing basis and knitting. Call: 749-0801 or 842-8841. Keen to work with us. Fees: $84 per hour. Female roommate to share nice two-bedroom apt. Modern appliances. Walk to campus. $150 a month + 1½ utilities. 841-4451. 2-16 Roommate wanted: to share 2 bdrm apt. No deposit or lease $75 plus $1₂ utilities. 842-7422 2-16 Roommate needed for a 2 bedroom apt. No deposit needed and on the bus route. Call for more detail B749-3183 2-16 Need roommate to share Mall's Apt. Rent: $173, neat nail, private room, fireplace, office. Call 749-49242 2-17S Person to commute with, Lawrence to KC and back, 8-5, TR. will share, generously驾/driving. Call 842-4455. keep driving. 2-18 KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS Don't want to drive across town 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. Rate rates below to figure costs. Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: ___ Name: Name:___ Address:___ Phone:___ Dates to Run | | 1 time | 2 times | 3 times | 4 times | 5 times | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 10 words or less | $2.25 | $2.50 | $2.75 | $3.00 | $3.25 | | Additional words | .02 | .03 | .04 | .05 | .06 | Classified Display: 1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00 1 computer & network condition Page 16 University Daily Kansan, February 12, 1982 Sports Center next superstar Claxton leads Kansas By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor Superstar. This word is the most overused word in the sports world. It used to mean those athletes who dominated the games they played and who led their teams to many victories. Lynette Woodard was a superstar when she played at Kansas. She dominated women's golf. But Woodward left Kansas, and the Jayhawks were supposed to fall to pieces in her absence. THE JAYHAWKS haven't done this, and the main reason for this is Tracy Claxton, the person who looms as the next superstar in women's basketball. "Everything she does she does well. "Tracy is the type of player that doesn't care if she's in the limelight," Coach Marian Washington said. "She is just content on contributing to the team. Even with Woodard and All-Region 6 player Shebra Legrant playing, Claxton led the Jahyhats in rebounding her freshman year with 316 rebounds for an 11.6 average. She also was third on the team in scoring, averaging 14.1 points a game. She started all 31 games for the Jahyhats, and led the team in rebounding in 22 of them. "WHEN I visited Kansas, I liked the coach and I liked the school," Claxton said. "But one thing I thought was that I could help them rebounding, and I tried to do that." The present season has only added to Claxton's success while at KU. Claxton, who played for Wilbur Cross High School in New Haven,Conn., and was a Parade Prep All-American, started the season off with a remarkable 36-point, 28-rebound performance against Pacific Christian. "She has always been a good rebounder," Washington said, "but this year, her scoring has gotten better." CLAXTON HAS BEEN KU'S most consistent player throughout the season. She has led her team to victory in 2014 and 2015. led the Jayhawks in rebounding in all 25. She has or more points twice and 20 or more points 10 times. 'I can still improve on my offense,' Clarton said. 'I need to work on posting in the middle and getting good position. This will also help my rebounding.' "My personal goals right now are to lead the nation in rebounding, and in two more years, to bring back our youth." Claxton, who already has matched her total of 361 rebounds from last year with five games remaining, is close to her first goal of leading the nation in rebounding. Her average of 14.4 rebounds a game puts her in second place in the NBA’s top league. She is 80 behind Valerie Still of Kentucky. ONE MIGHT think that complicancy would sink in to Claxton's outlook, but Washington said "Every year, Tracy can target something else to do to improve her game," Washington said. "She has proven she can rebound and her offense can go around, but many people ignore her quickness." The thing that would show off Claxton's quickness would be to move her outside, and that is something that Washington has wanted to do all season. But lack of depth in the middle has canceled all of Washington's plans for this season. ___ "How we use Tracy next year depends a lot on what our recruiting does this year," Washington said. "If we can move her out and have her facing the basket, it will make a lot of dif- ALTHOUGH CLAXTON looks forward to her future at Kansas and the possible change to an outside position, she said that she thought there was no need to look forward to next year. She said that although the Jawhayas had gone through a rough period, they were ready to come back. It may be too late to salvage this season, but the future looks bright. And the future of Kansas will continue to be bright as long as the air is warm and dry in recent years. New Haven, Conn, number 15, Tracy Claxton." 22 20 U NETWO Tom Hea Tracy Claxton, KU's All-American candidate, goes up for two points against Oklahoma. Claxton leads the Javahays in searing and rebounding. Jayhawks attempt to extend streak By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor The women's basketball team will attempt to extend their winning streak to three games when they play the Northwestern Oklahoma State University Rangers tonight in Allen Field House. "WE NEEDED the week off and enjoyed it," washington said. "I went to bed early, I hope I could and play well." The 14-11 Jayhawks, who have won two in a row after losing five straight, will be playing for the first time since they played in Kemper Arena last Friday against the National College of Education. Coach Marian Washington said that she thought the rest did the team some good. For the Jayhawks to continue their winning streak, they must continue to get good play from their one-two punch of Tracy Claxton and Angie Snider. Claxton leads the Jayhawks in scoring and rebounding, averaging 13.2 points and 14.4 rebounds, as well as 12.6 points a game and leads the team in assists with 15. "They do not have a strong inside game, so that should help us," Washington said. The Rangers are led by Jan McCully and Kayla Landreth. The 6-foot McCuly leads the Rangers in scoring with 13.9 points a game and averages 5.5 rebounds a game. Landreth, a 5-9 freshman, is second with an 11.5 average and leads the team in rebounding with 9.2 a game. The rest of their lineup consists of Debbie Holmes, Robin Taylor and Jan Schefeler. "THEY ARE A fine outside shooting team," Washington said. "They're not afraid to shoot the long shot, so we have to keep pressure on them. "On defense, they'll switch a lot, but they will probably play mostly zone to try to shut off their computer." Despite the Jayhawks' poor playing during January, Washington said that she felt the team still had a chance for post-season play. Claxton agreed with her coach. "We still have a chance," Claxton said. "But starting tomorrow, we have to win them all." Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Team W W L Pct. GB Boston 34 12 1.00 Philadelphia 24 14 788 ½ Washington 24 24 560 10½ New Jersey 24 24 560 10½ New York 23 27 460 9½ Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee ... 34 | 14 | 708 Detroit ... 22 | 18 | 400 Atlanta ... 25 | 19 | 14 Indiana ... 20 | 29 | 608 Chicago ... 19 | 10 | 688 Cleveland ... 18 | 11 | 225 Seattle 34 14 708 4% Los Angeles 34 12 694 4% Toronto 31 21 274 6% Golden State 26 21 553 7% Phoenix 21 21 348 7% Philadelphia 14 34 292 7% San Antonio Houston Denver Ulah Kansas City Dallas 30 17 638 28 22 54 28 22 41% 16 31 340 16 31 14% 14 33 298 YESTERDAY Y RESULTS New York 120, Cleveland State 17 Detroit 123, Cleveland 113 Houston 124, Houston 114 Houston 17, Seattle 100 Team W L 1 Pct. GB Missouri 9 1 1.00 Kansas State 6 2 14% Nebraska 5 4 556 % Oklahoma State 5 4 556 % Oklahoma State 5 4 556 % Kansas 3 6 333 % Iowa State 3 8 25 % Colorado 3 8 250 % Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI rank North Carolina (16), Maryland rank 56 West Virginia (13), Kansas rank 50 Tennessee (17), Georgia state 67 Wisconsin (17), Michigan state 67 Baylor省 66, Arkansas (10), 55, MT Baylor省 66, Arkansas (10), 55, MT San Francisco (10), 77, St. Mary's 78 France省 (10), 44, Long Beach state 45 Massachusetts (10), 44, Long Beach state 45 Hockey Team W L L 3 T G FG 194 Pts. NY Islanders 35 13 16 62 74 178 马里兰州 35 13 16 62 74 178 NY Rangers 25 11 9 203 215 51 Pittsburgh 25 11 9 203 215 51 印地安纳荷斯 21 17 9 213 214 59 NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Patrick Division Montreal 22 11 17 12 260 160 190 Boston 32 17 17 7 228 170 71 Buffalo 30 10 14 10 254 123 64 Washington 27 20 10 20 184 232 64 Hartford 26 14 14 14 185 264 46 Campbell Conference Minnesota 22 18 16 16 236 204 64 St. Louis 25 18 16 5 236 294 55 Detroit 28 16 11 11 231 265 Chicago 20 27 10 13 247 264 45 Toronto 16 28 13 13 287 264 50 Baltimore 10 26 13 13 287 264 50 Edinburgh 25 13 10 13 313 227 50 Calgary 25 13 13 13 228 241 53 Vancouver 19 10 12 12 198 268 50 Los Angeles 19 20 12 12 198 268 50 Houston 19 20 12 12 198 268 50 Philadelphia 6, Buffalo 4 Miami 10, Chicago 7 Montreal 4, Pittsburgh 2 Boston 4, Minnesota 5 Washington 5, Calgary 2 Washington 5, Calary 2 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W L W Pct. GB Pittsburgh 16 5 16 327 Baltimore 16 6 172 474 New York 14 6 227 4 Buffalo 11 12 478 6 Cleveland 8 11 381 4 Philadelphia 8 6 304 10 New Jersey 15 15 250 10% Aikens wins arbitration, gets pay hike St. Louis 20 3 870 Wichita 13 11 854 9% Dearer 10 11 768 9% Memphis 10 14 417 10% Phoenix 10 14 417 10% Kentucky 6 18 128 10% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 5. New Jersey 2 Former All-Star second baseman Cookie Rojas won $80,000 in 1974, but an arbitration committee then ruled in favor of the club's $7,500 offer. KANSAS CITY, Mo.-First baseman Willie Alkens, the second player to take the Kansas City Royals to arbitration, has been awarded a one-earn contract for $350,000. Arbitrator Thomas Roberts sided Wednesday with Alkens after a four-hour hearing Tuesday morning in Los Angeles. The Royals had offered Alkens $250,000. Royals reliever Dan Quisenberry was scheduled to present his case yesterday in a hearing before arbitrator Joseph Gentle in洛杉矶. The arbitration hearing is scheduled for next Tuesday. By United Press International Ron Shapiro, Alken's agent, said the case was largely based on comparisons with other The rankings cited by Shapiro are contained in a study compiled by the Elias Sports Bureau after the 1981 season. He said he didn't intend to use the study as evidence, but that he did so after the club used the study to compare Aikens with other players. Akens, 27, hit 266 last season with 17 home games and 85 batted in. He earned an estimated $150,000. "Willie is ranked third in home runs for first basemen," Shapiro said, "and third in RBIs." KC Royals Willie Aikens KU faces Nebraska in crucial game By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawks will try to snap a three-game losing streak tomorrow when they meet in Houston. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. in Allen Field House. The Jayhawks are 3-6 in the Big Eight Conference and 12-4 overall. The Cornshuckers, 5-4 in the conference and 13-8 overall, enter the game with a two-game winning streak. THE JAYHAWKS are coming off losses at Iowa State and Oklahoma State, and a recent home loss to Missouri. On the other hand, Nebraska handed Missouri its only loss of the season in Columbia, and then defeated Oklahoma State. "His upset at Missouri was a great thing for them," Coach Ted Owens said. "To go down there and on the number-one team (now named on their floor is quite an accomplishment)." "Nebraska has always given us trouble, and this year's first game was no exception." Isn't that the truth. When the two teams met earlier in Lincoln, Neb., the Cornhoppers blew out the Jayhawks 75-6. who are averaging 17.2 and 15.8 points per game respectively, combined on only 8 of 30 shots In the earlier contest, Nebraska benefited from cold shooting by the Jayhawks and raced to The Jayhawks, who could never get closer than the points in the second half, shot a dismal 34 percent. Since that time, Guy and Magley have showed signs of getting their rhythm back. CO-CAPTAINS Tony Guy and David Magley, Gs of getting the jayhawks were led by Kelly Knight's 13 10721653 Tony Guy points in that game. However, Knight has been suffering from a deep thigh bruise and a sprained ankle and is still doubtful for tomorrow night's game. Knight's replacement, Brian Martin, has filled in adequately since beint called on to start. Against Missouri Tuesday night, Martin outplayed All-American candidate Steve Stipanovich. Martin outscored Stipanovich 6-4 and outbounded him 8-7. IN NEBRASKA'S upset victory over the Kansas State Wildcats, the Cornhuskers were led by Jack Moore, 5-foot-9 senior, who scored 25 points. moore went 15 of 15 from the free throw line and is within 10 free throws of the Big Eight "This will be a crucial game for us, as they all are at this point of the season." The two new recruits are Ron Sample, 5-10, 170-pound defensive back from Tonganoxie, and Mike Sorensen, a 6-4, 230-pound lineman from Cameron, Mo. JAHYAWK NOTES: Kansas signed two more football recruits yesterday, bringing to 33 the total number of prospects committed to Kansas. Each school is allowed 30 scholarships by the NCAA. Two of the 33 prospects are junior college transfers, which do not count toward the 30-player limit, and two will not receive scholarships. Javhawk swim team meets Cornhuskers Sports Writer By MIKE ARDIS The Kansas men's swim team faces a tough weekend when they travel to Nebraska tomorrow to go against defending Big Eight champion Nebraska. "I LOOK for us to swim real well. We're starting to take shine." "Our weaknesses are their strengths and their weaknesses are our strengths." Coach Gary Kubrisky said. Kansas faced Nebraska in January in an invitational meet and finished fifth, while Nebraska took first. In winning the meet, Nebraska took the first four places in diving to help with their sprint strengths. KU only has one diver, Mark Murphy. To offset this disadvantage, Kemp said the layhawks would have to come through with their disadvantage. KANAS IS 1-2 in dual meets in the Big Eight, with a victory over Oklahoma, and losses to Iowa State and Missouri. Last year, the Jayhawks defeated Nebraska, 68-45. "It's difficult to offset relay, sprint and dive strengths but we're going into the pool with the team." "If Nebraska wins this dual meet, it will be the first time they have beaten everyone in the Big Eight in duals," Kempt said. "There's no pressure on us. I look for everyone to swim." While the men's team does not have any national qualifying times, and the women's team has both individual and relay qualifying times, Kempf said he wasn't worried. etc. Intramurals Basketball Greek Men BcxB YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Rec. A Sauce Kings 46, AKL Schmoes 37 Pi Kappa Phi 41, The Eight Balls 18 Independent Men Navy ROTC 2, Miller High Life 0 Sam's Smaag 42es of the Tortoisesr 30 TOMA mann etc. 10, Have-Note 28 TOMA mann etc. 10, Have-Note 28 Cisomma 13, Doorman 25 Must Mistulis 29, Transformers 32 Scorpioe 32, Lumberjack Bey-51, The Mentors 16 Skewered Dibbles 58, Skimax 19 Hoopsers 4 Beta Vestians 27 Beta Vestians 36 Cowhands 44, C.B. 21 Hobartz 7 The Tool 40 Maturals 14 Matrics 37 The Matrics 38 Phi Plu LB's 25 Must Packing C.5 Sigma Nu #25 Must Packing C.5 Sigma Nu #25 9 Independent Men SKYHawks 34, The Magnetebes Sonics 28, Vicious Valumps 10 Rec.A Women Coneless Wonders 30, Blisters I 13 Cornetts 27, Sellards 22 Somnify 38, The Disease 32 Echolga 2, Chicken Chokers 0 Shooting Stars 38, Kenny's Kids 32 Wet Tops 43, Face Job 34 "You still get a lot more women's qualifying times without the taper," he said. "It's been traditionally that way. A lot of the men's time will drop drastically after the shave and taper." One of those will probably be Ron Neugen. Neugent has already set a Big Eight record in the 1,000 freestyle this year, yet it was 20 seconds slower than his best time. The women's team is spending their time preparing for the Big Eight Championships Feb. 25-27. The women have cut down the yardage and distance they are swimming. "We're into our final phase." Kernp said. "You don't have to do much in the final two weeks." The women will be idle again next week, while the men face Southern Illinois at home. Dawkins signs contract By United Press International PHILADLPHIA-Darryl Dawkins, who hasn't quite reached the level of greatness predicted for him in the NBA,早晚 signed a deal to play in the Philadelphia 76ers and vowed to improve his game. Team owner Harold Katz refused to disclose details of the contract but said the pact, which goes into effect next season, would make them “financially secure for the rest of his life.” Dawkins' NBA career has been noted for a pair of shattered backboards but his play has been a disappointment to many. In nearly seven seasons, his scoring and rebounding averages are 11.3 and 6.2 respectively. The figures for this season are 12.3 points and 7.5 rebounds. KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily Monday, February 15, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 96 USPS 650-640 Carlin sees leaner salaries By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter KU's faculty will be lucky to get a 10 percent salary increase from the Kansas Legislature next year, Gov. John Carlson said Saturday. Carlin spoke at an "Eggs and Issues" sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. "Ten percent should look very good in light of the response by the Legislature," he said. "We shouldn't be talking about 10 percent being too good, but I will go up, I can assure you, and it's likely to go down." Carlin recommended a 10 percent faculty salary increase in his 1983 budget. The Board of Regents asked for an 13 percent increase. "I was quite proud I was able to recommend the 10 percent increase with what I had to work with." Carlin said. "It should illustrate a firm commitment that salaries are important." FACULTY MEMBERS have said that KU salaries are not competitive with other universities. Chancellor Genoia made an appeal to the university, saying they are necessary to keep a high-quality staff. Carlin said the fate of his proposed severance tax would have an important, though indirect, impact. Four different versions of a severance tax, which is a tax on minerals extracted from the state's soil, have been introduced in the House of Representatives. Carlin has proposed a 5 percent tax on oil and natural gas and a 2 percent tax on coal. The estimated $125 million in revenues from the tax would help finance public schools and highway improvements. Carlin said if the education system were to reduce there would be less money for higher education. "Those who oppose a severance tax will look at higher education (for budget cuts)," he said. "They're not talking about salary increases for professors or higher education at any level." Carlin's budget recommendations include revenues from a severance tax. This is the first time a Kansas governor has built his budget on a tax not yet approved by the Legislature. He said the charges that his budget was risky were "a bunch of hogwash" and political 'gamme-ness'. "If I had not put it in, I would have been criticized for that," he said. "I left it out last year and was criticized for that. I put it in this book and was demanding me for putting in funding that didn't exist." THE MOST powerful opposition to the severance tax is in the Senate, he said. New AD brings a positive approach "It comes down to the Senate, and more specifically, to the proper role of the Senate (Ross McDermott) on FGM名" By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter Jim Lessig, newly named KU athletic director, brought a sprinkle of good humor, good intentions and enthusiasm for the University of Michigan to press新闻 conference at Parrott Athletic Center. Lessig described himself as a positive thinker. Lessig described himself as a positive thinker. "You can do anything in life that you believe you can do," Lessig said. "I believe in the University of Kansas." Lessig directed 24 men's and women's sports involving 750 athletes at Bowling Green, which is the location of the 1996 U.S. Women's National Championship. Lessig, 46; was athletic director at Bowling Mall. On December 11 he was appointed last week by Chapter 51 of the Law last week by Chapter 51 of the Law. A search committee made up of students, faculty, alumni and administrators screened 46 applicants and recommended four to Budg. The committee's choice of both the committee and the chancellor. HE REPLACED Bob Marcum, who resigned from the position Jan. 2 to become athletic director at the University of South Carolina in Columbia. Lessig will earn $51,000. He said he did not think that his background in basketball, rather than football, would make any difference. "That's like asking one who has three children which one he likes the best," he said. Most of the athletic directors in the Big Eight Conference and at KU have had backgrounds in school and college levels. He also has served as a color commentator with the Cleveland Cavaliers Television Network and as the Cavaliers' assistant coach and talent scout. Lessig has coached basketball on both the high Lessig said he would return to Bowling Green until they found a new athletic director, but he said he hoped to be permanently at KU by May 1. Lessig expressed concern that athletes "graduated with a degree that is meaningful to them." He likened the place of athletics at a university to the front north of a house. the front porch is not the most important part of the house, but it is the most visible," he said HE SAID that many people passed by the house who would never come close enough to judge it from the inside. Like the house, he said See DIRECTOR page 5 ASK delegates deny funds for second campus directors Funds to hire second campus directors at three Kansas colleges were denied by the delegates of the Associated Students of Kansas at their spring legislative assembly this weekend in Topeka. By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter Debates took place between the seven member schools, Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburg State University, the University of Kansas and Washburn University, and also among KU delegates. Some delegates thought the second director's work at Wichita state, H. and K-Slate could be done by a team of 15 students. "I think it would be a mistake for ASK to assume that to get anything you have to pay students, "Dick White, Pittsburgh State" ASK Steve Dunn, KU's ASK board member, disagreed. "You must realize the work is not the same at the campuses. We feel there is enough work, at least at KU, for two people. We don't feel we can depend on volunteerism," Dunn said. KEVIN FAULKNER, Fort Hays State's campus director, said the Fort Hays Student Senate had allocated extra money to its campus director's salary. "If the campus feels it's necessary, let them do it themselves." Faulkner said. KU* ASK *members* had appended #kU *Student Senate for Senate* for a hire a second KU *ask moon* 5. Weather STILL WARMER The warming trend will continue today with the highs expected to be in the high 45, according to the National Weather Service in Toneka. The wind will be west to northwestern 5 to 15 mph. Tuesday will be mild with highs in the 50s. M. P. On his campaign trip to Lawrence, Dave Owen, Republican candidate for governor, stops by GSP to visit his daughter, Elizabeth. GOP's Owen blasts Carlin for lack of education support By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter On a one-day campaign swing through Lawrence, Dave Dawn. Republican candidate for governor, promised to promote higher education in partisan-partisan states in Tuguegea if he were elected. Owen, a 43-year banker from Stanley, criticized Gov. John Carlin's "overspending" in some areas and underspending in areas such as higher education. "Under Carlin, the state's support for higher education has declined constantly," said Owen, former lieutenant governor under Gov. Robert Bennett. Owen said that under Bennett, state colleges and universities received 21 percent of the state's general revenue fund. But that figure has slipped below 19 percent since Carter took over, "It is typical of the misleading way he's handled his budget that all the headlines say he's requested a 10 percent increase in faculty wages, when in fact, the increase amounts to 8.3 per cent." Owen also criticized Carlin's "deepest" proposal or a 10 percent salary increase for the manager. ALTHOUGH CARLIN proposed a 10 percent wage increase, he increased his earnings. members retire and are replaced by lesser-paid members—from 2 to 3.5 percent, Owen said. A real danger exists that the higher education community is going to lose confidence in the state government." Owen said. Already, private industry and out-of-state colleges are luring state faculty members away. OWEN SAID that increased revenue for education, as well as for the proposed construction of a medium-security prison, could be raised without implementing the severance tax, which ultimately would raise utility costs, he said. "We don't need the severance tax." Owen said. We "don't need to go to a witch hunt through the woods." We don't need to be a witch hunter. "What we need is an even-handed, across-the-board look at every aspect of the state budget. We've allowed Carlin to spend us into a mess, but it also gives us an economic turn, we end up in kind of on the shorts." Owen blamed Carlin for the problems at Kansas State Penitentiary, and said there had been too many studies and not enough action taken to alleviate the problems there. He and other Republicans supported a new prison in the 1970s, he said, but Carlin, the Speaker of the House, continually shot down the proposal. Asked whether he would maintain Patrick See OWEN page $ AUTHORIZED COPY Get Smart a leader New Wave rides high in placid Lawrence By CATHERINE BEHAN Staff Writer Marc Koch, 1319 Tennessee St., looked like a typical 21-year-old in his Lewis and T-shirt, but tucked under a chair in his living room were a pair of scuffed red satin shoes and a leather jacket. In his left ear I noticed an earlure. But at the -Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St. where Get Smart often performs and where a band called Jason and the Nashville Scorchers played Friday and Saturday, dancers with purple hair pack themselves into their hats and pushers or zebra striped shirts, and they bounce up and down to the loud, fast and energetic music. "We're not punk," Koch said of his band, Get Smart... "No one from the middle class can be punk." He said that there was no such thing as "punk rock" or "new wave" music and that those were just names of the type. Some of the dancers sport Mohaws, with their heads shaved off all but a strip of hair from their foreheads to the napes of their necks. The hairstyles rival those of Jason and the other band members. One self-described punk rocker, Stell Stoll, 818 Louisiana St., was dressed in a leather jumpsuit, red T-shirt, black and red checkered tie, red sneakers and white spats. He said punk rock was high-energy music without the similarity of older groups such as Journey or REO Speedwagon. Koch agreed that the music he and the other band members, Lisa Wertman and Frank Loose, played in his studio. "In the post-Vietnam psychedelic era, there was a humdum of mediocrity of music," he said. "Bands like the Ramones started writing harder core music to fit their own needs." Most punk fans say the music is just part of a movement that started in England in 1977 with the Sex Pistols. During depressed economic times, thousands of young people were unemployed and angry, and the punk movement began as a statement about their own circumstances. The popularity of the Sex Pistols spread to the East Coast and, while pink faded in England, the music's pop-era took over. punkers is cresting in California, with groups such as the Germs, the New Marines, Black Flag, Jerry's Kids and the Dead Kennedys, nearly three years after punk died in England. Koch said the kids who started the movement were saying that people had to accept them for what they needed. He said that there were still some bands, especially on the West Coast, that were punk bands, but the bands that played in the Midwest were not punk band-style people have "nothing to complain about." "It isn't a regeneration of rock 'n' roll (in the United States). Everyone is tired of pain and their surroundings, and want to do something about it, so they do it in music instead of speeches," he said. Many punk bands in the United States follow me example of the English bands by getting a group of musicians to form a band. Monday Morning whatever comes to music. Musical talent usually doesn't matter as long as the music is fast and loud. Ann Hellman, Overland Park junior and music director at the student radio station JKHK, which plays what the station calls "progressive rock," said some, but not all of the bands that the radio station "Good musicianship is not really a prerequisite for popularity." Hellman said. "Punk rockers are the hippies of the '80s," Stoll said, taking off his slit-end sunnails. AND WHILE THERE are not as many punk rockers as there were hippies, punk rockers like music and "For the first time they are a part of something, whereas before they were put down for being poor and uneducated and were never a part of anything." Koch said. With the adamant support of the movement and the music and the rebellion it stands for, the dancing sometimes gets violent, and one violent dance has its own name—"slam dancing." Usually dancers just bounce up and down to the music, but when slam dancing, they stand and move SLAM DANCING is a close cousin to the popular Los Angeles punk dance, *shanking*. Koch said that "we were very proud of this project." side to side, slamming into each other as hard and with as much pain as possible. Susan Accardi, Lenexa senior and a disc jockey for KJKH, said. "They get pretty violent up there (in Los Angeles). Only a few people are doing it here, and I hope it doesn't really catch on." Sometimes, slam dancers hit band members or non-slam dancers. When that happens often enough, people "Sometimes they'll just move away from people who are sham dancing, but if they really get mad, they'll "It's very violent. They go out to cause harm in this dance," he said. "They wear studded bracelets and necklaces." Although slam dancing in Lawrence is considered tame when compared to California punkers, dancers can throw it hard. "With the movement, they can be that they want to be and set away with it. "Koch said. In Los Angeles, slam dancers try to cause as much pain to other dancers as is humanly possible. When a clumsy dancer falls to the ground, aggressions come out and people start kicking with their boots. "I don't think people sit around and think what they are going to bloom up next or who they are going to be." BUT THE aggression that punk rockers have in their lives sometimes leads to aggression in their music and dance. "It reminds me of locker-room antics," Koch said. "They have fun. It is a way to get out their hands." The dancing is not the only violent aspect of punk rock. Usually the groups 'names and song lyrics aren't calm either; the Dead Kemmies perform such titles as "Kill the Poor," and "California uber Alles." Lawrence punk is a bit tamer, with bands such as Get Smart. Thumbs, Start and Mortal Micronetz. And though middle-class Lawrence residents might not have much to complain about, many are following the movement a little more plausibly—but just as zealously—as their California counterparts. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 15, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Security risk prompts Pope to cancel Nigerian speech KADUNA, Nigeria—A meeting between Moslem leaders and Pope John Paul II, wounded nine months ago by an assassin's bullet, was canceled for security reasons yesterday, the third day of his West African tour. The pope had planned to deliver a speech calling for unity among Moslems and Christians in a meeting with the Moslem leaders, but instead, he read it aloud. A Kaduna state government official accompanying reporters on the papal tour, however, said the meeting was cancelled because of political infighting. Two Vatican officials said the papal party had been told that the meeting, which was to have taken place in Rome in Kadaua, 400 miles north of Rome, would be a security briefing. In an atmosphere of tension and 90-degree heat, the pope said if Catholics and Moslems "join hands in the name of God we can accomplish much The pope, on his first foreign trip since the assassination attempt nine months ago, planned the visit to allay tensions in the northern region of West Africa, where the resurgence of militant Islam could conflict with the aggressively expanding Catholic Church. UAW leaders support pay freeze DETROIT—United Auto Workers leaders plotted strategy yesterday to win approval of a contract agreement that would freeze the pay of 170,000 workers. UAW President Douglas Fraser met with his executive council one day after the historic past, the first time the union has agreed to contractual concessions in the midst of an industry slump, was tentatively reached with the number two automaker. The executive council is virtually certain to recommend Wednesday that the Ford Council, made up of 225 local union leaders, approve the contract at a meeting later this month. U.S. missionary shot in Guatemala The contract would freeze wages for 31 months, and cost-of-living hikes for nine months for auto workers, whose pay, including benefits, now GUATEMALA CITY, Guatemala—Hooded gunmen in a speeding car shot to death an American missionary from Wisconsin, bringing to three the number of U.S. churchmen slain in Guatemala in less than a year, officials said yesterday. Brother James Arnold Miller of the Christian Brothers order was the third American churchman to be slain in Guatemala in seven months. "The murder of Brother James Miller brings to 15 the number of priests and religious men who have been kidnapped or murdered in Guatemala in the last 18 months," said a statement released by the order, which is based in St. Paul, Minn. Officials in Guatemala City said four hooded men in a speeding automobile gunmed down Miller Saturday, outside his mission in Huehuetenango, a province in central Guatemala. Priests and nuns in Guatemala come under mounting criticism by rightists who claim they are linked to leftist guerrillas fighting to topple the government. Marchers cross bridge in Selma SELMA, Ala.—Hundreds of demonstrators, requesting an extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, marched across the Edmund Pettus Bridge yesterday, where almost 17 years ago lawmen attacked participants in a similar march. The group, which is also protecting the voting-righs convictions of two black women, have had protection from state troopers since they set out the convictions. On March 7, 1965, troopers and sheriff's deputies, under orders from Gov. George Wallace, used billy clubs in an attempt to stop a Selma-to-Montgomery march that continued only after the intervention of a federal judge. Airline talks move into 11th hour WASHINGTON—With a strike deadline just hours away, representatives of USAIR and the Teamsters union met with top federal mediators yesterdays. The session focused primarily on salary issues. The Teamsters have rejected the airline's wage offer and said unless the company was willing to pay, they would continue their operation. The talks resumed less than 10 hours before the union's strike deadline. Robert Brown, Robert of the National Mediation Board held separate meetings with the unions. The Teamsters and 900 workers were off to their jobs in Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Buffalo, N.Y., and Boston at 12:01 a.m. today. if settlement was reached. Anti-imperialists bomb businesses PARIS—Two bombs slightly damaged American and Colombian businesses in the latest of a wave of nine bombings allegedly committed by a new revolutionary group that opposes U.S. and Soviet "imperialists," police said yesterday. Explosives went off simultaneously late at Saturday at the French headquarters of the Columbian steel firm, Acerias Paz Del Rio and the U.S. electrical appliance firm Bendix, both on Rue Marheuf off the Champs Elysee in central Paris. A group calling itself "Bbounce-Gdanak-Paris-Guatemala-Salvador" claimed responsibility in a communique to a news agency. The same group bombed a Polish company Dec. 21. Three firms which work with Poland, the Soviet Union and the United States were hit Jan. 10. The group threw Thursday the Chilian Airline office, a firm importing meat from Argentia and an electrical appliance shop selling U.S. products were bombed. U.N., Koch feud, but stick it out Angered over a U.N. resolution to cast Israel from the General Assembly in retaliation for the annexation of Syria's Golan Heights, Koch threatened Wednesday to inscribe a quotation about hypocrisy on the curved U.N. Memorial Wall. UNITED NATIONS—Despite hostile words exchanged this week between Mayor Edward Koch and U.N. officials, the international organization and National Council of Women are maintaining diplomatic ties. U. N. aide Hans Jannischet of Austria said the body should respond by pulling its headquarters out of New York, where the United Nations and its more than 10,000 employees deposit about $800 million annually in the city coffers. Diplomats have looked at alternative headquarters sites, estimating the cost of the move, but they quietly have decided that the United Nations and the UNCCC are the best option. 500 couples renew marriage vows BOSTON—Five hundred couples, surrounded by children and grandchildren, renewed their vows and promised to stick together "till death do us serve." Couples ranging from newlyweds to 70th anniversary celebrates packed historic Farnell Hall, many sporting buttons and carrying balloons Dozens of disappointed men and women, unable to gain entrance because of the overflowing crowd, stood outside in the bitter cold and clashed each other. Playboy magazine is expected on campus soon to interview women for a picture article on women of the Big Eight Conference, David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday. Playboy to seek KU women Amler said he learned of the article through Ronald Beer, vice president of student services at Oklahoma State University. He said he had not been contacted by Playboy and doesn't expect any contact with the magazine. It is his understanding, Amber said, that Playboy places ads in local newspapers telling of the interviews and pending article. To allow the magazine to use any part of the campus would imply University consent or complicity with the commercial venture, he said. However, Playboy does not have to have the University's permission to contact students, he said. It is a matter between the student and the magazine, he said, and there is no way the University could interfere. "We would prohibit using the campus for acidification or sale." Armenia said. But, he said, the interviews and photo sessions would be conducted away from campus. Ambler said that the University had no official position on the matter, but that he hoped students would not inadvertently leave in this personal type of exploitation. THINKING ABOUT WOMEN'S LIVES Books by and about Women EVENT: Reading Group DATE: Wednesday, DATE: Wednesday February 17, 1982 TIME: 7:00 p.m. PLACE: Gallery Room Lawrence Public Library PLACE: Gallery Room on campus The agenda is open, so feel free to suggest your favorite reading materials. For further information call the Women's Center at 864-3552 TODAY 864-3552. THE JAPANESE FILM SERIES will present "Happiness of Us Alone" at 7 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. Would You Like To Be The Student Senate Elections Committee Chairperson? THE KU HISTORY CLUB will show the history of the club at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Rooms of the Union. THE STUDENTS CONCERNEED WITH DISABILITYS will sponsor a discussion group at 4 p.m. in 7-D Lippincott Hall. Nominations are now being taken for the Student Senate Elections chairperson position. If you are interested in serving as chairperson of this committee, drop by the Student Senate Office, 105B Kansas Union, and sign up. Nominations are due by Monday, February 15, at 5:00 pm in the Student Senate Office. Self Nominations are welcome. Should you need further information about the responsibilities of the Student Senate Elections Committee Chairperson, feel free to contact the Senate Office at 864-3710. The KU Chapter of the ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. JERRY HARPER ATTORNEY 901 KENTUCKY July 20th 841-9485 TOMORROW THE PHOTOJOIURNALISM STUDENTS ASSIGNICATION will sponsor a show presentation主持人 at 8 p.m. in Room Lippincott Hall. There will be a faculty recital performed by Richard Angieletti on piano at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Tues.-Sat. 12-8 fashion eyeland HOLIDAY OPERATIONS 841-8000 Holiday Place THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a dutch lunch for members at 1 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Cork II of the Union. Rapid Reading Program Improve your reading speed and concentration Five Sessions Mondays and Wednesdays 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. February 17, 22, 24, March 1, 3 For registration and payment of contact: The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 848-4044 For registration and payment of fees contact: The Grinder Man 27th & Iowa 842-2480 Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 11-10 p.m. Fri., Sat.. 11-10 p.m. dine-in 11-1 a.m. drive-thru 7-10 SPECIAL OF THE WEEK 1.99 Mini Hero Chips Med. Coke dine-in only E-Systems continues the tradition of world's great problem solvers. Unquestionably, Leonardo da Vinci possessed one of the world's great minds. Not only renowned as a painter and sculptor, da Vinci also applied his exceptional talents to the medical field through military for planning military campaigns, and even astronomy. Today, scientists and engineers at E-Systems continue the tradition by expanding the practical application of advanced technology. E-Systems uses the latest advances as the basis for major modifications to aircraft, expands basic cartography to encompass highly sophisticated guidance and command and control systems, and has designed and built a system that is able to study the universe. That's only a small segment of the tough problems E-Systems engineers solve in the area of antennas, communications, data acquisition, processing, storage and renewal systems and other system applications. Re-reconnaissance — systems which are often the first of a kind in the world. For a reprint of the da Vinci illustration and information on career opportunities with E-Systems in Texas, Florida, Indiana, Utah, and Virginia, write: Dr. Lloyd K Lauderdale, Vice President Research and Engineering, E-Systems, Inc., Corporate Headquarters, P.O. Box 226030, Dallas, Texas 75266 E E-SYSTEMS E-SYSTEMS The problem solvers. An equal opportunity employer M.F.H.V armored tur Leonardo da Vinci dimed car helicopter marachute design horseman & thule lance leather car davian man multi-barrelled gun Military Porsman & three lances Aerial car Wurman man Mutte currelled gun Mather Our Greenville Division will be on campus interviewing Feb. 19. University Daily Kansan, February 15, 1982 Page 3 0 ALISM will tion 1. loom 3; al pern n piano hull. ONAL N will members I of the d 0000 Plaza On the record Police recovered more than $6,000 worth of stolen stereo equipment from an apartment at Jayhawk Towers (978-215-3495) and the money, director of KU police, said Friday. Lawrence and KU police used a search warrant to enter the apartment, where they found stolen property that could help solve from two to 10 burglaries, Denney said. The burglaries have occurred both on campus and within the Lawrence city limits during the last several weeks. There were no arrests made Friday, but several KU students were questioned and the investigation was to come over the weekend, Denny开会. POLICE REPORTED an attempted burglary at McQuen Jewelers, Inc., 809 Massachusetts St., early Sunday morning. A burglary tried to rob the store after cutting a hole in the store's ceiling. Several ceiling tiles fell into the store, causing an alarm to sound at the police station. Police said the burglar was carrying a small police scanner and heard the dispatcher report the alarm. The alarm sounded at 2:20 a.m. and the first police officers arrived at the scene at 2:22 a.m. They found various tools and the scanner at the scene, but they didn't find any suspects. There have been no arrests. BURGLIARS ALSO STOLE almost $800 worth of stereo equipment Friday from an apartment at 1512 W. Ninth. S.p. police said. After lifting a sliding glass door out of its tracks to enter the apartment, burglarts took a turntable, a stereo receiver and a tape deck. There are no suspects, police said. BURGLARS STOLE more than $1,035 worth of items from a residence at 1940 Connecticut St. sometime between 11:30 p.m. Friday and 11:30 a.m. Saturday, police said. Burgurls broke a rear, east window to the residence and took a telephone worth $12, an 12-inch black-and-white television valued at $75 and a stereo receiver valued at $500, police said. There are no suspects. Profs warn African students By SUSAN AHERN MARUSCO Staff Reporter A KU professor warned African students on Saturday to be careful of what they learned at the University and Western approaches to African pupils. James Mayo, associate professor of architecture and urban design, spoke to about 146 people at the Lawrence Community Center as part of "African Night," a cultural event sponsored in conjunction with Black History Month by the African Students Association. Mayo warned African students that KU didn't prepare them for urban planning in their own countries "You only learn theory here. There is no practicality," Mayo said. "You should address your own problems, not ours. We have been taught that big is beautiful, but big has shown its ugly face. U.S. approaches won't optimize African needs." May also advised students to learn from U.S. mistakes. He told them not to adopt Western technology, because Occidental institutions, resources money and ultimately depends on along with it. Bid rigs doubtful state architect says The state architect of Kansas said Sunday that the possibilities of bid rigging on state projects, including four major universities of Kansas, were improbable. The U.S. Department of Justice had been investigating alleged bid rigging on highway projects in several states, including Kansas. "Rut it is highly improbable." "The possibility would certainly exist if people like that exist," said John Hipp, state architect for the state of Kansas. 1980 He said that there had been no accusations made about the bid rigging. Eli Reichman's Photography 8 p.m. Monday Feb. 15, Rm.3 Lippincott All interested people are welcome to attend. *Another photournalism Student's Association lecture.* *Tuesday, October 18th.* This is GENTLEMAN'S QUARTERS 8th year anniversary! To help us celebrate, Take advantage of this COUPON OFFER $2.00 OFF on Shampoo Cut and Blow Dry OR $5.00 OFF on Haircut and Perm OFFER EXPIRES MARCH 20,1982. 611 W. 9th 843-2138 N.Y.C. DANCE T --- SCENE FROM SOWETO bovewiler P THE THIRD ANNUAL SUA THEATRE SERIES a musical celebration feb. 18-20 feb. 21 matinee forum kanae union room SIDE by SIDE by SONDHEIM TAKEN IN MARRIAGE by thomas babe feb. 24, 26 mar. 4, 6 kansas union room RATS by israel horovitz & mar 3.5 an evening of one-acts feb.25 27 smith hall OPENING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00p.m. ALL MATINEE PERFORMANCES ARE AT 2:00p.m. tickets: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE LINK BOTH FOR THE KANSAS UNION AND LAWRENCE AT 84543 INFORMATION INFO (812) 644-3477 WITH KLUD BENEFIT SHOW 32 50 BENEFIT SHOW 56 40 GENERAL PUBLIC BENEFIT SHOW 23 50 BENEFIT SHOW 79 00 INVENING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00 p.m. STAKES ARE HIGH AT THE MONDAY NIGHT POOL TOURNAMENT AT TIME OUT 2498 IOWA TONIGHT 50' DRAWS FEB. 15 2408 IOWA $3.00 Entry fee must register by 7:15 First prize $25 Second prize $15 Third prize case of beer MAKE A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE There's an endless frontier of need out there, stretching from the Sahara to the Andes to the Atolls of the South Pacific. In 20 years, 80,000 Peace Corps volunteers have traveled to all of them, to work with people in over 60 countries. They've done everything from helping villages dig wills and build houses, to teaching them languages and skilled trades, to giving advice on farming and health care. Join a phenomenal tradition. The difference is a better world, and a better you. "LACEMENT OFF CARNUTH-O'LEARY FEB 18th, 19th THE JORDACHE LOOK JORDACHE® EYEWEAR For a limited time only while supplies last frames by ON SALE AT 30% OFF Jordache These frames normally cost between $53 and $79. This ad cannot be used in conjunction with any other ad. HUTTON master charge 842-5208 OPTICAL CO. 742 Mass. Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 10-2 PETER M. GRAY Headmasters. 800 Voice Lawrence, Kansas 60444 You'll Love Our Style. = + Mennonite YOU ARE NEEDED! Central Committee MENNONITE CENTRAL COMMITTEE INTERVIEWING Monday, February 15 8:30 am - 4 pm Alcove B. Kansas Union MCC is looking for committed Christians willing to serve a 2 or 3 year voluntary service term in their major or related field of interest. MCC/A CHRISTIAN RESOURCE FOR MEETING HUMAN NEED. STUDENTS COMMAND STUDENTS COMMAND 10% OFF COMMAND PERFORMANCE Students save 10% on all Command Performance Services with a FREE Student ID Card. Including the Performance Haircut $M The haircut that continues to perform for you and your active lifestyle, long after you've left our shop. Shampoo. Performance Haircut $M are designed for both men and women Appointments are not necessary. So come in for your FREE ID Card and let us perform for you. Command Performance $ ^{2} $ Weekdays 9-8 Saturday 9-6 Sundays 12-5 1806 W.23rd—In the Southwest Plaza Phone 843-3985 Opinion page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 15, 1982 Quest for exclusives Funny, announcements of new athletic directors seem to bring out the worst in local newspapers. Thursday, the name of Jim Lessig—the man who would be athletic director—was one of the best-kept secrets in town. All night, reporters telephoned the eight selection committee members, trying to worm Lessig's name out of them. Of course, the University planned to announce his name at a Friday morning press conference. But most wanted the name before then: they wanted an exclusive. The quest for the exclusive sometimes makes newspaniers do strange things. One newspaper compiled an exclusive list of "top contenders" for the job. Another printed the hot scoop that Chancellor Gene A. Budig unilaterally chose Lessig as athletic director the same day Bob Marcum left the job. And a University newspaper, which shall remain a newsent, sent two reporters to the Lawrence Country Club to see if the new athletic director was dining there. He wasn't. But the reporters bought themselves a couple of shrimp dinners. (With their own money.) As it turned out, at least one insider disclosed Lessig's name, and 13 hours before the Friday press conference, the story was all over local radio and television newscasts. But it's funny, with all the list compiling and telephone calling, most reporters forgot to do one thing—call Lessig. The new athletic director spent a quiet Thursday night in his hotel room. After years in coaching and administration, Lessig probably has had contact with the press, so we hope he won't be too alarmed by our Thursday night shenanigans. He should know by now that to make the press do funny things, all it takes is a full moon-or a well-secret secret. Hopeful find happiness bv striking compromise It may be interpreted as a grim or hopeful comment on the human potential for happiness, or a pessimistic one. "Most people are about as happy as they make in their minds to be." Now, what does this observation on human nature, scrawled on the wall of a woman's work For example, it could be the smug pronouncement of someone who looks disapprovingly at the poor, the sick and the lonely. He considers himself a kind person, regardless as he is, they just aren't trying hard enough. This attitude may come from a person who had a hard and bitter struggle to get where he is. today. His own problems left him with no sympathy to spare. He has made a good life for himself, one he is happy with, and he sees no reason why the rest of the world can't do the work. LISA BOLTON This attitude may also belong to the person who expects everyone else to be as contented as he, never mind that he has always had the sort of life in which every variable subject to human control was set for satisfaction. He has all the happiness money can buy. Never having known material need—or even want—this person would be happier than anyone else, and rest the rest of the world as easily as it came to him. These two people represent the grim view of the pursuit of happiness. Each is isolated in his struggle either to keep the hard-won material beyond their reach or to reenter the reproachful eyes of those without such comforts. Both like to think that those forever struggling can simply make up their minds to be quiet. The happiness of the grim view is ostentatious and tinged with guilt. The person doggedly pursuing it cannot look down; he must concentrate on keeping his foothold on the climb to the ultimate goal: happiness. He has made up his mind that he expects and that he expects everyone else to do the same. A more hopeful interpretation of this writing on the wall is the one offered by those who know they'll never really have everything they want, that they don't know what's important what they do have – in spite of what they don't. They don't have to close their eyes to the people around them and race toward happiness because they know they can't program the events of their lives exactly as they might want. The unavoidable element of chance interferes whether it be misfortune or lucky opportunity. At a more fundamental level is the physically handicapped person whose striving for accomplishment is restrained by only the physical limits that his handicap imposes. The hopeful interpretation of this line of graffiti is that people make up their minds to be happy, whatever their lives may offer or hurt at them. They make the best of it. There comes a point—different in time and degree for each person—at which growth must extend outward rather than upward. It is at that point that a person makes up his mind to stop grasping for what he will never have and to be happy with what he does have, whether it is a respectable law degree, a good husband or a sound mind. Deciding to be happy means reaching a compromise between perfection and reality, yet doing so demands unfinishing with one's hand. But the hopeful view is that most people can do it. THE RUSSIANS ARE OCCUPYING AFGHANISTAN, THE POLISH PEOPLE ARE SUFFERING UNDER MARTIAL LAW, CIVILIANS HAVE BEEN SLAUGHTERED BY GOVERNMENT TROOPS IN EL SALVADOR, MEMBERS OF THE BAHA'I FAITH ARE BEING SYSTEMATICALLY EXECUTED BY THE IRANIANS AND FIDEL CASTRO IS INJOLVED IN RUNNING DRUGS AND EXPORTING REVOLUTION. ANYBODY HAVE A SUGGESTION? I MOVE WE CONDEMN ISRAEL! ©1982 MIAMI NAU Letters to the Editor Mourners lament death of old enrollment To the Editor: Faculty, students, staff, lend me your e rs. We come to bury Allen Fitz Flock Enrollment not to praise it. The evil that ancient systems do lives on after them: The good is often interred in their ruins. So let it be with the Alien system. The noble administration hath told you it was outdated. `A wws so, it was I g thevoud truit, and grievously hath the system answer d'it.` Wait, let me look at the word `grieviously`. It's a bit blurry but looks like it. Okay, I'm ready to transcribe. `A wws so, it was I g thevoud truit, and grievously hath the system answer d'it.` Here, under leave of Budig and the rest For Budig is an honorable man; So Buding is an honorable man; Are they all, all honorable men, Come we to speak in the old system's funeral. Sometimes we received all good cards, faithful But the press says uncomputerized is bad. And the press is an honorable body. together. Whose student fees did the general coffins fill? Does this to the press seem bad? When the classes were filled, assistants have went: We speak not to disapprove what the University spoke. Computers are made of sterner stuff. Continue here instead of further salut: The you administration says it was warranted. You are an incredible body. You all did see that during enrollment we thrice presented ourselves wasted. Which we'd three enjoy. Was this bad? They were happy. Was was, bad, and, sure, they are honorable people. to speak what we do know. But here we are to speak what we do know. You all have enjoyed it at least once, even if you have not. What causes withhold you then, to mourn for it? O judgment! Thou art fled to bristle beasts, And man have lost their reason. Bear with us; Our hearts are in the coffin there with the old And we must pause till it come back to us. Phil Scott, Paola junior, and Engel Pengalan. Columbia, Mo., junio Accurate reflection To the Editor: In recent months, the University Daily Kansan has printed a succession of features, articles and editorials on racism. Hopefully, the KU community will not let this issue die. No one is claiming that segregation does not exist at KU, but whites argue that many of our major institutions remain segregated by choice, not by special attempts to exclude blacks. But the fact is, the KU residence halls and Greek system are merely a reflection of American society—racist. More than 100 years after the Civil War, this country remains unable to integrate blacks into the mainstream of national life. Only a little more than a decade ago, civil rights marchers were involved in a major push to change this situation. Tragically, the movement has stalled and lost its momentum. Deprogramming bill poses threat to freedom of religion The groundwork is being laid in Topeka for a cull hunt. And like the witch hunts of 17th century Salem, Mass, this one is based on fear and ignorance and has the potential to threaten everyone's freedom. The Kansas House Judiciary Committee last Tuesday approved a bill that would allow parents to gain custody of their adult children and officers of cults and have them deprenured. A. K. SINGH This bill is almost identical to the one in The bill, if passed, would enable parents to petition a court to assign a temporary guardian—a deprogrammer—if it can be reached. Offspring are under the influence of a cult. DAN TORCHIA New York that was vetuted twice by Gov. William G. McCain in unconstitutional threats to religious freedom. Under the bill, if the guardianship is granted, a person can be held for 45 days, and an additional 30 days can be granted. This is the deprogramming stage. Deprogramming techniques use many of the same techniques used by cults—sleep deprivation, confinement to a specific place and intense questioning of previous values. A person has to undergo an abrupt and drastic alteration of basic values, physical changes like weight change or cessation of exercise, or a transitional or exceptional capability to be assigned to a guardian. This bill would create more problems than it would solve. Using the word "cult" would cause immediate constitutional problems, so the authors of the bill avoided the word when they drafted it. But the vagueness still creates constitutional problems. The changes have to be caused by a "systematic course of coercive persuasion"—a cult. According to the bill, cults use devices like manipulation of the environment, isolation from family and friends, inadequate care, deprivation and unreasonably long work hours. How is a cult determined? Black gospel churches are sometimes labeled cults by their religious practices. memberships. But they aren't cults in the common definition. The Roman Catholic Church, as a requirement for its religious orders, requires that people give up their possessions to the church. This has been an issue in the United States since the years, and no one considers it as cult behavior. "I experienced inadequate diet, I experienced unreasonably long hours, I experienced inadequate medical care—all in support for Eugene McCarthy up in New Hampshire," he said, alluding to the 1968 presidential campaign. Mark Alan Siegel, a New York assemblyman, aptly demonstrated the problem of defining cults during last year's debate on the New York bill. Cults are a problem, and especially so on a college campus. Idealism runs high, and many students are exposed to ideas and subjects vastly different from ones they are used to. No one is going to be programmed for working long hours on a campaign. But Siegel says, “I can’t stop.” Values and lifestyles that are unchallenged for almost 20 years are often questioned. Most people modify their basic values without any help from cults. At present, the civil rights movement is in full-scale retreat. Testimony on the bill heard Feb. 4 showed that college students are often cultized' targets. Court officials said. "Last spring, I got involved with a group at Kansas State called Maranatha," said Dee Tillman, a senior at KSU. "My family relations went downhill, my academic achievements slipped. I did not date and I was going to the elders of the group pick my band." "I was functioning not as an individual, but as a protege of the organization." Other testimony looked at groups commonly thought of as cults, including the Unification Church and the Hare Krishnas. Those testifying told of schemes to take money from people and of stealing gas and food as they traveled. Cults seem threatening because of their unusual recruiting methods and the appearance of their members. Preaching on the basis of having shaved heads is unusual and threatening. But cults' supposed threat to society is exaggerated. About 20 million people belong to cults, a significant number, but the groups don't have any cohesive power. Roland Enroth, professor of sociology at Westmont College in Santa Barbara, Calif., said in Christianity Today magazine that there was a great deal of turnover in cults. "People nut from group to group," he said. Likewise, Irving Zarsky of the University of Chicago, in Intellect magazine, questioned the continuity of cult membership. "Cult participation is often an occasional one-shot experience, rather than a conference." One of the oldest tensions in the United States has been religious tolerance. A bill that allows cut members to be taken against their will is a first step, but threatens everyone's religious freedom. We need to take a long-term view in dealing with cults. If we can find a constitutional, rational way to get people out, then we should use it. But this bill saps of emotionalism. It is not up to the Kansas Legislature to decide what a religion is, or which ones are valid. Freedom of religion encompasses a variety of beliefs and ideas or groups that seem dubious to some. Only a month ago, the Reagan administration granted tax-exempt status to two private southern colleges that openly discriminate against blacks. The Senate Judiciary Committee, chaired by segregationist Sten Sromtrud, R-S.C., is squabbling over extension of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Only last week, General William Smith was on Capitol Hill explaining why he wasn't about the law. Internationally, we are improving relations with South Africa, a country quarantined by the world community for the past 15 years because of its apartheid policy. Recently, David Canyad and Patricia Crocker have written to the Kansan in rebuttal to articles on racial discrimination in Greek houses and GSP-Corbin. These letters reflect the racism engrained in our national character. Canady claims that whites wish to "achieve their personal potential by matching with others of similar background." This merely implies that all whites come from upper- or middle-class families, while all blacks come from lower- or middle-class families. From the sorority viewpoint, KU unfortunately is one of only a handful of universities in the nation to conduct formal rush in the middle of the school year. And with the way the Panhellenic Association caters to Corbin, it is no wonder that the hall is "100 percent white Anglo-Saxon." It's admittedly hard for a black girl to go through everything involved in rush knowing that most of the sororites on campus have never pieded a black member. At KU, it is indeed hard to prove the intent to discriminate against blacks in Greek houses and GSP-Coribin. But the effects are glaringly obvious. Something should be done. During the big push for civil rights laws in the 1960s, the major debate focused on whether Justice Department enforcers had to prove the illegitimate, or merely the effects of discrimination. Black fraternites and sororites are themselves racist. But their formation is understandable in light of an existing system that shuns them. Racism in America is a national disgrace. True, most of us at KU can't do much about the national situation. But there is a lot we can do right here. The necessary steps to end racism at KU should be undertaken seriously regardless of how unpopular they will be at first. Alun Jikla. The University Daily Salina sophomore The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 65046) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holiday April through October. Mail all orders to USPS 65046. Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a semester. Pass the student activity fee new changes of address to the University dailyKarma, K5 6063 Lawrence, K5 6063 Editor Business Manager Nate Lalieu Judge Management Editor Tracey Hamilton Editorial Editor Karen Judaer Gene George Campus Editor George Eden Campus Editors Joe Rebeen, Becca Chaney Assistant Campus Editors Joe Rebeen, Becca Chaney Sports Editor Steven Brolivan Associate Sports Editors Gin Strippel Makeup Editors Ian Mann, David Levine Retail Sales Manager Sharon Aparebain National Sales Manager Howard Shalinuk Classified Manager Sherwin Holton Classified Manager Larry Leebengow Tearcase Manager Bar Haima Retail Sales Representative Susan Cookey, Matthew Lautner, Jerry Grimes, Amy John, Matthew Lautner, Marchel Marbachka, Liz Mcm Moody Manley, Kathryn Lynch Suan Jendero Sales and Marketing Advisor...John Oberman General Manager and News Advisor...Brian University Daily Kansan, February 15, 1982 p. n th st Owen From page 1 McManus as secretary of corrections, Owen said, "Absolutely not." "McManus has sold Carlin a bill of goods on his community corrections program, and that is not a viable alternative to incarcerating violent criminals." OWEN ALSO criticized Carlin for a string of broom campaign promises, including one to him. While campaigning four years ago, Carlin said he favored a death penalty, but twice since the mid-1990s, he was supported by the caucus. Director "People feel like they were duped by Carlin in that last race," Owen said. "I happen to be in favor of the death penalty and if I'm elected governor I plan to sign the death penalty bill." "I don't think we're in the business of assuring Owen said he also differed from Carlin in his attitude toward President Reagan's "new federalism." The Reagan program should be a healthy exercise for Kansas, he said. the rest of the university might be judged by that standard From page 1 If Reagan's proposed changes are passed, student loans and grants become the responsibility of the state, and these programs could undergo a cleanup, he said. He said that because of the visibility of the athletic department, there were bound to be "I know that everything is not totally positive," Lessig said. "The success of the athletic program has to start with the people at the top." Derr Brinkman, chairman of the search committee and dean of the School of Journalism, said he was pleased with the choice of Lessig as athletic director. "We have yet to hear a negative thing about Jim Lessig," Brinkman said. "His work with coaches, athletic staff members, students, faculty and alumni is superb." Del Shankel, acting athletic director, said he was impressed with the effective way Lessig coordinated his staff at Bowling Green University. BUDIG SAID he thought Lessig would serve the University well in the years ahead. "He is committed to strengths in the classroom as well as the playing field." Budig Carl James Big Eight commissioner, who is a good administrator with a good background. Lessig said that KU's outstanding reputation and the positive attitude of people involved with the University were the things that influenced his decision to come to KU. "He has an excellent reputation in the Mid-America Conference." James said. Last spring, Lessig was offered a position as a professor at the University of Maryland, which he refuses. Lessig said that he was used to a smaller town and was not interested in living close to the Washington, D.C. area. He also thought he thought he would love to be about their university as they have found at KU. that everybody can go to school," Owen said. "I'm opposed to the government footing the bill, though I think the student loan program should be made more accessible to students who deserve it and who will pay it back." Owen, one of three Republican gubernatorial candidates, said there would be "no contest" between himself and Louis Kemp of Easton and Jeffrey McLean of whom have previously held public office. Doyen," he said. "Is there going to be any flexibility on the part of the president of the Senate so we don't get caught in a deadlock over this?" Eggs Doyen, R-Concordia, has refused to compromise on his stand against any form of a severance tax, and he has strong support in the Senate. "What it may come down to is whether individual senators will stand up and be counted. Will a majority by responsive to the needs of our state?" Carlin said. From page 1 He said property taxes went up last year because no severance tax or other funding increased. " Their interests seem to be primarily protecting the oil and gas industry," he said. He said the House passed a school finance bill last week with the understanding that they would not take part. "They did not vote for a property tax increase," he said. "They assumed they would pay." ASK From page 1 campus director for four months so that the present director, John Keighley, could work to reorganize the KU membership while Patty Gillen was the new director, could work on legislation in Topeka. The Senate's finance and auditing committee voted against presenting the issue to the Senate, and the Senate voted against a suspension of the Senate during discussion of the issue at its meeting Wednesday. The ASK Board of Directors voted Friday night to amend the fiscal 1983 budget to take $1,000 that KU would not need for a summer program and put in the campus director's budget. "It was to increase the campus director's kightly to hire a second campus director," Klightly wrote. BUT THE ASSEMBLY reversed the amendment by a 40-14 vote, Keightley said. One member of the KU delegation voted to reverse the amendment. Rose Kuo, the KU representative who voted to reverse the amendment, said KU should be able to vote in the council. While the assembly discussed issues, the KU deletion had its own conflicts. "In our organization there are so many personal vendettes against each other. It's tearing up the organization," Randy Crow, KU delegate, said. DAVID ADKINS, KU student body president and delegate, said the KU delegation lacked forfeiture. "From my perspective, KU's delegation is very disorganized and has not done its homework as the other Regents institutions will." Influence and effectiveness is nil. "Adkins said." 'KU is not respected in all assembly right body vice president, said. Adkins said ASK at KU would be under scrutiny this semester. "We're supposed to be working with Senate, and we're fighting them." Crow said. "I'm only a freshman, but I joined ASK and I think it's worthwhile. I guess we're pleading for me." CROW SAID Kightley was not respected by the assembly simply because he was new. The ASK assembly passed 13 resolutions to pass the state legislators as the students' opinions néguyan say the issue should be what ASK could do rather than whether ASK could exist at ONE RESOLUTION that passed stated that ASK opposed sections of President Ronald Reagan's fiscal 1983 budget making graduate and professional students ineligible for guaranteed student loans. It was sponsored by the KU graduate student council. Some other resolutions passed were: - support for legislation to lower the residency requirements of students at state universities in Kentucky - support for legislation to extend the authority of campus security police to university facilities * - support for legislation to disallow deductions from Kansas tax returns donations to schools * the DAYTONA BEACH - support for a House bill to increase penalties for conviction of "habitual violator" for the offense of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated. - support for the efforts of students in Poland Daryona * PT Lauderdale * Key Largo Padre Island * Nassau Bahamas Bahama Islands Cruise * Mexico MAKE A SPRING BREAK SUN ESCAPE! DELUXE DELUXE means the beautiful Whitehall Inn. A spacious high rise resort each room having a private ocean front terrace features include a swimming pool, large outdoor lounge and cocktail lounge all located on the oceanfront! $11900 per person ECONOMY BOTH PACKAGES INCLUDE: Welcome Party Sports Activity - 8 Days/7 Nights Lodging Beach Motel located directly on the beach. Each room is complete with two double beds, a bath and a shower. - All Taxes OPTIONS INCLUDE: CLUDE: ing World FOR INFO CALL 842-6689 6-10pm per person Side Trip To Disney W Side Trip To Disn Roundtrip Bus Roundtrip Bus Only $10500 SUMMIT TOUR SUMMIT TOUR is your lucky number! 12 You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1982 officer and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas: 1. President 5. Films 2. Vice President 6. Fine Arts 3. Secretary 9. Outdoor Recreation 10. Public Relations 7. Forums 4. Treasurer 11. Special Events 8. Indoor Recreation 12. Travel Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union Interviews will be held Saturday, February 27. Sign up deadline for applications is Friday, February 19, 5:00 p.m. SUA University-Community Service Scholarship Award As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift. Qualifications *Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term). *Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. *Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews. Q *Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community. Applications - Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Tuesday, February 16, 1982 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held February 23, 1982. * More information and applications available in the SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477. monday madness Fast...Free Delivery Hours: 4:30 - 1:00 Sun · Thurs. 4:30 - 2:00 Fri & Sat. 841-7900 1445 W. 23rd St. 841-8002 610 Florida Limited delivery area. ©1982 Domino's Pizza, Inc. DOMINO'S PIZZA DOMINO'S PIZZA Good Mondays only... Pizza plus 16" item 1 Pizza Plus two free cups of Pepsi. Price includes tax. One coupon per pizza 5-800g Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations. $6.50 Our drivers carry less than $10.00. K 19985/6301-2 KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 101 CARRUTH LEANY THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MAIN CAMPUS. LAWENCE. KANSAS 66045 NOTICE: Telephone 913/864-3291 TO: MEMBERS OF KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION AND OTHER FACULTY AND STAFF OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS RE: OPENING OF NEW BRANCH OFFICE AT 2212 IOWA WE ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF OUR BRANCH OFFICE LOCATED AT 2212 IOWA HERE IN LAWRENCE, KANSAS! THE DOORS WILL OPEN AT 8:00 MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 15, 1982, AND YOU ARE ALL INVITED TO USE OUR NEW FACILITY AT YOUR CONVENIENCE! HOURS AT THE BRANCH WILL BE: 8:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON SATURDAYS HOURS AT THE MAIN OFFICE at 101 CARRUTH WILL REMAIN THE SAME AS THEY HAVE BEEN, 9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M., MONDAY THRU FRIDAY. $ WE WILL HAVE AN OPEN HOUSE TO CELEBRATE OUR NEW BRANCH ON SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1982 FROM 2:00 P.M. TO 4:00 P.M. AT THE BRANCH OFFICE. AT THAT TIME WE WILL HOLD A DRAWING FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE DOOR PRIZE!...$100.00...DEPOSIT IN YOUR SHARE ACCOUNT. TO ENTER OUR DOOR PRIZE DRAWING YOU NEED TO PICK UP YOUR TICKET OR TICKETS AT THE BRANCH OFFICE BETWEEN FEBRUARY 15, 1982 AND MARCH 6, 1982. TICKETS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED AS FOLLOWS: VISIT OUR NEW BRANCH...1 TICKET MAKE A DEPOSIT...1 BONUS TICKET OPEN A NEW ACCOUNT...5 TICKETS THANK YOU FOR ALL OF YOUR SUPPORT AND CONCERN FOR YOUR CREDIT UNION IN THE PAST, AND WE HOPE NOW THAT WE CAN HELP SERVE YOU BETTER WITH A BIT MORE SPACE!! KU Federal Credit Union established 1982 Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 15, 1982 Huskers defeat KU By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer The Nebraska swim team proved to be too much for the Kansas men's swim team as the defending Big Eight team won the Jayhawks 79-34 in Iowa Saturday. "We struggled, to say the least," Coach Gary Kemp said. "As usual, where we were strong, we were strong, where we were weak, we were weak." RON NEUGENT had the best day for the JAYHawks, winning the 500-yard freestyle, the 1,000 freestyle and the 200-meter freestyle. The first place finishers for the JAYHawks. "Nebraska is the predominate team in the Big Eight," Kmpf said. "We have to get tough. Every single team has to do their part for us to be successful." "We have some people doing the job, but we need to have 19 doing the job, not nine or ten." The Jayhawks did perform well in the 500 freestyle, the 1,000 freestyle and the Balloon-a-Gram "How to the Occasion" SEND A BALLOON-A-GRAM! F. D. Box, 2122 Lawrence, MA 60044 Made in USA 200 butterfly, sweeping the events, Neguent took first in all three events and Bob Vince and Dave Killen took and third in the 500 and 1,000 treestyle. Brad Wells and Cameron Dunn took second and third in the 200 butterfly. Gardner Wright had the only other winner. Carlyle takes second, taking another in the 200 backstroke. "I saw some things we needed to do," Kemp said. "Some of our athletes saw that they needed to get their act together." Senior co-captain Killen said that the Jayhawks problem was that they lacked enthusiasm. "We blew them away in the distance, (500 and 1,000 freestyle) sweeping the event, and no one really got excited." he said. "We just moved on to the next The Jayhawks have one more meet before the Big Eight Championships. They will face Southern Illinois next weekend at home. clip and save ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841-0101 808 W 24th 841-0101 808 W 24th offer expires Feb. 28, 1982 BE A PEACE CORPS AGRICULTURALIST: RAISE HOPES. We're looking for volunteers with farm experience or training who want to share their knowledge and skills to help farmers of the Third World. Help them improve seed quality, soil-fertility, herd selection, conservation, and more. If you want to help developing nations grow, join Peace Corps. etc. Intramurals Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Greek Men Tronfly League Phi Pai 63, Sigma Phi Epiah 37 Phi Chia Ai 44, Warriors 39 Phi Chia Ai 44, Upward 230 Fjl#p 136, AKL Mirror Upward 230 Lambda Chla Alpha 32, Kappaappa Upward 230 Nuka Nq 45, Kappaappa Upward 38 Delta Upsilon 38, Beta A-Z 37 Fjl#p 230, Kappaappa Expon 28 Piles 36, Phi Fla #2 30 Piles 36, Phi Fla #2 30 Beta Beta 34, Phi Kappa Theta 42 Phi Pai 21, Evans Scholars 27 KANSAN Tuesday Night Special Send to: Editor University Daily Kansan 111 Flint Hall Lawrence, KS 66045 Tuesday Night Special BUY ONE VISTABURGER GET ONE FREE Vista RESTAURANTS Feb 16 only • 4 pm to close 1527 W. 6th Your student newspaper Trophy League Backyard Gambia 82, Seldon Stars 36 Pill Balls 26, Kwane Natec 49 Hotspots 52, Sardissus 1 -1- 36, The Clash 77 Address___Phone No.__ PLACEMENT OFF CARRUTH-O'LEARY FEB 18th, 19th Law School 50, McColm 6 West 43 The ALSAC's The Inferno 10 The Sox's Phil 51 and 52 Rick's Running Rebels 80, the Hurricanes 53/ Gumbers 89, Bowers 45 Warner 44 Have a photo or story idea? Ree B. Kappe Sigma 41, Ballers 31 Fantasia 44, Dragenes 37 Naver Sigma #29, The Resisters 24 Greek Women Tell us about your photo or story idea for the University Daily Kansan. After all, it's your student newspaper, and we'd like your input. Fill out this form (print or type, please!), and send it to the Kansan. Boyd's Coins-Antiques Greek Men Rec.B Kappa Alpha Theta 2, P1 Pho 4 Alpha Omnicon 9, P1 Alpha Omnicon D6 Alpha Omnicon 7, P1 Alpha Omnicon D13 Delta D1 Delta P1 19, Tr-Delta 18 Alpha Chi Omnicon 25, N O S B S 10 Women Women Women Boyd's Coins-Antiques Class Rings Baby Silver Ring Gold Silver Ring Silver Crown 51 New York City Limited Edition 600449 91-842-8771 Limited Edition 600449 91-842-8771 Feb 16 only * 4 pm to close The Tumpertm 34, Fire-Bombs 32 Rockettle 33, Gater Haters 28 Erickson Traugging 2 K Phi Pai Jaybirds 0 Viscocity 32 The Rec. A Triple Nipples 2, Bruin Twitts 0 G.B.C. 33, The Band-Its 20 LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property THE GRADUATE SCHOOL COUNCIL IS VOUR VOICE ON THE LAWRENCE CAMPUS. USE IT. WHAT: ANNUAL GSC MEETING WHEN: MARCH 1, 7 PM WHERE: FORUM ROOM, KANSAS UNION Name. CONVERSE John E. Dudley Prudential 842 2870 Protect your valuable personal property John E. Diddy $$$$$$$$$$ 842 7870 843 8771 (c) Math. Algebra Effective Today Robinson North Gym will be closed for repairs. WITH SPRING BUDGET HEARINGS APPROACHING. YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS THIS EVENT . . . The University of Kansas Concert Series Presents KU Alumuna and European Opera Star PATRICIA WISE SOPRANO Accompanied by KU Alumnus Robert Hiller, Piano FEBRUARY 21, 1982,SUNDAY 3:30 PM. UNIVERSITY THEATRE. MURPHY HALL Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved. Student and Senior Citizen Discounts available. For reservations call 913-864-3982 The Arts Festival Music Festival Miss Wise's performance is part of the 1982 University Arts Festival. A For $50^{¢}$ u can buy *crotchless underwear at the Salvation Army *a shoe lace *5 packs of ketchup *balloons deck of cards *dental floss For 50¢ you can buy ... ur draws for everyone from 9:00-12:00 Ladies night 50° for a glass of champagne from 9:00-12:00 TUESDAY and on MONDAY NIGHTS 50c PITCHERS from 7 p.m.-Midnight $1.00 Bar Drinks Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. WEDNESDAY "hooker" for 75c 1401 West 7th 843-0540 C the SANCTUARY Warriors beat Kings By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Purvis Short scored 24 points and World Free赛 shortened 18 yesterday to lead the short-handed 39 victory over the Kansas City Kings. The Warriors snapped a three-game losing streak even though they were playing without both leading scorer Bernard King and leading rebounder Larry Smith. King missed the game and was muscled and Smith had an injured back. Free scored 4 points to send Golden State on an 11-2 bitz of the Kings during the final three-and-a-half minutes of the first period to open up a 35-21 lead. VALID ID CARDS Instantly - Laminated - Color available at -DENT SYSTEMS Room 1144 Ramada Inn 841-5905 Warriors maintained that 14-point lead at the intermission and then bleed the game open by outscoring the Kings 12-3 in the third of the quarter to take a 64-14 lead. Short scored 7 fourth-quarter points to give the Warriors a 102-79 lead with 4:32 remaining. But Kansas City scored 14 straight points from there including 5 three-points and 4 apes from Kevin Leder and Steve Johnson to make the score respectable. 18 the points by Free left him 2 points shy of scoring a career 10,000 points. Jerry Barry Carroll also scored 18 points and Lorenzo Romar scored 15 for the Warriors. Johnson and Cliff Robinson each scored 15 to pace Kansas City. A. H. S. IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 849-980-3 "A Frank We Can All Afford" 23rd & Iowa Lawrence phone 843-9672 CARRY OUT MENU W.C. FRANK POLISH FOOTLONG FIFTH.™ 38¢ 57¢ 65¢ 69¢ COCA-COLA ORANGE SPRITE ROOTBEER TAB REFWED ICED TE All Sandwiches come with Refresh & Fresh Cut Onions Additional Toppings 14¢ 15¢ 15¢ 12¢ 24¢ small .25¢ medium .35¢ large .45¢ CHEESE CHLI KRAUT CRSP DILL SLICE CHIPS SODA FREEZE 65€ Bootlever or Orange SOFT-SERVICE CREAM CONE 28€ SUNDAE 59€ Chocolate Buttercream Chocolate, Butterscotch Hot Fudge SPECIAL NOTICE Patrons of the KU Performing Arts Alisa Festival The Kansas City Ballet will make its Lawrence debut, as part of the 1982 University Arts Festival, at 8:00 pm Wednesday, March 10, in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. While we cannot assure you the same seats you hold for the other series, we will do our best to accommodate your ticket preferences. TICKETS GO ON SALE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC FEBRUARY 18. If you have purchased SEASON TICKETS to the KU Concert, Chamber Music or University Theatre series, or are a member of First Nighters or the Swarthout Society, you may purchase tickets to the performance February 10-17 at the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats are reserved for this special evening of dance. Reservations may be made by calling 913/864-3982. Unpaid reservations MUST be picked up 24-hours prior to the performance. ___ The Arts CoSaan African Dance Company A performance of social and religious dance from West Africa to commemorate Black History Month. MOHU 8:00 p.m. Sunday, February 21, 1982 Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall The University of Kansas K Tickets available at the University Theatre Box Office in Murphy Hall and the SUAOffice in the Kansas Union. Admission $1.50 Presented in part by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency University Daily Kansan, February 15, 1982 Page 1 Peacock steals show as KU track teams win By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer At first, it seemed that the biggest story to come out of the KU men's and women's track meets at Allen Field who didn't show up as he was going to be about who didn't show up. Conspicuously missing from the men's dual against Oklahoma State were several of the Big Eight's leading performers. Joe Dial, the only pole vaulter in conference history to clear 10 feet, was at a meet in Albuquerque, N.M. Randall Naech, the second best pole vaulter, and didn't make the trip. John Sharp, the Big Eight's fastest miler, was there, but he didn't compete in his speciality. Tyke Peacock, the KU basketball player who moonlights as a world-class high jumper, soared 7-foot 4 and came within a whisker of clearing 7.4/8 to cap off a good afternoon for both the KU men's and women's track teams. BUT ONE of the conference's is not the world's-best athletes did arrive, and did he steal the show. Besides Peacock, several other Jayhawks turned in outstanding performances to defeat the Cowboys. 93-39. The women won their meet too, scoring 52-5 points to beat Arkansas, which scored 46.5 Oklahoma State came in last with 18 points. JUST LIKE the last time he appeared before the home crowd when he leaped 7-14 to set an Allen Field House record, Peacock put on a jumping exhibition rarely seen anywhere else. He waited until the bar was raised to 6-11 before he entered the competition. Wearing his sweats and a belt on his jersey, he easily cleared the bar. But unlike the last time he jumped in Allen, Peacock had some competition. There were still three jumpers left at the 7-1 mark: Peacock, joyfellow Jayhawk Pat Craig and Greg Brewer, who was competed untatching. Brewer cleared the bar on his first try. Craig set a new record when he made it on his second try. **THEN IT WAS** Peacock's turn. Still wearing his sweats, he rocked back and forth on his heels a couple of times, took four steps toward the bar, and then, like an airplane leaving a runway, he exited the room with a smile, over the bar with several inches to snare. When the bar was raised to 7-2/4, the qualifying mark for the NCAA indoor tournament. Peacockck. At this point, Brewer and Craig both went to the cork all alone. He decided to go 4-3. THEN CAME the final try. The tension showed on Peacock's face as he walked up to the bar, seemingly trying to comprehend how high he would have to climb to reach the audible when he approached the box as the humming of the lights overhead. Although he was going for a height made by only three other high jumpers in collegiate history, Peacock still didn't take off his sweats. However, he did change his shoes. In the meantime, a tense quiet fell over the several hundred spectators who came to watch the best high jumper in the world. Again, he soared over the bar, with plenty of room for his own ovation. He was a spanning ovation. "I just told Tyke to put the ball in the basket," Timmons said, laughing. "That's the coaching he understands." Instead of just going for an easy lapy, however, Peacock decided to go for a slam dunk. He had the bar set at 7-6/4, almost a full high inch higher than all-time best of 7-5/4, which he jumped in the World Cup title in Rome last fall. Although he had been bothered by a knee injury he suffered while warming up for a basketball game last month, Peaceak said the injury didn't affect his "It was no real problem," he said. "I felt pretty good today." At first, it looked as if he had made it. The bar bounced around for a couple of seconds, but came down right after he hit the mat. AFTER HE made 74, KU's head track coach Bob Timmons went out to shake Peacock's hand. He also gave him a little coaching advice. "I don't understand what happened," Peacock said. "I felt it too, but it was weird. My whole body was over, and I waited in the bar, bar, bar. I think it was arm that hit him." PEACOCK SAID he felt the tough competition helped both him and Craig to lump their best. He missed on the first attempt, and as he does every time he misses, he removed his sweats. After doing some stretching exercises, he tried again, but this time he caught the bar on his way down. Peacock was not the only Jayhawk to have a good day. Ten Jayhawks turned in personal bests, including shot patter Clint Johnson, whose winning 59-84 heave is the third best in the contest. If he hadn't done so much though he didn't set a personal best, was still impressive, winning the pole vault with his 17-40 effort. ALTHOUGH HE would've liked to have gone against Dial, Buckingham or Gould. "It didn't really matter to me," "the Big Eight is the most important" "team in the Buckingham" "halfway, would like to have gone" "higher today, though." Peacock thought he had made it, too. Oklahoma State didn't leave all of its power behind. The Cowboy did bring world class sprinters James Butler and Ron Ingram. However, they both went on to win. In the 60-yard dash, KU's Anthony Polan k拉 a 6.32 to edge Butler. In the 900-yard dash, Butter and Ingram apparently placed first and second easily, but they were disqualified for running out of their lanes, and KU's Warren Wilhoite was declared the winner. On the whole, Timmons said he was excited about his team's performance. "He's just amazing," Timmons said. "He's just so explosive." "IT WAS A good meet for us," Timmons said. "It's the kind of meet you like to have two weeks ahead of the conference." The women had a good meet too, according to Carla Coffey, head coach of KU's women's track team. Not only did Peacock impress the crowd, he also impressed his coach. "I was really pleased about what we did," Coffey said. "It was really good for us to get off on a winning note like this." The women also seem to be peaking before the conference. They set several targets for the weekend, two events in defending Arkansas, one of the perennial powers in track. The highlight of the women's meet was the 60 yard dash. KU sprinter Wanda Harris set a Kansas women's school record with a time of 6.08. The previous record was 6.86, set by Shelia Calmere in 1978. "We've got a lot of good people working for us," she said. "It's a total effort." The University Daily Coffey said that her team had come a long way this year. KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer ... Each additional word. AD DEADLINES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one $2.50 $2.75 $3.25 $3.50 $3.80 $4.10 $4.40 $4.70 $5.00 $5.30 $5.60 $5.90 $6.20 $6.50 $6.80 $7.10 $7.40 $7.70 $8.00 $8.30 $8.60 $8.90 $9.20 $9.50 $9.80 $10.10 $10.40 $10.70 $11.00 $11.30 $11.60 $11.90 $12.20 $12.50 $12.80 $13.10 $13.40 $13.70 $14.00 $14.30 $14.60 $14.90 $15.20 $15.50 $15.80 $16.10 $16.40 $16.70 $17.00 $17.30 $17.60 $17.90 $18.20 $18.50 $18.80 $19.10 $19.40 $19.70 $20.00 $20.30 $20.60 $20.90 $21.20 $21.50 $21.80 $22.10 $22.40 $22.70 $23.00 $23.30 $23.60 $23.90 $24.20 $24.50 $24.80 $25.10 $25.40 $25.70 $26.00 $26.30 $26.60 $26.90 $27.20 $27.50 $27.80 $28.10 $28.40 $28.70 $29.00 $29.30 $29.60 $29.90 $30.20 $30.50 $30.80 $31.10 $31.40 $31.70 $32.00 $32.30 $32.60 $32.90 $33.20 $33.50 $33.80 $34.10 $34.40 $34.70 $35.00 $35.30 $35.60 $35.90 $36.20 $36.50 $36.80 $37.10 $37.40 $37.70 $38.00 $38.30 $38.60 $38.90 $39.20 $39.50 $39.80 $40.10 $40.40 $40.70 $41.00 $41.30 $41.60 $41.90 $42.20 $42.50 $42.80 $43.10 $43.40 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$86.60 $86.90 $87.20 $87.50 $87.80 $88.10 $88.40 $88.70 $89.00 $89.30 $89.60 $89.90 $90.20 $90.50 $90.80 $91.10 $91.40 $91.70 $92.00 $92.30 $92.60 $92.90 $93.20 $93.50 $93.80 $94.10 $94.40 $94.70 $95.00 $95.30 $95.60 $95.90 $96.20 $96.50 $96.80 $97.10 $97.40 $97.70 $98.00 $98.30 $98.60 $98.90 $99.20 $99.50 $99.80 $99.10 $99.40 $99.70 $99.90 $100.20 $100.50 $100.80 $101.10 $101.40 $101.70 $102.00 $102.30 $102.60 $102.90 $103.20 $103.50 $103.80 $104.10 $104.40 $104.70 $105.00 $105.30 $105.60 $105.90 $106.20 $106.50 $106.80 $107.10 $107.40 $107.70 $108.00 $108.30 $108.60 $108.90 $109.20 $109.50 $109.80 $110.10 $110.40 $110.70 $111.00 $111.30 $111.60 $111.90 $112.20 $112.50 $112.80 $113.10 $113.40 $113.70 $114.00 $114.30 $114.60 $114.90 $115.20 $115.50 $115.80 $116.10 $116.40 $116.70 $117.00 $117.30 $117.60 $117.90 $118.20 $118.50 $118.80 $119.10 $119.40 $119.70 $120.00 $120.30 $120.60 $120.90 $121.20 $121.50 $121.80 $122.10 $122.40 $122.70 $123.00 $123.30 $123.60 $123.90 $124.20 $124.50 $124.80 $125.10 $125.40 $125.70 $126.00 $126.30 $126.60 $126.90 $127.20 $127.50 $127.80 $128.10 $128.40 $128.70 $129.00 $129.30 $129.60 $129.90 $130.20 $130.50 $130.80 $131.10 $131.40 $131.70 $132.00 $132.30 $132.60 $132.90 $133.20 $133.50 $133.80 $134.10 $134.40 $134.70 $135.00 $135.30 $135.60 $135.90 $136.20 $136.50 $136.80 $137.10 $137.40 $137.70 $138.00 $138.30 $138.60 $138.90 $139.20 $139.50 $139.80 $140.10 $140.40 $140.70 $141.00 $141.30 $141.60 $141.90 $142.20 $142.50 $142.80 $143.10 $143.40 $143.70 $144.00 $144.30 $144.60 $144.90 $145.20 $145.50 $145.80 $146.10 $146.40 $146.70 $147.00 $147.30 $147.60 $147.90 $148.20 $148.50 $148.80 $149.10 $149.40 $149.70 $150.00 $150.30 $150.60 $150.90 $151.20 $151.50 $151.80 $152.10 $152.40 $152.70 $153.00 $153.30 $153.60 $153.90 $154.20 $154.50 $154.80 $155.10 $155.40 $155.70 $156.00 $156.30 $156.60 $156.90 $157.20 $157.50 $157.80 $158.10 $158.40 $158.70 $159.00 $159.30 $159.60 $159.90 $160.20 $160.50 $160.80 $161.10 $161.40 $161.70 $162.00 $162.30 $162.60 $162.90 $163.20 $163.50 $163.80 $164.10 $164.40 $164.70 $165.00 $165.30 $165.60 $165.90 $166.20 $166.50 $166.80 $167.10 $167.40 $167.70 $168.00 $168.30 $168.60 $168.90 $169.20 $169.50 $169.80 $170.10 $170.40 $170.70 $171.00 $171.30 $171.60 $171.90 $172.20 $172.50 $172.80 $173.10 $173.40 $173.70 $174.00 $174.30 $174.60 $174.90 $175.20 $175.50 $175.80 $176.10 $176.40 $176.70 $177.00 $177.30 $177.60 $177.90 $178.20 $178.50 $178.80 $179.10 $179.40 $179.70 $180.00 $180.30 $180.60 $180.90 $181.20 $181.50 $181.80 $182.10 $182.40 $182.70 $183.00 $183.30 $183.60 $183.90 $184.20 $184.50 $184.80 $185.10 $185.40 $185.70 $186.00 $186.30 $186.60 $186.90 $187.20 $187.50 $187.80 $188.10 $188.40 $188.70 $189.00 $189.30 $189.60 $189.90 $190.20 $190.50 $190.80 $191.10 $191.40 $191.70 $192.00 $192.30 $192.60 $192.90 $193.20 $193.50 $193.80 $194.10 $194.40 $194.70 $195.00 $195.30 $195.60 $195.90 $196.20 $196.50 $196.80 $197.10 $197.40 $197.70 $198.00 $198.30 $198.60 $198.90 $199.20 $199.50 $199.80 $199 Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found terms can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can place, in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 844-358. ERRORS 3 bedroom apartment. Close to campus, carpet, off street parking, no pets. Referees, water, electricity paid $350 a month. $200 deposit. 824-739-744. 2-18 $8 Elegant Chicken recipes. Delicious. Nutrition. Different. $3.00 to Tastemasters. Box 23133, Lawrence. K66455. 2-19 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. **study air. clip:** to campau at 19 W. 19th. available Mar. 1, 1982 $500.00 mo. with a $200.00 d-point. Absolutely no pets. Call 749-414 or 841-9701. 2-17 DUPLEX—GREAT LOCATION 809 Ohio, 2- barn. stove, refrigerator $250 per month. Available now. 1-796-6853. 2-15 ANNOUNCEMENTS Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downcity. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf FOR RENT 3-Bedroom Apt. close to campus, carpet, street parking. No pets. References. Water & electric. $350/mo. $300 deposit. 426-5784 2-19 FACULTY PREFERRED for RENT or LEASE PURCHASE 3 br. townhouse, 2712 University Drive. All appliances. Drive. bus route 725. mms. 840-128. hbl. 836-360. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Two bedroom apartment, 3 lower utility two blocks from KU. 3 blocks from town, central air, equipped kitchen, carpet and draperies. $250/month. 114 Tenn. Call 842-429-1268. 空气 atmosphere, International meals, workshops, and conferences; looking for six cooperative group inc- panies; working with U.S. UNIFILTIES INCLUDED; Large house; appliances and laundry; Call 814-7692; CLOSE. Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in newer fourplex, 1 pillar, 1 bath, bathcarp, carpeted woods, 220 per month, 843-8571 or 1-782- 3716 3-19 Soblease 2 bedroom apt., gas paid. Complete kitchen carpet plus drape, central air and call. Call 411-6888. 2-26 **HANOVER PLACE.** Completely furnished between 4th & 11th a.m. on Mass. Only 2 bedrooms. KU. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your apt. phone number or visit http://www.ku.edu/monthly-wait-for-rooms/ or 843-4455. For rent 2-bedroom apt. Convenient shopping. On bus route. Complete kitchen, central air and carpet. Caped plus draps. Call 841-6888 2-26 The rest to mature male student. Quiet comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 822-4185. t PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APPAREMENTS. Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, perfect for roommate, features wood burning fireplaces, a large window, dryer hookup, fully-equipped laundry room, 9th floor, 9:30-5:30 daily at 228 Princeton Blvd. or phone 842-2753 for additional information. 2 Large B 28hrm, gt. in an old home at 1017 Rhode Island. Available. Iftail One. Only 225mm a mo. with a 200-90 dp. cup. Call 414-4234. Absolutely no坟碑. Call 2-17 Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt in carpeted, carpeted & drapeed, enclosed kitchen. Bathroom with tile floor & campus, and on bus route 35 per month. MEADOWBROOK 10th & Crestell CAMPUS. ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished twoboys available immediately. Flexible lease. Rates vary. Located on 13hh & 10hh. Only two short blocks from the Union. Call 842-463-4538. Copy 3 Idbm. unfurnished ap, in older bed at 314 h. W14 (14th & T8th) available now. Only 275.00 mw. with 200.00 dwr. Bed at 314 h. Absolutely. Available in 2-17 Call 794-4114 Spouses commutes to K.C.' Share the drive Nee house for rent in DeSolo, after Mar. 15-1. 1-585-1630 or 864-1151. 2-19 For rent 3 bdmr. apt. $260 a month. Avail. M-ach 1. Near campus. 749-1750. 2-19 For sublease, 2 Br. apt; $310 + elect. 2-22 available; New Telephone: 841-8138. 2-22 1 bedroom kit, to submit first of March or April—$219.00 per month, all utilities paid. Close to campus (Orad) Contact Margo— 841-6533 2-23 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Note on Sale at Berkshire University. Makes sense to use them-1) As study guide, 2) For classroom practice, 3) For case studies. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* *available now at town, Crest, Tier* Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-960-3900. 2900 W. 6th. tf Gadget Electic guitar solid body, Schaller Gadget Electic guitar solid body, Schaller Fendel Hard. 50 watt $100. $49-246. 2-15 For Sale - Tunable - 8-stack, AM-FM STORE Recent tune-up. $125. 843-886. 1979 Mobile Home 14 x 70, 3 bdrm., AC室 = refrigerator; 7 x 10 shed, $11.300. Lot rent is 65.00/month, water paid 843-23 1758 after 5.00 pm. Car Stereo Pioneer Super Tuner and Pioneer amplifier $55.00—New Alvares guitar $200.00, 740-2374 2-15 5 pc. Ludwig Drum set, excellent condition, Zidian Cymbals, pearl equip. 110 Hanover Place apts. 2-15 Acoustic model 118 bass amp, one 15 inch Acoustic make the 118 bass amp 2-18 6412-290 722-290 2-18 Must sell great component stereo system. Must sell great component stereo in atruder at prices. Lyle 842-5462. 2-19 Very nice looking Technics SU8088 80-watt hiero stereo with 11 stereo channels 832-643 for details 5-15 BOOKCASES, stereo cabinets, chest ear, etc. custom made to your needs Michael W. W 130d W 130f Gretsch Guitar and Peavey amp. Only 4 months old and sound great. 842-5403. 2-19 New women's clothes: Jeans-Calf Straight, Lee, Calvin Klein (all $19.00). Blowes, Oxford shirt and sweaters ($10.00). Good quality: Call 642-1832. 2-18 5 piece Ludwig drum set with new heads. $900.00 $840.00 $620.00 9.19 Watershed—Frame, liner, mattress, heater. 2 mo. old. $225. 842-6712. leave message. SURPLUS JEEPES, CARS, TRUCKS Car-in-value $2143, paid for $100. For information on purchasing similar bargains call 602-988-0575. Ext. 3083. Call Refundable. 2-15 FOUND I found a gold stocking cap in front of Allen Field House after the Missouri game. 841-9754. 2-16 The Sanctuary has openings for cocktail waitresses and door floor persons. Must be a full-time job, able to work late hour, must be looking for a year-round work. Apply in person at www.sanctuary.org. Leatherr key ring, with Volkswagen crest on it, holding 2 keys. For information. Call 843-1727 ask for Joff. OVEREASES JOBSE -Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer, Australia, Asia. All Fields. Write JC monthly. Sightseeing. Write JC, June 2014 Box B=31- K=1-3 CW, Mar CA, 092622 HELP WANTED Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Personable. Contact Dan at the Exchange. 842-5539. Men's silver-rimmed glasses—Found Tues. Illinois & Sunnyside—Call 842-3370 or 843-1251. 2-17 Energetic, hardworking, personable wattresses wanted. Must work well under pressure. Hourly wage plus tips, commission. Applicants should have experience with Gammon's, Southern Hills Shopping Center. CRUISES, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDIENTS, Europe, Korea, Canada, Worldwide OPENINGS, GUIDES TO CRUISE-WORLD, 153 Box 60129, Saratov, 8-12-74 Work at a girls camp this summer. Positions required for WSI and SCI certificate; Horse Program (WSI and SCI certification); Horse Program Crafts Director; Contact Kaw Valley Girl School; Kaw Valley School; 913-733-2800, weekdays, 6649, or call 913-733-2800, weekdays. Clock typist or secretary. Excellent typist Clerk. Resumes to 412-658-0713. Student. Contact Belfast University. Contact Belfast University. Stockbroker trainee. College grad—Excits opportunity for hard working, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individual. Rep-P.O. B口 157 Red Bank, N.J. 678-831. Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent in this semester. Must be capable, studios, have own tools and equipment, in cooperative training. Call Darley 841-838-6988. MANAGER OF MEMBERSHIP AND COMMUNITY AFFAIRS to assume responsibility for Chamber membership development management. Entry level position requiring a college degree and management skills. Salary Range $14,000 + and benefits. A complete position announcement letter must be obtained from the Lawrence Chamber may be obtained from the Lawrence Chamber by or by calling (913) 833-2432, 2-23 Kansas or by calling (913) 833-2432, 2-23 LOST Lost bus pass and other id. on 2-3-82 Please call Sarah 749-7427 if found. 2-16 $200 Reward for Canon AE1 Lost on Jan. 26 on 13th & Vermont. No questions asked. 841-3295 2-17 Maroon Billfold Lost at 12:00 movie. Man that called about it. Please call again! Monica 841-8651. 2-16 NOTICE Get back to the Boogie in your own style of music. Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and theory lessons. All levels, teaches训 meets. Music, Callurt Katz, Callurt Katz Music, 814-8817. 2-16 PERSONAL SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS Economical packages every weekday and school breaks. Skip Ck. Esi Ekt. 841-8386. Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Stuids Studio. 749-1611. tf Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfred Skillet Udely. 1966 Mass. 843-8186. tf Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-1611. **tf** שד tuesday, February 16, 12:15 to 1:00 Cork 1 Kansas Union Cafeteria The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs! !! Call 841-7549-1610 W 23rd. 'Report on the Winter Hillel Institute' FUTONING, MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER, SCIENCE. Call 699-4009 time BS. in physics, MA in mathematics, or call 841-4759 (akr for Robert). Hillel Lunch David Pearlman Hillel President MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. KAY 462-8641. **tf** Rapid Reading Workshop-Five sessions. February 17, 22, 14, March 1, 3, 7-8:00 pm come to the Student Assistance Center for registration for payment. 2-16 PARTY FAYORS—glassware, sportwear, High quality, low cost. Call for St. Pat's day specials. University Photography 842- 3279. 2-15 SKI STEAMBOAT CHEAP: $33 per day, per person, inc. lifts, 4, 6 or 8 guests. Call (303) 979-6886. 2-15 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT. 843-4821. YOU ARE NEEDED! Mononotea Central Community college is booking for your interview. The major or related field of interest for a two or three hour appointment will help you put your knowledge into action? MCC has opportunity all over the world waiting for you to apply. Education, health and nutrition, agriculture and horticulture are MCC representative will be interviewing on Monday, February 15 at 8:30 am to 4:00 pm at Mononotea. Save 10% on Pente sets from Footlights when you mention this ad. Footlights, 23th Iowa. 2-18 I need a ride to and from South Padre Island for Spring Break. Will drive sharing, gas and beverage. Call Stu 864-6844. 2-16 Collector records: Zep. Floyd. Stones, Who. 843. 8528. 826 after 3 2-15 Old, new, used, unable and reusable Cratches to bottles, suits to jeans, slips to shoes Bottle lids to pillows Ride change GDGE 601, Kusakid 841, Hiress 823 TUE-SAT 9:00-12:00, 1:00-5:00 2-17 HEY! NEED a ride to Texas Spring Break? I'm going as far as Austin and need one or two cars to share drive and gas ex- presses at the bus. Call Bill EB1- 841-0581. You are a victim of "vitamin robber" if you smoke, drink or have an Ecstasy dose. The birth control pills. We have the most recommended answer in your practice manual: 814-4330 or 814-4648. TRAVEL CENTER GETAWAY! Ski Packages - Scuba Diving Adventures * Windjammer "Barefoot Cruises" * Singlelayer Cruises & Tours * Club-Med Resorts * Dude Ranches * Health Spas * Golf Teams Camps * Mississippi Steamboat Cruise - Mississippi Steamboat Cruise - Alaska/Canada Fishing Trips FREE PARKING "HOME OF THE NEON PALM TREE 1601 West 23rd St. 1601 West 23rd St. SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER 9:5-10 Mon.-Fri. 9:30-2 Sat. Wanted, someone who loves drinking beer pitchers on Mondays at the Sanctuary 7:00- 12:00. 2-15 Mr. Bills and the Entertainer present Jasper. One night only. Thursday, Feb. 18, 9-12 Dawn open 8:30, 3:30 All you can drink is beer. Their first Lawrence play this year. 2-18 Who is the blind guy with wired rimmed glasses who used to work in the reserve area at Watson I saw at "Raiders" at GUA, a local golf club. The tall blind want to know your name. 2-17 1979-Wonderful, 1983-Sensational, 1983-Wild, 1982-Make history, 1982-Breathe 2-17 Beat the snowbound blues. Taste the tropics at Brazilian Carnival, Feb. 20. 2-16 There once was a girl named Mitsy whed dressed preppy, but she too dresses Her Birthday was Saturday Her birthday was Sunday But Toook thinks she will be nice You able-bodied man, we pretite. Har? We are able-bodied man, we pretitate. Har? We are able-bodied man, we pretitate. Har? We are able-bodied man, we pretim WHO IS PAUL KLIPSCH? What is he doing at the GRAMOPHONE SHOP March 3rd? 2-19 Over stocked! 20% off Everything in store. @% off, coatings, furniture, clothes, items, mice. Inflation Fighter. E 7 Ht: 10-25 3-P 0-10 M-10 3-Fatten 2-19 EVERY CAR IN STOCK $0.05 A DAY $9.95 A DAY FIRST 50 MILES FREE THEN ONLY 85 A MILE Special weekends rate. We are now leasing a Car Wash with Accept Master Card/Viva. Located at 705 W. 8th Lease one of our cars, it's cheaper than a bus fare home! Reserve your car now. for spring break LEASE A LEMON 749-4225 LEASE LEMON 749-4225 GREEN'S CASE SALE, COORS 86.5, PABST 86.99 GREEN's, BUNN WEST 23RD .2-19 SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 Get that job with a professionally prepared resume by a local corporate recruiter. Learn the latest job hunting techniques. 2-14 841-5664 to improve leadership skills *Attend* "Perspective for leadership training on campus" at Jihawk Research Union, from 7-8 and 10am, by the Office of Student Organization and Activities, 2-16 Join our Bible Study Group certificate upon complication of 10 week course. Every Tues. 7:30 pm, partners A & B. Union Salt Block. 2:19 TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 811-499-696 IMS in BS in ENGLISH. A in mathematics) or call 814-4716 (ask for KEB). If now at Gwen—Glad you're back—Love Mike. 2-16 ENCORE COPY CORPS $3 \frac{1}{2} {}^\circ$ self service copies 国家税务局监制 WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say? 17 to say! Stop by The House of Uber and resume. 9-11 to say! Resume on resume at Uber $88 Microsoft, bushcrafts, 9-3-9; Sat. NON-Sun. 3-10 Schneider Wine & Keg Shop -The finest selection of wines in lawsuits-largest supplier of strong kgs 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212. tf Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, and it print it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, 52th and 1-26 Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years exp- ence, competitively priced. Also Script Lettering for certificates. 814-7944. 3-8 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE 842-2507. tt TYPING TYPING PLUS: Thess., dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling. Visit us at www.scienceofamerica.org; 814-6254. foreign students or Americans. 814-6254. Experienced typist. Theses, term, papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all unicellular. IM Correcting InteracteR Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-3545 Mrs. Wright. If It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. ff Experienced typist will type lettera, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting selectric. Call Donna at 842-2744. tf Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct. Selective: Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tf Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term papers, mise. IBM correcting selectic. Barb, after 5 p.m. #84-2310. ftl QUALITY TYPING: Themes, Manuscripts, Dissertations; IBM Selectric; Girl Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 please TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist--IBM Correcting SelectI II; Royal Correcting SE 3000 CD. 843-5675. tf Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. IBM. Before 9 p.m. 749-2647. Ann. tf Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric. Elite or Pica 842-5644. 2-76 For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 481-4980. ff Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and rewriting their thumbnails or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing I at Encore! Call 842-8001 for more info. 2-26 EXPERIENCED TYPIST would like to type anything. 841-8525 2-15 Quality typing and word processing gav- alient Encopy Copy Corp. 255, 849-2001 849-2001 2-26 Professional typing, quick, reasonably pried, paper supplied. Call events. 2-18 2-18 Former medical research secretary, will type term papers, books, thesus. Kane 2-25 Nancy *TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS* IBM Corp. correction to composition assistance. Em- mergency data transfer. Professional typing. Dissertations. theses. term papers, recounts legal. iER MARC International Journal of Law. Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. Located in Topena key. -1913-1924. IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE IS ALIVE AND WELL 842-2507 2-15 Roommate to share modern 2 bedroom apartment 3 blocks from campus. $137.50 a month + utilities. 843-8628 Jane. 2-17 2 roommates $150 + deposit each. Batch arrangement with excellent location 1005 Indiana. 842-4630. 2-17 Sub-lease 2 bdmr. apt on bus route. In today, low price. Call 842-1434 or 841-346 WANTED Female wanted to share 2 bedroom fur- miture. $123 mo+ i - utilities. 841-224- 841-224. Female roommate to share nite two-bedroom furniture appliances. Will to campus $150 a month for room rent. Roommate needed for a 2 bedroom apt. o deposit required. Roommate wanted to share 2 bdmr. No deposit or lease. $75 plus 1' utilities to share. Need roommate to share Mall's Apt. Rent $173, heat paid, private room, fireplace, nice place. Call 749-0924 2-17 Person to communicate with, Lawrence to KC Man to coordinate fuel delivery, gas driving Calib. Bail 842-443, keep trying, 2-19 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apart- ment on bedroom. B142-5309 1-219 faxes 842-5309 Female roommate to share house, 112.50 + ½ utilities, own room and laundry. Call Mike 843-8892 2-17 Male roommate to share 3 bedroom house: deposit, liberal, sugar amok okay 843-6219 deposit, liberal, sugar amok okay 843-6219 BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 60045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: ___ Classified Display: 1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00 Dates to Run: 1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times 18 weeks or times $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 Additional words .02 .03 .04 .05 .06 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 15, 1981 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Team W W L Pct. GB Boston 38 16 14 .72 - - Philadelphia 56 14 12 .72 % New Jersey 25 25 28 .490 12 Washington 25 28 28 .490 12 New York 25 28 28 .490 12 Milwaukee 36 14 720 Detroit 22 29 431 Dallas 28 30 431 Atlanta 19 38 404 Chicago 19 38 404 Houston 11 39 25 Western Conference San Antonio 32 17 .653 Houston 77 22 .853 Texas 26 11 .59 Ulah 18 18 .367 Utah 18 31 .674 Utah 18 31 .674 Kansas City 13 34 .567 Kansas City 13 34 .567 16% Seattle 34 16 17 680 - Los Angeles 34 16 17 680 - Los Angeles 28 21 21 %/% Golden State 27 22 22 %/% Phoenix 27 22 22 %/% Phoenix 14 36 151 6/% Phoenix 14 36 151 6/% Philadelphia 117, New York 105 San Diego 128, Los Angeles 94 Boston 108, Los Angeles 103 Chicago 110, San Francisco 104 Dallas 111, New Jersey 109 Indiana 109, Portland 107 Houston 106, Cleveland 105 Team W 10 L Pct. GB Missouri 1 1 1 49% Illinois 7 7 1 38% Oklahoma 6 5 490 3½% Nebraska 6 5 590 3½% Ohio State 6 5 600 3½% Kansas 4 6 400 5½% Colorado 4 6 280 5½/ Fall State 4 6 282 5½ Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. [4] 41,89; Okhata State 89 Kansas State 14,58; Iowa State 49 Kansas 60; Nebraska 63 Oklahoma City 67 UPITOP 20 RESULTS North Carolina (2) 66 Georgia 57. NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Team W L W T L G FG GA Pts. Baltimore 31 7 1 5 62 77 170 Philadelphia 31 7 1 5 62 77 170 NY Rangers 37 21 9 211 219 618 Pittsburgh 37 21 9 211 219 618 Hartford 16 23 11 220 220 432 Montreal 33 11 12 67 363 163 78 Boston 32 18 12 60 333 178 72 Buffalo 30 18 12 200 288 181 69 Chicago 22 18 10 14 288 169 46 Hartford 16 26 10 14 188 169 46 Campbell Conference Norris Division Minnesota 23 18 16 16 242 204 62 Leuven 25 18 16 9 263 262 54 Louisville 26 17 16 12 298 253 54 Wimmington 20 25 11 174 174 51 Toronto 20 35 11 174 197 45 Norton 18 20 11 214 165 43 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Edmonton 39 13 13 11 320 232 82 54 Calgary 26 15 12 13 234 254 53 54 Vancouver 20 20 12 13 201 207 52 52 Montreal 10 18 12 13 191 262 77 53 Colorado 10 18 12 13 191 262 77 53 LSU STATE New York Islander, Hartford 1 College of Washington 2 New York Rangers, Quebec 2 Philadelphia, Los Angeles 4 Michigan State 5 Soccer Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 17 5 773 - Baltimore 18 16 750 - Detroit 16 15 720 % Buffalo 16 13 480 % Cleveland 9 14 382 % Philadelphia 9 14 382 % Philadelphia 11 17 221 St. Louis 20 13 483 - - Wichita 13 15 634 9½% Memphis 10 16 345 9½% Phoenix 8 18 385 11% Kansas City 8 18 385 11% NEBRAKA 12 AGEY 45 NEBRAKA 1 KANSAS 21 Forward David Magley goes up for two of his 22 points Saturday night in the Jayhawks' 66-63 victory over the Nebraska Crescentus in Allen Field House. Kansas snaps three-game losing streak By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawks won their biggest game of the year Saturday night. The Jayhawks defeated the Nebraska Cornhuskers 69-43 in Allen Field House, snapping a three-game losing streak, before a crowd of 9,850. With the victory, the Jayhawks kept alive their hopes of finishing in the upper division of the Big Eight Conference. "I THINK THAT if we had any hope of finishing in the upper division this was a step in the right direction toward achieving that goal," guard Tony Gauy Finishing in the upper division of the Big Eight Conference would mean the home court advantage in the Big Eight Post Season Tournament. "This was a very, very important game," forward David Magley said. "I think this gives us a legitimate chance of getting a home court berth." Besides Nebraska, KU is chasing Oklahoma State, which is 5-4 and Oklahoma, which is two games in front of the Jayhawks at 64. WITH FOUR games left in the conference, the Jayhawks face a must-win situation the rest of the season. The Jayhawks' victory raised their Big Eight record to 4-6 and overall record to 13-9, while the Cornhuskers, one of the teams the Jayhawks are chasing, fell to 5-5 in the conference and 13-9 overall. "Sometimes it helps you to know you have to win," Coach Ted Owens said. If the Jayhawks would fail in their attempt to gain an upper division finish Trailridge 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843 7333 How to Win At The Losing Game DIET CENTER IT'S A Natural! 841 DIET 841 DIET DCS New Harvest Medical Center they would have to prove they can win on the road where they have struggled. "It it would be very difficult," Magley said. "It would be a tough challenge, "I think we can do it if we're forced to. But, we're not going to look at that now." B41-DIET The 'Jayhawks' victory over Nebraska was that much more important since Nebraska is a team they are chasing. The beginning of Saturday's game was full of surprises. BEFORE THE game ever got under way, the fans in Allen Field House received a surprise when Mark Summa was introduced as the starting center. "He (Summers) has done a terrific job in practice the last couple of days, and he earned the right to start," Owens said. Summers finished the game with 5 points, 1 rebound and a key blocked hit. He sat out most of the first half, when he put into early foul trouble. However, you would never have known that Summers earned a start by the crowd, as they responded with a chorus of boos when he was introduced. "It wasn't that big of a deal," Summers said. "I just have to block that out of my mind." "I liked getting a chance to start," Summers said. "But I got three quick foals, and that kind of upset me." HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKETPLACE, 4TH FLOOR, NEW YORK, 1201-537-5422 THE JAYHAWKS made another 1350 N. 3rd COUNTRY JM* $2.00 OFF Chick or Steak M-Th only 5-9 Enquiries 2/28/82 COUNTRY JM* $1.00 OFF Chick or Steak Fri. & Sun, 5-9 Enquiries 2/28/82 Sun, 11-8 M-Th only 5-9 Expires 2/28/92 1350 M. 3rd COUNTRY inn 21 20 OFF Chick or Steak Start Your Day Right. With A Pam's Delight! 2 Buttermilk Pancakes Only $1.99 3 Strips Bacon and 1 Egg COUNTRY mm PP breakfast • Lunch • Dinner • Daily Buffet GO Fuji One thing that didn't change for the Jayhawks was the leadership of Guy and Magley. You've never met anyone quite like Juni starting lineup change when Tad Boyle, after playing second fiddle to Lance Hill the last two games, resumed his starting role. "When I came out and started to look at the basket, I think I surprised Nebraska," Boyle said. "I think I was more ready than in the past." PAM A PLACE Mond-Sat 6 a.m-9 p.m. 2907 W 6th 841-6844 Sunday 6 a.m-8 p.m. "I took him out of the lineup, but he's come back and responded well," Owens said. Boyle responded in a hurry, scoring 10 points for the Jayhawks' first 16 points in the contest. After Boyle's quick start, he didn't score another point but he dishied 5 out a game. Between the two they combined for 44 points, making 12 each. 16 points were made by one team. 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JAYHAWK NOTES: Tony Guy's 22 points moved him into fifth place on the all-time KU scoring list. Guy passed Wilt Chamberlain. 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Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 "AN UNCOMMONLY BEAUTIFUL FILM" HEART- LAND PG 第 7-30 HILLCREST 1 9TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 829-2400 HILLCREST 3 THIRD AND IOWA TELEPHONE: 420-861-7800 379 APRIL AND JUNE 2015 Whose life is it anyway HILLCREST 11-Phone Number 803-8400 PAGTIME PUC = 7.45 only Mat. 7.00 ACADEMY, AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE JAMES CARNIE CINEMA 1 31ST AND IOMA TELLEPHONE 212-545-0800 You're never not singing to a smile JOHN EASTMAN JUNE 23 / CLOSETS / COFFEE SHOP Evenings at 7:15 & 8:15 Weekend Matinees at 2:00 & 4:00 Meals $1.50 Café Choses $1.25 NO OTHER CAFE MENU By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor CINEMA 2 PAUL NEWMAN SALLY FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE A COLUMBIA PICTURE Fri 7:30 8:30 Mon 10:30 Sat 9:30 It's been a long time coming, but the women's basketball team got its first easy game in nearly a month, as they routed the Northwestern Oklahoma State Rangers 85-56 in Allen Field House Friday night. Arout. "The season has been a challenge." Coach Marian Washington said. "It was tough for me." Kansas led at the intermission, 39-31. THE GAME was close throughout the first half with both teams shooting from the field. Northwestern Owen from the 33 yard line, while the Jayhawks shot 39 percent. Leading the way for the Rangers was Jan McCully with 8 points. Three other Rangers scored in the victory. During the first half, the Jayhawks were led by Angie Snider's 9 points and Chris Stewart's 8. Tracy Claxton, KU's leading scorer and rebounder, was held to just 5 points and 4 rebounds in the first half. KANSAS'SHOOTING also improved in the second half, as the team shot 17-31 from the field for 55 percent. Northwestern Oklahoma was just as cold in the second half, shooting 9-28 for 33 percent. The Jayhawks methodically built their lead to 30 points during the second half, as the Rangers did not contend with the Jayhawks' inside power. The Jayhawks out-rebounded the Rangers 25-13 in the second half. "That was our 15th win, and we haven't let up at all this season," Washington said. Claxton had 16 rebounds to lead the Jayhawks in that category for the 28th time this season, Taylor, who has not played well against the double fouls in rebounding with 10. Snider, who sat out the 6-4 of 68 the game, and Claxton the Jayhawks with 21 points each. Stewart added 15, including Taylor and Rose Peppes had 8 each. McCully led the Rangers with 16 points and 6 rebounds. Christie Chucken chipped in 10 points and Robin Taylor had 9. RA TRACEY THOMPSON/Kansan Staff p. n th si Angie S肋er, right, looks for an open teammate as she is closely guarded by Susan J肋er, left, and 21 points in the Jayhawks' 85-68 victory over northwestern Oklahoma State Friday. WEDNESDAY NIGHT AT SGT. PRESTON'S CALVIN COOLIDGE TWO SHOWS 9:30 and 11:30 9:30 and 11:30 Advance Tickets $2.00 At the Door $2.50 Also: All You Can Eat Ribs & Salad Bar $5.95 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT SGT. PRESTON'S 815 New Hampshire Attention NonBusiness Undergraduates - Representatives from the KU School of Business will discuss the M.B.A. and other graduate programs in business available to those who do not have undergraduate business training. - Information will be provided and questions answered about admission requirements, programs of study, and job placement at meetings being held; Monday, Feb. 15, 3:30 p.m. Southeast Conference Room Satellite Union Tuesday, Feb. 16, 3:30 p.m. Room 504 Summerfield Hall - information is also available at 202 Summerfield, or call 864-3795. Tie In With Us Recreation Services Racquetball Doubles Tournament - Play is available for men and women in three classes provided there are enough entrants: advanced, intermediate, and novice. - Entry fee is one can of unopened racquetballs submitted with completed entry form. - Entry deadline is Thursday, Feb. 18 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson. - Play begins Sunday, Feb. 21. Entry forms are available in 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546. 9F 6 ly built the second contend over.The Rangers improved shot 17- nint. Nor- ws cold in 8 for 33 and we season," n th si 46 of the hyawks dded 15. Peeples read the the 26th has not also hit h 10. with 16 kuckner Taylor KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, February 16, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 97 USPS 650-640 KU enrollment sets record By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter The University of Kansas had a record spring admissions and records, said yesterday. A total of 25,284 students were enrolled on the day of classes this semester, 23 more than the average class. "It was a combination of factors." Dyck said. "We had a couple of courses that drew well in Topeka, and a new computer course at the Reents Campus attracted 48 students." The 20th day of classes, Feb. 10, was the official day for final enrollment figures. The Lawrence campus enrollment decreased by 76 students this semester from spring 1981's enrollment of 21,038, for a spring 1982 enrollment of 20,962. Enrollment at the KU College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan. decreased by 14 from spring 1981's enrollment of 2,263 for a total of 2,249 students. But enrollment increases in off-campus courses at the KU Regents Center in Overland Park and the Capitol Complex in Topeka helped push the total enrollment to a record level, Dyck Off-campus enrollment rose from 1,960 in the spring of 1981 to 2,073 this year, an increase of 113 "It is especially gratifying to note that KU's spring enrollment has continued to increase steadily over the last 20 years," Chancellor Gene A. Budig said. "The excellence of KU's academic program will continue to earn it national recognition in the coming decades." Eight schools had enrollment increases and eight had enrollment decreases this spring. The School of Architecture and Urban Design had an enrollment of 629 this semester, higher than the previous year. The School of Liberal Arts and Sciences had an increased enrollment of 9,876 this year over last year's enrollment of 9,843. The School of Engineering had an increased enrollment of 1.847 students over last year's The School of Journalism's enrollment increased from 594 to 601. Line School of Law had an increased enrollment in students over its spring 1981 enrollment of 525. The School of Social Welfare increased its spring 1981 enrollment of 429 to 432 this semester. The School of Medicine had 1,395 students enrolled this semester, higher than last year's There are 682 special students enrolled this year in the enrollment of 907 special students in the spring. The School of Business had an enrollment of 53 this semester, down from last year's Firefighters on the move to improve physical fitness See ENROLLMENT page 5 By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter A warm room, friends, the hum of a television set and a relaxed, after-dinner pace are suddenly interrupted by a loud, startling alarm. The calm atmosphere of a Lawrence fire station vanishes as seven firefighters rush to the scene. This is a common scene at the Lawrence fire station, at Eighth and Vermont streets; when an alarm sounds and the dispatcher announces a fire. When the firefighters reach the scene of a fire, they must be ready to enter a smoking, flaming building like the one at Lawrence's College in Albany, New York. The college Shop, 82 Massachusetts St., on Feb. 3. As Lawrence firefighters battled the Royal College Shop blaze for more than seven hours, they continuously changed their air packs so that they could breathe. "We would have used a lot more air packs if it weren't for the fitness program. Paul Flint told us." "It's gonna save our lives." Two years ago the Lawrence Fire Department adopted a mandatory physical fitness program for its firefighters. They now walk briskly and an hour of each day they work exercising. "Firefighters have to maintain the ability to get 10 aeroiborne points a day." Jim Wooldridge says. Firefighters are required to earn 10 aerobic points each day they work or 30 points a week. They work every other day or 15 hours a week. "There are three ways to get the aerobic exercise." Findley said. "There's two stationary cycles at each station, and there's walking and jogging." Findley that most of the firefighters prefer running to get the required aerobic to earn the aerobic paths by running, firefighters must run two miles in less than 14 "We figured out that it's eight and two-thirds laps from the front of station one, and around the sidewalk in front of the library," Findley said. Fire Chief Jim McWeain and Michael S. Bahrke, KU professor of health, physical education and recreation, developed the fitness program in an effort to increase the firefighters' cardiovascular capacity and maintain overall physical conditioning. *Forty-five to 48 percent of firefighters than in the line of duty, die heart attack*, Bailieng "They go from a completely restful situation to 100 percent capacity." The firefighters are pleased with the effects of the fitness program. Since the mandatory program began in February 1980, the fire department's cardiovascular capacity as a whole has improved 15 percent, Bairke said. "We're a better fit, better able department. We'll have more stearin." Wardhak said. "The program's gonna pay its dividends," Findley说. LFQ. LFQ. Lawrence firefighters stay in shape by running at least two miles a day. Jerry Karr, left; Tom Teague, center; and Jim Sloan, right; are all Lawrence residents. From Staff and Wire Reports Spencer's death saddens officials KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Helen Foresman Spencer, a major benefactor to the University of Kansas and other area art and education institutions, died Monday. She was in her late 70s. Funeral arrangements were pending for Spencer, the wife of Kenneth A. Spencer, the head of the Kansas City-based Spencer Chemical Co., who died in 1960. "She was a lovely lady," Todd Seymour, director of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said last night. "She has contributed a substantial amount to the University." In 1949, she and her husband founded the Kenneth M. and Helen F. Spencer Foundation and began dispersing millions of dollars to university museums and art groups throughout the world. At her death, she was still president and director of the foundation and was an avid civic leader. Spencer, who received the Distinguished Service Citation, KU's highest honor, gave money to the Spencer Research Library and the Spencer Museum of Fine Arts here, besides being a major benefactor for the Nelson Gallery Art and the University of Missouri, Kansas City. The Spencer Art Museum, completed in September 2017, cost a total of $4.6 million. The research library, named in honor of her husband, was completed in 1968. She also had a home in Mission Hills, Calif. and the University of Science in Kansas City, Kan., a memorial See SPENCER page 5 Weather A LITTLE WARMER M Today will be fair with the highs expected in the 50s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. The wind will be northwest 10 to 15 mph. Wednesday will also be fair with highs in the 50s. The lows tonight are expected to be in the low 30s. 10 Dick Brown, Johnson County graduate student, examined prints in the Kansas University at the Marion Gallery Japanese Print sale. The sale will continue through today from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the Rate increases, cold weather causes of higher utility bills Staff Reporter By JAN BOUTTE Utility bills doubled and in some cases tripped during the first of the year because of unusually cold weather and rate increases passed in December by the Lawrence gas and electric "People are being shocked by the bills," Clyde Chapman, director of the consumer affairs "Because we had a mild winter last year, we didn't really feel the pain of the increases until J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said, "We're not any worse or any better than anyone else." The residence halls run up a $8,618 bill with the gas company January. Last year's bill for billing to the residence will be $10,097. "We're not through yet. It's hard to tell what February's going to be bring." Wilson said. The utility bills will not cause any cuts in programs. Wilson said, but cash balances will For students not living in the residence halls the higher utility bills the budget a bit harder. Richard Olson, Osage City junior, said utility bills played an important role in his decision to move out of Hanover Place. Olsen said that he could no longer afford to live in the townhouses and that he now committed to renting them. Olson's electric bill jumped from $80 to $120 a month. For other students, the utility bills were startling, but because they came at the beginning of the semester, students were able to cover the cost. "We didn't know what to expect," Wendy Kendrick, Lake Forest, III., sophomore, said. "Now we're watching it a lot more, we're budgeting." Kenrick lives in a small house at 2008 Mound Mountain, where his jump started from $30 in change to $73 in income. Carla Linden, Seneca junior, said her electric bill had not gone over her budget for January, but she had shut her electric heat during the semester break in her West Hills apartment. Susan Allison, Anchorage, Alaska, junior, said that her electric bill for January was also manageable because the apartment was empty over vacation. Both Lindeen and Allison said they were taking SEE HRLS mare 5 Group attempts to end recall struggle By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter Dick Haney, former Lawrence mayor, is among several people who are attempting to reconcile the opposing factions in the city's political climate. Mr. Haney, Tom Gleason and City Manager Buford Watson. Raney, owner of Raney Enterprises, 921 Massachusetts St., said recently that the struggle in Lawrence could make it difficult to find a developer for the downtown project or to unite citizens in financing utilities for a new industrial park. The controversy began when it was revealed two weekends ago that Gleason had written a letter to the governor asking him not to vote. In response to Gleason's action, a group that includes former Mayor Ed Carter began a petition drive to force an election to recall Gleason. Gleason had said he would move to fire Watson at a closed session of the commission Thursday. Raney emphasized that there was no formal organization behind his efforts to reconcile the differences. "I am not part of a movement," he said. "I just need a need to move myself. If people want to leisure, I don't." "I have attempted to discourage this large effort to recall Gleason or to fire a city man," he said. The disputes could make large projects such as the downtown development plan more expensive. Jack Arensberg, owner of Arensburg Shoes, 519 Massachusetts, said the recall issue itself was a mistake. Watson did not want to discuss the effects of the dispute on development. "A developer could come in and say, 'You must you re-invite me.' Whew. Wha? I just went into a civil war," he said. "IIf I were a developer I be tempted to build in a terrible cost factor," he said. "I might even want to go to another city where you wouldn't have to look around every corner and see "I don't want to speculate on that," he said. "Whatever anybody else does, I'll have to live with whatever a majority of the commissioners decide." Gleason was unavailable for comment. Arensberg said that, like Raney, he was trying to bring together people on both sides, but that it was difficult to discuss it without affecting what he was trying to do. He said he had come to know some of the noelle in city government. "I've got acquainted with Mayor Marci Francisca for the first time and developed an relationship." Both Arensberg and Raney said that there were times when commissioners might have to be recalled and managers fired, but that there had to be good reasons for it. "If the commissioner could state a case for incompetence, that would be due cause," Kaney said. "Some people would say, 'Anyone in public does something dumb should be recalled.'" "In that case I doubt that anybody in public life would remain." Latter, a spokesman for the group that is sponsoring the recall drive, said the voters should not have to make up their minds. "I've had conversations with a number of people, including Mr. Arensberg," he said. "We'll just have to wait and see what the voters want." It would be important to explain what they think, nor do they have the right to." Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 16; 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Oil rig capsizes in storm; all 84 aboard feared dead ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland-Battered by 56-foot waves, the world's largest oil rig capsized in the storm-tossed North Atlantic yesterday. Rescuers feared that all 84 American and Canadian crew members were killed. Seven hours after the rig cap sized, Coast Guard vessels raided that they had found two fiberglass lifeboats bobbing in the seas, but that the winds and waves kept them from reaching the boats. Bodies also were seen in the water. Rescuers in search planes, battling a dense Atlantic snow storm that reduced visibility to 300 feet, said that only the giant rig's anchor and ropes were deployed. The crew abandoned the 10-story high Mobile Oil Co. rig, the Ocean Ranger, 120 miles east of SL. John's early yesterday after it began lingered in dangerously hot conditions. A third lifeboat was still missing. Rescuers said it would be a miracle if there were any survivors. The $50 million rig, measuring 398 feet long, 292 feet wide and 357 feet high, was built in 1767 and was the largest in the world. A spokesman for the Ocean Drilling and Exploration Co. said that 46 of the men on the rig were ODECEO employees, most of them from Louisiana and Mississippi. Begin asks Reagan to veto jet sale JERUSALEM-Prime Minister Menachem Begin appealed directly to President Reagan yesterday not to break his personal pledge to ensure Israel's "qualitative edge" over its Arab foes by selling advanced weapons to Jordan. Began win overwhelming government support for a resolution urging the United States not to sell 16-jet and advanced mobile Hawk anti-aircraft missiles. The resolution, approved in the Parliament by an 88-3 vote with six abstentions, won the support of Shimon Peres, opposition Labor party leader, who said the thought of such sophisticated weapons in Jordan was "horrifying." Begin's speech and the Parliament vote capped a weekend of mounting concern in Israel over reports about the sale attributed to a high U.S. official traveling with Defense Secretary Casper Weinberger. Begin said it was not related to a spokesman spoke in his own name or issued statements from the government. AFL-CIO leaders propose budget BAL HARBOUR, Fln...AFL-CIO leaders, saying military spending should alter course, closed a social program for possible cuts, proposed an extension of the military. Opening its annual mid-winter meeting, the AFL-CIO executive council blamed Reagan for the continuance recession and the 8.5 percent uptick. Its alternative budget would restore $41 billion in programs cut by Reagan and would add $23 billion for new job-create programs. These costs would be partially financed by a revised tax structure and a progressive surtax on individual and corporate incomes. AFL-CIO President Wang Kirkland said the administration had proposed an "imaginable trade-off" in its budget calling for higher defense spending. Auto industry says rebates a flop DETROIT—U.S. auto companies said yesterday that the industry-wide rebates now in effect have been a lapse so far, and General Motors announced INVESTMENTS in MOTOR BASED AUTOMOBILES. The five domestic car producers reported that daily sales for the first 10 days of February were at their lowest level in 21 years. GM said we was shutting down two plants in California and eliminating a shift in Pontiac, Mich. The closures begin next month. GM also said it was recalling another 7,300 laid-off workers by adding shifts at three plants to build sportscars and trucks. Currently, more than 240,000 auto workers, about 140,000 at GM alone, and industry-wide—just 2,000 short—the record number laid off last summer. Pope continues tour amid threats LAGOS, NIGERIA - Pope John Paul II celebrated mass for 10,000 people yesterday despite reports of security scares by gunmen and the quibbling by police officers. The pope, who nine months ago was wounded in an assassination attempt, looked drawn and tired hallway through his four-nation tour of West Africa. However, Vatican aides said the pontiff was well and would continue as planned. Police arrested two men and a woman Sunday at the airport in Kaduna, 400 miles north of Lagos, where the police spoke. One of those arrested was carjacker Nathaniel Adebola. Another gunman was arrested Friday in Lagos at the scene of the pope's first open air mission on his eight-day West African tour. Actors donate funds for guerrillas WASHINGTON - Led by Edward Asner, television's 'Lou Grant,' a group of actors announced yesterday a $1 million fund-raising campaign to provide health care for guerrilla forces in El Salvador—in direct opposition to U.S. policy. The actors and filmmakers presented a check for $2,500 to Medical Aid in the form of a group providing medical relief to the Democratic Revolutionary Front. developmental, Sen. Claudine Dell, F.R.T., said recently that after a whirlwind in the election, a Salvadoran government was responsible for 70 percent of the country's killings. In El Salvador yesterday, leftist guerrillas attacked five military posts in country in response to Army claims of success against insurgents. FFI reports. KALAAM, Wash.—A West German grain ship, which was burning in the Columbia River, exploded yesterday, shooting flames 40 feet into the sky. Six people were injured fighting the blaze, three seriously, the Coast Guard said. 6 injured while fighting ship blaze The morning blast buckled a bulkhead aboard the 600-foot freighter Protector Alpha. Two Coast Guard firefighters, the ship's first mate, two crew members and a Seattle fire captain have been injured since fire broke out aboard the ship. The Coast Guard and others spent several hours nudging the smoldering ship, which was anchored on the Oregon side of the river, which forms the state's border with Washington. First lady looks at drug programs ST. PETERSBURG, Fin — Nancy Reagan hagged and kissed children in an elementary school drug program yesterday, and told them to “do what you can.” The first lady, on her second big excursion since her husband became president, opened a two-day tour of drug abuse programs in Florida and Texas with a visit to the Alpha Effort, which educates third to fifth-graders about the dangers of drugs. She was scheduled later to visit Straight Inc., a controversial behavior modification drug program for teenagers, which is patterned after Alcoholics Anonymous. Scottish educator's aim: new exchange program In 1958, a young Scottish graduate student turned down a Direct Exchange Scholarship to the University of Kansas. He accepted a doctoral fellowship from Cambridge University in England instead. By DON KNOX Staff Reporter But the same student, now head of the English department at a Glasgow, Scotland university, has come to KU to establish an exchange program between students at his university and KU students. Alan Sandison, chairman of the English department at the University of Strathelyde, arrived in Lawrence yesterday to begin work with University officials on the proposed exchange program. Sandison also is the author of several books, including "The Last Man in Europe." He will present his views on George Orwell, the celebrated British writer, at an English department colloquium on 4 p.m. today in 4019 Wescoe Hall. "I think we all believe very much in the exchange of students," Sandison said. "The advantage is primarily an academic advantage." But Sandison said recently that his primary reason for visiting KU was to establish the student exchange. Sandison said that Strathclyde, a university of more than 6,000 full-time students, offered American students a wide selection of academic programs. "Strathclyde is very distinguished in the science," engineering and technology science," he said. "The department is one of the best in Purnea." Sandison said that the KU administrators were enthusiastic about the idea of an exchange program. "A lot of them are interested already," he said. Anta Herzfeld, director of KU's Study Abroad program, highly recommended the proposed exchange. "You just grow tremendously," she said. George Woodyard, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that although he had not met Sandison yet, KU was "very open-minded" and looked for potential programs that could be of value. "Usually, European universities are unwilling to have students gain credits overseas," he said. "Our own governing body, the University Senate, has to approve the credits that Scottish ex-college students earn here in America." However, Sandison conceded that getting his own university to accept the program might be difficult. Sandise predicted that KU students might be attending Strakelyhe by this time. American universities were influenced by the Scots during the 18th century, Sandison said. But Sandison did not think this was too much of a problem. "I think it is possible," he said, "but it will be a very limited number." "It's not really a battle now" he said. "A year or two it might have been." "The movement of ideas centered in Scotland on an almost inexplicable degree," he said. "Adam Smith was central to that movement." Sandison said that those Scottish American academics still existed. "The dollar is very strong in Europe," Sandison said. "It helps to bring in money which isn't recycled from the government." KU maintains Study Abroad programs with the University of St. Andrews and the University of Stirling, both in Scotland. Sandison said there also was an economic advantage to having students on campus. He said that the costs of attending Strathclyde would be expensive for any visiting student. Sandison estimated that each student would pay $2,500 for tuition and $2,000 for room and board during two-seminar stay at Strathclyde. But Sandison said that the tuition was lower than it might have been. "By arranging our program as we have, we have considerably reduced fees." "Your choice is a great deal wider in Scotland than it is in England," he said. "And Glasgow, the people—they are really a part of the attraction." Sandison said that he hoped American students would use a variety of Strathclyde's many academic choices. hip and save ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841-0101 808 W 24th offers exp Feb. 19, 1988 $ 3^{1/2} \mathrm{c}$ COPIES 3 1/2¢ COPIES Service Beyond Duplication HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. - 12510 Adverse weather conditions have delayed construction of a $324,000 bridge connecting Marvin Hall and the School of Fine Arts building. "We started out two weeks ago, but got froze out," Bob Douglas, president of Douglas Construction Co., said in making the construction, said yesterday. Weather delays Marvin project By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Staff Reporter "We moved in, got set up and now we're just marking time." Bong Anguis, superintendent for the project, said workers moved into the area south of Marvin last Thursday, but he did not know why he was for the support columns of the bridge. "It was too cold and now it's too muddy," he said, referring to the soggy condition of the construction site created by melting snow. The construction delay, however, has yet caused officials to change the tactics. "We are scheduling classes for that space next fall," said W. Max Lucas, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design. Lucas said the connecting bridge would house a design studio, two faculty offices, studio support space and project research space in addition to the corridor that would connect the location of the Fine Arts building and Marvin. "When renovation was programmed five or six years ago," Lucas said, "it was recognized that a shortage of space existed in the School of Architecture. The bridge will help alleviate a need for more space in Marvin, Lucas said. "But we were working on a tight budget." Lucas said he had hoped that money Boyd's Coins-Antiques Chloe Jones Boyd Valerie Gold Coast - Coins Gold Coast - Coins 712 View Lamp Hampton Court Palace 91 842-8778 You've never met anyone quite like Joni STARRING JONI EARECKSON AS HERSELF A WORLD WIDE PICTURES RELEASE EVENINGS at 7:15 & 9:15 EVENINGS at 7:15 & 9:15 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 for additional space would be available from funds used for renovation. Alien Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said the almost $324,000 for the bridge was part of the $2.8 million used for the renovation. "Pretty close to the end of the project they found they had some left," Wiechcirt said. He said renovation on Marvin began after bids were taken in August 1980 and was completed last September. Wiechert said the connecting bridge should be ready by the fall semester. 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State Farm has one of the largest computer operations in the country so it's one of the best places to start your career in Data Processing. You don't have to be a data processing major to interview for these jobs. But, you do need a minimum of six credit hours in data processing and related courses. WE TRAIN YOU. As a new employee you'll receive 16 weeks of training (starting in June) to familiarize you with our systems operation and its related software. After completion of the training program, you'll get involved with the day-to-day work flow of the companies. State Farm offers good wages and benefits including a cost of living adjustment that automatically adjusts your salary to increases in the consumer price index. Data processing at State Farm. A good job, with good pay and good fringe benefits. Check it out. It may be the best possible place to start your career. To get details on career opportunities in data processing, write to Ron Prewitt, Assistant Director, Home Office Personnel Relations, One State Farm Plaza, Bloomington, Illinois 61701 or contact your Campus Placement Director, or visit the State Farm Recruiter on campus February 23, 1982 STATE FARM Auto Life Fire INSURANCE STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES Home Offices Bloomington, Illinois An Equal Opportunity Employer University Daily Kansan, February 16, 1982 Page 3 ect available director almost of the son. project left," b began last 1980 er. bridge ater. p n th si KU officials protest KSU energy funding Part of about $1.2 million now earmarked for Kansas State University may come to the University of Kansas instead if KU officials protest a recommendation in Gov. John Carlin's budget. The money, made available through the closing of the Kansas Energy Office, is designated in Carlin's budget to go to the Cooperative Extension Service at K-State. But at a meeting with the governor, planned for next week, KU officials might ask that part of energy research应 accordingly toward energy research at KU. we have made some people in Topeka aware of the fact that we are interested in some of that money." Thomas Patton, acting associate vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, said yesterday. "We think that some of those energy functions may more appropriately be carried out at this institution." Patton said that he, Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Bob Riordan, acting director of the KU Energy Research Center, recently received letters in which Carlin invited them to Topeka to talk about the research money. Mike Swenson, Carolin's assistant press secretary, said that the governor requested the spillover of Energy Office money into the energy service at K-State because that program often subcontracted with KU and Wichita State University. Patton said, "It was the logical thing for him to do. Subcontracting may be totally appropriate, but until I have been convinced that it say whether this is good or bad." The Cooperative Extension Service at K-State is more than a decade older than the KU Energy Research Center, now in its second year, and has received state money in the past. Richard Hayter, a director of the K-State energy program, said that only half of the recommended $1.2 million would be funneled to K-State through the closing of the state energy office. The K-State service has been receiving about $500,000 a year from the new defunct energy office. TRIPPING WITH DR. HARRY SCHWARTZ The February 8th issue of Newsweek magazine contains an essay entitled "We Need to Ration Medicine," by Dr. Harry Schwartz of Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons. Dr. Schwartz claims that the cost of "Medicaid and care mentitlements is forcing cut in士 .. education, law enforcement aid to the poor (and) scientific research." After noting that some $10% of the gross national product (GNP) goes for health care, Dr. Schwartz describes as "mimics" our having "adopted an ethics which deflates, in effect, that the medical possible must be done for every human life born in this country. To make that possibility must be done with free medical programs of free medical care, like the Medical, and others in the private sector." This lamentable state of affairs exists. Dr. Schwartz tells us, "because under the misapprehension that we had great shortages, we have created a huge surplus of physicians and have built more than enough hospitals and facilities to take care of any reasonable need." When Dr. Schwartz attributes governmental lethargy in the public sector to "Medicaid's unsuitable appetite..." and medicare entitlements," he ignores the fact that this difference was already well established at the time of Medicaid's birth in 1965. While bemoaning the percentage of the GNP which goes for health care, Dr. Schwartz overlooks the all-important part that the fees set by his peers play in this sad state of affairs. sad fact that of the democratic ethic "that everything possibly possible must be done for every human being born in this country," Dr. Schwartz proposes "formal rationing based on a consensus developed after proper debate." He then suggests several possible forms this consensus rationing might take. One form, financial rationing, would involve "banning government or private insurance systems that pay for care simple and limited illnesses, thus encouraging patient trust in rescuing or doctors "A second alternative be a decision to deny free care to individuals for whom there is no good future. Expensive and heroic medical care might also be denied to those unfortunate babies burn with Down's syndrome, or serious spina bifida or other ailments that doom a child from birth to a sadly reduced quality of life. Would the "proper debate envisioned by Dr. K. Shah" for the prospective victims of this disease? This the good doctor doesn't need to hear the heart of the issue when he concedes that 'Any effort to ration medical care is certain to affect some people adversely and to affront our humanitarian instincts.' Dr. Schwartz's underlying claim that "we have created a huge surplus of physicians, hospitals and facilities" is so much bafflerdash! Although there are always a great many well-qualified applicants to every medical school, these institutions maintain a selective mechanism which annually rejects most of this group. With such a wasteful procedure in continuous operation is it any wonder that medical costs and care are beyond the reach of millions of individuals? Several miraculous vaccines, intrauterine surgery and organ transplantation are just a few of the incredible offerings of medicine available to some segments of the population today. It is, perhaps, his willingness to take seriously all hallucinatory dreams that has left Dr. Schwartz unable to realize a trismus articulated by Hippocrates over 23 centuries ago." Healing is a matter of time, but it is sometimes also a matter of opportunity." William Dann William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terr. Bill to deprogram called unconstitutional By COLLEEN CACY A bill that would legalize deprogramming of religious cult members is probably unconstitutional, according to some local state Staff Reporter The bill, which a Kansas House committee approved last week, is scheduled for debate on the House floor tomorrow. It would allow a judge to appoint a temporary guardian shown to be under 'mind control'. "The bill puts a great deal of power in the hands of the judge," State Rep. John Solhach, D-D Lawrence, said yesterday. "It seems to be overly Members of Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church and members of Maranatha Campus Ministries, two groups who were mentioned specifically at the committee hearing on the bill, were not available for comment. He said several members of religious organizations in Lawrence were concerned that the bill would violate their right to freedom of religion Sobach, a member of the House Judiciary Committee that held hearings on the bill, said he voted against it because he was "not convinced it was ready to leave the committee." "I suppose it could be abused," he said. "It's a tool for someone to bring someone into court proceedings." The bill specifies that an organization "A Frank We Can All Afford" MILTON, MA. WC Frank 23rd & Iowa Lawrence Phone 842-9672 must cause a drastic change in a member's life, by using a system of coercive persuasion, for the person to be considered under "mind control." COCA-COLA ORANGE SPRITE ROOTBEER TAB W.C. FRANK POLISH ... FOOTLONG FIFTH.™ All Sandwiches come with Reish & Fresh Cut Onions Additional Toppings from simply changing jobs or moving," she said. Coming Soon CHEESE 146 CHILI 154 KAUU 153 CRSPD DILL SLC 126 CHIPS 242 Rootbeer or Orange SOFT SERVICE CREAM BREWED ICED TEA SODA FREEZE . . . . . . . . 65¢ Solbach said there were organizations other than religions that might cause an extreme change in a member's life. BREWED ICE TEA small 25¢ medium 35¢ large 45¢ Chocolate, Butterscotch Hot Fudge State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, agreed that the law was probably too broad. CONE...28¢ SUNDAE...59¢ 1 can see why some people want it, but it's probably unconstitutional. You're talking about protecting adults from religion." "When I was a teenager, I joined the Marine Corps," he said. "Maybe if there was a law then, they would have gotten out of war, a military Jordan and I would have gotten out of it." THE ARTS FESTIVAL THE GARDEN OF LONDON The Kansas City Ballet will make its Lawrence debut,as part of the 1982 University Arts Festival, at 8:00 pm Wednesday, March 10, in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. She said that even if the Kansas Legislature passed the bill, it might be challenged in court and ruled unconstitutional. If you have purchased SEASON TICKETS to the KU Concert, Chamber Music or University Theatre series, or are a member of First Nighters or the Swarthout Society, you may purchase tickets to the performance February 10-17 at the Murphy Hall Box Office. While we cannot assure you the same seat you hold for the other series, we will do our best to accommodate your ticket preferences. TICKETS GO ON SALE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC FEBRUARY 18. All seats are reserved for this special evening of dance. Reservations may be made by calling 913/864-3982. Unpaid reservations MUST be picked up 24 hours prior to the performance. The Arts "There can be a change in behavior Patrons of the KU Performing Arts "It has to do with freedom of religion," she said. "This is government interference with religion. Solbach said it was difficult to distinguish between a cult and an established religion. SPECIAL NOTICE "Most religions today were considered cults at one time," he said. SCHOOL OF MEDICINE CIFAS UNIVERSITY OPENINGS AVAILABLE "CLASSES TAUGHT IN ENGLISH" CLASSES FACED IN SANTO DOMINGo, Dominican Republic. Our Medical Program is tailored after the traditional U.S. Model of Medical Education and is fully accredited. Many happy Returns UPENews Our school is published in Vol 35, No. 4 of the WHO "business outpushed by the World Health Organization." For More Information and Application Form please write to CIFAS AUGUSTA MEDICINE DEAM OF ADMISSIONS 1220 WRITER BOOK SOME 10 WRITER BOOK SOME The Kansas Union Bookstores are currently paying 6% of total purchases from the fall of '81 (July 1, 1981 to Dec. 31, 1981). These are period 70 receipts. They may be redeemed at the Customer Service Desk at the Main Bookstore or at the Satellite Shop, with your student ID. Period 70 receipts will be redeemed until June 30, 1982 EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Feb.18,1982 PUGET SOUND NAVAL SHIPYARD (ATTN: 170.2CP) BREMERT, WASH. 98314 K.U. BOOKSTORE Period No. 70 10:30 2:45 (12/16/81) 2242.10 2:55 NDS 18 MIDS 18 MIDS 9 K 19 K 2.10 M 7.65 30 - Contact your Placement Office for an interview immediately. If this date is inconvenient, you may call toll free by dialing 1-800-265-9966, or if you wish, you may mail a resume to: kansas - Starting Salaries to $25,138 depending on qualifications. Mechanical Engineers Electrical Engineers Industrial Engineers Civil (Structural) Engineers Nuclear Engineers Chemical Engineers CHALLENGING ENGINEERING POSITIONS WITH PROFESSIONAL GROWTH - Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, with over 11,000 employees, has been established for over 85 years. Located in scenic Bremerton on a deep water arm of Puget Sound. With a mild climate, only one hour from Seattle, recently recognized by several publications as the city with the best "quality of life" in the country. KU - Excellent opportunities for advancement under the Merit System to Senior Engineer levels with pay levels in $25,138 to $32,212 range. All Federal Civil Services Benefits—liberal vacations allowed, paid sick leave, partially employer-funded life and health insurance programs, excellent retirement plan. Relocation allowance for self and dependents. U.S. Citizenship required. union bookstores Proudly Presents 2 for 1's & Free hot Hors de oeuvres from 5-7 pm every Friday. GAMWONS SNOWWONS main union level 2, satellite shop Thursdav $1.25 Bar drinks all night long. 25¢ Draws 10-11 p.m. Friday and Saturday come alive at eleventh $1.25 drinks. 75e draws 11 p.m.-12 a.m. Wednesday Ladies Night - the ladies get two free drinks after 9:00 pm, 25€ draws 10-11 pm. LUPE LURE Tonight thru Saturday, 1st Set Starts at 9:30 Tuesday is Preview Night at Gammons—no cover charge for the band. NYC Jumping Contest --- Tribal Mask THE THIRD ANNUAL SUA THEATRE SERIES SIDE by SIDE by SONDH a musical celebration feb 18-20 feb 21 matinee forum kansas union room SIDE by SIDE by SONDHEIM TAKEN IN MARRIAGE by thomas babe feb 24, 26 SCENES from SOWETO mar 4.6 big eight kansas union room & feb 25 27 smith hall DATS mar 3.5 an evening of one-acts by israel horovitz ALL EVENING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00p.m. ALL MASTER PERFORMANCES ARE AT 2:00 p.m. tickets: REPRESENTATIVE AT THE 8TH BOX OFFICE IN THE KANSAS UNION, LAWRENCE $13,900 WINTO RAND BEACH SHOW 52.10 BEACH NIGHT 56.00 POB TICKET INFORMATION CALL (913) 864-3477 GENERAL PUBLIC SMALL SHOW 5.30 MIDDLE TICKET 9.00 Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 16. 1982 Fatal blow to equality "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex." This idea, the first clause of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment, was born in the 1920s and may have died last week in a stuffy office in the Missouri Statehouse. Last Wednesday the Constitutional Amendments Committee of the Missouri general Assembly blocked the proposed amendment from going to the Missouri Senate floor. ERA supporters have been concentrating their efforts on six states, including Missouri, trying to convince those state legislatures to ratify the amendment before the June 30 deadline. Missouri was the fourth of the six target states to reject or block ratification. Three more states are needed to ratify the ERA. So, barring some political miracle working, the amendment appears to have died, a victim of bad public relations generated by emotional arguments. In addition to the first clause prohibiting gender discrimination, the ERA contains a clause empowering Congress to pass legislation enforcing the amendment and a clause stating that the amendment would go into effect two years after the ratification date. The ERA makes no mention of unisex bathrooms, military service for women, abortion, homosexuality or the destruction of the American family—red-flag issues frequently linked to the amendment by its opponents. It would allow the United States Supreme Court to view gender classifications as a suspect category. Federal and state governments would have to prove a compelling state interest in order to adopt and enforce laws that discriminate on the basis of gender. This could have a sweeping effect on laws governing areas including social security benefits, child support and custody, control over community property and protective labor laws. If, in fact, the ERA is dead, feminist groups may be the only vocal mourners. The issues that could be affected by the passage of the ERA are not women's issues. They are people's issues. But ratification of the amendment could have provided constitutional protection for anyone, male or female, suffering from the effects of gender discrimination. Letters to the Editor 'Know nukes', not 'no nukes' To the Editor: Once again, one of the columnists has successfully written a column based on doubt rather than on fact. This letter is in response to Teresa Riordan's column on nuclear power plants. Just as those cute no-nuke flower children do, Teresa has jumped to the conclusion that Jane Fonda and the movie "The China Syndrome" know all about the safety of nuclear power plants. Instead of fantasy, let's go into the real world. You also claim that people were numbed by the Three Mile Island accident and that public opinion toward nuclear power is down. I would like to know where you got that false idea. According to a study conducted by the Rasmussen Commission, the chance of a nuclear power plant fatally injuring you is one in one billion, while the chance of a car killing you is one in one hundred thousand, amounting to fifty thousand deaths per year because of automobiles. I ask Riordan, how many people have died as a result of an accident at a nuclear power plant? Less than those that have died in Ted Kennedy's car. According to Current Magazine, June 1980, a poll was conducted after the Three Mile Island accident. Of those polled, 21 percent said nuclear power was "very safe," 46 percent it was "safe," and 29 percent it was "safe." Of the reasons for this approval was that the accident caused optimism because no one was hurt. Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters. The University Daily KANSAN (US$50,650) Published at the University of Kansas in January and June 2014. Visit University of Kansas on June 1 and exept Saturday, Sunday and holiday. Second-class postage paid at Lawnerville, Kansas. Mail to Lawnerville, KS and $$ for each month as a year in Douglas County and $$ for each month as a $3 semester. mail through the student activity fee. Send a semester, pass through the university activity fee. Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Davan Kansai, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas. Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Natalie Jaline Manager Editor Tracey Hamilton Manage Campus Editor Tracy Hamilton Campus Editor Gene George Associate Campus Editor Joe Beben, Reem Burgham Assignment Editor Steve Robrahn Sports Editor Hengag Tuner Entertainment Editor Coral Beach Makeup Editors Lia Masseira, Marylin Wise Wire Editors Sharon Appelbain Wire Editors Edile Marner, Teresa Tieran, Randy Photo Editor Ben Bagler Staff Photographers Jon Hardesty, John Makkaman, Jones Bob Greiman Tracy Thompson, Mark McDonald Head Catch Chef Jane Bryant Copy Chief Cassy Cindy Campbell, George Pollock Retail Sales Manager Amir Hornberger National Sales Manager Howard Shanklin Sales Manager Juan Estes, Bob Greiman Classified Manager Saradin Bedin Production Manager Larry Lebengbad Retail Sales Representatives Barbaum, Larry Hurmster Snoege Colby, Meg Diagenau, David Phillip Marchbanka Lil McMahon, Moody Moore, Kidryn Nyers Robo O'Blany, Mike Pearl Sales and Marketing Advisor JoJo Obernan The next question I would like to ask is "What other sources do we have? Of course we have solar, but that still is very expensive and only satisfy one percent of our total energy needs by the year 2000. Maybe coal, but its effects are more disastrous than those of nuclear. Where are the columns about the dangers from coal use? Why are you busy worrying about something that could happen, while something is happening right now? In the future I hope Riordan will do a little research on the scientific side instead of the fantasy side. In the future we should read "know knuts" instead of "no knuts." Marc Kean, Lenexa freshman Sales and Marketing Advisor John O'Connor General Manager and News Advisor Rick Musken To the Editor: Poor word choice I understand that space is at a premium when writing headlines. However, substituting "hopefully" for "hopefully" in the F1. column headline would have only cost one additional letter space. "Hopefully" has the additional advantage of being an English word. Michael Allen. This Thursday, after an afternoon executive session of the Lawrence City Commission, City Manager Buford Watson Jr. will still have his job. Letter bad move for Gleason, city And the political career of City Commissioner Tom Gleason, which is not yet even a millionth of it. Gleason, for reasons that only he really knows, recently saw fit to seek the resignation of Watson, who has served as Lawrence's city manager since 1970. In itself, Gleason's quest is morally insignificant. City managers everywhere serve at the pleasure of their respective city governments, and there is little rancor involved. But Gleason's unsavvy method of simply sending a letter to Watson requesting his resignation, without prior warning to or consultation with his fellow city officials, is ammistakable flavor of pure and cynical politicalness. I find it hard to believe that Gleason was motivated solely by the good and the noble qualities of his character. I will follow the instructions to generate a text-based image. However, as I don't have the capability to create visual content in plain text, I'll just provide a description of what is shown. The image depicts a caricature of a man with a thick haircut and glasses. He has a large nose and is holding his chin with one hand while pointing with the other. The character appears thoughtful and knowledgeable. represent," as stated in his letter to Watson and in subsequent public pronouncements. For a lawyer possessing Gleason's reasoning skills and educational background, he can use these skills in P. If the interests of Gleason's constituents are best served by giving Watson the sack, there are certainly more and better ways to do it than blatantly attempting a commission end run. Both of Gleason's past allies on the commission, Mayor Marci Francisco and Commissioner Nancy Shontz, have declined to openly join Gleason's rush to judgment. Then, why did Gleason do it? To properly answer this question, a little background is in order; and the story begins, innocently with the 28-space parking lot at 600 Massachusetts St. In the election days of April 181, "600 Mass" was a slogan guaranteed to make some candidates win. It's now a seldom-used parking lot, but in the days before DALE WETZEL Reaganismes it was the location of a sturdy, unpleasant teque, toy factory owned by one Browne. The City Commission, using the city's long-term plan for redevelopment as an excuse, wanted that spot for a parking lot. Anderson, who worked at the building wasn't enough, refused to sell, and the commission (over the protests of then- Commissioner Francis) had the building built. It was a classic "you can't fight City Hall" case. Candidate Gleason, in his support of Anderson's quest to have the parking-lot issue studied further, brought considerable political risk upon himself. Large newspaper ads, paid for by the Lawrence Homebuilders Association and the Lawrence Central Labor Council, urged voters to turn thumbs down on Gleason and to remember the unambitement commissioner Bob Schumann and former Lawrence mayor Nancy Ham堡ton. The election results, however, appeared to portend a new era for Lawrence city government. Schumm, the incumbent, finished dead last in the five-person field; Shontz finished first with 6,044 votes. Gleason won by a narrow margin, leaping second, but settled for third place behind Shontz and Commissioner Barkley Clark, an eight-year commission veteran. The ads accused Shontz and Gleason of harboring secret prejudices against the city's growth and implied that Lawrence's ex-communist views would disqualify their policies were put into effect. It was, in the words of one exultant Gleason supporter, 'the election that couldn't be benign.' Francisco, Gleason and Shontz were often available for public visits in the mayor's city hall office on Tuesday afternoons. Study sessions were begun; "public input" became a commission catchword; and meetings lasted up to five bleary hours as Shontz, Francisco, Gleason, Clark and Binns discussed the issues. The inauguration of the two new commissioners perpetuated this newfound era of good feeling. Francisco, who until then had been the lone liberal voice crying in the wilderness, was elected mayor and quickly moved to assist the press in its coverage of commission meetings, directing that reporters be provided with the same materials that the commissioners themselves examined during meetings. Adding to this impression is the letter itself, which gives no real reason for firing Watson other than mind-numbing vagaries ("Your employment continues to be a central source of contention, both of the city commission and among the public.") It is this backdrop of relative openness and cander that lends a sadly clandestine smell to the room. A large wooden chair, one with a than discussing his concerns with the commissioners in executive session, or taking the matter up with Watson himself decided to follow a solitary path strewn with personal publicity. A city manager is a fairly big notch in any commissioner's six-gun, and Gleason gives the decided appearance of wishing to reap the benefits that he saw as Watson's impending departure. Regardless of what one thinks of Watson himself, he hasn't lasted for almost 12 years as Lawrence's chief administrator by being stupid or easily intimidated. In such a long period of time, in such a diverse community as Lawrence, Watson has undoubtedly accumulated a number of detractors. But Lawrence's treatment the personally affable Watson, has done him great favor. He made Watson into a $1,900-a-year martyr. Not that Gleason doesn't try to ease the pain he helpfully added that I "would have no problem" with it. On top of all that, Gleason has given Lawrence's more conservative elements and its business community a rallying cry with the potential potency of "Remember 600 Mask" Lawrence's Tortoise, who got bush waxed. "Lawrence's Tortoise won't get too fooled again, and 1983 isn't far away." A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. employment and would personally urge all other city commissioners to do likewise." Hhrm. Sounds like the rhetorical equivalent of a car, but you do have a great personality." And, after the heady, open days of 1881, it's a lamentable future to contemplate. We as students must begin considering a similar decision about our membership in the Associated Students of Kansas. ASK is a program that says it represents your views with your money. As with the sick pet, we would do ourselves a favor by dropping our financial support of ASK Ailing student lobbying group should be put to sleep The old family pet is breathing its last, facing you with a painful dilemma. You should spend still more money to keep him alive for a few more weeks or should he be put out of his misery once and for all! Usually, after a family trip, you leave Fido or Spot at the vet's for the final time. ASK was formed as a lobbying organization for the Regent schools and Washburn University. STUDENT BODY A.S.K. ZILL WYLIE DAVID HENRY statehouse in Topeka with a full-time lobbyist and several part-time assistants, while also maintaining salaried campus directors at each university. These seven local directors osten- organize members on each campus, drumming up support for student needs and concerns. However, if you've read this far, it's a safe bet that you've learned more about ASK in the preceding paragraph than from any information ASK gave you. To say that ASK keeps a low profile at KU is an understatement; subterranean would be more appropriate. When the Student Senate decided KU should join ASK four years ago, many people had strong reservations about the move. KU already had its own lobbying organization (the now defunct Concerned Students for Higher Education), they argued. Why do we need to join ASK? The answer was a resounding chorus: KU needs to become a part of a unified voice of music. At that time, this writer was one of ASK's strongest supporters. The following two years he supported the group. Four years have gone like a clock in the night and ASK's current leaders are, say to say, still saying the same things. "Students don't know what they are going to do," the organization can do for them." John Keightley, KU's ASK campus director, said recently. Keighley, as were his predecessors, is faced with an ironic situation: representing the needs and concerns of KU students who don't realize they're being represented. What's more, his "constituents" pay almost $17,000 a year in student activity fees for the privilege. ASK at KU has clearly never earned its keep. At whom then do we point the accursory friend? Haplas campus directors? The main AK on KU's Topeka and its staff? Student apathy at KU? The answer is surprisingly simple. By attempting to be the unified voice for 80,000 Kansas students, ASK bites off far more than it can chew. Furthermore, ASK's lobbying efforts are greatly overextended. This year, for example, the organization takes a stand on 18 different issues, including the treatment of King's birthday a state holiday to support a 13 percent increase in faculty salaries. From these issues, five are considered "priority issues." While other more heavily financed organizations lobby for one or two issues in Topeka, ASK takes on five. In so doing, ASK buys a new car but loses the war-year after year after year. There is, however, an alternative that could provide a stronger voice for KU students at the statehouse. As soon as possible, the Senate should vote to remove KU from ASK and in its place form a new KU lobbying organization. The $17,000 currently going to ASK would now go to the new group, which I'll call KU Students' Lobby. Instead of representing the varied opinions of every Kansas university, KUSL would reflect the The possibilities for KUSL's success would be far greater than ASK's. The money would allow KU to hire a full-time lobbyist to work for us in Lawrence, maintaining an office in Lawrence, not Toeka. viewpoints of KU itself. Critics might call such a plan isolationist; Kansas' schools find their strength only in their unity, they would say. Yet ASK's lack of real strength as the student voice speaks for itself. Anderson's teachers speak for itself. Unity at the expense of effectiveness or direction is weak unity indeed. Conversely, Kansas' universities would gain rather than lose by adopting this decentralized pricing model. In our own needs and concerns neutered by those of other universities, each school could lobby more confidently. Such a plan cannot, of course, be completed in the space. Much of the planning responsible web site is not yet complete. But first the Senate must act with the student body in mind when ASK's funding is reconsidered at next month's budget hearings. They will need to provide as much ASK once and for all. The opportunity for a fee, more effective student lobby should be reason enough for Senate to stop letting sleeping dogs lie. University Daily Kansan, February 16, 1982 Page 5 p nth si h a i r e t e t o r f e t i n e d u s, h i n n t i n t y and h BUA will select 1982-83 officers Officers and board members for the Student Union Activities will be selected during the week beginning on Wednesday. The committee will select the officers, including a new STA president, vice president, treasurer, and chief executive. Janie Biehler, SUA president, said yesterday that applicants would be interviewed during that week by a committee composed of Kansas Union Memorial Corporation delegates. She said that each applicant would be notified of his interview time. On Feb. 27 in the Curry Room of the Kansas Union, an interviewing committee composed of retiring members of the present SUA Board, the new (1883-88) officers, and delegates from the old SUA Board will receive the Memorial Corporation Board will interview people interested in board positions in the SUA. The eight board members serve on the departments of films, fine arts, forums, indoor recreation, outdoor recreation, public relations, special events and travel. Biehler said that although the new officers would not assume their positions until the 1982-83 school year, they would work with current board members during a transition period. She said that applications for the positions were coming in at a steady rate and that anyone interested in applying should pick up an application form at the SUA office. Enrollment From page one The School of Education's enrollment decreased from 1,065 last year to 1,033 this year. The enrollment in the School of Fine Arts decreased from 1.119 to 1.016. The Graduate School had a decrease in enrollment from 5,890 to 5,896. The Pharmacy school's enrollment decreased from 228 to 223. The Applied English Center had a lower enrollment this semester, decreasing from 160 The School of Nursing's enrollment decreased from 316 students last year to 297 this year. The School of Allied Health decreased in enrollment from 202 last year to 159 this year. The department of occupational therapy's enrollment remained at 355 students, the same number as last year. There are 331 students enrolled in more than one school. Committee disagrees with education report By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter The Student Senate Academic Affairs Committee yesterday reviewed an undergraduate education report that the Commission on the Improvement of Undergraduate Education issued recently, and found many parts unclear. The report, compiled by seven faculty members, contained letters from faculty and alumni concerning the improvement of undergraduate education. The University of Kansas and Chancellor Gene A. Budig already had adopted the policies in the report and submitted them to the Senate for the students' views. "The biggest problem is the reception of the student body." Bill McLeeman, assistant chancellor “There are some parts of it that are extra vague,” Sarah Duckers, chairman of the caucus. He said students would not understand some parts of the report. The committee plans to discuss the report with Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, at its meeting March 9. The committee hopes she would clarify certain points. Members of the committee said the report contained restrictions that might belong at a higher level than those listed. "This is the students' first chance to say,Hey, what are you talking about?" "Duckers are talking about." "If somebody wants to go to Harvard, Berkeley or Yale, they're not going to go to KU," Terri Reicher, Shawnee Mission junior, said. One of the proposed restrictions the committee objected to was a University class attendance policy that would determine how many absences students would be allowed. "We're supposed to be big people now. I think it's up to us." Duckers said. "It's my impression it would be better left to the in-depth professors, rather than a University policy." The committee members also objected to a policy that would limit the maximum number of course hours students could take, because they were less likely to reason for the limitations were not clear. Speaking of students who take more than 21 hours, Duckers asked, "How large a problem is it?" The Senate committee had its own recommendations about graduate teaching assistants and their effects on undergraduate education. "If there is no strict supervision they can teach whatever they want, and I think that bad," Brad Gaubatz, Creve Coeur, Mo., junior, said. "It's helping teaching assistants learn and it's also good financially, because you couldn't afford to have full professors for everything." Duckers said. Duckers said having teaching assistants each undergraduate courses did have some evidence. The committee members planned to talk to tallow students to come up with questions for them. After discussing the policies with her, the committee will then make a report or students' views to the Senate before spring break. SOA gives program on organization A program designed to help students discover and understand the diverse student organizations at the University of Kansas is a well-known office of student organizations and activities. Art Farmer, assistant director of SOA, said recently that the "Discovery" program began this semester after a survey of students last year indicated it was needed. them if they thought more information was needed about the campus organizations," partner said. He said that SOA had conducted two meetings so far this month, covering an introduction to some of the 160 student organizations and membership roles and rules in them. The third session, which will be Feb. 24, will revolve around decision making and goal setting. Bills measures to cut down on their energy use for February. From page one Bob Allison, plant superintendent for the Kansas Public Service Co., said that the increase in the cost of gas plus the onset of cold weather produced unpredictably high gas bills. Electric bliis reflected a 10 percent increase that went into effect Dec. 16 by Kansas Power & Bob Allison said the cost of gas had increased by approximately 75 percent in the last two years. He said the December increase should cover the gas rates for most of 1982. "A questionnaire was sent to students asking For students who are having trouble, both the KRLL and the Kansas Public Service Co. are involved in the project. "We will be willing to work with anyone who is having problems paying the entire bill." Joe Fickler said. "It it looks like there's a simple reason, that it's a necessity—then we'll work out a program for it." Oursils from the KU office of financial aid said they considered utility bills to be a school-related expense that would be an acceptable reason for taking out a short-term loan. Both the gas and electric companies have sent out all their January bills, and have started with the latest offering. Fife said that KP&P allowed its customers 28 payments on a weekly basis, the set off disconnect police and afterhours services. The gas company bills have a due date two weeks after the bills are sent, with a 2-percent penalty if paid after the two weeks passed. Bob Allison said that customers were given until the next billing date before notice of termination would be sent. Chapman said that he had had few problems in his experiences with the Lawrence utility companies, and that they normally were hesitant to cut off service to students who went in to talk over the billing problems with the credit department. 'W' drop policy starts tomorrow Tomorrow is the last day students can drop a class and not have it appear on their transcripts, or they must return to class. If a course is dropped after tomorrow, either a or an "F" will be recorded, according to each course. Law students may drop a class up until the last day of classes without it appearing on their transcript. Students wishing to drop a class with no record of it should go before 5 p.m. to the department offering the course and fill out a drop slip. The course will then be canceled. The schools of Business and Journalism require dean's approval, but not an advisor's Both an adviser's and dean's approval are required before a course can be dropped in the following schools: Allied Health, Architecture, Education, Pharmacy, Social Welfare, Fine Arts, Nursing, Occupational Therapy and Engineering. From page one For most students, the last day to add a course will be Feb. 22. Spencer In the 1970s, she gave about $2 million for the Helen F. Spencer Theatre in the Center for Performing Arts at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. She also funded the Kenneth A. Spencer Chemistry Building and the rare book Museum built at the Linda Hall Library at that university. chapel on the Kansas City campus, and sponsored a lecture series and a distinguished professorship in Lawrence. "What a loss to the city, what a loss to the whole region. She was a giant, one of the great benefactors of all the area," said Patricia McIrath, founder and producer director of the Missouri Repertory Theatre and chairman of the Department of Theater at UMKC. of Frank Wade Foresman and his wife, Frances. After graduating from high school in Pittsburg, Kan., she attended KU and graduated in 1926. She married in Neosho, Mo., Jan. 6, 1927. The couple lived in Pittsburgh until 1940, when they moved to the Kansas City area to open the Spencer Chemical Plant. They built a home in Mission Hills, but recently Spencer had lived in Kansas City, Mo. Spencer had been on the board of directors of the Friends of Art, the board of trustees of the Kansas Philharmonic Association, the board of artists of the Performing Arts Foundation of Kansas City. Balloon-a-Gram PROMOTER TO THE OCCUPIERS SEND A BALLOON-A-GRAM! Ft. Bo. 3127 Lancaster KX 50044 Mamaroneck, NY VALID ID CARDS Instantly - Laminated - Color available at - DENT SYSTEMS Room 114A4 Room 841-5905 LOW COST RENTER S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley 467-297 855-301 Prudential 843 8717 | National Advisory Board DIET CENTER it's A Natural! BARISTA IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 4-40 Hwy 843-9803 Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 841 DIET THE BEST PRICE • 76 Lines of Quality Audio • Complete Service • Discount Prices • Mail Order Selection, Price, Quality, Service . Three "State of the Art" showrooms; two large mass manufacturers showrooms; one budget manufacturers area, as well as, our mail order facility and wholesale warehouse. Shop every major dealer of audio components in the midwest or compare more lines of quality audio at the Gramophone Shop! KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE shop Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, Ks. 842-1811 --- --- The University of Kansas Rock Chalk Revue 1982 presents .. InThe Spotlight Thursday, Feb. 25 7 p.m. $2.50 Friday, Feb. 26 8 p.m. $3.75 Saturday, Feb. 27 8 p.m. $5.00 Tickets available at: SUA Box office, Kiefs, Saffees, Hillcrest. Raney Drug, KU Information Booth. Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 16, 1982 Spare time Open mike offers a chance to perform ROBERT WISEMAN Staff Writer Liz Anderson, Rich Frydman and Melvin Litton. Not your everyday household-word music personalities. But then Bob Dylan was just a "cross between a chairboy and a beatnik," a writer Robert Shelton beset him at a club called Greenwich Village—niven his dues, as they saw. It's Open Mike Night, every Tuesday at Off-The-Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St. Anyone with any form of entertainment is encouraged to take their act out of the closet and sign-up for one of the seven or eight 20-minute time slots. Admission is free. And that's what these three Lawrence song/singer们 are doing—trying to be heard. Now, thanks to Billy and Terry Ebeling, they have the last one opportunity to play in public every week. "This is artistic expression," said Terry, Lawrence senior. "We don't kick anybody off the bus." The idea for an open mike show came while the bottom — and I find a gag for their act, the Rudolph Regal of Redhats. "Donnie (an Off-The-Wall Hall manager) told us there weren't any openings in the schedule." we used us we could do an open make, and they would provide a job. Frydman has played guitar since he was nine-years-old and got his first chance to play in public four years ago at the Pentimento, a downtown Lawrence coffee house, which has since closed. Frydman said the Open Mike Show and the void created by the Pentimento closing. Litton, who recently returned from a trip to New York where he played at some folk clubs, said he used the Open Mike Show to try out new songs. "It beats playing on the back porch," said Anderson, who has been performing for four years. "Most rigs you have to play a certain tempo, but here you can play what you want," said Jack Hammond. "I'll probably just play the bass." He also said open mike was good for practicing behind a Mike. "It's a lot different than just playing in your living room." he said. "No matter how many times you've played in tennis, you still feel unnatural practices," said Litton. Actually, the for an open mike show can be traced back to the Wednesday night jam "Back then nobody used the stage, they just played out by the street," Billy said. session, started five or six years ago when Steve Mason opened what is now Prairie Music School. But, he said, the open mike entertainers were more varied in their acts than the original jam group. Besides the many Bob Dylan-type of solo acts, a typical Open Mike Show might include magic acts or juggling, Cullen Mertes and Steve Goetz are the "Rainbow Brothers," and they juggle everything from "Max the 'Ax" to flaming tennis balls in the Open Mike Show. No matter who is included in the Tuesday night shows, the Ebeling brothers usually close the evening's entertainment with their blues-oriented act. They are paid $15 for organizing the show, so, as Terry pointed out, this is not a big money-making venture. "This isn't a bunch of musicians out for a fast buck," he said. Agreeing with his brother on the fact that money was not the main reason for his involvement in the Open Mike Show, Billy had a slightly different opinion about his work with the musicians. He thought he could back for all of the open mike chances he had had since he started playing guitar in high school. SUMMER OF THE SUN Liz Anderson, 736 Missouri, takes the opportunity to exercise her vocal chords at the weekly Open Mike Show at the Off-the-Wall Hall. By DEBBIE DOUGLAS Staff Reporter KU students now have access to a color/light laboratory where they can study the interaction of color and light and their effects on cells. Dr. Menn, Mann, is an academic and actress. Mann said the laboratory's equipment could also be used to study how different combinations of light and color could change the dimensions of moving shapes. Jones experimented with kinetic light and color in the late 1930s and early 1940s while he was $ p $ KU faculty member in the art and design department. The equipment was donated by the widow and family of Tom Douglas Jones. Equipment for the Tom Douglas Jones Color/Light Laboratory was dedicated yesterday. The laboratory contains Jones' color and light research inventions. "Being able to use this equipment has put a whole new education in my teaching," Mann said. "And I don't have any motivation problems with my students." She said students could add music to their color, light and design creations and make a totally new environment. In one of Jones' inventions, colored lights that can be turned on or off separately are set up behind a rotating three-dimensional shape attached onto a projected glass screen, Mann said. Designs projected on the screen can be photographed creating a different style of art. Recognizable images as well as those that are abstract can be created, she said. Another of Jones' inventions is simply a rotating盘 on which cardboard disks with black-and-white designs can be spun, Mann can manipulate the disk fast enough, the viewer can see other colors. Mann said that Jones was one of the few people who had experimented with color and light in this way and that he had written a book called "The Art of Light and Color." A museum wanted to buy Jones' 12 inventions, but his wife wanted the equipment to be used so that light and color experimentation could continue. Mann said. Mann said she doubted if there were any other laboratories like this one in any other country. milestones CINDY TREASTER, Lawrence graduate student, has been awarded a travel subsidy by the Council on International Educational Exchange. Treaster will use the award to carry out a study program in Haiti. She is one of eight students nationwide to receive this grant. DAVID DARWIN, associate professor of civil engineering, was elected as a fellow to the American Concrete Institute at the Institute's convention last fall. CARLYLE H. SMITH, professor emeritus of has been invited to participate in a conference at the Smithsonian Institution. The conference, the first of its kind, is being called BARBARA ETZEL, professor of human development and family life has received the 1981 Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Award for her work in developing methods to teach children with learning problems. In conjunction with the award, Etzel was the guest of the Japanese government from mid-November to mid-December. for the purpose of recording and preserving the important history of metallismmating and jewelry from pre-World War II to the present. Smith was the founder of the KU jewelry and metallismmating program. The new jewelry and metallismmating programs and Design Building will be named in his honor. By MICHAEL GEBERT Contributing Reviewer Historical 'Ragtime' recollects the past RAGTIME Starrying Brad Dourif, Mary Steinburen, Howard Rollins, James Cagney, Elizabeth McGovern, James Olson, Kenneth McMillan, Normale M师, Pat O'Brien, Robert Joy, Donald O'Connor, Matinick Written by Michael Weller, Directed by Milos Forman. The difficulty in adapting a patchwork novel like E.L. Doctoor's "Ragtime" is in knowing which parts of the patchwork to use, which to choose, and how to render them beforemost of which is the original plan to have Robert ("Nashville") Altman direct—never the less, we do have Milos Forman's new film "Ragtime" before us, and it is a very fine film indeed. Review Not having been much of a fan of the book in the first place, I sympathize with Forman's choices. Doctorow's book seemed to me to be a catch-all historical pastiche—the highbrow equivalent of one of those Sherlock Holmes things where Karl Marx and Teddy Roosevelt help HolmesMcKinley's assassination. In the movies, however, taking a bit of this, a touch of that, two jewish immigrants here, a black piano player there. Three strata of society are mixed with famous people to create Doctorow's stew. There's Father (Olson), Mother (Steenburgen) and Younger Brother (Dourif), a tight-laced family of Protestant-work ethnic types choking on their high-collars; there's Coalhouse Walker (Rolls), a black piano player who entires their lives when Mother takes in the illigible son Cole (Nicholas), a queen is a possessor in the bushes; there's a Jewish peddler (Pattinik), who eventually becomes an early motion picture producer—and in the book, invents the Little Rascals. The film delineates the disintegration of the ultra-sterile household as they come in contact with the world. Coalhouse becomes a black terrorist after some goons destroy his brand new Model T. Younger Brother involves involved with Evelyn Nesbit, the woman over whom millionaire Harry Thaw shot archived Stanford White in one of the most famous murder cases of the century (that's true); and Mother makes a meek but firm blow for liberation by taking in Coalhouse's baby. There's a suggestion of Altman in the way the film seems made up of half-glimpsed moments—the murder of White Mailer), Nessit being paid to investigate the murders of his nakedness, police inspector Cagney, showing more contempt for the descrainer of Coalhouse's Model T than for the black man holding the J.P. Morgan library hostage. But the difference Hermann's vision of America—an imn-altman version. The same attitude was shown in Louis Malle's "Atlantic City;" for some foreign-born film-makers, America seems to be a great toy, a comic strip company, a Disneyland to live in. The Czechborn Forman can't see any real bad in the total loss of cynicism which is refreshing. That doesn't mean that Fornan (and his scenariist, Michael Weller) are naive, but that they give everyone a chance. Doctoro's Father was a repressed capitalist, bad in bed (the sin of being a capitalist) and distressed when the natural curtors turn out to be so natural. It's a more truthful stance. And by extension, Coalhouse's self-destruction is precisely that; he's not a victim of fate. Because of its setting—the early 1910s—'Ragtime' is compared by some to 'Reds'. It isn't a very appropriate comparison, 'Reds' says. So when John Lee sells itself like John Reed sold socialism; 'Ragtime' is more stately, more clinical; 'Ragtime' would never have had the 'Reds' bit with the dog scratching at the bedroom door; if it knew of 'Reds' fire and chutzpah, that's the price. Not that "Ragittum" is sterile. Many bits are endearing, particularly Cagney and Elizabeth McGovern—Tim Hutton's girlfriend from "Ordinary People"—as the casually mercenary Nesbit. McGovern will probably get an Oscar for it. The settings are excellent, especially the scenes in the Jewish immigrant areas. And Mary Steenburg's portrayal of Mother is extraordinary, quiet, reserved, yet incredibly moving at times. The film is aided enormously by its scrupulous, expensive historical setting, the excellent cast (there are simply no bad players in the film) and Randy Newman's fine score. But it does not come to light until later, built by Forman and Weller. They worked together on "Hair," and it is hard to imagine anyone else who could have done such a project with a straight face, let alone the combination of visual and narrative elements they achieved. With "Ragtime," they have made the film that gives us the past we had forgotten. on campus TODAY THE STUDENTS CONCERNED WITH DISABILITIES will sponsor a discussion, "ALCOHOL ABUSE A DISABILITY," at 4 p.m. in the pajay Hawk Room of the Union. THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a dutch lunch for members at 11 a.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union. INCENTIVE OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS IN ACTIVITY SPONSOR A LEADERSHIP TRAINING WORK- SHOP at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. TOMORROW THE TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robson堡 THE MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors A and B of the University. THE DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. @AtomicUniversity Notice to Engineers May & Summer Graduates MASON & HANGER · SILAS MASON CO., INC. Engineers & Contractors Since 1827 May have the career for you. A prime contractor for the Dept. of Energy in nuclear weapon BS/MS ME, EE, IE & ChE Sign Up Today at Friarplace once AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER MIP Sign Up Today at Placement Office manufacture & assembly - Representatives from the KU School of Business will discuss the M.B.R. and other graduate programs in business available to those who do not have undergraduate business training. ATTENTION NONBUSINESS UNDERGRADUATES - Information will be provided and questions answered about admission requirements, programs of study, and job placement at meetings being held: TODAY at 3:30 p.m. Room 504-Summerfield Hall Open Offices: President/Vice President Secretary (a team) Treasurer - Information is also available at 202 Summerfield, or call 864-3795. AURH Election Information More Information at your hall desk Filing deadline, Wednesday, February 24, 5:00 p.m. The Association of University Residence Halls Cafe'Elridge Affordable Fun Dining For fun dining at an affordable price, dine at the Cafe' Eldridge. Choose from the many delicious homemade dishes prepared daily by our Chefs. Most meals at the Cafe' Eldridge cost between $3.50 and $5.00. An extraordinary price for a fun meal served in the pleasant atmosphere of the Cafe' Eldridge. The Cafe' Eldridge is open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week. From 11 am to 11 pm. Mondays-Saturdays and 11 am to 9 pm on Sundays. You can even call in for carry out. Whether it is a special occasion or you just want a delicious homemade meal, dine at the Cafe' Eldridge. 7th Massachusetts During February and March the Cafe' Eldridge features 98 cocktails from 9 pm - 11 pm. Top Sirloin Steak 6.25 Bread of Chicken Top Sirion Steak 6.25 Breast of Chicken Almondine 4.95 Baked Lasagne 4.95 Humble Pie 4.25 Eggs Benedict 3.95 Monte Cristo 3.50 British Burger 2.95 Chili Supreme 2.50 Crock of French Onion Soup 2.50 Onion Soup . 2.50 Special Coffee Drinks Special Coffee Drinks University Daily Kansan, February 16, 1982 Page 7 st ion is 191's- "Reds" e that alism. inical. its' bit r; if it izpah, RIES of the will Profs discuss several religious issues By DAN PARELMAN Staff Reporter The political coalition of the religious right is beginning to crack at the seams, a KU associate professor of church-states relations said at the School of Religion yesterday. The professor, John Macauley, was one of six professors of religion who spoke all day to a group of about 30 students, professors and lay people in a program sponsored by the department of religious studies of Religion there." "Social Crises and Religious Responses." Timothy Miller, lecturer of 1974 Lynn Taylor, professor of religion, holds a workbook used in many private religious schools. He gave a lecture on "Creationism and Evolutionism" at St. John's High School. Macaule, Miller and Sandra Zimdara-Swartz, assistant professor of women and religion, agreed that the religious right had succeeded politically in the past few years, though. Another impact of the religious right is the popularity of private schools, said Lynn Taylar, professor of religion and culture in public education, who spoke on creationism and evolution. Through women, the religious right is regaining its control over the home, she said. The Moral Majority has reinforced the 19th century concept of women as the conservers of morality, Zimdars-Swartz, organizer of yesterday's program, said. Macauley said that groups such as the Moral Majority were based on negative responses to homosexuality, pornography and abortion. Now they cannot decide on any positive actions to take, he said. "If the private school system takes root it will ruin the public school system," he said. American religion agreed with Macauley's belief that the religious right was falling apart. Groups are forming private schools partially because of the increased demand for creationism in public schools, Taylor said. He predicted that this particular issue would not be resolved until it was brought before Congress. He read from one fifth-grade textbook that said the men who landed on the moon discovered that the moon was 6,000 to 10,000 years old. Christian scientists who knew that the Bible said the moon was created during that period, the textbook stated. Because the earth and the moon were created on succeeding days, it told the Bible, the earth is also 6,000 to 10,000 years old. "Nothing hurts a movement as much as being in power," Miller said. According to Breslauer, Judaism ponders how the human can make sense of a troubled world, Islam asks who Allah has appointed to be the successor of the Kingdom of God. Christianity determines to oversee the nontraditional agent man and promoting the divine agent. Jews historically found that obeying the laws of the lands they inhabited was the best way of obtaining what they national-states arose that began defining human existence and oppressing its subjects. Zionism, the belief in the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Israel, was born in 1926 when as an answer to the Jew's inability to live in freedom, he said. The Middle East is divided by three religious beliefs held by three different religions, said Daniel Meehan, professor of Jewish history and theology. KU salaries dropping, AAUP report shows The day's discussions included international as well as national topics. The day after Gov. John Carlin said KU faculty members would be lucky to get a 10 percent pay raise next year, the KU branch of the American Association of University Professors released a statement that said salaries were actually sliding. Taylor said a new movement Although Chancellor Gene A. Budig has said he wanted to make KU one of the top 10 universities in the country, the university's salaryaries were hurting the University. "Rather than making progress, the University appears to be in retreat," the report stated. Morris Kleiner, chairman of the Economic Status Committee of the Profession for AAUP, which prepared the report, said, "We found that if KU was going to pay the state is clearly not paying for it, at least in terms of faculty salaries." The report, released yesterday, said that KU is losing too many high-caliber faculty to private industry and other state and private universities. This seriously diminishes the quality of education at KU and the services KU faculty provide for the state, the report said. calling itself "Creation Science" was making inroads into public schools with textbooks which taught creation science. The report said that KU faculty were not paid competitive salaries with faculty at peer institutions. And although KU salaries actually have been growing faster than the national average, there are more raises in pay relative to the rate of inflation or relative to what other state employees are receiving. By ANNE CALDVICH Staff Reporter income for Kansas between 1971 and 1980 was 157.7 percent, and the growth in earnings for workers who produce goods in Kansas was 123.6 percent for the same period. But growth in earnings for KU faculty between 1972 and 1981 were 85.7 percent for professors, 82.7 percent for associate professors and 73.4 percent for assistant professors. "We're not sharing in the prosperity the rest of the state is experiencing," Kleiner, an associate professor of business, said. Nationally, when compared to 24 publicly supported members of the American Association of Universities, KU ranks 20th in salary and 21st to 24th when fringe benefits are taken into account. For example,the growth in per capita The average salary for a professor at these universities was $33,982 in 1981, and the average salary for a KU professor was $31,089. The average for an associate professor was $24,684 nationally and $23,001 at KU. But there were greater disparities within particular University schools. For example, the average national salary for a law professor was $45,910 and the KU average was $38,806. In Allied Health, the average salary was $36,234 for a professor and the KU average was $30,221. "It is important that the state reaffirm its support of high quality education by a return to its traditional capital income funding" the report said. The committee points out that more than 70 faculty members left KU last year, many because of low salaries here. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer ... Each additional word. AD DEADLINES one ten two three four five six seven eight nine ten one hundred three thousand four thousand five thousand six thousand seven thousand eight thousand nine thousand eleven thousand twelve thousand thirteen Extra nice 2-bedroom apartment in newer four-floor, 1 and 2 baths, carpeted, wooded area, 220 per month. 843-8571 or 1-782-3716. 2-19 FACULTY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3 br. townhouse, 2712 University Drive. All appliances, electricals, bus route, $75/mo. 8:49- or 8:50, $630. Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Sublease 2 bedroom apt., gas paid. Complete kitchen carpet plus drape, central air and heat. Call 841-6688. 2-26 Large 2 Bilirn. apt, in an older home at 1017 Road Island. Available with 1. Only 255 lb. a mo. with a 200.0 dep. Hosp. pd. by dward. Abundantly nets pet Calls: 1-277 ANNOUNCEMENTS 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. For sublease, 2 Br. apt $310 + elect. Available now. Telephone: 841-818-22-22 Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf POKER AND CHESSE LESSONS 411-6966, tf 80. Elegant. Chicken. recipe. Dulces. Nutritious. Different. $3.00 to Tastemakers. Box 23134, Inc. KS 60540. 2-19 KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished townhouses immediately. Flexible parking available. Located on Dhih & Dhh. Only two short shacks from the Union. Call 824-453-8455 Large, modern 1-bedroom, unfurnished apt. in an 8-plex at 1212 Rhododendron Island, available now. Oct 19, 2000 mm. with 200.00 dep. money. Call 714-4511. Absolute sale! Call 714-4511. 2-17 Studios atmosphere. International media, cryogenics, ergonomics and perspectives for work with competitors. Work with companies over. Room size $100 m². Furnished rooms. Warm, bright, airy spaces. Flexible plans and layout. Call 841-7692. Close contact. HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished, suitable for lunch or dinner on Mass. Only 2 blocs from K.U. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your apt at Rentals. From $240 monthly—warranty 12 months. Coxy 2. Dbfm, unfurished ap, in older room at 314 w. 814 h. (14th & Term.) available only. Only 275.00 mh. with 200.00 dpm. (included. Assistant) available. 2-179 731-4941 Available now. Two bedroom guest rooms apt. inside, carpeted carpets draped, a closet, garage, and a second suite to campus, and to campus. and on bus route. $35 per month. No pet. on MEAHOWDOWN litch & Crestelline bath. PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APMENTS! Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, perfect place for entertaining plus room in garage with electric greenhouse, wader/driver lookups, fully-equipped kitchen, laundry room, 9-30-30 daily at 2288 Princeton Bldg., or phone 842-2573 for additional information. Spouse commute to K.C.?Serve the drive Nice house for rent in DeSoate, after Mar. 15, 1-585-1663 or 864-415). 2-19 For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4135. If 3-Bedroom Apt., close to campus, carpet, off-street parking. No pets. References. Water & elec. paid. $550 mo. $300 dep. 842-7504 2-19 Two bedroom apartment, low utilities, two blocks from KU. 3 blocks from town, central air, equipped kitchen, carpet and draps. $250 monthly. 104 Tenn. Call 842-342-3-19 Available apt. clinic to campus at 19 W. 14th Available Mar. 1, I. Mosele $50.00 mow. with a 200.00 deposit. Absolutely no pets. Call 440-414 or 841-9701. For rent 2 bedroom apt. Convenient shopping. On bus route. Complete kitchen, central air and heat. Carpeted plus draps. Call 841-6868 2-28 For rent 3 bdm, apt. $260 a month. Avail- March 1, Near. campus. 749-1750. 2-19 1 bedroom apt. to submit first of March or April—$210.00 per month, all utilities paid. Close to campus (Oread) Contact Margo— 841-6553 2-23 APT—31² Rooms=2 blocks from campus- $175 month--ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED 841-4847 2-22 Comfortable apartment - large bedroom, kitchen, bath, inexpensive, available immediately. 749-1898. Call anytime and keep calling. 2-23 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! For more information about the Mises sense to use them-1) As study guide, 2) The New York Times, 3) New York Publication. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* Now on sale at town Creek. The book and the novel are in stock. Large 3 room apartment in nice older home. Kitchen appliances, fenced backyard. Call 841-536-305 (days) or 841-2304 (evenings) 3-11 Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3800 W. 6th. 1979 Mobile Home 14 x 70 to 3 bdms., store +空调 fryer 7 x 10 shed, $11.30. Lot rent is 62.00/month, water paid: 843-1758 after 5.00 pm. Acoustic model 118 bass amp. one 15 inch speaker $450.00. Acoustic makes the best. 841-2792 after 5.00. 2-18 5 piece Ludwig drum set with new heads. First 200 to take it - 842-6916 2-18 New women's clothes. Jeans-Calf. Straights. Lecal, Calvin hair (all $19.00). Blouses, Oxford shirt and sweaters (all $10.00). Good quality. Call 842-1538. 2-18 Must sell great component stereo system. Get the great names in stereo at ridiculous prices. Lyle 842-5403. 2-19 BOOKCASES store cabinets, decor chair BOOKS books, decorative books Slough. W30 13th W43-8829 2-19 Waterframe–Dried, matte, multineer, header. 2 mop, ed. $225, 842-6712, leave message. Gretsch Guitar and Peavey amp. Only 4 month old and sound great. 842-3403. 2-19 Four drawer metal letter-size file cabinet $35 Turkish carpet approx 19" x 3 double knot wool. hand-made. Cost $75. Measured at 24". Sold by the foot. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. #84-423, Eennings. FOUND I found a gold stocking cap in front of Allen Field House after the Missouri game. 841- 9754 2-16 Found: hat, Summerfield Hall. Contact Greg 749-3412 to identify. 2-18 Men's silver-rimmed glasses—Found Tues. night. Illinois & Sunnyside叫 842-370 or 843-1251. Call 2-17 HELP WANTED Leather key ring, with Volkswagen crest on it, holding 2 keys. For Information, Call 843-1772 for help. For Jeff. 2-17 The Sanctuary has openings for cocktail waitresses and door floor persons. Mature individuals may work to work late hours. Must be look-able and work late hours. May be look-able at 1401 W. 7th, 10 am - 6pm. J 2-17 OVERSEAS JOBES - Summer/year round. Europe, S. Ameer, Australia, Asia. Fields: Marketing, Write JC, Box 82-X1-1-Corp. Del, MA, CNZ 92625. Energetic, hardworking, personable, waitresses wanted. Must work well under pres. supervision plus tips, commission and incentive bonus. Shop at Gammon's, Southern Hill Shopping Center. CRUISERS, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDIENTS, ECONOMICS Europe, CROSS-COASTER, Worldwide Service, LIFE ANIMALS GUIDE TO CRUISERWORLD, 153 box 6021 GUIDE to CRUISERWORLD, 153 box 6021. CARRIERS: 3-12 工作 a girl camp this summer. Positions WSI and WCA certificate! Hear horse Program (WSI and SCI certification) Herse Program Craft Director Contact Raw Valley Girl Club电话 613-750-2900, weedwks@cgu.edu or 613-750-2900, weekdays Stockbuck trainee. College grad—Excellent opportunity for hard working, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individual. Really P.O. Box 157 Red Bank, N.J. 07901. 87004. Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Personable. Contact Dan at the Exchange, 842-9539. 3-12 Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, studious, have own tools and equipment, be cooperative in work. Call Darrell 841-8386. MANAGER OF 'TEMBERSHIP AND COMMUNITY AFF.' IS to assume responsibility for the management of community programs, and committee liaison and assistance. Entry level position requiring a form of employment in management skills. Salary Range $14,000 + and benefits. A complete position announcement may be obtained from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce or by calling (913) 843-2131. 2-23 Kansas or by calling (913) 843-2131. SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SWINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS Economical packages every weekend and school breaks. Call Ski Eric Ehk 843-1864 tdd PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- tif, 843-4821. Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swellss 749-1611. tt Instant passport, vina, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. tf TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-909-8968, B.S. in physics, M.S. in mathematics, or call 841-4176 (tax for Robert). If The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegs!!! Call 841-9450-1610. W 23rd. Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfred Skillet Endaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. **tf** Rapid Reading Workshop- Five sessions. February 17, 22, 24. March 1, 3. 7:30-8:00 to the School to the Student Assistance Center, 121 payment. for registration in payment. 2-16 Save 10% on Pente sets from Footlights when you mention this ad. Footlights, 25th Iowa. 2-18 MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. ff GREEN'S CASE SALE, COORS $8.65, PABST $6.99 GREEN'S, 888 WEST 23RD. 2-19 Hey DOG Have a beary happy 21st. I'm wild! I need a ride to and from South Padre Island for Spring Break. Will share driving, bike trips with family. Old, new, used, unable and reusable Crates to hatch, assits to juvenile, ships to all of this and much more at West Coast Motel. TU $109.00-12.00, 1.50-3.00, 2-17 TU-SAEP $9.00-12.00, 1.50-3.00, 2-17 Gwen-Glad you're-bove- Love Mike. 2-16 Hey! Need a ride to Texas Spring Mike! I'm going as far as Asu at Atlanta and迪一or one of Tampa Bay. I'll go there and back. Call Bill evenings presents and back. Call Bill evenings M. Hill's and the Entertainer present Janner. One night only. Third day. Feb. 18, 9-12 Dozens open at 8:30. All you can drink: Coca-Cola. First Lawrence performance this year. 2-18 Who is the blood guy with wire rimmed glasses who used to work in the reserve area? Who is the girl in front of Fraser one Friday? A tall blind woman to know your name. 2-17 1980-Wonderful. 1980-Soational Band. 1981- Tampa Bay. 1982-Tampa Bay Carnival, Feb. 20, Opera House. 2-17 Beat the snowbound blues. Taste the tropes of the band's most popular hits. MIDI IS JASON KUPCZHO! What is be doing WHO IS PAUL KLIPSCH? What is he doing at the GRAMPHONE SHOP March 3rd? 1. Over stocked: 20°, off! Everything in store, 40°, off coats, furniture, clothes, household items, mice. Inflation Fighter, E 8.7th. Opt. 12-35 10-M 5-10 30-S 2-19 Join our Bible Study Group certificate upon complication of 10 week course. Every Tues. 7:30 pm, partors A & B. Union Salt Block Want to improve leadership skills? Attend "Perspective for leadership training on campus" at UNK, Kumsa Union from 7-9 p.m. Sponsored by 2-16 of Student Organization and Activities 2-16 Wow, you ought to use our bookers, price just right, you'll get no snooker. 9:00-3:00 75, each is all you'll pay. Th= Sanctuary. 2-17 Champagne for the ladies, 50r a glass Tux. 9.90-12.90, now that's real class Th- Sanctuary 2-17 SPECTRUM OPTICAL fantasy savings using the Lawrence Book or People book coupons on our large selection of books. Open 10-6, M-5, 8111-113, 4 E-fit. 7-19 75r Schoolers at Ichabod's. 2-16 For Strokes at Riverside 2-16 Dear Steve, Happy 23rd! You'd better be prepared to do some big time celebrating your birthday this year. Don't forget the Kermit kewdit! I.L.Y. Love, Patti. 2-16 What do 60 dancing people have in common? many? BRIZZANL CARNIVAL 2-16 2-16 SERVICES OFFERED **EXPERT TUTORING:** Math homeworks CS projects? Call 814-7883. 3-10 **CONTROLLER SCIENCE:** Call 814-699 any time (B.S in physics, M.A in mathematics) or call 814-679 (ask for Robert). Drafting ( charts, maps, etc.) 6 ex-scriptors Script Lettering for certificates: 814-7944 Get that job with a professionally prepared scriptor. Learn the latest job hunting techniques. Learn the latest job hunting techniques. 814-564 2-14 Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—the finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of wine kgs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843–3212. 3 1/2¢ self service copies now at ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th and Iowa 842-2001 Carmichael University 2017 Lost bus pass and other id. on 2-3-82. Please call Sarah 749-2427 if found. 2-16 Put your best foot forward with a pro- fessional Encourage. Write it well, like and print it, for your Call Center 842-2001, 8250 and now. 2-56 WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? Stop by The House of Ulmer and House of Ulmer 825 Massachusetts, 8-M-P House of Ulmer 825 Massachusetts, 8-M-P L'OST Maroon Billfold Lost at 12:00 movie. Man that called about it. Please call again! Monica 841-8651. 2-16 $300 Reward for Canon AE1 Lost on Jan. 28 on 13th & Vermont. No questions asked. 841-3295. 2-17 NOTICE TYPING IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE 842-2507. tf Get back to the Boole in your own style of music. Guitar, mandolin, banjo, bass, and thyme lessons. All levels. teaches tute music. Call Kurt at 841-0817. Music. 841-0817. TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, punctuation. Foreign students or Americans. 811-6244. It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. II Experienced typet -thesis, dissertations, term papers, mise. IBM correcting selective, Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting selections. Call Donna at 842-2744. tf Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all musculaneous. IBM Correcting Selectie, Elr or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone: 845-3545 Mrs. Wright. *tf* Expressed typify. Theses, term paper, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tt Reports, dissentations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectric. Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2127. tf Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric, Elite or Pica. 842- 5644. 2-26 QUALITY TYPEING; Themes, Manuscripts, Dissertations; IBM Selectric; Girl Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 phone; TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective I; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-6675. tf Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. Fast. IBM Before 9 p.m. (7464-847). Ann Ifr. FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-4980. Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and rewriting your code, find themselves in need of word processing at Encore! Call 642-2641 for more info. 248-555-0795 or encore@encore.com for Encore Copy Corp, 352 and iowa. Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call evenings, 841-2915. 2-18 TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Corp. offers a full-service correction to composition assistance. Emmerich, Inc. offers computerized former medical research secretary with type 8020 paper thins, books. Call Nancey 212-5882 8002. Professional typing. Dissertations, these paper papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Corp. Correcting Sellebh. Deb 843-9592. 2-26 Fast, efficient typine. Many years' experience. Located in Topeka area. 1-913-272-5435. 2-19 Quality typing and word processing. Reasonable price includes revisions. 841-2781 after 5:00. 2-22 WANTED Female roommate to share twin two-bedroom apartment with a female roommate for $150 a month. utilities 841-451-2416 - 216 Roommate needed for a 2 bedroom apt. on the second floor of a condominium. Call for more detail Bob 749-3183 Person to commute with, Lawrence to KC and back, 8-5, TR, will share generously gas/driving. Call 842-4451, keep trying. 2-18 Sub-lease 2 bdrm. apt. on bus route. Move in today, low price. Call 842-1434 or 811-8467. 2-16 2 roommates $150 + deposit 1 each. Beautiful excellent excellent vacation. Indiana 842-6430 2-17 Roommate wanted: to share 2 bdm. apt; or lease to lease. $75 plus 10%. 848-742-726 848-742-726 2-16 Roommate to share modern 2 bedroom apartment 3 blocks from campus. $137.50 Roommates needed immediately. Nice apart- ment, 142 sq. ft., bedroom 147 sq. unities, 842-539-0000, 2-19- Need roommate to share Mall's Apt. Rent $173, heat paid, private room, fireplace, nice bed. Call 749-0924. 2-17 Female roommate to share house. 1125.6 + Mike 844-8822 Mike 844-8823 Mila roommate to share 3 bedroom house 514-826-9072 d-mail: Liberal, smoker okay 842-619-619 d-mail: Liberal, smoker okay 842-619-619 BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: Name: ___ Classified Input: Address: ___ 1 col x 1 inch — $3.75 Phone: ___ Dates to Run: to 1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 time 15 words at risk Additional $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 02 03 04 05 06 Wanted a bridge expert with patience, can- able and want to teach casual bridge lions on Sunday afternoons for beginners in intermediate bridge players 843-6450 C-22 --- *The Bridge Lab* Roommates is wanted. Graduate student in exercise science needs one to two persons to work with her and her team. Ginning June or August, 1982. Must be non- military and 21 years old. evenings and weekends. 2-22 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 16. 1982 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Diving Division Team W W L Pct. GB Boston 30 16 14 720 Houston 16 14 14 720 New Jersey 25 28 490 12 Philadelphia 25 28 490 12 New York 25 28 490 12 Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee 36 14 720 321 Detroit 22 29 431 14% Atlanta 19 38 494 15% Chicago 19 31 494 17% Indianapolis 19 38 494 17% San Antonio 32 17 22 653 5 Houston 27 12 22 58 5 Ulah 18 16 24 360 14% Utah 18 16 34 360 14% Kansas City 16 32 34 320 14% Kansas City 16 32 34 320 14% Seattle 34 16 16 .680 1% Los Angeles 34 16 16 .680 1% New York 28 21 21 51% 1% Golden State 37 22 22 .551 6% Phoenix 37 22 22 .551 6% Phoenix 36 14 14 .690 2% San Francisco 14 16 20 .280 2% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Denver 145, Utah 134 Team W L Pct. GB Massachusetts 10 7 1 .49 Missouri 10 7 7 .50 Oklahoma 6 5 600 4 Nebraska 6 5 500 4 Oklahoma State 6 5 300 2% Kansas 4 2 600 5% Colorado 4 8 200 5% State 4 8 200 5% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. Nebraska 51, Oklahoma 51 UPI TOP 20 RESULTS Virginia (14) Georgia Tech 32 Delaware (13) Ohio 86 Detroit (13) Ohio 86 Memphis State (13) Illinois 64 Aransas (17) Texas 64 AMX Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Paterson Dialysis Hockey Campbell Conference Mintenirai 33 11 12 67 163 158 Boston 32 18 18 267 183 78 Buffalo 30 18 18 220 181 69 Quebec 28 10 9 258 169 64 Quebec 20 10 10 248 164 Team | W | L | T | G | FG | GA | Pts. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Miami | 31 | 17 | 6 | 58 | 172 | 80 | 78 | Philadelphia | 31 | 17 | 6 | 58 | 172 | 80 | 78 | NY Rangers | 27 | 21 | 0 | 211 | 219 | 63 | 41 | New York Mets | 27 | 21 | 0 | 211 | 219 | 63 | 41 | Washington | 16 | 17 | 0 | 111 | 248 | 51 | 38 | Minnesota 23 18 17 17 17 243 208 64 St. Louis 25 28 19 24 23 284 53 52 Detroit 21 18 17 14 23 294 60 Winnipenget 25 25 14 11 214 147 51 Toronto 20 15 11 11 194 147 43 New York 16 20 14 19 199 251 43 Edinburgh 36 13 15 11 123 230 282 84 Calgary 21 13 15 11 234 254 55 Vancouver 21 15 12 10 209 278 62 Los Angeles' 11 13 15 10 208 262 54 Houston 13 16 12 10 179 184 35 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota 3, Toronto 3 Vancouver 4, Chicago 1 Team W 17 L 5 Pct GB Pittsburgh 18 5 737 — Baltimore 18 6 720 — Atlanta 18 6 792 — %6 Buffalo 12 13 148 — Cleveland 9 14 391 — %8 Detroit 9 14 281 — %8 Philadelphia 18 18 114 — %10 Leonard finishes Finch early St. Louis 20 14 4 453 — 6 Wichita 20 10 14 583 — 6 Tampa 20 10 17 583 — 6 Memphis 10 17 17 370 11½ 8 Phoenix 8 17 8 370 11½ 8 Tampa 8 17 8 370 11½ 8 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New Jersey 8, Memphis 4 Wichita 5, Philadelphia 3 RENO, New—They call Bruce Finch "Lightin' and that's just the way Sugar Ray Leonard handled him last night — in a flash. By United Press International Leonard turned Fünch's dreams of glory into a sudden nightmare, giving him a thorough boxing lesson and successfully defending his World Wellerwright Title with a devastating third-round technical knockout. HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKET STREET, 5TH AVE. NW HAMP, 1-800-624-7474 Fighting for the first time since winning the undisputed title last September with a 14th-round TKO of Kris Bryant, he wasted little time in disguining Fitch. In the third, Leonard quickly landed a sharp overhand right to the head and Finch's legs turned rubbery. Blood began to pour from his mouth. Another flurry to the head put him down, but again he staggered to his feet before referee Mills Lane stopped it at 1:50 of the third round. FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Free Estimates FIVE ESTIMATES THE PRESTON McCALL COMPANY 311 N. 3rd 841-6067 Rapid Reading Program Improve your reading speed and concentration. Five Sessions Mondays and Wednesdays 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. February 17, 22, 24, March 1, 3 For registration and payment of fees contact: The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064. 4. 10.25.2018 (Assistance Center), 127 Strung, 639-404-000 Pyramid Pizza will honor any pizza coupon in the Lawrence book or People book. Offer Good Thru Fri., Feb. 19 Order any one-topping 12" pizza and get 2 LARGE Cakes for only $540 FREE, Fast Delivery! pizza and get J LARGE Cokes for only $6.65 - Order any one-topping 16" 507 W. 14th (at the Wheel) Open till 1:00 a.m. every night DRIVERS WANTED Pyramid Pizza It has been only four days since Jim Lessig was named to succeed Bob Marcum as athletic director at the University of Kansas. Marcum came to the University to put Kansas in the "big time." And during his three and one-half years here, Marcum did just that. By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor But in his enthusiasm to put Kansas into the national limelight, Marcum decided some things had to change. One of his priorities was men's and women's gymnastics teams. And if first impressions are an indication, KU students should feel lucky that they have the opportunity. Granted, Marcum did not change ticket prices by himself, but he could afford them. Another change, possibly the most critical problem, was the deterioration of the relationship between the athletic department and the students. This problem came to the forefront this year as attendance for basketball and football dropped. The main reason for this drop, especially in basketball, was the increase in student season ticket prices. "He had excellent rapport with the students at Bowling Green. That fact impressed me." "We were very interested in his ability to relate to students," Chancellor Gene A. Budig said. "We hope for strong ties to be built between the athletic department and students and we think Lessig can build such ties. At the press conference last Friday, Lessig said that he would not want to fill every seat at every game with alumni. He said that students are the backbone of a sports program and their support is needed. "He was well-liked by the students here," Bruce Johnson, Bowling Green student body president, said. "It seems we always look out for the students." And the students figure in Lessig's plans. He said one of the first things he wants to do is meet with the student leaders. leaders," Lesigi said yesterday. "The students know more of the problem than I do, and I want them to tell me their concerns. In fact, one of the reasons he was chosen for the post was his relationship with the student body at Bowling Green. "I want to get an informal meeting with representatives from the different countries." "It will give me a better idea on what needs to be done." He appears to be the man that KU students have looked for. Someone who hears their concerns and wants to do something about them. Another thing that puts Lessig above the past athletic director is his sense of responsibility to the University for which he was under contract. Both Lessig and Marcum were under contract. Both left their respective schools' support of each school's administration, mediated. He did not stay around and aid in the search for a new athletic director. But Lessig will not take over right away. He said he had made a commitment and said that he felt it was only fair to help Bowling Green during the season of his institution. This shows Lessig as a man who stands by what he has said in the past. Bowling Green was upset that they had lost a friend in their administration. "Lessig's leaving will be a great loss for us," Johnson said. Athletic Corporation that it was a bad idea to raise the prices as much as it would Lessig seems too good to be true. You hear nothing but good things about him from administrators, coaches and students. Some may worry about this, but right now there is no justification for that. James Lessig T. R. SMITH This is We can only hope that Bowling Green's loss is Kansas' gain and in particular, a plus for the students of Kansas. Virginia retains top spot NEW YORK- While Virginia needed a last-second battle to maintain its No. 1 rating, neighborring West Virginia top 10 for the first time in over 20 years. By United Press International The Mountaineers, ranked 13th a week ago, moved up three positions to the No. 10 rating after extending their streak of success among major colleges—12 26 games. North Carolina remained at No. 2. North Paul once again is rated third and Missouri fourth. Rounding out the top 10 are No. 5 Oregon State, which switched places with No. 6 Iowa, No. 7 Tulsa, No. 8 Minnesota and No. 9 Kentucky. Idaho moved up a notch to No. 11 followed by No. 12 Georgetown. No. 13 8th year anniversary! To help us celebrate. Take advantage of this COUPON OFFER Prepare for April MCAT MCAT 1. Virginia (25-1) 2. North Carolina (24-2) 3. Missouri (12-1) 4. Massachusetts (12-1) 5. Ohio (18-3) 6. Iowa (18-3) 7. Tulsa (18-3) 8. Kentucky (17-4) 9. Kentucky (17-4) 10. Alabama (12-1) 11. Idaho (12-1) 12. Georgia (16-3) 13. Missouri (16-3) 14. Florida (10-2) 15. Frisco State (10-2) 16. Kansas State (17-2) 17. Arkansas (17-4) 18. Texas (17-4) 19. San Francisco (21-4) 20. San Francisco (21-4) GENTLEMAN'S QUARTERS Memphis State, No. 14 Fresno State and No. 15 Alabama. UPITOP.20 Kansas State dropped two positions to 16, not 16. followed by No. 17 Arkansas, No. 18 Wake Forest, No. 19 San Francisco and No. 20 Tennessee. Educational Center TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Stanley H KAPLAN Stanley H. KAPLAN Educational Center etc OFFER EXPIRES MARCH 20.1982. 611 W.9th 843-2138 Class will be in Lawrence starting the last week in Feb. 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Give your local Army Reserve unit a weekend a month and a couple of summers during college, and they'll give you over $12,000 for college. Up to $4,000 in college aid is yours just for joining most units. Plus over $2,200 for two summer training periods. And another $6,000 for serving a weekend a month plus two weeks a year. Interested? Call your local Army Reservist recruiter toll free at 800-421-4422. In California, 800-252-0011. In Alaska or Hawaii, 800-423-2244. ARMY RESERVE. BE ALLYOU CAN BE. CALL: 843-0465 0 I that they heir ad- reat loss Bowling and in dents of KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily Wednesday, February 17, 1982 Vol.92 No.98 USPS 650-640 Deprogramming labeled 'Nazi-like' By COLLEEN CACY Staff Register Staff Reporter TOPEKA—A bill endorsed yesterday in the Kansas House that would legalize the deprogramming of religious cult members is "religious pernography," according to a local leader of Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church. The House overwhelminely endorsed the bill on a voice vote, and House leaders predicted it would pass. "Deprogramming is legalized kidnapping," Lowell Mitch, state director of the Unification Church, said yesterday. "It violates the constitution. Tome it's spiritual rape." It would grant temporary guardianships to parents of religious cult members under the influence of "mind control," so that they could undergo a process of "psychological recovery" (Walsh, 2014). "The deprogramming process is the type of thing you see in a Nazi concentration camp," Mitchel said. "People get the impression that they come to the church and get zapped with a look or something. Like all of a sudden, they'll have antennas." Mitchem said there were 10 full-time lawyers. Mitchem and the Lawrence Chapter at 146 Oak Island St. The bill has received strong opposition in the Legislature because of questions over its constitutionality. Opponents say it interferes with an individual's First Amendment rights of freedom The bill specifies that an organization must cause a drastic change in a member's life by using a system of coercive persuasion for the group to change its control, or without the capacity to make decisions. A floor amendment to the bill would allow relatives to supervise and guard the victim for up to 30 days. State Rep. Joe Knopp, R-Manhattan, the bill's sponsor, said that this period of time could be used for deprogramming the victim to restore his decision-making ability. Professional counselors would be allowed to participate in the deprogramming if the bill was passed. Supporters said that now parents must resort to kidnapping, and risk lawsuits, to take their children from "destructive cults." But opponents said there were already laws on the books that allow guardianships for individuals judged "incapacitated" or unable to make decisions. In the past, these laws have been used mainly for the elderly or mentally unfit State Rep. Kerry Patrick, R-Leawood, opposed the bill. "I just don't think this is an area that the Kansas Legislature should be tampering with the public." State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said she would vote against the bill because it was too vague. She said it might apply to members of her party than cults, such as born-again Christians. State Rep. Tim O'Sullivan, D-Hutchinson, said families who feared that their children would change from one faith to another might fall back on the proposed law. But several lawmakers who supported the bill referred to education with constituents or parents in childcare. "It still scars the heck out of you," State Rep. Ivan Sand, R-Riley, told the House. State Rep. Bill Reardon, D-Kansas City, said there was a difference between the changes in cult members and the changes in members of reconciled religions. Reardon, a former high school teacher, said that changes in cult members he had known were not based on a belief. "The bill may not be constitutional, but I support it with my heart, not my head," he said. Mitchem said he thought the Unification Church was a "movement," not a cult. "To someone with no moral scruples, a religious life seems regimented," he said. "To try and live a religious way of life is always a question of self-discipline for any church." He said claims that the church used brainwashing, and that members were used to make money for Rev. Moon, stemmed from ignorance of the group's beliefs. "The changes are in the minds of the people mislated by the media," he said. "I ignorance is the channel of violent reaction. If people would take a hard read about the church, they would understand." KU women wanted the barer the better By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter Playboy magazine is coming to town and it wants to meet women. This is the sixth year for a photo feature on a college conference, Chan said Monday. Playboy photographer David Chan and his assistant Sheralf Snow will be in Lawrence within four to five weeks to interview women for Playboy feature, "Girls of the Big Fight." He said an ad would be placed in the student newspaper announcing the dates Playboy Chan said they would spend about three or four days in town collecting applications and photographs. The photographs are strictly for identification purposes, he said. If women do not have a picture, he will take a Polaroid picture of them. "THEN WE compile the applications and find out who will do nude shots, semi-nude shots, or full nude shots." He said the clothing shots might be done on campus or at various spots around town. The nude and semi-nude shots will be done in the woman's home, he said. Twelve to 15 women are chosen for interviews. From that group Playboy will choose one woman. Playboy will pay $75 for shots with clothing, $45 for semi-rimmed shoes and $300 for nude shots. Playboy's September issue will also have a man's fashion layout. Chan playboy would use male professors as models. The company offers eagle campus, not just the Barf Airport campuses. Chan said Playboy was not looking for a particular type of woman, "just a good cross It also featured Playboy's picks for the top 20 football teams, the top 10 offensive and top 10 defensive players and the coach of the year. About six years ago Playboy decided to add a picture feature on women from the different cultures. "One stipulation," Chan said, "They have to have everything on." PLAYBOY STARTED the back-to-school issue about 20 years ago, Chan said. It contained fashion features and articles geared toward students. He said the September issue was second only to the Christmas issue in sales. A crew from New York will shoot the fashion layout. He said the issue usually sold out in the towns where the schools are. Also, he said, See PLAYBOY page 5 THE RIVERSIDE STUDIO Rev Clark, Salina senior, takes time out of a foggy day yesterday to daydream on a balcony on the south side of Wescoe Hall on the third floor. Reasons promised if manager is fired By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter If the Lawrence City Commission fires city Manager Buford Watson at Thursday's closed session, the public will be given specific reasons for the firing, Mayor Marci Francisco said last "Sure." she said. "We're not stupid." Commissioner Toni Gleason said last week that he would move to fire Watson at the Thur- Two weeks ago it it was revealed that Gleason had written a letter to Watton asking Watson to In response to Gleason's letter, a group has been assigned drive to force an election to recall Gleason. The commission met last night and discussed, among other things, the role of commissioners Francisco told the commission she was concerned that commissioners appearing on KLWN's Wednesday morning radio program speak for the commission as a whole rather than as individuals. Commissioners appear on the show on a rotating basis. Commissioner Don Binns said to her, "I think what you're talking about here is trying to figure out the next step." It would be difficult to separate the roles of a commissioner on the program into official and individual roles, Commissioner Barkley Clark said. "I think it's a mixture of the two," he said. "You're also pretty obviously there as an individual. I don't think there's any need for a clear rule." However, city elections should not be discussed in commission meetings, he said. A related issue was whether commissioners could reveal matters discussed in executive meetings. Under the law on executive sessions, the commission as a whole designates someone to attend. But the commission hasn't been doing that, Binns said. "Marci, I think I have honored executive sessions far more than you have," he said. Bims said that Francisco was trying to intrigue on his constitutional rights by imposing a tax. "You're dealing with a very touchy subject, Marci, and that's the public's right to know." Binns said. "I just think you'd better leave it alone." Francisco also questioned the scope of public comment in meetings. She told speakers from the audience that comments should be limited to matters on which she was not aware. Francisco challenged one such comment when a lawyer connected with the petition drive to a former prosecutor. Francisco told the lawyer, Jim Postma, the public comments unrelated to actions that the commission could take would be more appropriate at a town meeting. Bimns moved that the commission vote on whether Postma could speak. Clark, who seconded the motion, said that Postma's comments were relevant because the commission would vote on Watson's job performance Thursday. The commissioners then agreed, without a vote, that Postma could speak. Postma told the commission his opinion of what criteria should be used to evaluate a city manager's job performance and said he could put it all in a nutshell. “It’s up to the commission to make policy. It’s up to the city manager to execute it,” he said. Parking board powerless without judges Staff Reporter Bv ANNE WYLIE The Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals may not have the authority to decide cases because of a regulation that requires a presiding judge, a jury, or sheriff. Owens, former judge, said Monday. Since Feb. 1, when all five presiding judges resigned from their administrative positions, no one has had the authority to take over that responsibility. Dan Dutcher, Biddeford, Maine, said. Owens said, "At this point, all the hearing sections are continuing to sit without officers." According to the University Senate Rules and Regulations, the chairman of the Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals must designate one member of each three-person hearing section as the Chair. But because Kent Frobish, chairman of the Board, resigned, no one was appointing hearing section chairman. Frobish was re-elected last Friday, but he has not appointed any chairman. But in her B. f. letter of resignation from the court, Owens said, "All decisions the hearing sections make are arguably voidable because we now sit without a presiding officer, although a presiding officer is required in the regulations governing our operation." Owens said she resigned because the five judges had resigned from their administrative positions without telling the other judges. Their success was essential for the court to operate effectively, she said. Frobish declined to comment on the authority of the court to decide cases without a presiding He said he wanted to read the rules in their entirety again before commenting. judge who was elected according to the rules and regulations. The judges resigned after a dispute over payment for their services. also decided to say whether the court had the authority to act without the presiding judges. "Only when someone contests that authority, when someone suffers harm—that's really the only way that the University community has to know about that authority," she said. She said someone from the Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals or the Parking and Traffic Commission. *Somebody has to contest that authority or somebody, has to ask for an opinion on that question.* Someone is asking. See JUDGES page 5 Alcohol use quenching students' passion for pot Staff Reporter BvKEVINHELLIKER A recent surge in teenage drinking may explain the lag in marijuana use. A nationwide survey by the Research Triangle Institute in high school students was a problem drinker. According to a 1981 study by the National Institute of Drug Abuse, a downward trend in marijuana use by high school seniors is well into its third year. Marijuana increasingly is turning off young people, but they're turning to alcohol with an unhealthy passion, recent studies indicate. According to Lawrence Police Sgt. Ron Balguit, the trend has hit Lawrence. "It used to be we'd hear that high school kids were having pot parties," he said yesterday. Mike Browning, supervisor of school services at Lawrence High School, said he had detected a decrease in marijuana use among students in recent years. "Three or four years ago, you could walk down the hall and tell who had been smoking dope," he said. "But I've noticed that a turn away from pot seems to be the trend." Browning said that although the school had students in student alcoholism, no large problems had occurred. But Jack Colyer, a counselor at the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism, said drinking problems were hard to pin down in young people. "The parents would rather have their child be sick or crazy than be an alcoholic. Alcoholism may be a chronic illness." Colyer said young people might be turning away from marrijuana because its negative effects were becoming more known. Within the last year, a Narcotics Anonymous group has been established in Lawrence and most of its members have problems with marijuana, he said. It could be dangerous if young people are turning toward alcohol to escape the effects of alcohol. "Studies have found that if a person starts drinking abusively as an adult, it takes about 10 years for the person to become alcoholic," he said. "But during adolescence, a person can become an alcoholic in 10 months." Lorne Phillips, commissioner for the state division of alcohol and drug abuse, said Kansas reflected the national trend toward alcohol and away from marijuana. "Based on all my discussions with program directors in Kansas, there's no question that there is a slight decrease in marijuana use," he said. "But there's been a significant increase in drinking." In the long run, that increase could mean a rash of alcoholism. Studies indicate a high correlation between alcohol consumption and addiction. Phillips said. "In the past, you couldn't use marijuana without implicating a rebellion against the in- form." Phillips said the reason for the shift to alcohol could be that young people were seeking to stay within the law. Although they may not be old enough to drink legally, many young people still view alcohol as more acceptable than marijuana. But Sakari Sarolia, also a professor of sociology, has made a trend detected by her as a "strictly legal" case. "Females have taken up drinking alcohol faster than drugs," he said. "So it's simply a matter of habit." "I think there was a strong association in the past between marijuana and political activism." William Arnold, associate professor of sociology, agreed. A less rebellious attitude toward the adult world could be responsible for the shift toward legal pastimes, he said. Weather BOOM Skies will be partly cloudy later today with temperatures reaching the upper 40s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be light and from the north to northwest at about 10 to 15 mph. Thursday will be partly cloudy with a high in the low to mid 30s. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International WASHINGTON—President Reagan tried to calm Israeli concern about the direction U.S. Middle East policy is taking, but served notice he sought to lift the ban on American exports. Reagan attempts to pacify Israeli fears of policy shift Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin warned Reagan in a letter that selling advanced weapons to Jordan would pose "one of the gravest potential dangers we have faced" since independence in 1948, and vowed to fight such a sale. Begin accused Weinberger of "anti-Israel declarations or, at least, inuendos while he was visiting Arab countries." The two leaders exchanged letters in the tense aftermath of Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger's Middle East tour during which senior U.S. officials said the United States could not be held "hostage" to Israeli interests and was redirecting military policy toward Arab countries. In his letter to Begin, Reagan said Weinberger brought no new request for new arms purchases from his meetings with Kirk Hussein of Jordan. "I Israel remains America's friend and ally," he wrote. "However, I believe it is in the interest of both our countries for the United States to take a more active role in Israel." In his letter released by the Israel embassy, Begin wrote Reagan that the possible sale of the advanced equipment to Jordan would give the four Arab countries neighboring Israel an overwhelming quantitative edge in weapons against the Jewish state. Soviet freighter sinks in Atlantic HALIFAX, Nova Scotia—A Soviet freighter sank in a raging Atlantic storm yesterday, drowning 33 crewmembers who refused to transfer to a Danish fishing boat and instead waited for another Russian vessel, officials said. Five crewmembers of the 4,282-ton Mekhanik Tarasov survived the sinking, the second sea disaster in the North Atlantic in two days. Yesterday's incident occurred just 68 miles east of St. John's, Newfoundland, where an oil rig sank Monday, killing 84 men who were from the United States and Canada. The Canadian and Newfoundland governments investigate and separate investigations to determine why the supposedly "unmachable" 58-mile boat Mobil Oil Canada Ltd, the owner of the rig, said only one body had been recovered, although it had unofficial reports that a second body had been Mobil said that its rig's safety certificate had expired last Dec. 27 and it was due for inspection the day it sank in the pounding 58-foot waves. Canadian officials said the rig was deemed seaworthy in their check two weeks ago. UNIONDALE, N.Y.—Sen. Harrison Williams, D-N.J., the first senator convicted of a felony in more than 70 years, was sentenced yesterday to three years in jail and fined $50,000 for bribery and conspiracy in the Abscam case. Williams convicted in Abscam trial Williams showed no emotion in court but vowed afterwards to continue fighting for justice on every battlefield" with the appeal of his conviction resting on a plea of doubt. Williams, one of seven congressmen convicted as a result of the FBI corruption investigation is a (2)cover Senate veteran, a Kennedy liberal. "I came into your court feeling deeply, indeed knowing, that I am innocent of these crimes," Williams told U.S. District Judge George Pratt before he pronounced sentence. "I leave this court knowing that I am innocent of the crimes charred." Williams could become the first senator expelled since the Civil War. Senate disciplinary hearings begin next week. Proposals equated to Jonestown BAL HARBOUR, Fla.- In a direct confrontation with Vice President George Bush, Lane Kirkland, AFI-CLO president, yesterday accused the Reagan administration of practicing "Jonesstown economics," against the poor and unemployed. Kirkland repeated his analogy to the Guayaura tragedy at a news conference that followed a 50-minute, closed-door session between Bush and the AFL-1. "It administers economic Kool-Aid to the poor and the deprived and the unemployed in this country." Kirkland said of Reagan's economic program. When Bush met with reporters, he did not mention Kirkland's reference to the $50 million settlement. The leaders failed give Reagan credit for economic success since taking office. Explain his reference to the Jonestown incident, Kirkland retaliated against Reagan's program. "When you drive people out of work, when you cut their unemployment benefits, when you eliminate trade adjustment assistance for those thrown out of work by imports... I say its destructive and harmful of not only this generation but of future generations." Kirkland said. Chaos draws Syrian troops home BEIRUT, Lebanon—Challenged by a rebellion at home, Syria has withdrawn some of its 30,000-man peacekeeping force from neighboring Lebanon for the first time since the troops were deployed six years ago, military sources said yesterday. Lebanon in turn placed its 30,000-strong army and internal security units on full alert Monday, canceling vacations and ordering regulars confined to their homes. The troop pull out is probably related to recent disturbances in the Syrian city of Harma, where soldiers from Syria's elite defense brigades were called in to assist. Western diplomats said yesterday that the Syrian government was taking extreme measures to crush the Moslem rebellion, including shooting those being held. The priest, Henryk Jankowski, said Wałesa, sporting a full beard and appearing exuberant, chose March 7 for the baptism of his new daughter and expressed the hope that martial law authorities would free him to attend the ceremony. Walesa denies inciting resistance WARSAW, Poland—Internal Solidarity Union leader Lech Waleset with a priest yesterday and, in his first statement since being held by military authorities, denied that he had called for resistance to martial law during his detention. Jankowski, who arrived from Gdansk yesterday, he expected talks soon between the government and Walesa, with Solidarity union experts and members of the suspended union's national presidium in attendance as Walesa had demanded. After the three-hour meeting at an undisclosed location, Jankowski read to reporters a statement by Walesa repudiating any underground leaflets bearing his signature and calling for passive resistance to Poland's martial law. Third shuttle launch may be early CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- The refurbished space shuttle Columbia returned to the launch pad yesterday and officials said preparations for its third orbital mission were going so swiftly that the shuttle might blast off two days ahead of the March 22 target date. The shuttle, clamped to a new apricot-colored external fuel tank and two solid-fuel boosters, was anchored to the ocean-side launch facility in early afternoon after the three-mile, eight-hour ride, from the vehicle assembly building, aboard a crawling transporter the size of a baseball infield. "We feel we could advance the launch date maybe two or three days if everything runs smoothly," George Page, the shuttle authority director, said. The rollout came five days ahead of the scheduled Feb. 21 date. The rollout came five days ahead of the scheduled Feb. 21 date. Promos considered Lessig plans to bolster student interest By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter The KU athletic department may be unfamiliar to Jim Lessig, but KU's new athletic director is more than familiar with issues confronting an athletic director. He said the big complaint students voiced when he served as Bowling Green University's athletic director that they wanted beer sold in the stadium. "We got around that and convinced them they could still have an awfully good time without the beer," Lessig said. One of the things Lessig used to increase interest in sports at Bowling Green was promotional events like band day. TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK Boyd's Coins-Antiques Class Rings Buy - Sell - Trade Gold - Silver - Coins Antique - Wallet 713 New Hampshire Lawrenceburg 60944 913-842-7771 hip and save ACADEMIC CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95 / day $60.00 / wk $225.00 / mo 25 FREE miles per hour 841-0101 808 W 24th offer expires Feb. 28, 1992 offer expires Feb. 28, 1982 Lessig said he had some promotion ideas that had worked in the past. Lessig said that students dropped the beer issue once they got busy with planning. "I'm a believer in promotions," he said. "I haven't heard about it since," he said. "But the question is, will they work here? I'll have to get a feel for the students and their ideas on athletics," Lessig said. He said three types of fans attend Learn how to make up your face...free. MERLE NORMAN The Place for the Gentian Fare! 701 Mass 841-5324 sporting events. He described them as the die-hards, who will attend the games under any circumstances; the fair-wettest fans, who will come only once a week; and the entertainment people, who will come when there is a promotion. He said band days and other promotions might "pull in a group of people who may be there for the first time. "Then even if the program dips a You're never met anyone quite like Joni You're never met anyone quite like Joni STARRING JONI EARECKSON AS HERSELF. A WORLD WIDE PICTURES RELEASE EVENINGS at 7:15 & 9:15 Cinema Twin 31st st lowa 842-6400 JOYN COUNTY FAMILIES little, you can still hold on to your crowd." Lessig said. Lessig said there was one foolproof promotion—winning. "Winning is indeed the best promotion," he said. 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E-Systems continues the tradition of the world's great problem solvers. space and the development of solar energy, systems which are the first-of-a-kind. E-Systems engineers are recognized worldwide for their ability to solve problems in the areas of antennas, communications, data acquisition, processing, storage and retrieval systems and other systems applications for intelligence and reconnaissance. For a reprint of the Newborn illustration and information on career opportunities with E-Systems in Texas, Florida, Indiana, Utah and Virginia, write: Dr. Lloyd K Lauderdale, Vice President Research and Engineering E-Systems, Inc., Corporate Headquarters, P.O. Box 226030, Dallas, Texas 75266 E E-SYSTEMS The problem solvers Sir Isaac Newton Gobe death Gobe of Mars rethoraxide motion of the planets Isaac Reflecting telescope mirror viewer experimentum crucis Our Greenville Division will be on campus interviewing Feb. 19. University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1982 Page 3 to your foolproof he best and omotion, udy the r p n th s i. with both ne weeks Peace Corps offers students tough jobs Volunteers needed By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter Volunteers for the Peace Corps go through rough and trying times, but representatives attempting to get KU students to volunteer their services to Third World countries say, "It's the toughest job you ever'll love." "Some people call it the best graduate school in international relations," Mary Lou Johnson, Peace Corps recruiter and former volunteer, said at the University of Kansas yesterday. Johnson and other Peace Corps employees were recruiting on campus yesterday and will be doing the same today. They have set up an information booth outside the Kansas Union dell and also are speaking to classes. "There are programs for almost anyone with a college degree," Mike McGirr another recruiter, said. He said anyone older than 18 with either a degree or skills in agriculture, science, math, health services or languages could apply. Volunteers work for two years for a minimal monthly salary to help improve conditions in developing countries. "It's always kind of been Peace Corps' philosophy that volunteers live at the same level as the people they're working with," McGirr said. "We were buried in that Action agency, it's to our benefit to get out." Johnson said. Action includes such services as providing Service to America, known as VISTA. "Living conditions vary even within one country. Some could have electricity and running water while some could have a mud house and a well." Although VISTA and other agencies might have their budgets cut or phased out, the Peace Corps will keep the same amount of money. McGirr said. Johnson said the Peace Corps had been a part of Action, a federal relief agency, but that by Feb. 20 Peace Corps would be a separate division. "We're holding our own," Johnson said. Johnson said the Kansas City, Kan. Peace Corps office covered Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri. Her visit on campus this week is one of two semiannual visits recruiters make to KU. Johnson said applicants to fill out a lengthy application. She estimated that 50% of the applications. Fifty-eight countries send requests to the Peace Corps headquarters in Washington, D.C., and local offices match applicants with needs. Volunteers go through six weeks to three months of training depending upon the complexities of the language culture of the countries, Johnson said. "You're putting a person in a Third World country they know nothing about," she said. For example, she said that French was the official language in Zaire, but there were actually 600 languages in Africa, spreading upon ethnic groups. "This is a very difficult job. It's very rewarding, but it's difficult," McGirr said Johnson said her stint in Jamaica exposed her to things she could not have seen without leaving this country. "It's an opportunity to work and live day to day and not as a tourist," Johnson said. "You're so much more a part of the country than someone in on vacation." "I've worked on Jamaican development, and I have friends I can always go back to. If it ever gets too cold, that's where I'll go." McGirr said, "I just think of the personal ties you build rather than the work-related accomplishments." McGirr stayed three years in Sierra Leone, West Africa. The recruiters said interested students in any level at the University could sign up for interviews for Thursday and Friday at the job placement office in Carruth-O'Leary Hall. A free film, "The Toughest Job You'll Ever Love," will be shown tomorrow night at 7 p.m. in 4033 Wesson. On the record Hurglar's stole more than $3,300 worth of stereo equipment from parked cars at the Meadowbrook Apartments parking lots, 15th Street and Crestine Drive, sometime between Sunday evening and Monday morning, Lawrence police said yesterday. Burglar robbed seven cars parked in the Walden Court, Weston Square, Dover Square and Camden Manor parking lots. After breaking four car windows and using an unlocking tool to enter three other locked cars, burglar stole four stereo cassette deckes, two stereos, two power boosters, 31 speakers and 31 cassette tape. There are no suspects, police said. BURGLARS *STOLE* a $500 rocking chair from a storage bin at Bristol Terrace, which is also a Meadowbrook building, sometime between Jan. 24 and last Monday, police said. BURGLARS STOLE $150 worth of equipment from a parked car at 2810 University Drive sometime between 4 p.m. Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday. Burglar's took a radar detector after possibly using a coat hanger to open the car door, police said. There are no suspects. THEVES TOOK $225 worth of men's rings about 3 p.m. Sunday from a residence at 101 West Vermont St. in the city, where he resided and asked to use the phone and the bathroom. While one suspect used the bathroom, the other stole 15 rings from a jewelry box in another room, the said. There have been no arrests. PRE-NURSING CLUB Are you interested in a nursing career? Come join us Wed., Feb. 17 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union 7:30 p.m. Everyone is Welcome Make Your Old Jeans Count For New Ones So, gather up all those old, scrungy jeans you have no use for and make them count for new ones at Balloon-a-Gram HUMAN RESPONSE SEND A BALLON a GRAM 107-522 107-3841 107-3842 P.O. Box 1222 - One trade-In allowed per new jean, but no limit on total trade-in transactions (In other words,3 trade-ins will get you $9 off 3 new jeans.) - All trade-ins will be donated to charity Limited Time Only LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley 842 7870 842 8171 Prudential (Not for profit) King of Jeans Will Give You $3 For any old jeans you have. Regardless of Condition Toward the purchase of any jeans or pants in the store, regardless of price. --and enjoy our Special At KING + Jeans levi's Trade-In Jean Sale KING of Jeans 740 Massachusetts *Coupons not accepted on trade-in transactions VALID ID CARDS Instantly Laminated Color available at I - DENT SYSTEMS Room 114A Ramada Inn 844-5900 AURH Election Information Open Offices: President/Vice President Secretary (a team) Treasurer More Information at your hall desk Filing deadline, Wednesday, February 24, 5:00 p.m. The Association of University Residence Halls Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse Come On Down To Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse Smoked Buffalo Right off the range at Paxico, Kansas Buffalo Wheels, Logs and Dinners Now through Sunday Now through Sunday The same popular prices as our Beef, Ham and Pork Come on Hawks! 719 Mass. Beat K-State Coke University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1932 Opinion Spencer leaves legacy As students bustle to and from class, they rarely pause to wonder about those who have lent their names to the buildings on campus. But this week would be a good time to stop and remember one of the people behind the names. Helen Foresman Spencer died Monday in her home in Kansas City, Mo. She left behind a multimillion dollar philanthropic legacy to arts and education in this area. Despite her huge charitable donations, Spencer was not a public person. The slender, artistocratic woman, whose portrait gazes softly on visitors to the Spencer Museum of Art, shunned publicity. She said she could not possibly grant interviews to everyone who asked, so she refused them all. The exact amount of her donations to KU, the University of Missouri at Kansas City, Kansas City's Nelson Gallery and other institutions has never been disclosed. Even the year of her birth is a well-kept secret. But all of that doesn't really matter. What does matter are the gifts she gave, both personally and through the foundation she and her husband, Kenneth A. Spencer, created. When KU needed a new home for its expanding art collection, Spencer, a 1926 KU graduate, came through grandly. She also contributed to KU's research library, sponsored a lecture series and distinguished professorship at KU, and built a home for the director of the College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan. Spencer donated $2 million to finish the interior of a theatre in the UMKC Performing Arts Center. And she gave the Nelson Gallery both money and valuable works of art. She answered this question in a rare interview after her donation to the UMKC theatre. Dozens of other charities, including St. Luke's Hospital and the YMCA, profited from the Spencers' generosity. The cynical among us might ungratefully look for a motive. Why did this woman delight in giving away millions of dollars? "My late husband and I were very proud to live in the Middle West and hoped to do all we possibly could to enrich this area by the development of its culture, education, and scientific institutions." she said. Spencer knew this, and did more than her share to prevent it. As anyone who has followed the plight of the Kansas City Philharmonic knows, it is shameful when cultural institutions must bow and scrape for their existence. The American Heritage Dictionary defines a philanthropist as one who endeavors "to increase the well-being of mankind." That description easily fits Helen Spencer. Through her support of art and education, she gave gifts that benefit all who are willing to enjoy them. She gave gifts of the mind. Journalists' cold approach would bother famous editor While he was at KU last week to receive the William Allen White Award for Journalistic Merit, Jim Lehrer, co-anchor of the MacNeil/Lehrer Report, said White would find more things about today's journalism that would trouble him than would please him. Aspiring journalists studying in the school named for White might not have liked what they heard, but Lehner was right. White, editor of the Emporia Gazette from 1895 to 1944, achieved national prominence with his writing and his politics, but he endeared himself to his readers in a way that was unlike any other, compassionate and personal. That type of journalism is all but extinct today. Journalism today is a fast-paced whirl of activity designed to obtain and report what is CHRIS COBLER perceived as the news as quickly and efficiently as possible. The wonder of electronics makes it possible for radio and television to report the latest news. The news reporters are not quite that adept, but they are gaining. To meet these ever-nearing deadlines, reporters rush in and rush out of meetings and interviews and bargain in and bargain out of very personal events. The necessity of speed forces reporters to be impersonal, abrupt, pushy and rude. Lehrer was right when he said White would be upset by public opinion pollts that list only politicians, ayatolls and lawyers below journalists in respect. This would be inconceivable to White. Many disagreed with what White said, but most respected why he said it. Why did White deserve this respect? Simply put, he earned it. In his salutary editorial, White told Empronia that "the new editor hopes to have the work done in her honor and was committed to doing what was best for his town." These were not hollow words. From age 27 to his death 49 years later. White made his home in the village, and also also his neighbors. And he loved their neighbors. Journalists today do not even know what their neighbors look like. That would be a conflict of interest. They disassociate themselves from their neighbors and they proclaim that they proclaim to know what the people need. Too many journalists ignore their responsibilities, choosing instead to talk of First Amendment rights. The rights of the people they serve somehow become subordinate. The press tends to see the public as an ignorant mass who be educated, but not knowing what is important. An additional ill-conceived tenet of today's journalism is that the public has some sort of learning disability. Good journalism is simple, but good journalism also has to include of whether the news lends itself to such a format. And although each of these principles so long taught in journalism schools has a certain justifiable, honorable intent, together they help to dehumanize journalism. People do not think they are served by the press, and often they're right. Instead, journalists are thinking of how to get the big story. They thirst after exposing corruption or uncovering the big scandal, but rarely do they stop to consider the reasons for what they are doing. The means become so important that the goal, serving the public, is lost. And even when a journalist is consciously trying to serve the public, he often fails. The structure of journalism has evolved into such a science that its inflexibility restricts attempts at genuine caring. Consequently, today's journalism is distant, removed. How many respected, metropolitan dailies would run a tender, almost syrupy editorial about the accidental death of a girl? The Emperor Gazette did, and Mary White is still missing from her death. The story had no national significance, but it had an almost universal, human appeal. This ability to touch people is what made White worthy of respect 50 years ago and even more so today. Journalists searching for respect need to be given the space and opportunity to be earned, not claimed as a constitutional right. KANSAN The University Daily USPS 585-460) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Subscription by mail are $1 for six months of $2 a year in Douglass County and $1 for six months or $30. Postmaster's send change to address of the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas. Editor Vanessa Herron Business Manager Nataline Judie Managing Editor Tracee Hamilton Managing Editor Karen Schlutter Editorial Editor Gene Pierce Campus Editor Neil Fleuord Associate Campus Editors John Fleuord Assistant Campus Editors Joe Reben, Robert Chaukey Assignment Editor Steve Robrahn Sports Editor Ron Haggström Associate Sports Editor Clint Stirppol Entertainment Editor Coral Beach Makership Linda Masthott, Lillian Davis, Sharon Appelbaum Wire Editors Eileen Markey, Terean Riordan, Lisa Magnan Bigler Photo Editors Jon Hardesty, Jo Hankamann, Jean Bigler Staff Photographers Bob Greenspan, Tracey Thompson, Mark McDonald Retail Sales Manager Am Hornerberger National Sales Manager Howard Shallincky Campus Sales Manager Ferry Beoul Chasing Manager Simon Bodin Production Manager Larry Lebogenko Traverser Manager John Reese Production Manager Larry Leibogken Retail Sales Representatives Bar Baum, Larry Burmatter, Susan Cookery, Richard Dagan, Jirt Grimes, Retail Sales Representatives Amy Jones, Matthew Lanigan, Phillip Marchbanks, Liz MacMahon, Mindy Moore, Malcolm Pearson, Susan Boyder Kathleen MacKinnon Chuck Blomberg, Kathy Duggan, Denise A. Popovis, Yve Zakaryan Campus Intern) Sales and Marketing Adviser John Obernan General Manager and News Adviser Rick Murden THANKS RON, BUT I THINK WE MIGHT WALK THIS TIME... THE 1983 BUDGET BARLING BY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Watt biggest threat to national parks Check your backpacks, bedrods and first-aid kits, everybody. Do you have your canelets filled and batteries for your flashlights? We're experiencing nature in one of our national parks. If you'll lie on your backs on the top of this hillock — everybody turn off your flashlights — you'll be able to see some of the major constellations. There's the Big Dipper. No, not down there. Those are lights from the recreation cabin, campers and tents. All right, then, we cannot see the stars from here. But, everybody, if you'll close your eyes and listen to the sounds of the night, you'll hear the chatter as you squeak, wolves howling, bears prowling. "Hey Maude, where did you pack the toilet paper at?" "Hoot, hoot, hoot." "Mommy, why can't I keep the snake,uh? Why?" "Squeak, squeak, squeak." "Oh, John, oh, oh . . ." Watt also tried to open California of-fshore tracts for oil exploration, but local residents blocked that action fearing that oil spills might engenderangered sea otters and destroy resort beaches. Oh, John, oh, oh... "Ah. ah. ah-000000." During his tenure in office, Watt has used his authority to tell Ron Lambertson, endangered species program manager, he was in favor of the program as long as it worked to take species off the list. Lambertson has resisted removing species, but has been unable to add one new species to the list, even though there is usually about 12 new animals added each year. That's enough. There's too many people around to experience nature properly. Although Congress declared many areas like this one protected wilderness, "where man is sometimes not too much harmed," are sometimes too much harmed. Fortunately, that situation may be changing. They need the extra protection, because their custodian, Secretary of the Interior James G. The Reagan administration announced last week it intended to raise admission fees to national parks, which would discourage some visitors from the area. Vacation spots, rather than natural preserves. Watt supervises one-fifth of the land in the United States and all its natural resources. Many people assume that because someone holds the office of secretary of the interior, he is supposed to preserve land and resources. Wrong. The land and resources are his to preserve or exploit, within limitations set by Congress. In addition, Watt has weakened his agency's P. JOLYNNE WALZ power to enforce land reclamation following proven strip-mining in ecological fragile areas supplement federal coffers with proceeds from leasing federally owned wilderness for mineral exploration. He has not been totally successful in that effort since environmentalists and Congress teamed up to use an obscure provision in the 1976 Federal Land Policy and Management Act to prevent oil and gas exploration in Montana's Bob Marshall Wilderness. But the Secretary of the Interior learned his lesson from that episode, so the next time he had a chance to lease federal wilderness for oil, he could have made the deal without consulting Congress. He leased New Mexico's 34,000-acre Capitan Wilderness, home of the original Strokey the no environmental assessment of possible effe- cents of mineral exploration on the area had been made. Two months later, in early November, a Wilderness Society official accidentally discovered documents pertaining to the leasing agreement and alerted Congress. Manuel Lujan, Jr. of New Mexico, ranking Republican member of the House Interior Committee, angry because Watt had not consulted Congress in the action, introduced a resolution to bar future drilling in the Capitol region, in a million wilderness acres in the other 49 states. He withdrew the resolution when Watt promised there would be no more drilling on Wilderness land without congressional notification and environmental assessment. Nevertheless, the House Interior Committee voted 40- to call a six-month moratorium on drilling. During that six months, committee members had decided to study Watt's policies and write protective legislation to prevent Watt from circumventing their authority again. Phew. Looks like they saved the Capitan Wilderness久 in time. Mavbe. Environmentalists are considering bringing the Department of the Interior to court over the deal, because, although there is a moratorium on mining, oil companies still hold leases on the land. While it's wonderful that President Reagan wants to raise entrance fees to national parks, which would protect some land, if he were really serious about conservation, he would have a more difficult interior than the interior, whom he supports despite opposition from Congress and environmentalists. In the light of that support, the plan to raise entrance fees smacks more of a balance-the-budget money-making ploy than a genuine concern for the environment. It was only a hucky accident that prevented attack from doing to Strokey's home what forest fire would do. Nest time we may not be so lucky. Letters to the Editor AURH election suffers from poor planning To the Editor : At the Feb. 11 Association of University Residence Halls meeting, a request for information concerning upcoming AURH elections was made. The following tentative schedule was provided: - On Feb. 15, petitions might be available. * On Feb. 20, petitions will probably be due. * On Feb. 28, campaigning may begin. * On March 3, candidates will hold - On March 3 and 4 elections will be held. There are two serious problems with the haphazard approach AURH has taken toward easier deployment. First, it prevents anyone not already actively involved in AUHR from having a realistic opportunity to be a serious contender—thus excluding the vast majority of potential candidates and seriously limiting the choice presented to residents. Second, with only three days for campaigning, the residents are not given the opportunity to vote. In order to run for secretary of treasurer, a candidate would have to get information on election procedures—which is not simple task—decide to run, get a petition, get the petition filled out, and turn the petition in, all in just five days. "I can run for president or vice president, a candidate would have to do all that, and would have the additional task of finding a running mate from a residence hall other than his own. Doing this reminds us of rubbing your tummy with a bar of soap," he said, "or ride a bicycle—it's difficult if not impossible." If anyone is interested in running and would like more information on the election, please contact me. AURH office at 864-4041. Start yesterday. And good luck. Alan Rowe Emporia freshman, and Bob Dowdy, Coffeyville junior Handle with care To the Editor: I am writing to commend JoLynn Walz on her peb. 9, column "U.S. auto industry not laugging me." What she wrote is true. Most drivers today just do not take good care of their cars." "Drive them till they drop" is an old saying that many people still live by. I work for the Western Auto store in Lawrence and I have worked for a Western Auto in Kansas City for three years. In that time, I have heard countless stories about people who abuse their cars and then are angry because they break down. Roeland Park junior Some of the stories I have heard are of a driver who drove 30,000 miles without changing the oil, or a woman who did not know where her gas cap was. To the Editor It takes less money to maintain cars than to repair them. I've been telling people for years what my uncle told me, "Take care of it and it will take care of you." *Kent Nelson*, Emphasis misleading The article by Janice Gunn on drunken driving contained one minor error. Lawrence Police Sgt. Stern Dalqualt was reported to say that "the average drink had 02." percent alcohol in it." Not true. The average drink (one jigger in 8 ounces) contains 7.5 percent alcohol. This average drink in the average drink raises blood alcohol by an average of 92 percent. This confusion about concentration, however, is not as significant as the failure to stress the variability in alcohol levels that results from drinking. Body weight, kidney and liver function, rate of consumption and food eaten when drinking can all affect the blood alcohol levels. To suggest that it itakes five drinks to be legally drunk is impudent. It may take more, or fewer. Most importantly, a person's ability to drive is significantly impaired below 0.1 percent blood alcohol. Drivers seen counting to four on their fingers are probably dangerous. Steve J. Bannister, Cumming, Ga., graduate student Letters Policy The University Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansas reserves the right to edit or reject letters. University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1982 Page 3 p n th si Judges From page one Dutcher has moved for a dismissal of a case because of a lack of turidiction. The hearing section selected a presiding judge the night of his case. Dutcher said, "There's no doubt in my mind that the presiding judge that night wasn't officially announced." He petitioned the Court en Banc to hear his appeal. The Court en Banc comprises five students and five faculty members. The five students are the judges who resigned their administrative positions, however. "They have to have a new committee to decide if they'll hear my case." Dutcher said. "Prestunely, if my appeal goes through, all these other appeals (on cases heard when there were no officially appointed presiding judges) will have to be granted." An attorney has two weeks to appeal if a client lends his case. Dutchess said he didn't think and answered the questions correctly. "I think I have a pretty good shot," he said. "The rules are pretty specific." It's a strictly procedural appeal, but as far as these rules are these rules, and rules are made to be followed . on campus TODAY THE AFRICAN STUDIES DEPARTMENT will sponsor a luncheon ROUNDTABLE NIGERIA MUSIC OF Entertainment from 11 a.m. in the Meadowlark room from 11 a.m. in the Meadowlark room of the Kansas Union. THE STUDENT SENATE RIGHTS COM- munity p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas University THE MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRIES p.m. in Parlor A and B and B the kansas Union THE DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Kansas There will be a NON-VIOLENCE TRAINING WORKSHOP sponsored by the STUDENTS ANTI-NUCLEAR ALLIANCE at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. The workshop will be given in two sessions with session two tomorrow night. THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Parlor of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION STUDENT ORGANIZATION will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 103 Bailey Hall. THE STUDENT SENATE SERVICES COMMITTEE will meet at 4 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. There is a S P M. ENTRY DEADLINE for the Recreation Services RACQUETBALL DOUBLES TOUNAMENT. Sign up in 208 Robinson. There will be a GENERAL MEETING OF THE GAY AND LEBANIAN SERVICES of Kansas at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. There will be a guest speaker. A LECTURE BY ROBERT W. BUTLER, arts and entertainment editor of the Kansas City Star will be sponsored by SUA. BUA will speak at 8 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. THE WESTERN *CIVILIZATION FILM* SERIES will present "Stalin and Russian History," parts one and two, and "Triumph of Wall," beginning at 7:30 p.m. in 308 Dyche Hall PETER WILLIAMS, in conjunction with the UNIVERSITY ARTS FESTIVAL, will perform a harpish concert at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. CARL STOKE, FORMER MAYOR OF CLEVELAND, will speak at 8 p.m. in Templin Residence Hall. The lecture is in conjunction with Black History Month. Regents Press to roll freely this year The Regentia Press of Kansas is hoping to upgrade its publishing program and 1982 might Staff Reporter Bv ANNECALOVICH The state printer has granted the Press what Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs, called Saturday an annual exemption: "In the state of North Carolina by the state printer as most state agencies must. This could save taxpayers about $20,000 to $25,000 next year, Fred Woodward, director of the press, said yesterday. It could also decrease the number of copies of his script and publishing by 8 to 12 months, he said. The press will now be able to employ commercial printers with specialized, fully automated printing equipment to do the printing of the books. The press, operated by the Board of Regents schools, is housed at 303 Carr O'Hare-Lyall Hall. It is a non-profit operation, subsidized by the member schools, that publishes scholarly and regional works by faculty members in Kansas and faculty and scholars throughout the country. But, according to Woodward, "We're still a giant in relation to the elephants in university programs." Woodward said the Regents press published about 15 titles a year, but that Oxford University Press was larger than most commercial publishers, turning out 802 titles in 1980. Harvard had 119, California had 199 and Chicago had 210 titles in 1980. Because the press is the only publisher in Kansas that produces short-run, case-bound books, and because the state printer is a general printer, the specialization needed to most efficiently print these kinds of books is not available through the state, according to Dale Smith, assistant director of the Division of Printing. With the exemption and a proposed three-year program for expansion, Woodward said, he hoped to make the Kansas Regents Press more reliable while retaining a high quality of published work. Smith said the state had only semiautomated printing equipment. "The state of Kansas doesn't do enough business to set up fully automated book binding Woodward said University Printing at KU would continue to do composition of the books. But John Sayler, director of University Printing, said he would bid against commercial printers for the press' business. He said he thought commercial printers would offer a lower price, however, because they specialized in a particular kind of printing. equipment. We couldn't even get to the point of being committel." Smith said. Under the exemption, the process of publishing books could also be cut by hiring free-lance copy editors so manuscripts could be considered promptly. Woodward said. "This is a very crucial cornerstone to our building program, Woodward said. "Our three teachers, Ms. Green, Mrs. Brown and Woodward took his three-year program proposal to the Council of Chief Academic Officers last Friday and the council deferred decision on it for a month. But Tacha, chairman of the council, said she expected the response to the proposal to be favorable. She said she was encouraged by the director who took over the director post last November. Woodward he wanted to increase the number of titles published a year from 15 to 20 to 25. There are now 103 titles in print. He said he also wanted the press to specialize in one to three areas, emphasizing the strengths of the faculty of the Regents schools. "More than anything else, they give me optimism for the future of this press because no one else has done it." Woodward said he was impressed with KU faculty. manuscripts, they'll also be good sources for manuscript leads," he said. "Those active in their fields are capable of referring top quality manuscripts at an early stage to this press." Woodward said he did not know yet which areas of specialization the press would choose, but that he was investigating the strong areas of each of the Regents universities. "The only way we can compete with others for the top names is to represent success in these areas so professors think of us as the place to be." He said, for the best manuscripts," Woodward said." KU faculty have published more books than faculty from any other school, but there is no窍门. The latest book released by the press by a KU faculty member was "Unity in Hardy's Novels," by Peter Casagrande, professor of English. It was released last week. One book that is being used widely in Kansas is James Drury's "The Government of Kansas," which is a standard book on Kansas government, written by Drury himself. He press, said, Drury is a KJ professor of ipurvam. Schott told the press was also interested in publishing more books of regional interest. Woodward said the press, which receives about a quarter of a million dollars in revenue a year, did not come close to breaking even. He even said that he would give five university presses in the country that did. The revenue pays for the majority of the salaries and expenses. Woodward said. Woodward said funding also came from private sources from other universities whose faculty published. Playboy From page one Playboy got letters and telephone calls from angry man that Playboy didn't pick their conference. PAST FEATURES have been on women of the team in the Ivy League, Southeastern and Southwestern teams. Chan just finished taking applications at the University of Oklahoma, where about 125 women applied. He is returning this week to Oklahoma State University for photo sessions. Two hundred women filled out applications at OSU. Chan said Playboy hoped to find a Playmate among the women selected. It has found at least one or two in all the other features featured except the Ivy League, be said. Application for Student Senate Spring'82 Budget Hearings Now Available in Senate Office Deadline for group application: March 1-5 p.m. (no late applications accepted) take TONIGHT CELEBRATE HUMP NIGHT AT XL T 25° DRAWS 7-10 PM 75° SCHOONERS ALL NIGHT TIME OUT TIME OUT THE PLACE TO PARTY 2408 IOWA BUSCH CASSIDY BUSCH CASSIDY BUSCH CASSIDY RIDES AGAIN! CAMPUS CONTEST 9. With a saddle of iron 1. It might be that he'll go Nine fourth lines for the nine clue verses, to help you win a vacation for 2 in Daytona Beach, Florida. 2. Found young BUSCH* expounding 3. An aversion for wet 4. BUSCH* barrels were bare 7. When you've got a strong thirst." 5. The scene of his scheme? 8. Leaves the probable hope 6. To save from the blade (Look for another clue ad in this space next week.) 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The office of facilities planning requested the study last June. "We'll be forwarding it with other major capital improvements requests for possible consideration in 1804," she said, of facilities planning, said yesterdays. The study was presented to the Regents last month. THE MODIFICATIONS could save the University more than $750,000 in expenses annually, said Richard Perkins, associate director of plant maintenance. "The modifications would pay for themselves within a year-and-a-half," Perkins said. The majority of the modifications recommended by the study dealt with the central power plant and the distribution system, which includes steam lines in the tunnels running underneath the campus, he said. Total savings in the central power plant would be $324,789, according to the study. Savings in the distribution system were estimated at $402,184 annually. Recommended modifications include new boiler controls and tune up; boiler blowdown heat recovery; boiler economizer and insulation for steam distribution lines, reserve water tanks, fuel tanks and water storage tanks and fuel oil heaters. PERKINS SAID a few of the recommendations, such as the suggestion for new builer controls and meters, were made because some of the equipment in the power plant was oxidated The power plant, south of Watson Library, was built in 1921. Perkins said that some of the recommendations dealt with reclaiming heat that was lost during the blow-down process. "THREE TIMES a day, we have to blow down the ends of the boilers to eliminate the formation of sludge in the boilers," he said. He said energy could be saved by placing coils in the boilers to pick up an wasted heat. "The hotter the water in the boilers, the less energy it would take to produce the steam," Perkins said. Lawton said the earliest consideration of the proposed energy-saving recommendations would be by the 1983 legislative session. Towers tenants say hot water runs cold Residents of the Jayhawker Towers are steamed up about the lack of hot water in the mornings. "You have to get up before the sun rises to get hot water here." Daric Laughlin, Lindsborg junior, said Monday. Laughlin and other residents of towers A and C complained that the hot water supply ran out by 7 a.m. each day. "If you get up later than a quarter after seven, or 7:30, you can forget it," tower A resident Anita Derby, Concord, Mass., sophomore, said. Most of the residents of towers A and C said they had rearranged their schedules around the hot water, taking showers at high tide or the morning or getting up earlier to bed and then going back to bed. Tom Pratt, Towers manager, said one of the water heaters in Tower C had gone out, and the maintenance had to order a replacement. Each of the four towers is supplied with hot water by three heaters that feed that tower's system. Pratt said, the water runs out sooner than it should. Pratt said he was unaware of any problem with tower A's hot water system. Tower D residents said their hot water problems, which started after semester break, had been solved earlier in February. Pratt said the maintenance department replaced one of tower D's three water heaters earlier this month. Pratt said the maintenance department normally kept an extra water heater on hand in case any of the four towers broke in each of the four towers broke. Pratt said that because the extra water heater was put into tower D, the maintenance department had to repair it when tower C' heater went out. "You can't build a foolproof system," he said. Pratt said there shouldn't be any problem paying for the replacements. "They have never yet balked at spending money that needed to be spent," Prat said of the KU housing complex. It was the apartment complex in April 1880. A CLASSIC CASE OF MISDIRECTED ENERGY Recently a fellow carnivore attributed my failure in the capitalist system (I'm unemployed) to a deep-sea fear that I allegedly held of "getting (my) hands dirty". Several weeks ago when this made the same scurious charge, he then proceeded to ignore my expressed willingness to join with him in doing community service work for six months and thereby put his thesis to the test. This same commitment to form rather than substance increasingly appears to characterize the organized effort to recall City Commissioner Tom Gleason. In the February 12th issue of the Journal-World Mr. Tim Miller relates how he discovered that the hills of the Alvaram neighborhood were always clared of snow by private contractor at public expense, while the comparable inclines of his Oread neighborhood were left unattended. Mr. Miller also questions the equity of our spending "millions on new water lines on future developments . . . (while) thousands of people in less prestigious neighborhoods don't have clean drinking water and city management says nothing can be done about it". In a very informative letter alongside Mr. Miller's, Mr. Richard Hernandez points out that according to Article 1-202 of the City Code: "The manager shall be chosen solely on the basis of administrative ability". Each of Mr. Miller's assertions deals with an administrative responsibility. Surely what is of primary importance in this brochure is not Commissioner Gleason's mode of forwarning, but the explanations offered by City Manager Watson for these instances of apparent favoritism. William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terr RALEIGH·FUJI·PUCH One Day Repair Service We Service All Bikes RICK'S BIKE SHOP 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence.KS 66044 !Openings for Student Senate Budget Subcommittee! Applications Available in Senate Office Membership Closes: 1 March, 5 p.m. The Famous KANON as Pachelbel beard it first recording on authentic instruments! INTRODUCTORY LOW PRICE CHRISTOPHER HOGWOOD THE ACADEMY OF ANCIENT MUSIC All L'Oiseau-Lyre and Argo label recordings regularly listed at 11.98 now on sale for only MFG. list 6.98 4.99 7. 49 per disc. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 25th & IOWA - HOLIDAY PLAZA P.O. Box 21 2100 A.W. 25th St. 931/842-1B11 Lawrence, KS 66044 DOWNSIDE LONDON ENTERPRISE AUTHENTIC EDITION PACHELBEL KANON CHRISTOPHER HOGWOOD ACADEMY OF ANCIENT MUSIC WOLF SCHOOL NIKON PRICES SLASHED AT WOLFE'S Now YOU can afford a NIKON 135mm 1/2.8 MD F3 Nikon Micro Nikon 65mm 7/2.8 Slashed is an overworked word, but we can't think of a better way to describe the massive price cuts on Nikon lenses at Wolfe's. Through joint efforts in cutting profit margins by Nikon and Wolfe's you really save money on Nikon lenses and some camera models too. Because of the savings it's no longer a question of "Can I afford a Nikon system?" But rather, "Which Nikon system shall I buy?" Check out our new, dramatically lower Nikon prices today. Here are just a few examples. Many more available! Call us for a quote. GREAT NIKON PRICES Nikon Product Wolfe's Old Price Today's Price 28mm f2.8 339.99 229.99 24mm f2.8 279.99 249.99 28mm f2 469.99 359.99 105mm f2.5 289.99 219.99 135mm f2 639.99 509.99 200mm f4 279.99 249.99 300mm f4.5 449.99 359.99 500mm f8 mirror 509.99 399.00 80-200mm zoom 699.99 539.99 55mm f2.8 Micro 289.99 219.99 50-300mm f4.5 zoom 2300.00 1495.00 Nikon F-3 body 789.00 659.99 PROMATIC TCL 3200 PRO ELECTRONIC Powerful yet compact, This model features bounce and thyristor for fast recycle. KENNEX Only $6999 PRO Panasonic PROMATIC CL 1800 Small unit with big unit 30° automatic ability, modern cobra design Only $39^{99} Carousel 5200 Kr Exclusive "Slide Scan" builtin in viewing screen, plus autofocus and stylish new design and easier controls. Only $269^99 with 5" lens LAST CHANCE AT 1981 PRICES Kodak increased Carousel prices in January, Wolfe's has a limited quantity still available at 1981 prices Carousel 4600 Same as 5200 less "slide scan" feature. WOLF $23999 Only with 5" lens Wolfe's camera shop, inc. 635 Kansas Avenue * Phone 235-1386 Topeka, Kansas 66003 University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1982 Page er at by nd no er, a- s. Beer tax could help alcoholism aid By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter TOPEKA - a spokesman for the state division of alcoholism and drug abuse yesterday asked a Senate committee to increase the state's aging of alcoholism programs from 2000 year to more than $5 million. Pointing to massive cutbacks in alcoholism funds from the federal government, the commissioner, Lorne Phillips, urged the committee to raise revenue for alcoholism programs by increasing the sales tax on beer. "Kansas ranks 48th in the country in alcoholism funding." Phillips said at the second hearing this month on the proposed increase. But Bob Storey, a lobbyist for the Kansas Bear Retailers Association, said an increase in beer prices would promote crime and damage state beer sales by forcing people across state lines to buy beer. The proposed increase would raise the price of beer by slightly less than 1-cent a 12-ounce can. 'Why tax 90 percent of the state's beer drinkers who don't abuse beer for the sake of those who repeatedly do?' Storey said. However, Phillips defended the concept of the increase as a "user's tax." "We recently conducted a survey, and out of 361 alcoholic clients, 305 had a problem with beer or said it was their major problem." he said. Phillips said the earmarked beer tax was necessary because the Legislature had not appropriated alcohol out of the general fund. IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 44-40 Hwy 843-980 consistantly were forced to operate beyond their capacity. Phillips said no treatment center in the state could admit juveniles younger than 16. "The image of an alcoholic does not evoke the same response as does the image of a handicapped child," he said. Phillips said the proposed funding would be used to alleviate overcrowded conditions at state hospitals, where alcoholism wards "We do not want to see the mixture of young alcoholics and drug abusers with alcoholics 40 years old and older." he said. "We've not been dealing with the front end of the problem with prevention," he said. The state also needs prevention and treatment centers for young abusers. Phillips said Phillips said the funding could be used to establish a separate treatment center for young alcoholics, and to "encourage" counseling for young people. Bruce Beale, director of the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism, said the deferment offered hope. Although the committee had planned to vote on the increase yesterday, action on the bill was deferred until at least next week. Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 7090 W. Sch, 841 7233 Live Music Lives At The 7th Spirit Club! You'll Love Our Style. WED.- BLUE PLATE SPECIAL THURS. - TERRY EELING SAT. - MARK BECALT SAT. - BETH SCALET SUN-LYNCH & McBEE wl Specia Headmasters. 1 809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044 MUSIC STARTS AT ABOUT 10:00 COME EARLY FOR HAPPY HOUR 6-10 $1 DRINKS AND 70℃ BOTTLE BEER 7th SPIRIT CLUB 642 Mass. 842-9549 Atom MASON & HANGER·SILAS MASON CO., INC. May & Summer Graduates Engineers & Contractors Since 1827 Mey have the career for you. Notice to Engineers A prime contractor for the Dept. of Energy in nuclear weapon manufacture & assembly BS/MS ME, EE, IE & ChE Sign Up Today at Placement Once AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER WIF Interviewing on Campus Feb. 25, 1982 Sign Up Today at Placement Page A KU faculty member might sue the University of Kansas over a delay in retirement fund deposits for KU faculty, Laurence Rose, Faculty committee member and professor of law, committee at a recent FxEx meeting. "Somebody has told me that they would consider being a plaintiff in a lawsuit against the state and the University." Rose said. "The longest was 45 days or so after my paycheck," Rose said. The issue was raised several years ago when professors realized that they were losing interest money because the students had no paychecks into retirement accounts. The accounts earn tax-free interest until their owners retire and begin Faculty member might sue over retirement fund delay Patrick J. Hurie, the secretary of the DOA, sent a letter earlier this month to the FaEx chairman, that faculty members could lose money if the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association/College Retirement Equities Fund received money after a 31-day grace period. drawing on them. The delay could cost faculty members between $1 and $5 a month in interest. There is no pending lawsuit, however Rose said. programs have different terms for premium due dates and grace periods, according to the letter. The state's Department of Administration is analyzing the problem. A discrepancy in terms could cause state financial officials to unknowingly send in premiums after the grace period, or some of the insurance companies. During the period between Jan. 1, 1800 and Sept. 1, 1981, there was one month in which the premiums were not received within the grace period. The Board of Regents is reviewing the insurance agencies to get this information and will advise the Department about the results, according to the letter. Faculty members could also lose money if the 52 insurance companies offering voluntary tax-sheltered The University Senate executive committee also met in closed session Friday to discuss appointments to the Parking and Traffic Board. In other business, FacEx met in closed session to discuss nominations to University Council. There are openings for 26 new members. 7. Sweepstakes void where prohibited, takedown or otherwise restricted. 8. All potential winners may be required to sign an affidavit of all rights to the sweepstake and to present proof of same. For a list of prize winners, send self-addressed, stamped envelope to ISACalton Sweepstake Cistern Highland Group 16. 5. All entries must be received by 3/18/22. Enter as often as you wish, but each entry must be mailed separately. 6. A random drawing of all incorrect entries will be held 3/22/22 by a independent judging organization whose decision is final. 3 MASS. STREET DELI 941 MASSACHUSETTS The Deli Sub ... for the hungry ... Served Hot or Cold Turkey, Ham, Salami, Bologna, American and Swiss Cheese, Lettuce, Tomato—super large French Roll. $2.25 FANTASTICALLY GOOD offer good Wed., Feb. 17 thru Sun. 21 No coupons accepted with this offer 3. Cut out matter key for use as official entry card or use 3" x 6" print. Print your answer along with your name and address. Mail to Secret City Swappees, P.O. Box 6018, Norwalk, CT 06852. Fill in 400 correspondent answers will receive a pointer as an entry prize. TO PLAY THE GAME Answer each of the riddles that will appear here each week in February. Write your answer in the blanks below each riddle. The letters with numbers below them correspond to the instructions for filling in the letters of the master key, you will be spelling the name and location of a secret city in Europe. Send us the solution, and you and a friend can win a trip there, free. 2. Grand Prize consists of two round trip economy airfares to the secret city, 30-day European passport American Youth Hostel or U.S. Airways airfare. (Answer to Week #2 Riddle: CLEF) here's a city in Europe-you could travel there free. So unravel these riddles, and uncover its key. offer good No coupons Wed., Feb. 17 accepted with thru this offer Sun. 21 TO ENTER SWEEPSTAKES: 1. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY My arsenal is patience, T THE QUEST OF THE SECRET CITY sweepstakes C A E S F N 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEES MAKE GOOD COMPANY. WHAT AM I? My sword is chalk; My discipline is conscience; My medium is talk; My reservoir is history, My greatest love is truth; My highest art is alchemy, Where lead to gold is youth. GF GENERAL FOODS Cafe Vienna AUSTRIAN STYLE INDIA CAFE BREWER GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEE CAFÉ FRANCAIS TRENCH LITE INSTANT Coffee BEVEN GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEE GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEES GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEE Suisse Mocha GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEE'S Irish Mocha Mint IRISH STYLE INDIAN COFFEE BEVERAGE Susse Mocha SWISS STYLE INSTANT COFFEE BEVERAGE kansas union bookstores main union level 2 satellite shop Dragon KU-K-STATE BASKETBALL GAME SATURDAY, FEB. 20, 1982 ECTIONS—LOWER BALCONY: 14, 15, NORTH HALF 19,20 UPPER BALCONY: 14-A, 15, 16, 17,18,19,20-A NORTH AND SOUTH END ZONES, BEHIND KU BENCH 2:00 p.m. - KU STUDENT ID'S REQUIRED FOR ADMISSION WITH ALL STUDENT TICKETS - KU STUDENT SEATING AREA WEST NORTH ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE-ALLEN FIELD HOUSE-864-3141 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1982 Medical program cuts costs By TOMHUTTON Staff Reporter The budget cutting axes in Washington have cut medical developmental programs everywhere. But because of the foresight of two University of Iowa colleges, the ministrators, the health Maintenance Program at the Med Center seems secure. The program, in the making since 1979, was saved from the chopping block when David Waxman, president of the Center, and Charles Hartman, vice chancellor for clinical affairs, hurriedly finished the final drafts for the program enabling them to beat 72 other applicants to gain a $25,000 bonus. "There were 82 programs competing for 10 spots and we were the last ones to submit a plan," Thomson said. Thompson and Hartman submitted their plan in June 1981. In March, the Public Health Service announced there would be no more funding for Health Maintenance programs called HMOs. Late last September, the two men found out that their efforts were successful when the Med Center was told it had received a $25,000 grant. The money was used to establish Kansas City Health Care Inc., a program designed to cut medical costs, improve care and shorten hospital stays through prepayment plans to members. THIS NON-PROFIT program is now the only Health Maintenance Organization affiliated with a public university, Thompson said. Only about 5 percent of all hospital care is covered under some type of prepayment plan, said Thompson. This figure will change, he said, as the cost for traditional health care plans continue to skyrocket. Thompson said the cost of Blue Cross and Blue Shield, one of the nation's largest health insurance companies, had risen between 20 to 40 percent last year. HMO costs up only about 8 percent, he said. The reason an HMO can provide lower costs is the basic theory behind the program, Thompson said. In a traditional system, Thompson said, unnecessary services are often performed. Hospital stays are often used, he said, because insurance will not cover the same operation performed as an outpatient. Thompson said laboratory tests and X-rays needlessly performed were other examples of waste in the present system. The advantage of an Thompson said was the removal of both waste and financial burdens. A MONTHLY FEE guarantees that members of an HMO will receive care without worry over expense. "Normally there are no additional out-of-pocket expenses," Thompson said. "All of the dollar pressures are removed because the people know they are going to get the care they need without it costing them anything." When the HMO actually begins soliciting members in January, the rates will probably be lower than additional insurance. Thompson said. A benefit package that includes all hospital ambulatory and primary care, prescription drugs, lab fees and X-rays will cost an individual about $53 a month. Thompson said, "I fairly plan will be about $140 a month." "There will be no deductable," Preventive medicine is an important part of any HMO, Thompson said. This is another area that helps to save money, he said. Thompson said. "You don't pay a penny extra." A FREE PHYSICAL, immunizations, and encouragement to see the doctor even if the symptoms minor, are the basis of the group. Last year, said Thompson, for every 1,000 members of private insurance companies there were about 850 days spent in hospitals. The HMO organizations had a figure of 407, Thompson said. The savings of an HMO over traditional insurance methods have attracted many industries to the programs. Currently, Southwestern Bell, Ford Motor Co., General Motors Corp. and Armco Steel have begun using HMOs for employees throughout the country. "Ford spends more on health care for its employees than it does on steel," Thompson said. CRITICS OF HMOs have argued that the idea is socialistic and is similar to national health coverage. "Calling an HMO socialized medicine is bull." Thompson said. The entire idea of an HMO, Thompson said, is to lower health costs through competition. Health care is not worse in an HMO, according to a report released by the John Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health. This study found that of 27 separate studies made, 19 found HMO care better than that provided by doctors working primarily for fees. The care was comparable or evidence inconclusive in the eight other studies. Although still showing an increase in his sales, the KU concessions department has shown a decrease in its net profit for the first time in several years. By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas Union, said yesterday that the number of items sold this year was comparable to the number sold last year. However, net profit was below that of last year because price increases have not kept up with the rate of inflation. "The total figures for sales are up slightly over last year," Ferguson said. "However, those figures don't give an accurate assessment of actual net profit, which is down $23,000 from last year." Ferguson said that the net profit was the true indicator of whether a business was doing well. KU concession profits shrink Students probably bought less this year because of the economic crunch, "More and more students are bringing sack lunches to school," Ferguson said. "They just don't have the purchasing value they had in years past. This also seems to be the trend nationwide." KU concessions encompasses a variety of services including the vehi- ming machines, the Wesco Terrace Cafeteria, the information counter at the Union, the athletic concessions at games and the fine arts snack bar. "The KU concessions department tries to be slightly under the market in the local area for its pricing or advice. So Scaffold can't do that, but on most times we deal." Ferguson said another important reason why concessions was having difficult earning a profit was the fact that he sold the 85 cent price tug or soda non items. "Coke prices remaining fixed at 35 cents is a big reason why the vending machines haven't shown an impressive profit," Ferguson said. "The department has decided to keep the price fixed at 35 cents for the rest of the year and set economic for the student. How often, more than price will undoubtedly have to be raised." Ferguson said that beverage sales were an intricate part of the concession system. He said that such items as cigarettes could be stored for a long time, but that soda pop must be sold immediately or be thrown away. He said the concessions department was better able to absorb a loss with over-the-counter items than with vending machines. At over-the-counter services we can slightly increase the products by pennies, which don't affect the consumer's purchasing power too much." Ferguson said. "However, with venom in your eyes, you can't be taken by an item by either a nickel or a dime." monthly booking bell for work. At 10:30 AM. - and your membership on the Student ID # 72. You can also sign up as well as apply for enrolment. No, the student will not receive a bell. TO 68° But you making the job But our modelling that you have done is so beautiful. monthly building ball for each month. In 10,500 Hrs. He has made a lot of progress. In 20,500 Hrs. He has made a lot of progress. KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE 847-762-4111 DIAL DOWN SNA FILMS "If this trend continues over the next couple of years, then changes will have to be brought about," he said. The sales of certain vending items may depend on the weather, he said. For example, on hot days during the football season Coke sales could skyrocket, and on cold days they could nose-dive. The attendance figures at games also play an important role in total sales. TONIGHT too sales. Ferguson said that the current figures might be an indication of things to come. The BITTERNESS of Living... The JOY of Loving... SIDNEY POTTIER a raisin in the sun Start Your Day Right, With A Pawe Delight! CLAUDIA McNEIL·RUBY DEE "As for now I don't see any immediate changes in store. It's just too early to tell." 7:30 p.mf. $1.50 Woodruff P Skateboarder 2 Buttermilk Pancakes Only $1.99 2 Stirpice Bacon and 1 egg 3 Spaghetti Dinner *Daily Buffet* PP Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner • Daily Buffe Mon. Sat. 6 a.m., 9 p.m. Sunday 6 a.m., 8 p.m. PAM'S PLACE 2907 W. 6th 841-6844 Mr. T. W.C. Frank "A Frank We Can All Afford" W.C. FRANK POLISH ... FOOTLONG FIFTH TM A Frank We Can All Afford" 23rd & Iowa Lawrence Phone 842-9672 COCA-COLA ORANGE SPRITE ROOTBEER TAB BREWEDICED TE 38¢ 57¢ 65¢ 69¢ All Sandwiches come with Refresh & Fresh Cut Onions Additional Toppings CHEESE CHILI KOALI CRISP DILL SUCE CHIPS small .25e medium .35e large .45e Coming Soon Rootbeer or Orange SOFT-SERVICE CREAM Chocolate, Butterscotch Hot Fudge 14¢ 15¢ 15¢ 12¢ 24¢ CONE... SUNDAE... 28¢ 59¢ Mingles Lounge Every Wednesday Happy Hour 4:00-8:00 p.m. $1.00 Well Drinks and 50' draws During Happy Hour free Mexican Hors D'oeuvres Build your own taco . . . and then finish it off with $1.00 Margaritas MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th St. 842-7030 Ext. 136 CITY OF LAWRENCE R 1863 1952 KANSAS CITY OF LAWRENCE REGULATIONS RNING COLLECTION OF REFUSE The collection of refuse and the operation of mechanized collection equipment is physically very demanding and exposes workers to unusual equipment daily. These hazards arise from the nature of the equipment used, the requirement to work in adverse weather and under treacherous conditions, and the nature of the material collected. In the interest of safety, it is important to use equipment that obligations most directly related to worker safety are listed along with some information of more general application. a Refuse containers be constructed of metal, plastic, or other materials approved by the City. shall have a capacity of not more than thirty two gallons, shall be provided with handles on the outside, and shall be maintained in a state of good repair. Residents are cautioned that many inexactly constructed containers become very fragile when exposed to liquid tracer. b. Disposable plastic bags of sufficient thickness to avoid rupture and tearing and having a capacity of not more than 200g. Disposable paper bags which are manufactured specifically for relocate disposal (such as those used in home kits) are also available. 1. Cardboard boxes, paper boxes, pasteboard or fiber- board borels, wicker baskets, and all drums are not approved reusable containers. Such containers will not be returned for reuse. e. Trash in ordinary paper bags such as grocery bags, shopping bags, or similar containers will not be collected there. d. Disposable bags must be secured tightly and leave sufficient material for arosing GARbage Truck g. Loose refuse will not be emptied from wheelbarrows, wagons, washers or similar containers. h. Unless authorized by the City to collect and dispose of refuse, it is允助 for any person to: (3) remove refuge from another persons container; (2) damage, upset, turn over, remove or carry away k Collectors are instructed not to empty containers have sharp or injured items stuck out of the container. (1) not a coach or a referee than that person own or which has been provided for that person use. (2) 1. Supervisors are authorized to confilicate any non-approved container or any container which is hazardous to the crew if any discrepancy is not corrected after one warning tag is issued. 1. Collectors are prohibited from reaching into containers to dig out compacted trash. m. Broken glass should be placed in a durable package and placed within the trash container for collection. It placed in a separate disposable box, it should be labeled so that the risk of injury can be recognized. Broken glass placed loose in plastic or paper bags is a leading cause of hand, arm, and leg cuts. 1. The weight of container and trash combined shall not exceed 65 pounds. n. Dangerous materials such as hot sashes, radio-activ- materials, acids, coustics, diseased materials, infected materials, highly volatile materials, and explosives shall not be collected. CITY OF LAWRENCE BROOKLYN 1400 WEST 2ND ST. THE MARKET BUILDING 620-753-8900 MAYLOR p. Yard, shrub, and tree trimmings can be collected only if they are: FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 841-1215 1) contained in an approuved container so that they do not extend more than two inches above the top of the container and are not so tightly packed that they must be pulled from the container by hand, or. (2) bundled in bundles not more than eighteen inches in diameter, nor more than five feet in length. The weight of the bundle or weight, bundles must be tied with cord, twine, or wire strong enough to permit pick-up by use of a tool. q. Newspapers and magazines put placed in containers must be tied securely in bundles more than twelve inches in thickness. Empty cardboard boxes which have been col- lored may be bundled in the same manner as newspapers. r. It is unlawful for any person to permit or allow any refuse or waste materials to be scattered about in that persons yard or upon the premises occupied by that person, to permit such material to be blown from the premises, or to throw any material upon another matter upon the premises of any other person or upon any of the streets, alleys, or other public places in the city. s. The Sanitation Department will provide special pickup of bulky items such as sofas, mattresses, carpet, and major appliances at no charge. Call the dispatcher at 841-1911 to arrange for this service. 1. Sanitation Department superviseurs can be reached at 841-273-6500 to discuss complaints or special service requirements. TRASH COLLECTION --- COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA COLUMBIA PHONE 862-710-1088 KATHARINE HEPBRUN HENRY FONDA On Golden Goddess A UNIVERSAL BOTTOM PG 7:30 AM - 7:00 PM R VARSITY COUNTY BORN 1121 PHONE 843-1085 HILLCREST 1 9TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 847-8400 THE BORDER R Entralling... CHARIOTS OF FIRE HIGHLIGHT 2 'AN UNCOMMONLY BEAUTIFUL FILM' HEART LAND PG 7.30 PAGTIME PG = 7 45 min Mint 2:00 ACADEMIC AWARD NOMINATIONS BEST PET FILM JAMES CAREY Whose life is it anyway CINEMA 1315T AND IOWA TELEPHONE 826-9400 PAGTIME JAMES * SALES * Allure Earnings at 7.15 & 8.15 Western Mountains at 7.00 & 4.00 Adults $3.90 You're never more angry than after you say THOMAS J. FARRERFERN JIM FARRERFERN WESTERN PICTURES MASSACHUSETTS PAUL SALLY NEWMAN FIELD ABSENCE OF MALICE PC A COLUMBIA PICTURES Film: 7:30 A.M. RX Pharmacy Footnotes DENVER by O.Newton King R.Ph A good rule of thumb is to avoid drugs during pregnancy if at all possible. Even the ubiquitous aspirin can be potentially harmful if it is poorly solved in the mother's stomach and having reached her bloodstream, it can pass quickly into the circulatory system of the unborn child; it could then possibly affect the baby's ability of the baby when delivered. As such, although a couple of aspirin for headache during pregnancy will not be a threat, frequent use may be an unneeded risk. Always consult your physician before ingesting any drugs during pregnancy. AT KING PHARMACY, we are concerned about your health. We have a library on health information and disseminate health information for you to your health agencies. We can take care of your health needs, from prescriptions and home health services to supplies or therapeic supports, pressure kits and other monitoring devices, and hospital beds for home use. We're in the Lawrence 6th St. Fm-Fri-8 5:40 Bk 6:44 M We Honor Student Insurance Claims HANDY HINT: FIRST HINT: The first few months of pregnancy are the most crucial in terms of fetal exposure. PHARMACY Laurencio Méjuelo Plaza 11'2W 8th Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-4 University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1982 Page 9 the next will have ny im just too A package deal KUAC approves lower student ticket prices A package deal By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation yesterday approved the proposed season ticket prices for basketball and basketball games next year. The new prices will be included in the BAC budget that Chancellor Gem A. Badawi will appoint. Richard Konem, ticket manager, said that all the sports ticket would cost $140. Total costs for the football and season ticket package last year was $450. For $45, students can attend home basketball and football games, including one football game during the Thanksgiving break and two basketball games during Christmas break. Students also will have the option of buying individual season tickets for the football and basketball games. Football tickets will cost $23, and basketball tickets will cost $22. The cost per game, however, will decrease for basketball games and increase for football. A recent NCAA decision to increase the number of season basketball games by one would allow KU to schedule 14 home basketball games for next season. This would change the pregame season ticket price to $1.57. This year, the season tickets are $1.75 for each basketball game. The six home games scheduled for next season won't make the $25 bid. The $40 bid ($44) would save $1. This year's season ticket for football an average cost of seven games, an average cost of $10.49. The all-sports price package plus the $9 student activity fee brings to $54 the total student contribution to the athletic program. This is still 33.5 percent of the price of public football and basketball tickets combined, which is well under 50 percent of public cost, the mark chosen as a goal for student prices. Rick von Ende, University executive secretary and KUAC member, suggested that the Kansas Relays ticket be included in the all-sports package "to keep people thinking about athletics in the spring." In other business, the KUAC board discussed the state of its budget. As of Jan 31, 1982 the budget showed an $855.16 deficit. The total budgeted income includes revenue from football and basketball games, contributions, the student activity fee, radio network and other areas. Televised football and basketball conference games generate money for all Big Eight members and NCAA members because money from participants is divided evenly among conference members. "Any game they win, as well as any game we win, will generate money for our conference," said Del Brinkman, KUAC faculty representative. Several factors, one already tabulated and some not yet tabulated, are Despite the big deficit now showing, John Patterson, KU comproller, said "We actually intend to pick up the entire $85,000." Student season ticket sales were $104,000 short of what was expected. Also, the payment from the Big Eight divided among conference members is paid off in two separate payments during the semester. Patterson said so. far it was $60,000 more than the amount received last year. "We don't know the impact of that yet," he said. Another factor that will affect the deficit is "a change in an income tax law making it profitable for people to give money," Patterson said. He said the total athletic budget was "slightly ahead or at the break-even point without considering contributions from the Williams Fund." Del Shankel, who acted as athletic director until Jim Lessig was appointed last week, said one problem was the lack of student attendance at revenue office. "It's a bad bond is hoping the new ticket options will increase student attendance." How To Won At The Losing Game DIET CENTER If it's a Natural! 841 DIET 839 New Hickory Medical Center 841-DIET HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE HARVESTSTATE 804 NEW HAMPTON RD. SAN FRANCISCO 94125 FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Book estimate: THE PRINCESS MCAIL COMPANY 311 N. 3rd 814-6067 MASS. STREET DELI inc 941 MASSACHUSETTS now featuring... Soft-Serve Frozen DESSERT YOGURT So Nutritious . . . So Lo Cal . . . So Natural So GOOD! Try Some Now Tv Bring in This AD Buy One Yogurt Cone get the second one FREE No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Many Fruit Flavors To Choose From Offer Expires 2/21/82 K KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION Telephone 913/864-3291 101 CARRUT O'HLEARY THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MAIN CAMPUS, LAWHENGE, KANSAS 66045 NOTICE: TO: MEMBERS OF KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION AND OTHER FACULTY AND STAFF OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS RE: OPENING OF NEW BRANCH OFFICE AT 2212 IOWA 8:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY WE ARE PRAID TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF OUR BRANCH OFFICE LOCATED AT 2212 IOWA HERE IN LAWRENCE, KANSAS! THE DOORS WILL OPEN AT 8:00 MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 15, 1982, AND YOU ARE ALL INVITED TO USE OUR NEW FACILITY AT YOUR CONVENIENCE! HOURS AT THE BRANCH WILL BE: 8:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON SATURDAYS HOURS AT THE MAIN OFFICE AT 101 CARRUTH WILL REMAIN THE SAME AS THEY HAVE BEEN, 9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M., MONDAY THRU FRIDAY. WE WILL HAVE AN OPEN HOUSE TO CELEBRATE OUR NEW BRANCH ON SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1982 FROM 2:00 P.M. TO 4:00 P.M. AT THE BRANCH OFFICE. AT THAT TIME WE WILL HOLD A DRAWING FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE DOOR PRIZE!...$100.00...DEPOSIT IN YOUR SHARE ACCOUNT. VISIT OUR NEW BRANCH...1 TICKET MAKE A DEPOSIT...1 BONUS TICKET OPEN A NEW ACCOUNT...5 TICKETS $ THANK YOU FOR ALL OF YOUR SUPPORT AND CONCERN FOR YOUR CREDIT UNION IN THE PAST, AND WE HOPE NOW THAT WE CAN HELP SERVE YOU BETTER WITH A BIT MORE SPACE!! KU Federal Credit Union established 1982 TO ENTER OUR DOOR PRIZE DRAWING YOU NEED TO PICK UP YOUR TICKET OR TICKETS AT THE BRANCH OFFICE BETWEEN FEBRUARY 15, 1982 AND MARCH 6, 1982. TICKETS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED AS FOLLOWS: HEAD FOR THE SUN SPRING Daytona Beach Daytona Deluxe means the beautiful Whitehall Inn and Daytona Economy means the Diplomatic Beach Hotel. Each is located directly on the beach with features such as television, telephone services, swimming pools, gourmet restaurants, and **offer lounges** in the World's Most Romantic Beach. Economy $191 per person Economy $94 per person Padre Island SMILEY The Sand Castle Resort is located right on the Bay just a few blocks from the Gulf. Each 4-6 person apartment has a kitchen, living room, laundry room, and kitchens. Two swimming pools, and a recreation room all on the beach. A listing of rates: $199 per person $509 per person Fort Lauderdale Lauderade's Rivera Hotel is located on the ocean right in the heart of the city with the best nightlife in easy walking distance. The hotel features a spacious lobby, an outdoor court, a sidewalk cafe restaurant and a cocktail lounger. Kichenettes are available Key West Key West keyboarding, Smoking, Deep Sea Sleep, Night Life, Seca Diving, Sailing, Grey Land Racing and a great fun. Our accommodations are at the Quality Inn Key West with swimming pool, restaurant and lounge BREAK Package Includes: *8 days *7 night accommodations *Pontocho welcome party *Hotel amenities *All areas *Optimal Siburors *Disneyworld - Daytona *Mamaroneck - Fords Island Tripsto旅到 Nassau, Bahamas Mexico Bahamah Islands Cruise sailing Night and a great tan Key West with SUMMIT TOUR SUMMIT tour info: Call 842-6689 after a p.m. Space is limited and filling fast so call soon. TO THE CLASS OF 1982 It's time to order your graduation announcements and name cards at: MAIN UNION, LEVEL 2 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. THE SATELLITE UNION 8:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m. GRADUATION Prepaid orders MUST be placed on February 17 & 18. Visa and Mastercard welcome. kansas KU union bookstores main union level 2. satellite shop Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1982 JUDYNE JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff Professor Anna Cienciala JON HARDESTY/Kansan S The University of Kansas Concert Series Presents KU Alumnae and European Opera Star PATRICIA WISE SOPRANO Accompanied by KU Alumnus Robert Hiller, Piano FEBRUARY 21,1982,SUNDAY 3:30 PM. UNIVERSITY THEATRE.MURPHY HALL Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved. Student and Senior Citizen Discounts available. For reservations call 913-864-3982 The Arts SILVER FESTIVAL Miss Wise's performance is part of the 1982 University Arts Festival NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA AND VIDEO GAME CENTER Now Playing All New Ms. PACMAN! Prof says Polish people will bounce back By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter COUPON Present This Coupon And Receive Two FREE VIDEO GAME PLAYS Expires 2/28/82 Limit one coupon per person Thats Right Ms. PACMAN!! It's just a matter of time before some kind of Polish union is organized again, Anna Cienciala, professor of history at East European Studies, said yesterday. "There is no way you can make a country work by using terror," Cien- ladez said. Since Poland declared martial law Dec. 13, 1981, the government has been using armies to patrol the streets, special security forces to break up demonstrations and physical brutality to restrain protestors, Cienciaca said. COUPON Solidarity was more than a labor movement, she said. It was a national movement that challenged the current environment of changes, both economic and political. Regular Pizza Prices LARGE Double Cheese '4.95 MEDIUM Double Cheese '3.95 SMALL Double Cheese '2.95 TINY Double Cheese '1.95 Additional Meat or Garden Topping 75ª ea. Large 65ª ea. Medium 55ª ea. Small 45ª ea. Tiny This military crackdown is different from those in the past. Ciencia said, "We have been trying to keep it under control." After the Polish government agreed to the demands of Solidarity on Aug. 31, 1980, it stalled for time, Clenciaki said. Government hardliners were probably hoping that the Polish people would ease up on their demands, but, she said, "I think things are going to continue to boil in Poland." Present This Coupon And Receive ANY SIZE PIZZA $1'00 OFF Expires 2/28/92 Limit one coupon per person The last time she was in Poland was in 1887, just before Solidarity was set up. OPEN DAILY 10 a.m.-11:45 p.m. SUN. Noon-11:45 p.m. Clienciala, a native Pole, has been back to Poland seven times since 1959, and six times since 1984, in national relations of Europe from 1914 to 1944. HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. — 842-3610 $ 3^{1/2} \mathbf{c}$ COPIES COUNTRY /nn' No other Coupon accepted with this Offer Coke 1350 N. 3rd COUNTRY Inn $2.00 OFF Chick or Steak M-Th only 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 1350 N. 3rd COUNTRY Inn $1.00 OFF Chick or Steak Fri & Sat 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 Sun 11-8 Fri & Sat 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 Sun. 11-8 Proudly Presents GAWMONS SNOWMONS 2016 LUPE Tonight thru Saturday, 1st Set Starts at 9:30 WEDNESDAY IS LADIES NIGHT! Everyone, 25c Draws 10-11 p.m. Ladles, 2 Free Drinks after 9:00 p.m. Open 7 days a week 11-10 Weekdays $3.75 "The Communist Party in Poland would be completely disintegrated by now had not the Soviet Union applied pressure." Cienciana said. If martial law continues, the Polish army will probably be demoralized and that would mean either another period of liberalization or Soviet intervention, 11-10 Weekdays 10-10 Weekends This Week's Special Breakfast Enchiladas $2.75 1801 Massachusetts "Right now passive resistance continues. almost all four newspapers are running newsletters." Now Featuring: Weekend Breakfast Specials 10 a.m.-1 p.m. 842-9637 --among children, are some of Cienciala's concerns, she said. In hard situations the Polish people are good at imprisonment. Clients said. When she was in Poland for the academic year of 1979-1980, Ciencia said it was obvious there was going to be a real economic crunch. The massive food shortages that the Polish people are now experiencing and the problem of malnutrition, especially Cornucopia Restaurant "The private support that Poles are now receiving is not enough," she said. "It's a drop in the bucket." "Poles have a history of resistance, she said. - Luncheon Specials Weekdays Through February. Cornucopia Salad with Soup and Bread. $2.50 "Food needs to be sent in bulk to the Poles and I would like to see our government give credit for food. But food distribution would have to be supervised by either the Red Cross or a neutral government like Switzerland." The strikes Solidarity organized showed just how much resistance the Polish people had, she said. SHOES Tie In With Us Recreation Services Racquetball Doubles Tournament - Play is available for men and women in three classes provided there are enough entrants: advanced intermediate and novice. - Entry fee is one can of unopened racquetballs submitted with completed entry form - Entry deadline is Thursday, Feb. 18 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson. - Play begins Sunday, Feb. 21. Entry forms are available in 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546. 98 The University of Kansas Black History Month February 1982 Former Mayor of Cleveland Afro-American History-- Blueprint for Survival Thursday, February 18, 1982 8:00 p.m., Templin Hall No Admission Charge Sponsored by Templin Hall, Templin Hall Black Caucus. Office of Minority Affairs, AURH, School of Law, School of Journalism, G. S.P., B.S.U. Carl B. Stokes First Black Mayor of a Major American City For more information. For more information, contact the KU Office of Minority Affairs, 324 Strong Hall, 864-4351 Publicity for this event paid for by Black Student Union, funded in part by student activity fees. NYC TREATMENTS I --- THE THIRD ANNUAL SUA THEATRE SERIES SIDE by SIDE by SONDHEIM feb.18-20 feb.21 matinee forum kansas union room TAKEN IN MARRIAGE mar 46 mar.4.6 big eight kansas union room SCENES from SOWETO bakeware.wmr & feb.25.27 smith hall RITO by 18rael horovitz mar 3. 3 an evening of one - acts ALL EVENING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00p.m. ALLMATINEE PERFORMANCES ARE AT 2:00 p.m. tickets: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE 6TH BAY BOX OFFICE IN THE KANSAS UNION LAWRENCE #93 46052 106 TICKET INFORMATION CALL (913) 864-3477 with KUND SHOW SHOW 52.30 MERIES TICKET 32.00 OFFICIAL PUBLIC SINGLE SHOW $3.20 ARRIVES TICKET $9.00 University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1982 Page 11 ck of Cien- Poles are she said. organized tance the Js bulk to the see our food. But we to be Cross or a verland." ces KU, visiting profs give 'community' seminars ish peopleciala said.istance,' By PAM ALLOWAY Staff Writer A community is defined as a group of people living together as a small social unit within a large one, having interests and work in common. A group of 13 faculty members from the University of Kansas and regional private colleges have focused on this work. The students' University-wide faculty seminars. Through the Andrew Mellon Grant for Faculty Development, University-wide faculty seminars dealing with selected humanities topics are held each spring. This year's topic is "The Impact of Technology on America and Pre-Industrial England." Andrew Debicki, co-director of the Center for Humanistic Studies, which "It helps develop faculty members from private schools and gives them the opportunity to do important research," Debicki said. "The seminars are set up on an interdisciplinary basis, which makes it possible for faculty members to extend their knowledge areas they work in on a day-to-day basis." The grant provides funds for six visiting fellows from private colleges within a 400-mile radius to spend a semester at KU, attend the seminar and conduct individual research projects. coordinates the seminars, said the purpose of the seminars was to bring the faculty of small colleges to the University of Kansas. The grant also provides funds for six KU faculty members who are chosen The Mellon Foundation, which funds the fellowships, was established by Andrew W. Mellon Sr., a wealthy financier, for the purpose of furthering educational standards in private institutions. KU circumvents the private university by visiting fellowships for faculty members from private institutions. Max Sutton, KU professor of English agreed. "I'm meeting people I normally wouldn't be and we share a common interest," he said. The original grant was for $315,000 and KU was awarded an additional $200,000, according to Debicki. The University Endowment Association account. Sutton is one of the seven KU faculty fellows. Sutton said he was interested in rural life and the seminar provided an opportunity to use his research from the past few years. He said he hoped to someday write a book on rural America. KU faculty members who participate in the seminar are awarded $800 for the semester and are expected to continue with normal responsibilities at the University. Visiting fellows, however, are given a leave of absence from their home institutions and are awarded $9,000 fellowships to do personal research. Each fellow, both KU and visiting, is required to present a paper on his research area at one of the weekly meetings. This group is usually included throughout the spring semester. being given more stress nationally now,"Debicki said. The three-year grant was awarded to KU in the summer of 1978 for year-long fellowships. the fellows were then channeled and now offered only on the spring session. last spring the grant was renewed for three more years. These seminars are held each Monday in the Kansas Union and are open to all interested KU faculty members. because of similar research interests. This spring, two KU faculty members are working on one research paper, so there are seven KU faculty members. Consequently the grant has been extended to five years. The first seminar was in the spring of 1979, and The Center for Humanistic Studies organizes faculty development programs, invites guest lecturers and curriculum development in the humanities. Although the center coordinates the grant, the seminar has its own directors who are independent from the center. The theme for next year's seminar will be "The Creative Process in the Humanities." The directors will be Peter Casagrande, KU professor of English, and Steve Addiss, KU associate professor of art history. The University Daily This spring's directors are Rita Napier, KU associate professor of history, and Joyce Youngs, the Rose Morgan visiting professor of history from the University of Exeter in England. "Faculty development programs are KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 AD DEADLINES CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer . . . Each additional word. one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one $2.35 $2.45 $2.75 $2.75 $2.50 $2.15 $2.00 $2.00 $2.00 $2.35 $2.45 $2.75 $2.75 $2.50 $2.15 $2.00 $2.00 $2.00 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Munday 9 p.m. Tuesday 10 p.m. Wednesday 10 p.m. Thursday 10 p.m. Friday 10 p.m. ANNOUNCEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads *place*, in person or simply by calling the Business assistant at 843-458. ERRORS POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996. tf 80 Elegant Chicken recipes. Delicious, Nutritious, Different. $3.00 to Tasmasters. Box 2313u, Lawrence, KS 66045. 2-19 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. Call Dan's Tax Service for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 811-6883. Applyitions available day or night. 3-3 APT=31? Room=2 blocks from campus= $175月—ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED 841-8487. 2-22 3 bedroom apartment. Close to campus, carpet, off street parking, no pets. Referees, water, electricity paid, $500 a month. $300 deposit. 824-750-741. 2-18 Sublease 2 bedroom apt., gas paid. Complete kitchen carpet plus plains, central air and heat. Call 541-6688. 2-26 For rent 2 bedroom apt. Convenient shopping. On bus route. Complete kitchen, central air and carpet. Heated plus draps. 411-6888 2-26 Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf 3-Bedroom Apartment, close to campus, carrot, off-street parking. No pets. References. Water & alce. paid $30 mo. $300 deposit. 842-750-741 2-19 FOR RENT Copy 3 Bdmn, unfurnished ap, in older cellar at 31W. 814 (14th & TERm.) available now. Only $250/month with 2000 dp. Available locally. Absolute value. Call 794-4141. 2-17 HANOVER PLACE, completely furnished, hanson 2, 2 bldm. apt. Located between 1300 and 1450 West 6th St. K.U. DON'T DELAY. Reserve your home today. Rentals from $240 month-water 1 bedroom apt to inpatient first of March or April-$210.06 per month, all utilities paid Close to campus (Oread) Contact Margo— 841-6535 2-23 KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Large 2 Bidr. hbm in an older home at 1017 Ridge Island, Avail. Feb. 19. Only 225 bd. a mo. with a 200 bd. dep. Utilizes pd. by Bridgman. See instructions for Call- 4414 4414 PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now available, 2 bedrooms and a wood burning fireplace, 2 car garage with electric opener, kitchen, quiet surroundings. Open house on phone 842-2539 at 2909 Princeton Blvd., or phone 842-2535 for contact to mature male student. Quick, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private room价格:842-4185.税收优惠:价格:842-4185. FACULTY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3 br. townhouse, 2712 Drive. 3 all appilions. KU, bus route 4$75/mo, 84-19- or 84-620. Studiosia atmosphere, International meals, crazy rostreams with Christian perspectives and inspirations. Open room $110 meals per week. Open room $140 meals per week. Flat accommodations, pillar and inlay. Call 841-7628. Close rooms. Spouse commutes to K.C.? Share the drive! Nice house for rent in DeRota, after Mar. 15. 1-585-1663 or 864-4115. 2-19 Studio art close to campus at 19 W. 140th Mare, Mar 1, 1982 $650.00 mow, with a 200.00 deposit. Absolutely no pets. Call 740-414 or 81-9701. Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in newer fourplex 1 and 2 baths, carpeted, wooded area, 220 per month. 843-8571 or 1-782-3716. 2-19 ON CANPUS. New completely furnished floor plan featuring two full baths. Floor plan featuring two full baths. Must see! Located on 12th & Ohio. Only two floors from the Union. Call 844-2534 or 841-2534 Large, modern 18-inch, unfurnished apt. in an 8-plex at 1012 Bridge Island, available with a 360-degree mo. with 200.00 dep. Tennant pays all utilities. Absolutely no charge. Call 744-6141. 2-17 Comfortable, apartment - large bedroom, kitchen, bath, inconspicuous, available immediately. 749-1898 Call anytime and keep calling. Two bedroom apartment, low utilities, two blocks from KU. 3 blocks from town, centrally air, equipped kitchen, carpet and draps. KBU 2156. Available now. Two bedroom apartments, updated, carpeted & draped, all electric bath, heated kitchen, campus, and on bus route. 343% per month. **MADBROOK LEA** 845-260-9455. 845-260-9456. For sublease, 2 Br. apt. $310 + elect. Available now. Telephone: 841-8128. For rent 3 bdm. apt. $260 a month. Avail. March 1. Near campus. 749-1750. Large 3 room apartment (i) nice older home (Large 2-room apartment (ii) nice older home) 841-5366 (l) or 841-2344 (evenings) 841-5366 (l) or 841-2344 (evenings) Clean, close to campus-Room for rent 2 rooms. Campus - Share bath, kitchen, 841-6579, 841-6579 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Be prepared to use them. Makes sense to use them -17 As study guide. For class preparation of the exam presp choice of book for own Crier. The Booklist and Road Book series. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3900 W. 6th. 1979 Mobile Home 14 x 70 3, bdms AC, stove + refrigerator / 28 sq. ft 11 x 30, $130. Lot rent is 65.00/month, water paid 843-1758 after 5:00 pm. 2-23 5 piece Ludwig drum set with new heads. First 200.00 takes it 84-691-691. 2-18 Acoustic model 118 bass amp. one 15 inch speaker. $450.00. Acoustic makes the best. 81-792-500 after 5.00. 2-18 BOOKCASES, stereo cabinets, cedar chest, etc. custom built to your needs. Michael Stough, 303 W. 13th. 843-8892. 2-19 Waterbed—Frame, liner, mattress, heater, 2 mos. old, $223. $243. leave message Gretsch Guitar and Peavey amp. 4 only months old and sound great. 842-503-04. 2-19 Must sell great component stereo system. Must have 50482-51003.售价: R19 price. Lyle 842-56003. New women's clothes; Jeans-Calf Straights, Lee, Calvin Klein (all $19.00). Blooms. Oxford shirt and sweaters ($10.00). Good quality. Call 842-1833. 2-18 Four drawer metal letter-size file cabinet; $35 Turkish-carpet approx. 11 x 5 double knot wool. hand-made. Cost $75. Betts Turkish-Carpet approx. 10 x 6 double knot wool. cost $45. 843-648. Evenings. 843-1711. 2-22 Bookcases, shelves, custom-built 8" or 12" pine or particle board unfinished or stained. Jim 842-8949. 2-23 1975 Opel Manta, 2-door, Automatic, Fuel Injection. New Heater, Air conditioner & radiator. Rear suspension. Ovation 12-String guitar mount. 115 SRS exhaust. Excellent condition. Tailgate 749-8031. For sale TEAC A-4010 SL reel-to-reel and 33 pre-recorded tapes. $200. Call 841-2763 after 5 p.m. Italian Guerilietto racing hecchi, Brano new. All Campana, Cmellcu, braze, anhoe 53 cm. Will sacrifice 110 Hanover Place Apf. 5 Guitar, Les Paul copy, Electra, sunburst, good shape, w case, $100.00 10 band EQ $45. 842-9543 2:23 Previously-Owned 10 gal. Aquarium, Package Deal Only—Includes: Heaters, Filter; Airpump, Hood and Light—$400.81. $817-80. The Sanctuary has openings for cocktail and dance parties. Please contact us to have neat appearance, pleasant personality and able to work late hours. Must be look- able 5pm-10pm. 1401 W. 10 am-6 pm. **2-17** 1401 W. 10 am-6 pm. 73 Nova, 37,000 miles, AC/PS, Like new, $900. Canon AE-1 with case/fish $220. +14-0653. FOUND HELP WANTED Energetic, hardworking, personable waitresses wanted. Must work well under prescriptions and incentive bonus. Apply after 5 pm to Gammon's, Southern Hills shopping Center. Men's silver-trimmed glasses—Found Tues. night Illinois & Sunnyside; Call 842-370 or 845-1231 Leather key ring, with Volkswagen crest on it, holding 2 keys. For information, Call 843-1772 ask for Jeff. 2-17 Found. hat, Summerfield Hall. Contact Greg 709-341-2658 Set of keys with leather key ring - Campbell's Soup. In front of Robinson. 841-319-2 19- Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Personable. Contact Dan at the Exchange, 842-9039. 3-12 OVERSEAS JOB'S- Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Astra. All Fields. $500-$1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Calif., DC. Box US - Box K-1-Carina Dal, Mar. CA 92876 CRUISES, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDI- TION Counsellors Europe, Sports Instruction Counselors Europe, Sports Instruction BAND DEPARTMENT, GUIDE TO CRUISE- SION DEPARTMENT, 153 box 609, Sacramento, 92850 Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, studious have own tools and equipment in cooperative. Call Darryl 841-838-5388. MANAGER OF MEMBERSHIP AND COMMUNITY AFFAIRS to assume responsibility for programs and committee activities, including a degree with degree in requiring a college degree with degree in communication/ and benefit. A complete position announcements may be obtained from the Lawrence Chapel, 822-643-1917 or by calling (913) 843-4141. 2-23 Full, part-time kitchen & restroom. Stockboker trainee. College grades-Exciting opportunity for hand work, hard handling, amitious and enthusiastic individual. Rep. P.O. Box 157红宝 Bank, N.J. 0780-38 LOST Full, part-time kitchen & restaurant help. Apply in person, 9-5 Sawbucks Sandwich Shop. 1814 W 23rd. 2-23 $200 Reward for Canon AE1 Lost on Jan. 26 on 13th & Vermont. No questions asked. 841-3295. 2-17 NOTICE Bassist needed to augment quartet of individual expressing discriminating tastes of musicians. He recruited Squeeze, the God, Jamie Godelm, Creme Kins, Van Morton, Frank, Sinatra, original manager, Mike Levine. PERSONAL Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Wells Studio 749-1611. **tf** PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-4821. Skillett's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willard Skilled Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tt Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-1611. SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, TRINKPARK, DILLON, AND OTHERS Economical packages every weekend and school breaks. Call Ski Etc. 814-8388 today. LEASE A LEMON Lease one of our cars. it's cheaper than a bus fare home! Reserve the car now. THE GUN AND A MILE Special weeksenders. We are now leasing trucks & vans. We accept Master Card Visa LEASE 749-4225 The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegge! Call 841-9450-1610 W 23rd. tt Old, new, used, useable and reusable. Crates to bakes, suits to suits, alpins to cash all of this and much more at West- erwood. TUE-SAT. 9:00-12:00, 1:00-2:17 TEU-SAT. 9:00-12:00, 1:00-2:17 Save 10% on Pentec sets from Footlights when you mention this ad. Footlights, 25th Iowa. 2-18 MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6614. **tf** Wow, you ought to see our hookers, price just right, you'll get snookered. 9:00-3:00 on Sunday. 75; we all is all you'll pay. The Sanctuary. 2-17 ELLEN KORT HAPPY 44th B-DAY OR IS IT 34th? THE DAYS OF THE DEAD HEY! Need a ride to Texas Sporing Break! I'm going as far as Austin and need one or two persons to share drive and gas enx- passion and back. Call Bill enx- passion at 841-0551. 2-23 Champagne for the ladies, 50r a glass. Tues. 9:00-12:00, now that's real class. The Sanctuary. 2-17 Mr. Bills and the Entertainer present Jasper. One night only, Thursday. Feb. 18, 9-12 Downers open at 8:30, 5:30 All you can drink: 2-14 this first Lawrence vacation this year. 2-18 THE BOYS OF HILLEL Who is the blond guy with wire rimmed glasses who used to work in the reserve at Watson, I saw at "Raiders" at BUA. He wore a black shirt and white skin tape on his back. I think blue blood came into my life. 217 Over stocked! 20% off! Everything in store. 40% off, coats, furniture, clothes, household items, mice. Inflation Fighter. 8 E. Kt. 10:24-13:30 M-F 10:30-15:30 2-19 GREEN'S CASE SALE, COORS $6.55, PABST $9.99, GREEN'S, WEB W 23RD, 2-19 ORTHODOX 1979–Wonderful. 1880–Sensational. 1881– Museum. 1882–Make history. Brainy Brick. Cabrillo, Feb. 20; 1979–Brian KLIPSFICH is what he doing at the GRAMOPHONE SHOP March 3rd 1979–Ralph H. Macklin. Join our Bible Study Group certificate upon complication of 10 week course. Every Tuesdays, 7 p.m. partners A & B. Union Salt Block. SPECTRUM OPTICAL fantastic savings using the Lawrence Book or People book coupons on our large selection of frames. Open 10-6, M-84, 111-13, E 4.7th. 2-19 ORTHODOX BIBLE STUDY Thursday February 18 7:30 p.m. Oread Room—Union Study Skills Workshop. Emphasis on study for exams and time management. Tuesday, February 28 - 9 p.m. pm; Jayhawk Room Wk. 500 The Student Assistance Center, 844-6464. The KU Walmer thank all who can... kinky pamadas, and many others... contribute to the team and contributed. Fooodsidh meet his deepest Hugger for Luckie Wippin. Tina and Beeky J. and Karen K. for making and breaking Steve and Steve from Footlights for kinky accesories. Rhonda D. for the Dirty Words Mary R. for Lankie Body Pants. Mary R. for Lankie Body Pants. You can paint on me anywhere. Kale has Swethtear cake. Keith for his pink chapagne case 22 and keg delivery—the Fooodsidh and Kev edible churyer sponsoring the most social event for conducting interview. Phil T. void hostt interview. Shawn J, and KenKen TRAVEL CENTER ENTERTAINMENT - Worlds of Fun - Kansas City Chiefs - Tittany's Attic * Waldo Asterio - Silver Dollar City Traveling Near or Far THE TRAVEL CENTER 841-7117 PEE KARK: "HOME OF THE PALM TREE" 1601 3rd St. Dr. Southern Hills Center 5-9:30 Fri - 9:30 2 St FREE PARKING Yon mademans who write clever verse be wrong. The poet's words will meet the both of you but to a Karaus can not will do. So here's a number-make-a will ask for Crawford that is all, 219 2901. Jiahawk. Gigli. We all know you now, too. I want to be a big girl, wear WOOK. Despite some missed fortunes, tradition is always big-patience. And Midshipmen have always been big-patience: B.V. Motion Letters: bk yint: B.V. Motion Letters: bk yint: TOM GLEASON—GUILTY. Of expressing an opinion? 2-23 "Mike" Ball—Thanks for the cookies,饼 and Gullee. Sorry about hourly excuse for no Valentine. Who writes my material for Congratals on contract negotiation Farka. Clothes and accessories with a touch of charm. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-3 Household items for apartment living. Barb. Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. Rose. White. Hair Rose. 513 Indiana. 842-744-7 Attention ALL K. U.B. Band Members! Want to get wild and crazy? Come to a KEIGGEBACK glass outside the Band Office for details. Be Top hats, derby's, visors, 40-50-skirts, clothes, cumbershacks, bow ties. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-3 1982 Kansas Relays April 14,15,16 and 17 The Kansas Relays needs students to volunteer as student officials for the Deadline March 5 I don't mean to impose, but DON'T MISS IT AGAIN THIS YEAR! Brazilian Carnival. 2-17 B-commandable job last week. To whoever took my purse from Jolie Hall last Friday: please return it to my mailbox. The billfold has sent it to Thanks. 2-19 Reward: For the return of a wine colored purse taken from Joliffe Hall Friday. No questions asked. 749-2125 2-19 If you are interested in making this the best Revelays, stop by the Men's Track Ofice in 143 Auburn Ave. out of the official's questionnaire. --- SERVICES OFFERED 3½¢ self service copies now at ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th and Iowa 842-2001 EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS project? Call 841-7683. COMPUTER SCIENCE Call 841-0989 any day. INFORMATION Call 841-1478 any day. Call 841-1478 for Robert. ENGINEERING Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We offer a variety of job postings. Call Encore 842-2001, 825 and Iowa. **2-26** **WRITE A RESUME? What to say? How to say it in English? FOREIGN HOUSE OF Uber or House of Uber; 838 Massachusetts; 8-M-F; 9-Pat; NOON-Sun. **2-3** **Children's Learning Center announces an expansion of services with an easing call time. Elementary age: Daycare 6-45 am to 6-60 pm. Junior age: Phone 842-2036 more information. **2-8** Grade student to tutor Calc: 115, 116, 112, 114 Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years exp. Drafting materials 5 years exp. Lettering for certificates. 841-7944 - 3-8 Schneider W & Kcl Shop - The finest shop in the city. 841-7944 strong of wenger kgs. 160 W 23d. 841-7944 of wenger kgs. 160 W 23d. 841-7944 Grad. student to tutor Calc. 115, 116, 121, 122. Very reasonable rates. Call 841-4031 after 5:00 pm. TYFING TYPING PLUS. Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Ansis. English tutoring, grammar, spelling. English tutoring, foreign language or Americans. M1-8254. It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. If Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IMB Correcting BECrity Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-6554 Mrs. Wright. **tf** Experienced typist. Theses, term papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-3818. tf For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. tf Fast, efficient typing. Many years experience. IBM. Before 9 p.m. 749-2647. Ann. tf Call Donna at 842-2744. ff Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct. Selective. Cilien or Ellean Ann Ann 841.2-2122. Experienced typist–thesis, dissertations, term papers, mlic. IBM correcting selec- trite. Bark, after 5 p.m. 843.2-210. Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting select. Call Donna at 842-2744. Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric, Elite or Plea. 842-6644. 2-26 TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting SE 500 CD. 843-5675. tt Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call evenings, 841-please. ff Graduate students tired of typing, retyping Graduate students tired of typing, retyping Save time and money by word processing I Write the text on paper or disk Quality typing and word processing avail- ability Copy Corp. 5th and 14th 842-2801 QUALITY TYPING: Themes, Manuscripts, Dissertations; IBM Selectric Library; Girl Thursday Secretarial Service; 842-7945 after 6:00 7915 7915 Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Correcting Selectic. Deb 843-6592 2-26 Fast, efficient typing. Many years' expi- lation. Located in Topaek area 1-8-19 5435 TUPFING-EDGING-GRAPHICS. IBM Correcting Slectric, full-time typi, spelling correction to composition assistance. Emergency service available. 843-297. - 298. Former medical research secretary will试 term papers, books. Call Nancy 841-297. Quality typing and word processing. Reasonable price includes revisions. 841-2781 after 5.O. 2-22 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE IS ALIVE AND WELL. 842-2507. 2-17 Roommate to share modern 2 bedroom unit + utilities. Call 843-628-5000. 2-172 roommates $150 each + deposit 1 each month + utilities 843-628-5000. 2-179 roommate $150 each + excellent location 2-199 Roommate to share Malaise Apt. Rent Need roommate to share room, fireplace, nice place. Call 979-848-5413. Req. Partnership with Lawrence to KC Roommate to share room, driveway, Call 843-628-5000. keep 2-199 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment need roommate $147.50 and $42.50. Roommate needs $843-628-5000. WANTED Male roommate to 3 bedroom house: 13th & Mast $108 mo. + 1/2 utilities + deposit. Liberal, smoker okay. 843-6519 Female roommate to share house, 11250 + ½ utilities, own room and laundry. Call Mike 843-8992. 2-17 Wanted a barge expert with patience, capable and willing to teach casual bridge lessons on intermediate afternoon for beginners or intermediate bridge players. CALL: 843-0540. CALL: 2-22 Need place to live? 3-br. house 83.33 + 1/3 ulc.封闭 to campus. Prefer female & non-smoker, 841-9779. 3-12 Roommates wanted: Graduate student in externates science needs one to two persons for a class in June or August. 1982. Must be named by June or August. 1982. Must be named by June or August. 1982. Must be named by June or August. 1982. Must be named by June or August. 1982. Must be named by June or August. 1982. Must be named by June or August. 1982. Must be named by June or August. 1982. Must be named by June or August. 2-22 evenings and weekends. --- BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kensons 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here:___ Dates to meet 1 week 1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times 1 less $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 Additional words .02 .03 .04 .05 .06 Classified Display: 1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00 --- Page 12 University Daily Kansan, February 17, 1982 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Team W W L Pct. GB Kansas 36 14 12 1.04 Philadelphia 26 14 720 1.59 Washington 25 25 500 11 % New Jersey 25 25 430 11 % Michigan 25 25 384 11 % Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee 36 25 1720 Detroit 23 24 169 Garland 28 20 141 Atlanta 20 28 417 Chicago 19 38 175 Chicago 19 38 175 Milwaukee 36 25 1720 San Antonio 32 12 763 653 Denver 28 28 723 440 5% Uakon 18 18 32 360 14% Utah 18 17 32 360 14% Kansas City 16 16 35 314 17 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 35 17 873 - Seattle 34 16 873 ½ % San Diego 28 22 873 ¼ % Golden State 27 22 351 ½ % Texas Tech 27 22 351 ½ % San Diego 14 27 873 ½ % YOUR RESULTS dallas 112 New York 98 Houston 109 Houston 109 Denver 119 Kansas City 106 Colorado Springs 107 Portland 97 Washington 109 Washington 97 Team W Ll Pct GB Missouri 11 7 517 Massachusetts 7 1 900 Nebraska 6 5 545 4½% Alabama 6 5 545 4½% Oklahoma State 6 5 545 4½% Kansas 4 6 400 8½% Colorado 4 6 400 8½% Indiana 2 9 182 8½% Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. Minnesota (4) 19-20 Iowa State 7) Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Hockey Team | W | L | T | G | FG | GA | Pts. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Philadelphia | 38 | 21 | 1 | 67 | 29 | 170 | 62 | | Philadelphia phil | 31 | 21 | 1 | 67 | 29 | 170 | 62 | | NY Rangers | 27 | 21 | 0 | 91 | 219 | 159 | 61 | | Pittsburgh | 26 | 21 | 0 | 91 | 219 | 159 | 61 | | Pittsburgh | 18 | 21 | 0 | 91 | 219 | 159 | 61 | Montreal 33 11 13 17 270 165 78 Boston 32 18 8 233 169 78 Buffalo 31 18 8 232 169 78 Chicago 28 18 10 125 181 45 Hartford 16 27 14 130 150 74 Campbell Conference Minnesota 23 18 17 17 245 206 63 Slouls 25 18 18 14 234 69 55 Wichita 22 18 18 14 232 69 55 Winnipesauga 20 20 18 11 217 254 41 Toronto 16 16 11 12 297 54 53 Detroit 16 16 11 12 297 54 53 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Edinburgh 36 13 13 11 320 232 83 57 Calgary 22 15 15 14 291 252 67 58 Vancouver 21 25 15 14 303 208 97 54 Los Angeles 19 25 16 13 285 194 64 55 **VERTEX A Y RESULTS** Quaker 7, Montreal 4, Canada 3 Montreal 18, New York Islanders 2, Pittsburgh 2 Oakland 16, Calgary 9, Hartford 8 Team W W L P Pct. GB Pittsburgh 17 5 173 Haltonville 8 6 754 New York 16 5 702 Buffalo 12 5 482 %/2 Cleveland 9 1 391 8% Gainesville 9 1 391 8% Philadelphia 11 15 18% Bv United Press International St. Louis 14 10 533 6 Wichita 14 10 583 6 Wichita 14 10 583 6 Memphis 10 17 370 11½ Phoenix 10 17 370 11½ Oklahoma City 7 8 308 DENVER - Alex English scored 24 points last night to give the Denver Nuggets a 11-96 victory over the Kangas City Kings. Kings lose, trade two YESTERDAY'S RESULTS no games scheduled. Denver, in winning its 10th game in the last 14, went five games over. 500, 28-23, for the first time all season. The triumph pulled the Nuggets ahead of Golden State, Phoenix and Houston for playoff playoff in the Western Division. Phillies. Indians make trade Meanwhile, the Kings traded away their leading scorer and a backup center in separate deals. The Kings dealt Cliff Robinson, averaging 20 points a game, to Cleveland for forward Reggie Johnson. Kansas City also sent John Lambert to the San Antonio Spurs for cash and draft choices. Robinson was also the Kings' leading rebounder and shot blocker. A club spokesman said the Kings traded for Robbie McKenzie, who came a free agent at the end of this season. By United Press International CLEARWATER, Fla. -- The Philadelphia Phillies, continuing a housecleaning that began with the arrival of new ownership last fall, yesterday traded veteran outfielder Bake McBride to the Indiana and Indians for relief pitcher Sid Moneghe. The trade, which had been in the works for the past month and was announced at the Phillies' spring training camp, was the fourth major deal initiated by Philadelphia since Bill Giles took over as team president in The transactions have resulted in the departure of three starters from the 1980 world championship team— leftfielder Lonnie Smith, shortstop Larry Bowa and rightfielder McBride—and promising catcher Keith Moreland. A fourth starter, catcher Bo Bobo, was sold to California just before Giles took over. In all, only 14 players remain from the Phillies' 1980 World Series team. McBride was hampered by injuries to both knees last season. He battled, 271 in only 58 games. He had surgery on his left May 27 and on his right knee Nov. 16. Monge, 30, compiled a 5-3 record with four saves and a 4.34 earned run average in 31 games last year with Cleveland. His best season was 1979, when he won 12 games with 19 saves and the American League All-Star team. JERRY HARPER ATTORNEY 901 NEUWICKY Soha 2014 841-9485 Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters KU looks for much needed road victory The two keys to the Kansas were supposed to be shooting and attitude You will not find many teams throughout the country that have as good an attitude as the Jayhawks. While their attitude has led to their success, their shooting has led to both their success and failure. IT ISN'T LIKE in years past where the Jayhawks have had too much talent and sometimes needed five basketballs on the court. Senior co-captain David Magley summed up this year's attitude best after the Jayhawks beat Oklahoma 65-82 The Jayhawks' shooting has been the key in more than half of their victories and almost all of their losses. GO "This is one team where you can actually say that everybody on the team is a friend." he said. Of the 13 KU victories, the Jayhawks shot better than 50 percent in six of those contests, and in four other victories they have shot better than 46 percent. Of the 13 KU wins, the Jayhawks' poor shooting against Arizona State, Texas Southern and Rollins College made the games closer than they should have been. RON HAGGSTROM IN THE LOSS column, where the Jahayhaws have dropped nine, only once have they shot over 50 percent. That was against North Carolina In five of those losses they have shot less than 44 percent. There have been two other big factors so far in the Jayhawks' on again, off again season. One has been the play of Kelly Knight, until he got injured. Since his injury the Jayhawks have struggled. He has been replaced in the starting lineup by Brian Martin and Mark Summers. With Knight and his 13.7 scoring average out of the line-up, there has been more pressure on co-captains Tony Guy and Magley, who already had enough pressure to begin with at the start of the season. HOWEVER, SOME of that pressure may ease up tonight in Colorado when Knight may return to the lineup and play on a limited basis. One big question still remains for the Jayhawks, a question that has led to their downfall this season. The Jayhawks are 1-7 on the road and their only victory wasn't even a legitimate road victory. They defeated Indiana 71-61 in Madison Square Garden, which was a neutral site for both teams. Can they win on the road? KU won't have a better chance to win on the road this season than it has tonight when the Jayhawks play Colorado. 2-9 in Big Eight play. Kansas' streak snapped KANSAS By GINOSTRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor The KU women's basketball team, riding the crest of a three-game winning streak, was upset 68-57 by the Wichita State Shockers in Washington last It was only the second time that the Shockers have beaten the Jayhawks. The last defeat came on Feb. 27, 1976, which was a 62-48 loss in Wichita. That season was the first year for women's basketball at Kansas. The Jayhawks, who are now 15-12 overall and 8-9 on the road, kept the game close throughout most of the first half, with 16 and 12-10, but never led by more than two. With the score tied at 12, Wichita State outscored Kansas 16-8 to pull in front 28-20 with 4:13 remaining in the first half. Kansas closed it to 4 with 3:04 in the second half. The Jayhawks came to take the lead. They trailed 32-28 in intermission. THE JAY 'WKS' biggest problem in the first half was their shooting. They shot a measly 10 of 36 from the field for 28 percent. Kelly Knight Dayhawks Kansas came out in the second half and closed the gap to 5, 36-31, on two Angie Shire free throws with 17:50 to play, but by the time Shyra Holden hit Kansa's next basket with 13:57 with the Shockers were ahead by 11, 44-33. The Shockers continued to pressure the Jayhawks, and built their lead to 18 points before Kansas could mount a comeback. They closed the gap to nine twice, but it was a matter of too little, too late. "I am obviously disappointed," Washington said. "But I think now we Tracv Claxton just have to try and finish the season as well as we can and look forward to next year." The Jayhawks were led by Tracy Claxton and Snider. Claxton scored 19 points and grabbed 14 rebounds, and Snider had 14 points and 8 rebounds. No other Jayhawks could muster more than 7 points or 5 rebounds. FIVE PLAYERS did most of the damage for Wichita State, which updid its record to 12-13. Teresa Dreiling, whose younger brother Greg Playls for the Wichita State men's team, led the Shockers with 14 points and 7 rebounds. He added 12 points rebounds and Lisa Gloebhardt and 12 and 5 respectively. Two other Shockers hit double figures in rebounding with Parm Mattingly grabbing 12 and Paula Stanley 18. James also scored from Stanley also scored 8 points apiece. etc. Intramurals Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS PLAYOFFS Independent Men Buffalo Bob & The Herd 37, Steve Hall 44 Sam & James Pupz 52 Moonrise Moonrise N1 31, LEY 27 Moosehole Moosehole N6 31 Lungbase 62, Pearson 33 I Floor Sweepers 2, Mentora 8 Magic Man 16, Bionics 16 Magic Man 16, Bionics 16 TRASHMan etc. 39, Artistes 33 Average White Boys 46, Brain Twits 40 Greek Men Mustiers 16, Beer Brewers 20, Hatchers 48, Beer Heaven 19 Hatchers 57, Beer Hope 17 Artichokes 14, Machinery 14 Artichokes 13, Machinery 14 Bridgewater 4, The Clap 3 Bridgewater 4, The Clap 3 The Synthesize 56. Fiat Port 44 Bouchers Leagues 43. The Attraction 37 Chippewa 42. The Storm 35. The Cupion 36. Your Mother 35 The Cupion 36. Your Mother 35 The Cupion 36. Your Mother 35 Ford Part HI. 35. M.E. Lime 18 Two Comets make All-Star's By United Press International western selections who have had prior experience. NEW YORK—The West Division leading St. Louis Steamers have landed eight players on the team for the Major Indoor Soccer League All-Star game on Feb. 23 in Buffalo, it was announced yesterday. Six of the eight have played in at least one all-star game and will join Wichita forward Norman Piper as the only The Kansas City Comets placed one player on the West team, defenden Leo Salvinville. Salvinville was an MSL Rooke of the Year candidate last Kansas City Comets Coach Pat McBride will coach the west team. McBride coached the Steamers before coming to Kansas City. The West has won both of the previous MISL All-Star games. Fourth-rated Tigers clobber Iowa State By United Press International COLUMBIA, Mo.-Jon Sundvold scored 18 points to pace four Missouri players in double figures and ensure the 4-rated Tigers at least a share of their three straight Big Eight title with State 71 yesterday over Iowa State. stuckey Frazier added 16 points, Prince Bridges 15 and Marvin McCraig 10 as Missouri became the first team to win conference titles in a row in 48 years. Ron Harris scored 14, Ron Falen-scrien 11 and Barry Stevens and Malvin Wurrick 10 spice for Iowa State, which won by 6-4. Eight play with its fourth straight loss. Tue - Set. 12-8 fashion eyeland physicalDisneyers 841-6000 Holiday Plaza Who will be first to telecast directly from space to homes? Our Surveyor spacecraft transmitted the first television pictures from the moon. We are built 85% of all the commercial communication satellites that circle the earth. We are the Our Hughes Aircraft group's labs near Los Angeles International Airport can transform your ideas from the theoretical to the practical. Our five-story simulator can put them to the tests of space. Bring us your BS or MS degree in EE, ME, Computer Science, or Physics. We can introduce you to people, ideas, and jobs that could change your world. And ours. It could be you and Hughes Space & Communications SPAL_ Proof of U.S. Citizenship Equal Opportunity JUDGES ANCHOR COMPANY SPACE & COMMUNICATIONS Proof of U.S. CITY Requirement Equal Opportunity Employer HUGHES We'll be on campus March 2, 1982. See your placement office for an appointment. THINK SPRING BREAK $3 holds your swimsuits 'till Spring Break Select from • Sassafras • Twins • Jantzen • La Blanca • Bobbie Brooks Open Thursdays 'till 8:30. Jay SHOPPE Downtown We have hundreds of suits to choose from. 835 MASS. LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044 • 843-4833 • FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 Jay SHOPPE Downtown FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily KANSAN Thursday, February 18, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 99 USPS 650-640 Higher education Officials say future of universities at mercy of Kansas Legislature Jim Dumas THE FIGHT FOR A FREE MIND By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter TOPEKA- The future of higher education in Kansas depends on the response of the Kansas Legislature, a Kansas Board of Regents member told lawmakers yesterday. Lowman was one of several speakers at a joint meeting of the House and Senate Ways and Measures. "Without your help, these towers of excellence are going to crumble," Frank Lowman, Hays Regent, said. "And when they crumble, you can't build them back again." In their formal budget request to the Legislature, Regents members and university administrators said their priority again this year was hisher faculty salaries. "In Kansas, we have a unique opportunity to improve the quality of our institutions," Chancellor Gene B. Budig said. "If you can help us, we can attract good quality teachers and researchers. We make these requests for our classes already on campus and those yet to come." THE BOARD OF Regents requested a 13 percent increase in faculty salaries, a total increase of $2.7 million, earmarking a $6 million increase for KU faculty. Gov. John Carlin recommended a 10 percent salary-increase, or $4.5 million for KU. Carlin's recommendation was split between an 8.75 increase for all faculty and an extra 1.25 for faculty members in areas with a high market for engineering, computer science and business. Carlin also slashed the Regents budget request for classified salaries from 10 percent to 8.75 percent. This would cut KU's classified salary request from $1.5 million to $1.2 million. The Regents requested an 11 percent increase in other operating expenses, which includes supplies and maintenance costs. Carlin recommended a 6 percent increase. Carlin also called for an increase in the shrinkage factor from 2 percent to 3.5 percent. Shrinkage is the estimated amount an insurance company has to shrink because of a turnover in faculty members. A SALARY savings results because a position may be vacant for a period of time, and the replacement might be hired at a lower salary than the original employee. The Legislature predetermines the amount of shrinkage and withholds this money from an employee. At the current 2 percent shrinkage level, the University actually receives $890,000 for each $1 million of salary funds. If shrinkage were increased to 3.5 percent, the number of dollars paid per $95,000 of each $1 million of salary money. With shrinkage subtracted, Carlin's recom- mension drops from 10.4 percent to 4.4 percent. The Regents recommended leaving shrinkage at 2 percent. James Pickert, chairman of the Regents Building Committee, presented a list of capital improvements needed at the institutions. A $2.5 million loan from the Hall was listed as the committee's fifth priority. But Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said he did not want the committee to vote. "The odds are that it won't be this year, but there's a good chance for next year," he said. BUDIG TOLD committee members that the Regents' 11 percent requested increase in operating expenses was important to offsee the increase of inflation and increasing maintenance costs. He cited several examples of supplies bought in large quantities, such as pencils, test tubes and newsprint, in which the prices had gone up as much as 45 percent from 1981 to 1982. *"For universities to prepare students for the modern market, up-to-date equipment must be available."* "All units have become increasingly dependent on sophisticated scientific instruments and instrumentation." The Regents also objected to Carlin's method of funding fund increases for changes in enrolment. Carlin's recommendations were based on an old formula the Legislature used several years ago. It is based on enrollment changes from the fall of 1980 to the fall of 1981. KU's enrollment decreased slightly, so Carlin recommended cutting $25272 and 16 faculty positions from the KU budget. THE REGENTS endorsed the method that the Legislature adopted in 1981, which uses the rule of first come last. Under the corridor concept, the institution must absorb an increase or decrease of less than In this system, the same year is used as a base for the next three years, so large changes in the number of faculty would be made only every three years. Clark Ahlberg, president of Wichita State University, said the corridor concept gave universities more time to adjust to enrollment changes. "It gives us a full year to give notice to all our faculty," he said. "The governor's rec令ation must be done." are unable to give adequate notice to our employees. "We are in favor of the corridor concept whether or not it produces more or less money. It gives us a good sense." HESS SAID HE THought the Legislature would favor staying with the corridor method. positions at universities that don't hold the prestige of those in our state." Duane Acker, president of Kansas State University, said more and more Kansas faculty members were leaving institutions for more money. "The exodus of faculty from Kanaas is more rapid than originally anticipated," he said. "We were not prepared to live through it." He said it was not unusual to lose faculty members to higher positions that would advance their careers, but it was becoming increasingly common for faculty members to leave for jobs in private industry, and even to lower-ranked universities where they could earn more money. Hess said he did not think the Regents would get the full 13 percent increase, but said universities would probably fare better than they did last year. See BUDGET page 5 "I think both universities and social services New Regents ponder jobs visit schools By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter The two new Board of Regents members said yesterday they would be likely to approve funding needed to provide the best education for the students in their district. The salaries and more operative funds for buildings. The Regents, Jim Dumas and John Montgomery, accepted their positions in December just in time to review long budget proposals. It was also going to know the people that the budget will affect. The two men will visit all seven Regents schools during the next two months. They visited Kansas State University last week and will visit the University of Kansas March 11. "Each campus has different needs. I want to develop a feel for the interest of students, concerns of the faculty, and the concerns and interests of the general public," Dumas, a Kansas City, Kan., executive of Western Electric Co., said. Dumas received a 'bachelor' and a master's degree in electrical engineering from KU and played basketball here 20 years ago. He also has a Ph.D. in business administration from Stanford University. Montgomery, who runs a family newspaper publishing business in Junction City, received a bachelor's degree in American studies from the University of Florida where he began in business administration from Stanford. The two Regents attended their first monthly Regents meeting in January, but their positions still have to be approved by the Kansas House and Senate. In the meantime, they are learning about the Regents schools. in their travels, Dumas said, they hoped to strengthen strengths and weaknesses of each Regex unit. One of their responsibilities, and the most important one right now, they said, is the amount of salary increase faculty members would receive next year. "The budget in its entirety is controversial," Dumas said. "It's an increase over what was had in previous years, but the most important aspect is salaries. We need to minimize the impact of inflation and become more and more competitive in the market place." Gov. John Carlin has recommended a 10 percent increase in faculty salaries. The Regents recommended a 13 percent increase last year, before the new members had a vote. MONTGOMERY SAID he was not sure how large the increase should be. 'I don't know that I'm prepared to go to the 13 see REGENTS page 5 3 KU athletes arrested in area thefts By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter Cedric Alexander, Chicago freshman, Renwick Atkins, Chicago sophomore, and Broderick Thompson, Cerritos, Calif., junior, were each of theburgry and one count of arm theft. Three KU football players were charged in Douglas County District Court yesterday in connection with a bribery investigation. Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone filed charges against Alexander in connection with a Feb. 9 burglary at a residence in the 700 block of Ohio street. Malone filed charges against Atkins and Thomson in connection with two separate Dec. 29 cases, including a wrongful arrest. In the Feb. 9 burglar, four speakers, a stereo amplifier, a sleater speaker, an cassette deck and a tape recorder. IN ONE BURGLARY, at Tower B, a turntable, sensor receiver, cassette deck and two speakers in one. In the second burglary, at Tower D, a portable television, component stereo and speakers were stored. After voluntarily reporting to the District So solved column 10. Court, the suspects were arraigned, booked and released on £2.500 recognition bonds. Associate District Judge Mike Elwell set Alexander's preliminary hearing for March 3. Atkins and Thompson face preliminary hearings March 5. Jim Denney, director of KU police, said the investigation police were continuing the investigation. "We continuing the investigation to see if he be additional people involved," Denew said. DENNEY ALSO said there would be more KU and Lawrence police recovered more than $8,000 worth of stolen property Feb. 12 in a Jayhawker Towers apartment. The property is located in December and February burialeries. Denver said. property recovered in connection with the burglaries. During the 1981 football season, Atkins, a 6-foot-5, 285-pound defensive tackle, and a Thompson, a 6-4, 285-pound defensive tackle, started for the Rangers in the first round of starting position halfway through the season. The 6-foot-9, 295-pound Alexander has been training with the football team. He was traded from Georgia to Oklahoma. KU football coach Don Fambrough declined to comment on the players' futures. Weather George Brett of the Kansas City Royals speaks at the dedication ceremony of the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Regional Research Center at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Seated next to the lecturer is Keith Worthington, an ALS patient. In the front row of the audience sit Chancellor Gene A. Budig (left), David Waxman, executive vice chancellor of the Med Center and Dewey Zlegler, head of the center. See story page 3 THE MIDDLE SCHOOL PUBLICATION OFFICE JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Stall Drizzle and fog are expected throughout the morning, with partly cloudy skies this afternoon and temperatures to the National Weather Service in Topeka. DREARY Winds will be light and from the northwest at about 10 to 15 mph. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high around 50. 5 file civil rights complaints against Gammon's nightclub Staff Reporter By JANET MURPHY Four KU students and one former KU student have filed discrimination complaints with the U.S. Attorney's office in Topeka against a Lawrence nightclub. Gary Laster, 2348 Murphy Dr., a former KU student, charged Gamson's, 1601 W. 23rd St., with violating the civil rights of his guests on that university's occasions because of their national origin. "I feel like I'm being discriminated against because I am not allowed to have the guests I want and I am a bona fide member of the club," Laster said yesterday. Douglas Lara, Venezuela special student, George Reis, Brazil junior, Oswaldo Sanchez, Venezuela senior, and Paulo Vascone洛, Brazil senior, also filed similar complaints with the U.S. Attorney's office. None of the students are members of Gammon's. MARY BRISCOE, an assistant U.S. attorney in Topeka, said that the attorney's office received the complaints Tuesday and that it would review the allegations. Laster said the four students had tried to use their passports for identification to get into the club as his guests, but were told the passports were not legal documents. But Mikse Kirch, general manager of Gammons', said Monday that the club did not discriminate. He said they asked for proper identification of all people who came into the club. Proper identification, according to Kirsch, is a birth certificate with some other form of a picture I.D., a military I.D., or any valid U.S. driver's license. He refused to comment on whether a passport could be used as proper identification. Gammon's doesn't discriminate, Kirsch said, but "we don't want people coming in looking like us." Reis said he had occasionally been refused entry to the club as a guest. ON AUG. 21, 1811, Laster said, all four students were refused entry to the club as his guests. On Dec. 30, 1811, and Jan. 8, 1862, Lara and Sanchez were not permitted in as Lara's guest, he said. He said he could usually get into the club on a night, like a Monday, but on a busier night, it was more difficult. "The doorman said the manager had given him strict order not to access passports," Reis said. IN HIS COMPLIANT Laster had he met much of the manager on Dec. 30, to ask him about this matter. He had told me that he "He told me, 'I own the club and I make the rules,' " Laster's complaint said. "If my door attendants tell someone they can't come in, they'll ask for me." I told him that I didn't think this was right." Lara said he tried to use his passport and an identification card from his country to get into the club. He said he was told he would have to have a Kansas driver's license. sanchez, who also tried to use his passport to gain entry into the club, said he thought it was unfair because he saw others going in who were not asked to show identification. He said he thought a racial attitude had kept him out of the chats at times, although he too had heard other racists. 12 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 18, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Pan Am 727 aborts takeoff after controller reports fire MIAMI—A Pan American World Airways Boeing 727 aborted takeoff when one flames in which two passengers were engineered, forcing an airplane in which two passengers were ejected. A tower spokesman was unable to determine immediately how many flights were delayed by the incident, but said it had occurred during a slack run. The pilot of Flight 975, which was carrying 52 passengers and crew from Miami to Orlando, immediately reduced the jet's speed and veered it across another runway after a controller reported flares and smoke billowing from the plane, said Ed Newburn, chief of the Miami International Airport control tower. The aborted takeoff forced the closing of one of the airport's three runways and part of another for more than an hour. The passengers fled the plane, which had just begun its takeoff and had not updressed, by shaking them emergent slide chutes, while airplane doors closed. A woman passenger was taken to a hospital where she received treatment for a badly sprained ankle and was released, a spokesman said. Another patient complained of neck pain. Poles punish martial law violators WARSAW, Poland—Authorities staged a two-day crackdown on Poles suspected of violating marital law, punishing 52,000 for breaking curfew and detaining 3,500 others, presumably for more serious violations. Polish officials said yesterday. the campaign, called "operation peace," was launched last week to crush a thriving black market and quell violations of marital law imposed last year. In a "political signal" of displeasure at repression in Poland, West Germany yesterday announced a series of diplomatic and economic sanctions against Russia. Bonn's first concrete reaction to President Reagan's call for sanctions by U.S. allies in retaliation for the Polish military crackdown could delay imminent nuclear talks with Russia. UAW leaders approve Ford pact CHICAGO—By a nearly unanimous vote, United Auto Workers local leaders yesterday agreed to take to union members a historic contract agreement with Ford Motor Co. that trades wage and benefit concessions for job security. The move cleared the path for ratification by rank-and-file union members. The UAW Ford Council, made up of 225 local representatives, approved the vote on a standing vote, four days after the contract was drafted by party officials. The contract now will be submitted for a vote by the 170,000 eligible Ford boury workers. Of that group, about 60,000 are indefinitely or temporarily UAW Vice President Donald Ephlin said ratification would begin immediately and should be completed by Feb. 26. Prime rate rises,production drops WASHINGTON—The economy, plagued by recession and bad weather, was hit with bad news yesterday as the prime rate climbed half a point, factory production for January plunged 3 percent and new housing starts slipped again. Analysts in and out of government were dismayed by the increase to 17 percent for the prime rate, which is the barometer of borrowing costs that analysts had been monitoring. The latest 3 percent drop in factory production, the worst of six consecutive months of declines, brought the Federal Reserve's index to almost 1 percentage point below its low in the previous recession, reached in July 1980. And the struggling housing industry, badly battered after three years of almost uninterrupted deterioration in sales and starts, slipped another notch last month. SRS must reveal abortion doctors TOPEKA—The Kansas Supreme Court unanimously ruled yesterday that the state State and Rehabilitation Services Department must release the records of a student whose death was caused by drug overdose. However, the court added in its 25-page decision that people seeking information from official public records may have to help cover the costs of such information. The court's decision reversed an earlier decision by Shawnee County District Judge Fred Jackson, who had sided with the SRS contention that the Docket should not be made. The suit was filed by the attorney general on behalf of an anti-abortion group. Right to Life of Kansas, Inc. MONTGOMERY, Ala. —A federal judge last night refused to order the city to let protesters retrace the exact steps of the historic 1965 voters' rights march, despite warnings by black leaders that they would risk going to jail to do so. In addition to a possible run-in with police, the marchers face a possible showdown with the Ku Klux Klan. Some of its members have promised a strike. U. S. District Judge Robert E. Varner upheld a city council decision thatanchored the lawsuit from following the downtown route civil highway blockade in the 1982 Selma rally. Before Varner issued his ruling, the Rev. Joseph Lowery, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said the marchers were prepared to defy restrictions of the parade permit and risk going to jail if they were forced to abide by them. Mobil to inspect rigs after tragedy ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland—Oil company officials said yesterday they would send mini-submarines to inspect the sunken Ocean Ranger oil rig on which 84 men died Monday and will tow two similar rigs to shore for safety checks. A Mobil official said the underwater survey of the Ocean Ranger by the mini-subs could provide some answers as to why the 30,000-ton rig roped down on their ship. A Mobil Oil Canada spokesman said both the towing and inspection operations would depend on the weather. A new winter storm caused poor fuel availability. Rescuers found 40 bodies during a fall between storms—10 from the Ocean Ranger and 21 from a Soviet freighter, which sank yesterday awaiting rescue. Strasberg, acting giant, dies at 80 HOLLYWOOD, Calif. Clef Strasburst, who developed "method acting" and trained scores of Hollywood's biggest stars, died yesterday morning of a heart attack. Strasberg, whose students included Marton Brando and Marilyn Monroe, was mourned yesterday by friends and former students as a great teacher. "As a teacher he was one of the most dedicated people in the creative arts," said Rod Stelter, who joined Strasburg's Actor's Studio in 1947 and taught at the school. An actor himself, Strasberg was best known for his direction of the Actors Studio. It was there that he became the moving force behind the "method" school of acting—forcing performers, in effect, to "become" the characters they portrayed. The losses that KU men's athletic teams experienced this season were not only on the football field and basketball court. KUAC hopes to narrow deficit They also appeared on the budget books. Rv RARR EHLI Staff Reporter As of Jan. 31, 1981, the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation quarterly report showed that losses for the football team were $23,874. Susan Wachter, athletic business manager, estimated that losses from the basketball program would be about $125.000. The combined total means KUAC is projected to take a loss of $150,000. WACHTER SAID money that had been projected in the budget but had not been received after three quarters of the fiscal year had passed, was causing the current deficit. KUAC has one quarter left to close the gap. Single game tickets are still available for basketball games, and the revenue from those, as well as unexpected additional revenue from the radio network and television contracts, to up most of the difference, Wachter said. At a KUAC board meeting Tuesday, John Patterson, University comptroller, said that most of the amount budgeted should be recovered. Richard Konzen, ticket manager, said a drop in student tickets sales had increased. Konzem said that 3,742 student season tickets of the 6,400 allocated had not been sold to students for $104,776 in the budget. He and projected 4,000 tickets would be sold. KONZEM SAID one way to make up the loss from sagging student ticket sales was to sell more single game tickets to sell as game K-State basketball as an example. "Single tickets for K-State were overprojected, but I still sold those seats," he said. The seats were not sold on the student season tickets as planned, but later Balloon-a-Gram "Nice to the Occasion" SEND A BALLON-A GRAM! P.O. Box 3122 Lanwood, KG 60044 Kallamia International Makati City Boyd's Coins-Antiques Class Rings Bow & Tie Made in Gold Silver - Coins 731 New Hampshire 91-842-8771 91-842-8771 were sold at the single ticket price, which was higher, Konzem said. The single game price for tickets is while the price of individual games on the tour is less. "The bottom line is we are getting it from other sources," Konzem said. "By having the other revenue, it's app to be more of an off-setting effect." settlement rate at which the reserve seat and student seat prices are split BESIDES the unexpected income from the radio network and television contracts, revenues from ticket sales and premiums just profits from the ticket purchasing. For example, the reserve seats during the football season have an $8 split. Konem said KU gets $4 of that and the opposing team gets $4. The Big Eight Conference sets a If the home game reserve ticket was sold for $5.00, the $8 split would be the same as for $1.00. --- Konzem said that the loss from student tickets could be made up from sales in reserve seats. "We made it up in reserve seats," Konzem said. "From our vantage point, it doesn't matter if you do sell more reserve seats." Spring Break is Coming! I'll just provide the text content. The image is a grayscale photo of a person with a fluffy, wavy hairstyle. The face is partially visible, and the background appears to be a uniform black surface. There are no other discernible features or objects in the image. Hours M-Fri. 9-5 M-T-Th evenings open Sat. at 9 Entry Deadline for the Recreation Services racquetball doubles tournament is 5:00 p.m. today in 208 Robinson. Shoemakers to America Professionals! hair lords styling fine hair & wigs 1017 W Lyme Street 841 8928 --- Dexter softie styling have you're looking for with whatever you wea Who says you have to switch shoes when you go from dressy to casual? Not Dexter. Because these Dress Casuals go either way. Their lightweight soft leathers and great styling have the look you're looking for with whatever you wear Arensbergs =Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen HRS. M-Sat. 9:00-5:30 Thurs. til 8:30 1754 99 8 Place a want ad in the Kansan. THE EXPERIENCE OF A LIFETIME. Now that you've got it, put it to work. Share it with poor people in Peace Corps nations who need your experience in teaching, electronics, farming, engineering, family skills and many other areas. Volunteering your skills can help make a difference in their education, economic development or health. It's an experience no one can afford to miss. PLACEMENT OFF CARRUTH-O'LEARY FEB 18th, 19th AND VIDEO GAME CENTER NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA Now Playing All New Ms. PACMAN! Thats Right Ms.PACMAN!! COUPON Present This Coupon And Receive Two FREE VIDEO GAME PLAYS Expires 2/28/02 Limit one coupon per person COUPON Present This Coupon And Receive ANY SIZE PIZZA $1'00 OFF Expires 2.28.02 Limit one coupon per person COUPON Regular Pizza Prices LARGE Double Cheese '4.95 MEDIUM Double Cheese '3.95 SMALL Double Cheese '2.95 TINY Double Cheese '1.95 Additional Meat or Garden Topping 75¹ea. Large 65¹ea. Medium 55¹ea. Small 45¹ea. Tiny OPEN DAILY 10 a.m.-11:45 p.m. SUN. Noon-11:45 p.m. No other Coupons accepted with this Offer Coke Enjoy Coke J University Daily Kansan, February 18, 1982 eserve split seams. seats 2 an $8 of that Page 3 Regional Research Center for ALS dedicated let was be the extra. from p from TOM HUTTON ff Reporter KANSAS CITY, Kan. —Research into amytropic liver sclerosis, the disease which afflicted Leu Gehir, took a step forward yesterday when the regional Research Center was dedicated to University of Kansas Medical Center. University officials, the head of the Kansas City ALS chapter, George Brett of the Kansas City Royals and Kirk Harden of the Minnesota junior, spoke at the dedication ceremony. seats," antage do sell ALS, a disease that paralyzes nerves in the spinal cord and brain, strikes middle-aged Americans, leaving them without movement and paralyzing the respiratory system. This research center, one of 12 in the United States, will be used by the Med Center and the Veterans Administration Hospital in Kansas City, Mo. DAVID WAXMAN, executive vice chancellor of the Med Center, began the dedication ceremony with a pledge to continue medical research. "As federal dollars for research decrease, we have to take up the slack in many necessary areas," Waxman said yesterday. "We have a definite Donations almost entirely finance the ALS center. In November the ALS Society of America's Kansas City chapter began a $600,000 fund-raising campaign to support the center for the next three years. commitment into the research, cause and cure of this dreaded disease." Later in the dedication ceremony, the ALS center received a boost toward its facility. Worthington and two other members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity presented a check for $7,000 to Dewey Ziegler, head of the ALS center. Over the last three years, the fraternity has donated more than ZIEGLER, chairman of the neurology department at the Med Center, explained ALS $16,000 from its annual basketball tournament. "ALS is not rare; nearly 250,000 Americans now suffer from it and it is a progressive disease killing nerve cells that keep muscles alive," Ziegler said. There is no known cause for ALS, Ziegler said. There is no known infection, chemical imbalance or toxic substance that could cause the disease, he said. ALS and nodularity "Science advances by indirection," Ziegler said. "Evidence found will apply to other diseases of the central nervous system as well." Besides looking for a cure, research is going on in other areas, Ziegler said. The symptoms of the disease—difficulties in swallowing and breathing—are some of the problems being investigated. H. Eames Bipha, president of the A.I.S Society of America, was unable to attend the dedication because of the Tuesday death of his wife, a victim of ALS. Brett had met Keth Worthington, Kirk's father, who working on a promotion for a Kansas City clothing firm. Worthington, an ALS patient, was bice president at the store when he and Bruce became friends. Worthington is now president of the Kansas City chapter of the ALS society. Brett, deviating from a speech he said Worthington had prepared for him, praised the courage and determination of Worthington. "If any man deserves a standing option, Mr. Worthington does," Brett said. The crowd stood and clapped. 4th ANNUAL BRAZILIAN carnaval A MASKED JEWELER Worthington, who is confined to a wheelchair and breathes with the aid of a respirator, spoke with difficulty to the people for their support of ALS research. WHEN: FEBRUARY 20, SAT., from 8 p.m. to 3 a.m. WHERE: OPERA HOUSE—642 Mass. WHERE: BECAUSE!!! HOW: DRESSED, OF COURSE, IN A COSTUME -SUA box office. or Tickets: $4 each Buy them at VALID ID CARDS Instantly. Laminated. Color available at I - DENT SYSTEMS Spanish & Portuguese CAN'T STRESS ENOUGH: BRING YOUR OWN DRINKS Dent (Wescroe) Tie In With Us Recreation Services Intramural Track Meet - Thursday, February 25, 7:00-10:00 p.m.. Allen Field House - Events: 60, 440, 220 yard dashes; 880 yard run; 880 yard relay; mile relay; high jump; shot put; long jump - Entry deadline is Wednesday, February 24, 5:00 p. m. in 208 Robinson. There is no entry fee. For more information call 864-3548. 92 RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR A New Concept That's Long Overdue 23rd & Iowa 842-6089 9:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. EAGAN BARRAND Gourmet chefs and novices alike will love our selection of American and imported wines . . . Our experienced staff can help you select just the perfect wine for that special occasion . . . Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor AUTHORITY Room 114A Ramada inn 841-5905 Southwest Plaza Shopping Center Located behind Hardee's and next to Foodlam Hair Garden Laura Seitz is offering a February Special. 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TACO BELL (816) 276-1561 ___ Sponsored By ___ EVERY Thursday Tacos 49¢ each February 25,1982 12:00 - 4:30 p.m. 1408 West 23rd St. UMKC Pierson Hall University Center 50th & Holmes No Charge good only at this location Thursday, Sunday: Thursday 10:00 A.M.; 1:00 A.M., Friday and Saturday 10:00 A.M.; 2:00 A.M. 1982 EMPLOYMENT SEMINAR VOLLEY SALE A Strategic Plan For Today 57152004 Search For Tomorrow... $4.97 THE THRD BUILD NYC TUMBLING SPORTS A THE GIRL THE THIRD ANNUAL SUA THEATRE SERIES SIDE bv SIDE bv SONDHEIM a musical celebration feb 18-20 feb 21 matinee forum neau union room TAKEN IN MARRIAGE SCENES from SOWETO TAKEN IN MARRIAGE by thomas babe feb 24, 26 mar.4, 6 kansas union room feb 25. 27 smith ball reb.23.27 mar 3.5 & RATS ALL EVENING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00 p.m. an evening of one acts by israel horovitz ALL-MATINE PERFORMANCES ARE AT 2:00p.m. tickets INCERTIES AVAILABLE AT THE 6UU NOR OFFICE IN THE KANSAS UNION JURALWAYS 604817 FOR FIREST INFORMATION CALL (913) 864-3477 WITH ELAND SINGLE BROW 52.30 SINGLE TICKET 64.00 GENERAL PUBLIC SINGLE BROW 53.30 SINGLE TICKET 79.00 0 Opinion t Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 18, 1982 x → 1 2 3 Peace Corps wanes This week, on their way to lunch, some KU students stopped at the Peace Corps recruiting table near the Kansas Union cafeteria. eserve split ams. leats $8 at Most didn't. Some probably glanced at the table, and fully intended to stop to talk to the recruiters sometime. But sometime never came. Students were hungry, or late for class, or they had to pick up blue books before that 2:20 afternoon test. The Peace Corps is now more than 20 years old. At the organization's peak in the KU students probably aren't any more insensitive than most other Americans. In fact, the number of Peace Corps volunteers has steadily decreased since the first seekers of the New Frontier swelled the organization's ranks in the 60s. This week, during the Peace Corps' semi-annual visit to the University of Kansas, its recruiting table was often ignored. If the Peace Corps' 1982 recruiting drive is as successful as last year's, only about 20 KU students will apply for the two-year work program. mid 60s, there were 13,000 volunteers. Now there are 5,400. Then, the Peace Corps operated in 90 African, Asian and Latin American countries. Now it serves 58 countries. During the Peace Corps' early days, more than twice as many Americans were willing to spend two years of their lives teaching and learning from people in less developed nations. Times have changed. And the young people who have traditionally been the Corps' most frequent volunteers have changed, too. Chances are that after spending a few years on the fast track, some young people will find that in some ways, they aren't getting anywhere. They'll find out that after years of taking, there comes a time to give. Later this year, when the Peace Corps recruiters return to KU, we hope that more students who are hungry or late for class will stop to talk with them. Skip class. Skip lunch. It could be the best lunch you ever missed. Will the Bible-Belt beauties resist fame's tempting call? Huge Hefe sat in the sumptuous offices of his Chicago Play-doh club, chewing a cricadig cicular. In his mahogany desk a chapagne waterfall trickled down a rock wall and into a pool. At pool. At play-doh Bunny lounged with one leaf in the champagne. "Get out, Bunny," hefer said, grabbing the spotted rabbit by the scruff of the neck. "We've got work to do. Play-doh' wants a ball." He smiled at the woman, and we're going to begin with Kansu. The bunny blinked its pink eyes. Just then Heifer's secretary entered the office. "But Huge," she asked, "why go all the way to the Great Plains?" You could find eight big swamps. But I don't know. Heifer swore and spat his coagst into the champagne pool. "Tawny, 'Big Eight' is a BEN JONES 医院 collegiate conference. We want to do a picture on the beauties of the Bible Belt. You know—how's that Beach boys' song go. Midwest farmer's daughters?" He cocked his head and hummed a stretch of "California Girls." "Ever since we did the Ivy League layout a few years ago, women from other collegiate conferences want to show they have just as much brains as the dolls from Cornell," he said. Tainty's forehead wrinkled. "But Huge, how can a Play-doh picture feature show eight big-brained women? You can't see a person's brain." Hefer was about to bite off a reply, but stopped his strenuous mouth in the shape of a knife. He fell backward. ... our photographers will ask them to look intelligent. "And we'll write in the margins that they're intelligent. We'll even give their damned grade-point averages, along with other statistics that will give readers a feel for their well-roundedness. Now no more stupid people. Have someone fuel my Lear for Kansas." Soon Heifer's leer had arrived in Jayhawk country. "Excuse me, oldtimer," he said to a stubby-faced man wearing a battered oild straw and hib bib overalls. "Where can I find the University of Kansas?" "Up ponder thar," the man said, giving a terse not toward Fraser's flags as he stroked his chin and regarded Bunny with a suspicious scout. As Heifer mounted Oread, he outlined his ideas to Bunny, who was a whop or two behind. "Bunny, what we're looking for at Kansas is a farm with cornsilk hair, hazel freckles and a bushel bust. We want a girl straight from the farm who grew up feeding chickens and washing her hair in a rain barrel." Ah! "he farm is a hawkjayhawk Boulevard," "here comes one now." "Hello," Heifer said to her, extending a hair hand. "What's your name, miss?" The girl blinked her blue eyes. "Dorothy, sir," she said. "I'm Huge Heifer from Play-doh and this is my rabbit, Bunny. We want to take your thee, that'd be nice?" Dorothy said, "Can I wear the new dress my Amy Em worked me on." Dorothy blushed as red as an International Harvester. "Is this sexual harrasment? 'Cause we got a policy agin' there at KU, buster." "Of course not. You have to take your clothes off." "No, this is sexual exploitation," Heifer said with a disdainful smile. "Oh," Dorothy said uncertainly. "Well . . I guess it must be all right, then. Auntie Em never did say nothin' 'bout not doin' it, anhow." "We'll even pay you for it," Heifer said. rubbing his big gold ring with the thumb of the same hand, as he held it up where she could gaze at it. Again Dorothy face clouded over like a rice wheatfield under a Kansas thunderhead. don't understand it, and ain't put it before, and ain't put it 'em never thought the need to pay me for it. "What?" Heifer snapped. "Has Penthouse been here?" KANSAN "But why should they want to do that?" Dorothy asked, getting more and more excited. "Not as I know of," Dorothy said. "But the school photographer took my picture at our studio. I was there, and came to Mercerville, and I was standing by the clowns and got my picture in the town newspaper. But I had clothes on all them times. Why is it you want me out of my room?" "Why, so people can see what you really look like." “Oh.” She thought a while. “You never did say why you want to pay me. Seems me people only pay people when they've taken care of your work as a photographer, it was I as paid him, for a copy of the photograph and for his time and trouble to take it for me. But if you're wanting to pay me, then you must be wanting to give you me, then that is if you're wanting me to give mistress.” "Because people are curious." Dorothy set her lower lip. "You can't give beauty, mister," she said. "You can give love, but you can only have beauty. Beauty is not love. You love." Scuze me. I have to class to now班. She smiled and nodded to him, and walked away in her pink print dress with smocking along its yoke. Her shiny hair bounced on her shoulders as she went. "Why, your beauty," he said, and looked into her eyes. "I wonder if he knew what I meant by love?" she asked herself. "He probably thought it was something you take a picture of." Heifer was ready; he had traversed this argument many times before. Dorothy had not gone far when a thought made her turn and look back. The University Daily She shook her head again and went her way. USPS B5946-60) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage issued by Kansas, Kansas Post Office, Muncy, MN. Mail to Kansas Post Office, Muncy, MN, 58137. Students are welcome year round outside the county. Student subscriptions are a 6% session, paid through the student activity point. Postmaster. Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas Flint Hall. The university of Kansas Business Manager Vanessa Herron Natealine Juille Managing Editor Tracee Hamilton Editorial Editor Maren Schlauer Campus Editor Gene George Retail Sales Manager Ann Hornberger National Sales Manager Howard Shalinsky Sales and Marketing Adviser John Ottertan General Manager and News Adviser Rick Musser I'M SORRY, MADAM, THIS IS THE LAST AVAILABLE VEHICLE LEAVING FOR HEAVEN, AND SINCE YOU'RE UNALTERABLY OPPOSED TO BUSING ... Group tries to ease human suffering We read daily of political prisoners many countries away. But most of us push aside thoughts about their suffering as we push aside the newspaper each morning. It's understandable that we can be so unfeeling about the frequent headlines of human rights violations. Many occur in countries that don't jog our geographical memories. We've become so accustomed to reading about violations in more recent years, to reports of political prisoners are just old news. And if an occasional headline moves us enough to feel for those suffering political oppression, we generally fail to helppeace to do anything that affects and those human rights violations seem unreal. But for a few people in Lawrence, those headlines produce more than frustrated sighs. For the Lawrence chapter of Amnesty International, the suffering of those prisoners is real. And Amnesty members, in every small way they are able, trv to lessen it. Amnesty's primary concern is not prominent dissidents, according to Tim Pogacar, a group coordinator. Amnesty tries to help the forgotten dissidents. "Everybody knows about Sakharov," he says, but so many people are political prisoners who cannot be freed. Occasionally such efforts get responses from governments or from family members. But the group usually never knows whether its letters are received or when its packages are ever opened by the right person. The group has had three "adopted" prisoners since the Lawrence chapter was formed in February 1979. The first one was a Pakistani man, who had almost immediately after the group adopted her. The group's most frequently used tool is letter writing. Monthly, members send a barrage of letters to the police about their "adopted" prisoners. The group also sends money and care packages to family members. However, since then, the group has been B. F. G. TERESA RIORDAN working to free two adopted prisoners, one from one of those one from Czechoslovakia, who remain imprisoned. Rewards come seladm. But the group keeps writing letters, he meets staff and it keeps supplies on hand. Most of the group's members, which include students, professors and townpeople, have an international bent. Some are foreign students, some have studied abroad. But some have never even stepped foot in a foreign country. The true common denominator of this group is nothing more than sincerse compassion for human suffering. "It's more than a pen-pal sort of thing," pacificer said. "It's international relations on a personal level." For many, the work of Armnest is a well-intentioned but idealistic and futile venture. But however limited the sphere of influence of one chapter may seem, the combined international impact of Armnest cannot be denied. More than 2,500 adoption groups such as the one in, in 40 countries, have contributed to the release of more than 13,000 political prisoners. And Lawrence's chapter does have a significant local impact because of the international nature of the college community. Amnesty played a behind-the-scenes role in issues such as the Taiwanese spying question last semester. But perhaps the most important function of Amnesty is that, through its attempts to free prisoners, it keeps the idea of human rights alive in many people's minds. One member says that effort is sometimes the most frustrating. "Most people aren't even concerned about the life of their next-door neighbor. How can you expect them to care about lives of people they've never seen," the member said. But Amnesty keeps trying, keeps writing letters. And with each effort, Amnesty makes it more difficult for us to push those headlines of rights violations and political prisoners out of our minds and easier for us to realize, as Pogacar says, "how small the world really is." Letters to the Editor To the Editor: 'New Wavers' have grounds for complaint Catherine Beah's Feb. 15 article has given the otherwise *complacen* middle-class "middle-peat." The same argument applies to Lawrence's progressive musicScene deserves exposure; however, Behan's article is confounded by an ambiguous vacillation between the performance at large and the music performed in Lawrence. Our "journalist" may well have confused her visit to the Off-the-Wall-Hall (we suspect only one such visit occurred) with her recent viewing of "The Decline of Western Civilization," a film which documents the L.A. punk movement. At the hall, "purple hair" and "Mohawks" do not "pack the dance floor." Behan's cheap sensationalism is not an appreciated. What may have appeared to Behan as pointless bouncing "up and down," is as are forms of a dance, the bodily expression of subjective feelings aroused by the music. Few of the dancers who frequent the area are so artistically hood-tied that they can merely "bounce." Behan does admit that Slam dancing in Lawrence is "tame" (read: virtually nonexistent), but she gives the misguided impression that anyone attending a local new wave concert is automatically subject to physical abuse. Behan tacitly suggests that new wave and punk are primarily aggressive styles of music, while she ignores the most important motivating factor—the desire to dance. She forfeits the idea that Lawrence concert-goers frequent these clubs out of appreciation for progressive music, in favor of a lurid frustration-aggression hypothesis. Behan needs to control her tendency to overgeneralize about "Lawrence Punk" and to avoid loosely bandying about such subjective classifications. Define your terms. Catherine. Jim Stamel, Lawrence senior, and Darrel Laham Wichita junior Few brief highlights To the Editor: I hope all of you listened to the President's State of the Union address last month; there was much anger. While acknowledging the substantial increase in unemployment, the president pointed out wisely that his administration was not to blame for that. This was the past administration's doing, obviously so, because the present administration's policies have not had time to take effect yet. The president explained, for instance, how he would increase defense spending, reduce taxes, and while no longer talking about balancing the budget, he made it clear that this would surely reduce government deficits. He did not explain how this was going to work. He probably didn't have time, since his talk was limited to 45 minutes. Acknowledging that unemployment is a serious probem now, the president made it clear that it has been caused by past administrations' continuous "spending, spending and spending." On the other hand, he explained, it is obvious that the reduction in the rate of inflation is clearly attributable to the wise policies of his administration. Now we have certainly been teaching this all wrong in our economics courses here. We have been teaching that increased spending, whatever it may be, is the result of purchases and hence to more production, and therefore to more employment, not unemployment. Obviously this must be all wrong. I'll check it out with my chairman and then change stories on inflation and unemployment accordingly. In regard to the poor in our country, the president stated unequivocally that in the long run, his politics would greatly benefit all inclusions, including the poor and the unemployed. He forgot to explain what the poor should do in the meantime. Ten years of hunger could perceiveably be bad for their health, especially for the little ones. On second thought, he probably didn't forget to explain it. It surely was once again the time limitation, and the president figures that we can reason it out by ourselves. It's just me who can't figure it out. Finally, in a step of immense wisdom, the president announced that in the interest of the people some 40 programs will be turned over to the department to contribute to the states to be administered by them. Such a wonderful plan. An after came the Democrats who said, in a follow-up program, that "this administration is putting the American dream beyond the reach of the vast majority of Americans, preserving for the rich only." Now anybody can see how this will lead to greater equity and greater justice and equal treatment for all Americans. This will give the poorer states the chance to spend as much money on their welfare cases as the wealthier states, it will enable Mississippi, Alabama and South Carolina to put into practice what they have always wanted, namely equal treatment of all, irrespective of skin color—what a great and fair step indeed. Well surely none of us could possibly go along with this violence. BARRY G. Shaffer, Professor of economics and Soviet and East European studies. Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. If the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or a staff position. The Kansan reserve the right to edit or reject letters. University Dally Kansan, February 18, 1982 Page 5 Area crime rate increases By BECKY ROBERTS Staff Reporter Overall crime increased 7.7 percent in Lawrence during last year, according to the Lawrence Police Department's 1981 Year End Competicive Report released yesterday. However, out of the nine categories of crime, only two, burglary and larceny, increased. The other crime categories are murder and non-negligent manslaughter, manslaughter by negligence, rage, robbery, aggravated assault, non-aggravated assault and auto theft. Crimes in these categories stayed at the same level as in 1980 or decreased. Mark Brothers, police department crime marker, said the economy could be a reason for the rise in gun deaths. "There's probably a portion of the criminal element that supplemented their income with crime," he said. "And when they lose a job, it becomes their whole income." Burials increase from 293 in 1984 to Burglaries increased 26.2 percent from 783 in 1980 to 988 in 1981 Arrests were made in 12.3 percent of the Brothers said that the number of small burdurials had increased. burglary cases in 1800. In 1891, arrests were made in 9.6 percent of burglaries. "There seems to be a large number of residential minor burglaries," he said. "The losses are small in size." Brothers said small and stamps were examples of small losses. Brothers said a small burglary was difficult to solve because the property could not be traced as easily as large pieces of property such as televisions. He said most people probably don't have the valuable stolen property, so they sell small items. Larceny, the other crime category that has increased since 1890, rose 6.9 percent from 2,233 in 2014. The number of larvenes in which arrests were made decreased from 321, or 14.4 percent in 1980, to 269, or 7.1 percent. Robbery decreased more than any other crime in Lawrence during the year. In 1980 there were 56 robberies. In 1981 there were 44 robberies, a decrease of 21.4 percent. percent the Regents have recommended," he wrote. "The governors support the 10 percent the governor recommends." From page 1 But Dumas said he supported the 13 percent increase. Regents "I don't know whether that's possible," he said. "But we need to play up in an area that seems to have been neglected for a long time." Montgomery said, "I see the major role of the higher Regents as proposing the best budget it can before the students and faculty and administration, and once the Legislature has made the decision, making sure the funds are spent as best they can be." The two men said they were still learning and would have to weigh all angles before making film. DUMAS SAID he thought funds should be available to renovate buildings that were not If a facility causes students to be distracted or limits faculty to be effective instructors, it is recommended. And although Montgomery said he was not aware of library acquisition shortages because of budget cuts, Dumas said he would favor more library make "if that's what's necessary to make sure students learn, grow and develop." Montgomery said another area that concerned the Regents was enrollment. Fewer seniors are graduating from high school and possible federal budget cuts in financial aid to students would dramatically affect universities, he said. Montgomery said he would probably support state funding for scholarships, but that the board first wanted to see what affect President Obama's budget would have on student financial aid. Dusa said he was interested in attracting more physicians and nurses to Kansas, especially to the University of Kansas Medical Center at Kansas State University, which he said was a strength to be maintained. Budget From page 1 will do relatively better than other agencies," he said. LAST YEAR the Regents requested a 10 percent faculty salary increase and Carlin recommended 8 percent, but the Legislature slashed the increase to 7 percent. Hess said there might not be anything the Legislature could do to prevent faculty from becoming involved. "If a person is going to jump ship, I don't know how you're really going to stop that," he said. "You must make the university as attractive as possible." Hess said he thought Budig did a good job in his first appearance before the Ways and Means "He talked about everything from tissue paper to test tubes." Hess said. "He didn't play on the keyboard." MASS. STREET DELI inc 941 MASSACHUSETTS The Deli Sub ... for the hungry ... Served Hot or Cold Turkey, Ham, Salami, Bologna, American and Swiss Cheese, Lettuce, Tomato—super large French Roll. $2.25 FANTASTICALLY GOOD offer good No coupons Wed., Feb. 17 accepted with thru this offer Sun. 21 TO THE CLASS OF 1982 MAIN UNION, LEVEL 2 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. THE SATELLITE UNION 8:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m. It's time to order your graduation announcements and name cards at: Prepaid orders MUST be placed on February 17 & 18. Visa and Mastercard welcome. kansas KU union bookstores main union level 2, satellite shop AUDIOTRONICS INVITES YOU TO TAKE THE CHROME BASF CHALLENGE! BASF CASSETTE CLINIC BRING YOUR CASSETTE DECK AND YOUR FAVORITE TAPE AND FACTORY TECHNICIANS WILL... - INSPECT THE HEADS FOR WEAR • CLEAN THE HEADS • SPEC OUT THE HEADS • SPEC OUT THE DECK USING BASF PRO II AND YOUR TAPE ALL FOR ONLY $795 SPECIAL BASF PRICES FOR THIS PROMOTION!! BASF 90 Profesional BASF PRO II C-90 5.99 LIST PRICE 10 FOR $37⁹⁸ 10 FOR $37⁹⁸ AND YOU GET 2 BASF PROII C-80 TAPES FREE BASF PERF C-90 $3.99 LIST PRICE 10 FOR $19.99 BASF 60 Performance TWO DAYS ONLY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19 FROM NOON TO 6 P.M. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20 FROM 10:00 A.M. TO 6 P.M. AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS, DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE Rent it. 864-4358. Further Reductions 1/2 OFF All Winter Items We accept: Carousel 711 W.23rd Master Charge Malls Shopping Center Visa Hours: 10-6 Mon. St. 10-8:30 Thurs. 1-5 Sun. carouse Page 6 university Daily Kansan, February 18, 1982 Lot northwest of Allen now for brown permits By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter The Parking and Traffic Board decided yesterday to open the lot northwest of Allen Field House for brown-penmark parking during the rest week. The lot, N-6, was previously open to only yellow-permit holders, Sherlene Hawkins, board member and microfilm library assistant, said yesterday. In other business yesterday, the board discussed putting a card-gate system behind Strong Hall for parking under the rotunda. "Everything behind Strong is a zoo now," Don Kearns, director of parking, said. The board would issue plastic cards that would open a gate to the parking lot, he said. ONLY 22 PEOPLE, the number which corresponds to the available parking spaces under the rotunda, would get cards, Kearns said. "But those people should pay well," he said. This would affect only the parking under the rotunda, Kearns said. People without cards could still drive and park along the road behind Strong Hall. The board also discussed guest parking at Javhawker Towers lot. At a previous meeting, they had discussed issuing guest parking permits to Towers residents. The residents would have their guests put the permits on their cars after arriving at the Towers, Kearns said. "It's Jayhawker Towers," he said. "It's a different type of complex." THE TOWERS are too big and there are too many residents there for the availability of water. This is the guest-parking method used at Stouffler Place, but it probably would not work at the Towers, Kearns said. "If I go to fifth floor of Tower B and you give me a pass and say, 'Go put this on your car,' I'd say, 'You're crazy.'" he said. The board also discussed having paid as much as universal demand holder fees. Tom Mulnazzin, chairman of the board and associate professor of civil engineering, said medical permits were just like universal permits. Medical-permit holders can park anywhere on campus. "I'd like to see them pay as a universal permit," he said. Medical permits cost $26 a semester. Universal permits cost $49 a semester. LIBERATION THEOLOGY will be discussed during a THEOLOGICAL SEMINAR at 4:30 p.m., at the Christian Christian Ministries Center. THE STUDENT SENATE SERVICES COMMITTEE will meet at 4 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. There is a 5 P.M. ENTRY DEADLINE for the P.R.CREATION Services DOUBLES RACQUETALL ENGINEMENT. Sign up in 208 Robinson. TODAY on campus THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will present "The Drive HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKET APEST WITH NEW HAMMER & 8 FOOD GAT clip and save ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841 011-808 98 W 24th offer offers Feb. 28 THURS, FEB. 18 Pendleton punch nights $1.00 A Glass 1-1-30 BAY $'FB 20h SAT $'FB 20h SUN FEB. 21 LYNCH & McBEE with special Guest 10:00-1:30 Boys Babies All Guests HAPPY HOUR DAILY 6-10 $1.00 HIGHBALLS; 70¢ BTL. BEER WE ARE OPEN! WITH FREE LIVE MUSIC 5 NIGHTS A WEEK 642 mass. 842-9549 Give him Something SPECIAL this year Jack Daniels OLD NO.7 SINGLE MALT WHISKEY During his four years as mayor, he became a leader in several urban groups, including the National League of American Football and the National Urban Coalition. Great selection of Jack Daniel's gift items. CIGARS Jose Meiendi Colombo Valencia Havana Blend Boca Raton Venice bovine Jorge Over 500 types of pipes Famous brand pipe tobacco PIPES Savinelline GBD Jayce Pioneer Meerschaum Butz-Choquin SCHRADE pocket knives 1 yr. guarantee for loss SAVINELLI quartz pipe lighters leaf The Bookmark's the Ohio House of Representatives from 1962 to 1967. PIPE & TOBACCO SHOP In the Malts Shopping Center 842-7152 for Power," "Money on the Land: Part II" and "The Rise of Labor in America," beginning at 7:30 p.m. in 308 Dyche Hall. TOMORROW The KU Study Abroad Office will attend in Cork I of the Kansas Union. LATIN AMERICA'S SOLIDARITY and the Commission on the Status of Women in Paris panel discussion, "Women in Revolution" at 7 p.m. in Pariol Cof the Union --small ... 2. medium ... 35s. large ... 45s. Carl Stokes, the first black mayor of a large American city, will speak at 8 tonight at Tempelman Hall. James Washburn, the mayor of Hall Black Caucus, said yesterday. On the record 841 DIET Burglaries stole $757 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at 1439 Tennessee St. sometime between /'t30 p.m. Monday and 1 p.m. Tuesday, police said. After using unknown tools to enter the car, burglars took a camera valued at $630 and an equalizer valued at $225. There are no suspects, police said. Row 9 Wear At The Lice Service DIET CENTER It's a Natural 9414 Hitchcock Medical Center BURGLARS ALSO stole $700 worth of stereo equipment from another parked car at the same address sometime between 4:30 p.m. Monday and 6 p.m. Tuesday. Police said burglars used a camera to take photos and enter the car and store a stereo receiver and an amplifier. There are no suspects. Stokes is a lawyer, the author of two books and has contributed articles to professional journals. He was the recipient of several community service awards, including the Equal Opportunity Award of the National Urban League. The KU Inspirational Gospel Voices will perform before Stokes' talk, Campbell said. 'A reception will follow the speech. Stokes, former mayor of Cleveland, will appear as part of Black History Month. His topic will be "Reaganism and the Black Community." Stokes first came to national prominence in 1967 when he was elected mayor of Cleveland. He had served in A news conference will precede the lecture at 7 p.m. BURGLARS ALSO store a cassette deck valued at 400 from a parked car at 1312 Maple Lane sometime between 5 p.m. and 10 p.m. Tuesday, police said. Burglars entered the vehicle by ambushing the police, said. There are no suspects. IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 843-9803 THEIVES STOLE more than $500 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at 1100 Indiana St. sometime between 5:30 p.m. Monday and 2:45 p.m. Tuesday, police said. There are no suspects, police said. You've never met anyone quite like Joni STARRING JONI EARECKSON AS HERSELF. A WORLD WIDE PICTURES RELEASE EVENINGS at 7:15 & 8:15 Cinema Twin 311a & Iowa. 842-6400 JONI COUNTY ACCEPTED NO OTHER PASSES Stokes' lecture is sponsored by Templin Hall, Templin Hall Black Pearson College, Pearson College Black Caucus, Black Student Union and the Office of Minority Affairs. You've never met anyone quite like Joni STARRING JONI EARECKSON AS HERSELF THEVES ALSO removed a tape player from a parked car at 1332 Kentucky St. sometime between 8 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, police said. Stokes to talk on Reaganomics COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DONNERSON 1111PHONE 743-1980 KATHARINE HEPBRIN HENRY FONDA On Golden Time A UNIVERSAL PICTURE Friday 7/16 & 8/31 Mat. Sat. Sun. 7:00 Eve. 7:15 Sunny 7-9AM VARSITY TICKETS & TERMS JACK NICHOLSON THE BORDER Eve. 7-30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sat. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 "AN UNCOMMONLY BEAUTIFUL FILM" HEARTLAND FC Whose life is it anyway Fv. 7:30 Fv. 9:30 HILLCREST Entralling... CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Evt. 7:15 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 1 Enthralling... CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Ev. 7:19 & 8:30 Mars Sat, Sep 2:15 HILLCREST 2 "AN UNCOMMONLY BRAVATILFUL HEART-LAND" Ev. 7:30 Whose life is it anyway Ev. 9:20 HILLCREST 3 RAGTIME PG 14.5 only Mar. 7:30 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION INCLUDED Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-733 You're given a spot to sit in the sun JIMI EARKESSON @ JIMI EARKER 11/27 9:30 AM - 12:50 PM Weekend Matches at 10:00 & 4:00 Adults $10.00 SOTHER PRESENTS HILLCREST 2 "AN UNCOMMONLY BEAUTIFUL FILM" HEART- LAND PG Eve 7:30 !Openings for Student Senate Budget Subcommittee! RAGTIME 7:45 only Mat. 7:00 JAMES CAGNEY CINEMA 1 2151 AND 1094 TELEPHONE 612-8400 HILLCREST 3 12TH AND 13TH AUGUST RAGTIME WHO? 7-45 on Sat. Mar. 2.00 JACOB CAINEY 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE CINEMA 2 PAUL NEWMAN ABSENCE OF MALICE PG A COLUMBIA PICTURE Fen / 30 6 30 Mat. Sat. Sun 7:00 Applications Available in Senate Office Membership Closes: 1 March, 5 p.m. WILLIAM W. HENRY WC Frank W.C. FRANK 38€ POLISH 57€ FOOTLONG 65€ FIFTH™ 69€ Prepare For: April MCAT "A Frank We Can All Afford" 23rd & Iowa Lawrence Phone 842-6472 Educational Center TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 All Sandwiches come with Refresh & Fresh Cut Onions Additional Toppings Stanley H KAPLAN Stanley H KAPLAN MCAT COCA-COLA ORANGE SPRITE ROOTBEER TAB CHEESE CHLI KRAUT CRBSP DILL SLICE CHIPS Call Days Evenings & Weekends Class will be In Lawrence starting the last week In Feb. Coming Soon (913) 341-1220 collect Rootbeer or Orange SOFT;SERV ICE CREAM 28¢ 59¢ SODA FREEZE ... 14¢ 15¢ 15¢ 12¢ 24¢ HILL Y STEREO For Information on Other Centers in More than 85 Major US Cities & Abroad Outside NY State CALL TOLL FREE 203-823-1782 MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY IN CONCERT. ON FILM. AT LAST. NEVER BEFORE SEEN performances of their greatest hits-plus Beatles classics! PAUL MCCARTNEY & WINGS ROCKSHOW FULL DOLBY STEREO Varsity Downtown, 843-1065 BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 11:30 ALL SEATS $3.00 Chocolate Butterscotch Hot Fudge SOFT-SERVICE CREAM CONE ... SUNDAE ... by Oliver Goldsmith 8:00pm February 19-20 & 25-27, 1982 University Theatre Murphy Hall THIS PROGRAM IS PART OF THE 1982 UNIVERSITY ART GROUP. The University of Kansas Theatre Present Q Q Qx Q TICKETS ON HALL MAIL OFFICE FOR RESERVATION DLL MORE 3982S INFORMATION AND RESPOND TO CITIZEN ACCOUNTS AWALI Rent it. Call the Kansan. 60 OUNCE SUPER SCHOONER? SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER by Oliver Goldsmith SATURDAY SPECIALS From 10 p.m. to Midnight HOUSE DRINKS $1.00 FRIDAY SPECIALS Spiced Broiled Shrimp $1.50 1/4 lb. FREE Hors D'oeuvres THURSDAY SPECIALS From 9 p.m. to Midnight MEN'S NIGHT 25' DRAWS 60 OUNCE SUPER SCHO for only $1.75 Reg. $2.75 Anytime Sunday SUNDAY SPECIALS From 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. 75' PITCHERS Qx —MONDAY— 50' PITCHERS from 7 p.m.-Midnight $1.00 Bar Drinke Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. 1401 West 7th 843-0540 SANCTUARY C CoSaan African Dance Company A performance of social and religious dance from West Africa to commemorate Black History Month. mohun 8:00 p.m. Sunday, February 21, 1982 Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall The University of Kansas K Tickets available at the University Theatre Box Office in Murphy Hall and the SUAOffice in the Kansas Union. Admission $1.50. Presented in part by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency University Daily Kansan, February 18, 1982 Page 7 New ambulance station to be near hospital roa$TEPHEN BLAIR graff Reporter t The Lawrence Memorial Hospital Jesterday ratified the final agreement for the Douglas County ambulance to build a second ambulance station. The station will be built near the hospital's emergency room on land the county will buy from the hospital, Ted Brown, director of the service, said yesterday. main offices of the service, will allow these to reach people faster in an emergency, be better prepared. The new station, which will house the "We will be responding from two locations," McFarlane said. The other station is at 19th and Massachusetts streets. THE STATION will benefit both the county and the hospital by allowing the ambulance staff to train and work with the hospital's critical care staff, said Bob Campbell, hospital director of community relations. 1. "would guess it would relate to fairly traumatic care, fairly acute kinds of pain." "While the staff are not out on runs they have an opportunity to learn things. "I think it would be a little like firemen operate." Campbell said. Part of the county ambulance staff's training is to learn how to evaluate the emergency care a patient needs, McFarlane said. "They initially evaluate the patient's condition and discuss that with a nurse or physician," he said. "That treatment could include any thing from bandaging wounds, cleaning wounds, to administering drugs." The county is taking a slight financial risk in building the station, but the benefits of the location outweigh the risk, McFarlane said. Construction on the new station should begin in May. McFarlane said. ACCORDING TO a draft of the agreement, should the county stop using the building for purposes related to the hospital, or would property revert to the hospital. Should that happen, the county would not receive compensation for the property, McFarlane said. subsidized by property taxes so that no one in Douglas County will be too poor to be rushed to a hospital in an emergency, he said. "We don't want the economic burden to be a consideration when they call," McPharlane said. "In case you're taken, let me pay for it, the county absorbs the cost." "Every taxayer in the county benefits from our service. That's very much like our fire department. Even if his house doesn't catch fire, what the taxayer is paying for is the peace of mind that it's there." The county's ambulance service is In some counties, the ambulances are privately operated and are more ex- "Shawnee County charges three times what we do and provides the same basic services," McFarlane said. The average ambulance run costs Douglas County about $60 to $70, he said. In its projected 1982 operating expenses, the county service expects to take in about $150,000 in user fees and to make up its deficit with about $380,000 from property tax funds, McFarlane said. THURSDAY NIGHT IS DRINK AND DROWN NIGHT AT TIME OUT Take COME TO TIME OUT TONIGHT AND DRINK FROM COME TO TIME OUT TONIGHT AND DRINK FROM 8 PM TIL MIDNIGHT FOR THREE DOLLARS!$ Jumping BUD IS BACK ON TAP! ANOTHER REASON TO TAKE TIME OUT! 2408 IOWA TIME OUT to have a good time. THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR GRADUATE WOMEN Feb. 25,1982 Ecumenical Center, 1204 Oread 7-8:30 P.M. Please bring a dessert. For further information call 864-3552 MAKE A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE Roundtrip from Kansas City First Class Coach Special Fare Atlanta $418 $392 $224 Boston 630 590 258 Chicago 408 296 118 Dallas 332 300 118 Denver 448 340 178 Houston 409 368 118 Los Angeles 820 596 199 Miami 606 508 238 New Orleans 404 340 192 New York 752 542 258 Orlando 544 454 238 Phoenix 648 470 216 San Francisco 882 636 325 Seattle 882 636 318 Washington 552 434 209 Honolulu 1234 1017 547 Anchorage 1105 1137 550 Acapulco 618 490 343 Frankfurt 364 1316 649 London 2956 710 545 Amsterdam 2638 778 517 Buenos Aires 648 462 258 Tampa 532 470 198 Toronto 470 372 188 MAKE A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE There's an endless frontier of need out there, stretching from the Sahara to the Andes to the Atolls of the South Pacific. In 20 years, 80,000 Peace Corps volunteers have traveled to all of them, to work with people in over 50 countries. 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We'll get you the Lowest Air fares NEW UPRATED FARES AIRLINES Don't forget FRIDAY NIGHT SHRIMP PEEL Only $1.50 per 1/4 pound Special Drink Prices 4 p.m.-8 p.m. Also 95c Drinks 8-12 Don't forget FRIDAY NIGHT SHRIMP PEEL Only $1.50 per 1/4 pound Special Drink Prices 4 p.m.-8 p.m. Also 95c Drinks 8-12 Thursday is Ladies Night at Mingles 2 for 1 from 8 to 12 MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE MINGLES LOUNGE 2222 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Ks. 842-7030 Ext. 136 SVA FILMS Presents TONIGHT Rainer Werner Fassbinder's The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant $1.50 100% 7:30 p.m. "The year's best film!" —Charles Champlin, LOS ANGELES TIMES 'TESS' PG Columbia Pictures FRIDAY & SATURDAY 3:30, 7:00, 10:15 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium Beat the crowd—try the early or the late show! THE LETTER MARKS Feeling Bummed About Exams? Feeling Bummed About Study Skills Workshop Tuesday, February 23 7:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m. FREE Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064 MINORITIES & THE LAW CONFERENCE NORITIES & THE LAW CONFERENCE TODAY'S PROFESSIONAL: THE LEGAL IMPACT SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1982 9:30-2:00 KEYNOTE SPEAKER MS. ARNETTE R. HUBBARD PRESIDENT, NATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION Registration 9:00-9:30 PETER H. WILSON Morning Sessions Engineer Liability for Design Error Bill Hogan 9:30-10:30 Journalism: Open Records, Open Meetings Mike Kautsch 9:30-10:30 Medical Malpractice and the Doctor Rose Marino 10:45-11:40 Asset Guarded Sports: Negotiating a New Contract Joe Johnson Attorney Sammy Edwards Attorney 10:45 11:45 10:45 11:45 Business: The Law & Business Hand in Glove LUNCH 12:00-1:00 Keynote Address Arnette R. Hubbard 1:00-2:00 Presented by the KU Chapter of The Black American Law Students' Association and The American Bar Association/Law School Division Law. --- Cornucopia Restaurant - Luncheon Specials Weekdays Through February. Cornucopia Salad with Soup and Bread. $2.50 Now Featuring: Weekend Breakfast Specials 10 a.m.-1 p.m. This Week's Special Breakfast Enchiladas $3.75 Open 7 days a week 11-10 Weekdays 10-10 Weekends 1801 Massachusetts 842-9637 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 18, 1982 Sexual harassment policy closer to adoption By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter nics The University of Kansas' proposed sexual harassment policy moved a step closer to adoption when the U.S. Supreme Court Rights Committee reviewed it yesterday. The Senate will seek student input and will compile a response on behalf of the students in the next two weeks, the committee's chairman said. "Our job is to actively represent what the students think," Jim Cramer, committee chairman, said. Cramer appointed a subcommittee to write the response to the policy, which will then be submitted to David Adkins, student body president. Adkins said he would probably send the committee's response on to University governance, including the Senate executive committee and Robert Cobb, executive vice chan- COBH BAS the option of approving the entire report on sexual harassment and sending it to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, or making modifications and sending it back to SenEx and University Council Shirley Harkess, associate professor of sociology and chairman of the ad hoc committee on sexual harassment, explained to the Rights Committee how the report defining sexual harassment and its results were put together. The ad hoc committee sent an administrative draft to academic units and employee and student groups, Harkess said. The responses from those organizations were compiled into a final report that was approved last fall by the Senate executive committee and University Council. "The essence of the behavior which is prohibited is any behavior, including that by students, which represents repeated or unwanted sexual attention or sexual advances, when they are made conditions of reward or penalty for employment or academic performance," the report states. Based upon the responses of student groups and the results of a survey of 480 students in November 1981, Hankess said, "Students at the University of Texas perceive a relatively wide range of behaviors as sexual harassment." to the Senate a petition amending the Senate Code to allow members of the Senate to serve three successive terms in the Senate council instead of the present two terms. es from IN OTHER business, the rights committee voted unanimously to send "I feel the last part of the junior and first part of senior year is when students are most qualified to serve on SenEx," David Welch, student body vice president and author of the bill, said. The committee also voted unanimously for a resolution stating that the KU Senate opposed President Reagan's proposed fiscal 1983 budget cuts in benefits and eligibility requirements under Guaranteed Student Loans, Pell Grants, campus-based aid, state match grants, graduate fellowships, veteran's benefits, social security benefits and grants that provide financial assistance to students at institutions of higher education. THE COMMITTEE recommended the resolution, drawn up by John Keightley, Nunemaker senator, to the Senate. The rights committee also was to consider a resolution by David Zimmerman, special student, that stated the Senate would not consider the $3.50 campus privilege fee for the athletic department until the University had conducted a study on beer in Meor, he Stadium. cran however, Zimmerman salvage withdraw the resolution because chancellor already had approved fee increase. Bren Abbott, student member of *U* University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board, had said last week he board asked the chancellor to allow Senate time to take a stand on the issue before he made his decision. A referendum to obtain the students' opinions on the matter was proposed to Senate last week, but it was sent to a hearing in September and not action by Senate too late to be effective. --shop COUPON BU BUY GE Limit 1 order per coupon. One coupon per customer. New valid in combination with any other offer. Coupon effective 2/18 - 2/21 1527 W. 6th BUY ONE ORDER OF NACHOS, GET ANOTHER FREE Limit 1 order per coupon. One coupon per customer. Not valid in combination with any other offer. Coupon effective 2/18-2/21 Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W. 6th AURH More Information at your hall desk Filing deadline, Wednesday, February 24, 5:00 p.m. The Association of University Residence Halls Open Offices: President/Vice President Secretary (a team) Treasurer Election Information 12 You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1982 officer and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas: 1. President 5. Films 2. Vice President 6. Fine Arts 3. Secretary 7. Forums 4. Treasurer 8. Indoor Recreation 12. Travel 9. Outdoor Recreation 10. Public Relations 11. Special Events 12. Travel Professional Helstralting for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters SUA Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union. Interviews will be held Saturday, February 27. Sign up deadline for applications is Friday, February 19, 5:00 p.m. The delicate art of combining innocence and sexiness is perfected here by Henson Kickernick. Cotton dotted swiss are frosted with lace and rose-embroidery net insets. We also have matching bed jackets, camisoles and tap-pants. Sizes P-S-M-L. Tues.-Set. 12-6 fashion eyeland GENERAL CONCIERNE 841-4000 Holiday Plaza Henson COUPET HOOK 8 GO UNDERCOVER 21 W. 9th 749-0004 FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Free Estimate THE PRESTON MCALL COMPANY 3114 N. 5d1 BH-811-6007 The University of Kansas Rock Chalk Revue 1982 presents . . In The Spotlight Thursday, Feb. 25 7 p.m. $2.50 Friday, Feb. 26 8 p.m. $3.75 Saturday, Feb. 27 8 p.m. $5.00 InThe Spotlight Tickets available at: SUA Box office, Kiefs, Saftees, Hillcrest, Raney Drug. KU Information Booth. THE BEST PRICE • 76 Lines of Quality Audio • Complete Service • Discount Prices • Mail Order THE BEST PRICE • 76 Lines of Quality Audio • Complete Service • Discount Prices • Mail Order Selection, Price, Quality, Service Three "State of the Art" showrooms; two large mass manufacturers showrooms; one budget manufacturers area, as well as, our mail order facility and wholesale warehouse. Shop every major dealer of audio components in the midwest or compare more lines of quality audio at the Gramophone Shop! KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, Ks. 842-1811 Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 18, 1982 Scandals continue to hit athletic programs Every kid dreams of being in the limelight when he is young. years and had their first winning season in five years. Some of those kids' dreams are fulfilled. But others reach the limelight in different ways. There are few athletic programs nationwide today that haven't been touched with some form of scandal at one time or another. Kansas is no exception. VESTERDAY THREE KU football players were charged with one count of burglary and one count of grand theft each. RON Two of the players were starters: junior defensive tackle Broderick Thompson and sophomore offensive tackle Renwick Atkins. Cedric Alexander, the third player charged, is a freshman who sat out this season because he was academically illibutile. A SITUATION like this jeopardizes a football program that Don Fambrough has worked so hard to turn around. The three were released on $2,500 recognition bonds. This year the Jayhawks, who finished the regular season with an 8-3 record, went to their first bowl game in six Whether or not the three are found guilty, the incident will give KU a bad name and could also hurt recruiting the next few years. KU hasn't been the only school to come under fire. Earlier in the week a starting linebacker on the University of Iowa football team, Todd Simonsen, was charged with assault and criminal trespass by a female student, Julie Metzner, at the university. The past couple of years controversy has struck the universities of Oregon, Kentucky and Indiana. KENTUCKY AND Oregon both had football players charged with rape. Other Kentucky players were charged with murder. At Indiana, basketball coach Bobby Knight dismissed several players when he caught them with marijuana. However, the most recent scandal that drew national attention was the Boston College incident, in which three players were convicted of throwing At Boston College, Henry Hill paid three Boston College players during the 1978-79 season to shave points in nine games. (1) Hill paid each of the players $2,500 per game except when they didn't do as he wished. Then he didn't give them anything or cut them back. But it hasn't been just players Renwick Atkins throughout the nation. More and more coaches are facing a variety of charges. ONCE AGAIN at Oregon, six coaches, including football coach Rich Brooks, four of his assistants and swimming coach Rich Schleicher were fined a report $9,000 as a result of an investigation revealing that several football players and a swimmer had obtained bona academic records. Almost the identical situation occurred at New Mexico where basketball coach Norm Ellenberger and assistant (1) Broderick Thompson coach John Whisenant were charged in federal court with mail fraud and racketeering in connection with the college trans- naming Lobes player. Innocent or guilty, the charges against the three Jayhawks have localized a growing national trend. College and crime are often intertwined. Putting an end to this is more important than the next victory. See related story, page 1 etc. Intramurals Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Rec. A (playoffs) Leather Ballers 43, Dragons 30 Independent Men Monday Grosse Pointe 53, Red Ribbons 43, Tampa Bay 61, Cincinnati 38, Villanova 81, Bill Valvore's Bunch 61, The Tortoise 38, Cincinnati 37, Chicago 61, Lawrence Catholic Center 46, Skippers 43, Have New 88, Dana 29, Hornsby 43, Have New 88, Dana 29, Hornsby 43 Independent Men Ree R Racquetball TOURNAMENT RESULTS Ment Advanced Rec. B Vooedo Nuns 29, Skale 28, Skale 29 Coelonja 28, Coelonja 28 Henry E' 34, Goldbels 29 Goldbels 29, Warda 24, Warda 29 Taihei Waters 47, The Marlboro 30 Lakers 46, Marlboro 44 Lakers 46, Marlboro 44 FPNPD1317.37 Laramie Adult Education 35 Laramie Adult Education 35 Laramie Language 24 Dava County College 24 The Good Anniversary 37, D.P. 34 Good Anniversary 37, D.P. 34 South Wind Speaks 33, The Wrath 25 South Wind Speaks 33, The Wrath 25 Nora Flaack, winner- Margaret Donner, runner-up Steve Minter, intermediate Steve Wimmer, winner- Brittany McKee, intermediate Linda Hinder, intermediate Lisa Larson, runner-up Naomi Novice Tim Burler, winner- Jon MacAdamk, winner David Sakumura, runner-up Women's Advocacy Geaslands 28, Red Dogs 24 Mawkell's Demons 28, Me'sMaudaders 22 Buller's Bombers 57, "Go Nada 26 Vigil Stormer's Thirsty Herd 34, F & W Men's Novice Tin Borel, winner Mark White, runner-up Mokeski traded to Cavaliers By United Press International The Cavaliers will get the lesser of RICHTEL FIELD. Ohio-The Cleveland Cavaliers Tuesday sent forward Kenny Carr and center bill Lainheimer to the Detroit Pistons in exchange for forward Phil Hubbard, center Paul Mokeski and two draft choices. the Pistons' two first-round choices this year, either their own or Washington's, plus the second-round pick Detroit from the Kansas City Kings last year. Mokeski, a former Jayhawk, averaged 7.1 points last year, but was down to 3.2 in reduced playing time this week. He has been bothered by a back injury. CONVERSE Tie In With Us Recreation Services Racquetball Mixed Doubles Tournament Entry fee is one can of unopened racquetballs submitted with completed entry form. Entry deadline is Thursday, February 25, 5:00 p.m. In 208 Robinson. Play begins Sunday. February 28. For more information call 864-3546 An independent psychiatric evaluation was recently ordered in Paola, Kansas for a retarded man charged for the third time with second-degree murder in the 1977 stabbing of a sixteen year old girl. The accused, a thirty-five year old man, had previously been found unfit to stand trial in two separate evaluations conducted at state hospitals in Larned and Osawatomi. The judge took under advisement a motion by the accused's attorney to dismiss the charge because of the findings of the aforementioned two evaluations and added that if the man was found incompetent a third time, the charge would be dismissed. PSYCHATRIAC LECHECS CONTINUE THEIR ATTACK ON THE SOCIETAL CORPUS 98 Black's Law Dictionary tells us that a person is unfit to stand trial "if he or she lacks capacity to understand the nature and object of the proceedings, to consult with counsel, and to assist in preparing his or her defense." The accused's capacity to comprehend can sometimes only be perceived by the most erudite members of the psychiatric profession. This was undoubtedly the reason the judge decided to ignore the results of the two earlier court-ordered seances and permit the accused to be examined by the staff at the Menninger Foundation. Now while the psychiatric profession has been adjudged qualified to determine an individual's competency to stand trial, it has remained conspicuously silent about how to deal with those who combine this alleged incompetence with an ongoing murderous intent. Although the Sixth Amendment begins by promising to the accused "In all criminal prosecutions . . . the right to a speedy and public trial," our judicial system is steadily amassing a backlog of cases in part because of the considerable time it squanders listening to psychiatrically-inspired gibberish. While our governing units at all levels are periodically reviewing cases, we have been unable to conduct forensic prostorms for obstructive justice. If our legal apparatus is ever to function in the manner envisaged by the Founding Fathers, it will be necessary to clear the courts of these professional parasites. William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terrace Umpire dies in sleep DUMORE, Pa.—Nestor Chylak, an American League美职篮 for 25 years and assistant supervisor of the league's umpires since 1979, died yesterday. He By United Press International Chylak, a native of Olyphant, Pa., died in his sleep and was pronounced dead at his home by the family physician, Dr. Paul Remick, at 7:15 Chylak was considered the model umpire of his era. He combined authoritarianism with tact and a sense of humor and held the respect of players and managers. Chylak became an American League ampire in 1954 after eight years in the minor leagues. He was a veteran of five World Series, three American League Championship Series and four All-Star games. the only one in the world that everybody else can do better." Chylak once said an umpire's job "is "I umprided for 25 years and can honestly say I never called one wrong in my heart," he once recalled. "The way I see it, an ampire must be perfect on the first day of the season and then get better every day." In New York, baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn and American League President Lee MacPhail paid tribute to Chylak. "Few have ever been more respected in his field than Mr. Chylak," Kuhn said. "Everyone looked up to him and developed more respect every time I saw him in a World Series or an All-Star game." MacPahla said in a prepared statement, "He had the confidence of young umpires on the staff as well as the respect of the senior man. He was always ready to catch coaches and certainly one of the finest umpires in major league baseball." DAILY Wed.-Sun. 6-10 live music nightly 10-? $1.00 HIGHBALLS 70' BOTTLES of 7th SPIRIT 642 MASS. 842-9549 Application for Student Senate Spring'82 Budget Hearings Now Available in Senate Office (no late applications accepted) Skiing SKI VIP Deadline for group application: March 1-5 p.m. MARY JANE Breckenridge, Keystone, Copper Mountain March 17-22 Spring Break Mar.12-17 With or Ski etc... Four full days Rentals All lifts Lodging Transportation by sleeper bus Scoreboard only $245 Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference 841-8386 Space is limited! Team W 7 W 14 Pct. GB Indiana W 37 L 14 - - Boston 26 T 10 - - Washington 25 25 500 12 - New Jersey 25 25 500 12 - Nebraska 25 25 434 12 - Milwaukee...37 14 725 Colorado...37 14 725 Atlanta...22 10 15 Indiana...22 10 423 Chicago...39 10 365 Hickory...30 10 15 Western Conference Midwest Division San Antonio 16 17 27 669 - Delaware 28 33 15 40% - Darling 14 19 15 4½% Ulah 18 17 33 35¹⁵% Ulaan Baba 18 33 35¹⁵% Kansas City 17 34 32 17% Los Angeles 35 17 673 % New York 34 17 673 % Portland 28 16 604 % Golden State 38 22 560 % New Jersey 28 23 490 % San Diego 31 27 270 % New Jersey 115, Chicago 106 Connecticut 103, New York 102 Houston 115, Cleveland 102 San Antonio 106, Detroit 113 Minnesota 104, Miami 103 Atlanta 117, Utah 109 Team W L Pct. GB Broncos 7 1 43.8 6% Kansas State 6 5 545 4% Nebraska 6 5 545 4% Oklahoma State 6 5 545 4% Kansas 4 7 364 8% Colorado 4 7 364 8% Illinois State 4 6 353 8% Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPE ranking. Oklahora State 72, Kansas State (1) 62 Colorado 80, Kansas 80 UP1 TOP 96 RESULTS North Carolina (21) 69, Lake Forest (18) Maryland (20) 58, Kentucky (9) 84, Florida 78 Boston College 69, Georgetown (12) 71 Charlotte (20) 50, Mississippi State 48 30) 50, Missouri State 48 $ 3^{1 / 2} \mathrm {c}$ COPIES Service Beyond Duplication 838 MASS. — 842-3610 HOUSE OF USHE Hockey hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Detailed Information Use Kansan Classified Patrick Division Team | W | L | T | G | FG | GA | Pts. Hawks | 38 | 18 | 7 | 62 | 179 | 194 | 65 Philadelphia | 31 | 21 | 10 | 216 | 224 | 227 | 65 NY Rangers | 28 | 21 | 10 | 216 | 224 | 227 | 65 Washington | 17 | 31 | 10 | 216 | 224 | 227 | 65 Montreal 33 11 11 12 270 166 74 Buffalo 32 18 9 275 184 73 Boston 32 19 8 328 394 70 Hartford 31 18 9 184 204 46 Hartford 31 18 9 184 204 46 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Campbell Conference Norris Division Minnesota 23 19 17 17 249 215 65 St. Louis 23 19 17 17 249 215 65 Tampa Bay 20 18 17 17 233 204 54 Winnipeg 20 36 11 11 217 254 51 Toronto 20 36 11 11 217 254 51 Houston 20 36 11 11 217 254 51 Edmonton 37 13 13 13 327 286 56 Calgary 22 13 11 241 234 85 77 Vancouver 22 96 12 104 220 82 76 Colorado 31 11 12 130 282 68 56 New York Mets Manager 6 District 3, Toronto 7, Montreal 8, Edmonton 7, Minnesota 4 Washington 5, Los Angeles 2 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W L W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 17 7 5 173 Baltimore 18 16 752 % New York 18 16 782 % Buffalo 12 13 490 % Cleveland 9 14 378 % Houston 7 15 318 % Philadelphia 15 18 318 % St. Louis...20 14 833 Wichita...10 10 653 Kansas...10 10 69 Memphis...10 17 370 Phoenix...10 17 370 Philadelphia...7 18 280 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. THURSDAY DRINKATHON. $1.00 at the Door 25c DRAWS It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK 1340 Ohio THURSDAY DRINKATHON WHAT IS KU RUGBY? To find out you are invited to attend KU Rugby Informational Meeting at 4:00 p.m., Sunday, February 21 above Johnny's Tavern 401 North 2nd. Food and Refreshments Provided by KU Rugby Club. GAWWONS SNOWWONS Proudly Presents A 2016 LUPE Tonight thru Saturday, 1st Set Starts at 9:30 $1.25 Bar Drinks all night long! 25c Draws 10-11 p.m. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily KANSAN Friday, February 19, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 100 USPS 650-640 Bill would permit 6-month residency Regents push bill for new Kansans KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter Some students who have lived in Kansas for only six months may再 be eligible for in-state. at the University of Kansas, state residents pay $450 a semester for tuition. Out-of-state students pay $825 a semester for tuition. A bill before the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee would reduce the residency requirement from one year to six months, because many states require requirements before receiving residency status. At a hearing before the committee yesterday, John Conard, director of the Kansas Board of Regents, said the bill was aimed toward families who move to Kansas for employment. "These people start paying (state) taxes the day they move in," he said. "It doesn't make sense for the employee or his family to have to a new year before they're considered state residents." ALTHOUGH the bill does not specify who may receive in-state tuition after six months, it would not grant residency status for students who come to Kansas expressly for school, Conard said. Now, in addition to residing in Kansas for one year, a residence candidate must gain full-time work in Kansas, pay state taxes, transfer insurance and obtain a Kansas driver's license if he drives. Students seeking residency also must be totally independent of parents who live in other areas. The one-year requirement alone would change under the proposed bill, sponsored by the Senate. Besides the legal requirements, however, a student must convince officials at state schools that his quest for residency is not motivated by tuition costs alone. Conard said. "There's nothing automatic about becoming a resident after six months," he said. "Ultimately, residency status is in the mind of the individual, and no one can read his mind." "But there are bits of evidence by which a person can determine whether a particular deserving of慈怜." But William Kelly, associate dean of admissions and records at KU, said a student's intentions were not questioned if he met all the legal requirements for residency. The University does not ask whether the enquiry request is related to tuition costs, Kelvy's. "To be honest, if a person meets the requirements, then he becomes a resident," said Kelly, who approves resident requests at KU. "If you need help, do it if the requirement changes to six months." Last semester, there were 6,385 out-of-state students at KU. Because these students pay more than twice the tuition charged to Kansas students, it would result in recessions could result in fewer dollars for the state. Although Conard said that there was no estimate of the possible loss of tuition dollars, he said at a hearing for a similar bill last year that the bill would cost the state less than $300.000. This is the fifth year that such a bill has come before the Legislature since the residency requirement was increased from six months to a year in 1975. Conard said one reason the Regents supported the bill was that all community colleges in Kansas and Washburn University had only six-month residency requirements. The drop to a six-month requirement would mostly affect Wichita State University, which is near factories that often attract people from out of state, Conard said. But with nearly 7,000 out-of-staters in Lawrence, KU probably would be affected as well, he said. Faculty salary funds diverted to operating expenses budget By COLLEEN CACY and ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporters Money for faculty salaries, left over from a higher than expected rate of employee turnover, has been transferred to the operating expenses budget at the University of Kansas for the past five years, according to a report released by the Kansas Legislative Research Department. But the money transferred out of the salary fund could not have been used for salary increases, Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, said yesterday. The report said that from 1977 to 1988, a total of $1,672,063 was transferred to the operating expenses fund, an average increase in the fund of 1 percent each year. The report was released at a meeting of the House and Senate Ways and Means committees, where the Kansas Board of Regents presented their 1983 budget requests. Legislators questioned the Regents request for a 13 percent faculty salary increase because funds had been taken out of the salary budget in the past. BUT NITCHER said this money could not be used for salary increases because the raise would only be for part of the year. The employee should ask that next year because that money would not be there. Faculty members are named in the budget the year before their salaries are paid, and their salaries are paid for the following year. "If you have turnover or vacancies over a year, you save some money," Nitcher said. "It's nothing new. It's part of the University's fiscal policy." Nitcher said that in 1981, $44,348 had to be transferred from the operating expenses fund to the salary budget because there was less employee turnover than expected. When money is left over in the salary fund, it is because more vacancies occur than were already available. But in 1981, the reverse happened. SHRINEAGE IS the estimated amount an institution's salary budget will shrink because of a new budget. See BUDGET page 5 Bougain speaks races for his staff of 96. God Stokes former mayor of Cleveland, rode from yesterday's Cleveland Press denouncing Reagonomics. Stokes spoke at Templin Hall last night. Doors open for blacks, Stokes says By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Mixing wite and tough talk, black leader Carl B. Stokes last night exhorted KU's black students not to use their race as a crutch, but to use the opportunities gained for them to get Stokes, former Cleveland mayor and the first black mayor of a large U.S. city, told about 200 students and faculty members at the school that black students had "needed for blacks in recent years." "There isn't anything you can't do today," he said. Jr., no NAACP, no Urban League to solve their individual problems. Stokes appeared in conjunction with the observance of Black History Month. He said there was no Martin Luther King "You are going to have to do this yourself," he said. HE TOLD students to go to the classrooms they themselves "while those of us out here fight." JON HARDESTY/Kanaan Staff Bill Gleason, Roeland Park freshman, had Memorial Stadium to himself vesterdav afternoon as he loaded around the track. In the 1960s, he said, blacks were denied in employment. In the 1980s, blacks were deforestation. We are not always qualified for jobs. But the doors are open now, he said, and babe must take out counties and do more business. Stokes said it became important to him early in life to be independent and to work for himself. He and his brother now have the largest law firm in Ohio. He said he learned, in college, the limits to education. But he said he also learned the confidence, challenge and determination to be independent. "So, when a Ronald Reagan is doing what he did, you may hurt my country, but be wounded much." HE ENCOURAGED students to take courses that prepared them for a good job. "So the IBMs and the Dow Chemicals will be on your doorstep and will choose you," he said, "not because you're black, but because you're needed." Stokes said his competitive drive made him want to learn. He said it was effective in his political life and when he went into jour- Holding a copy of Thursday's Topea Capitol-Journal, of workers being laid off at STORES in CALIFORNIA. AAAAAHHH Weather 26 Tomorrow will be clear to partly cloudy with a high in the mid- to upper-50s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the southwest at 10 to 15 mph. The overnight low will be in the low 30s. Economy, budget emphasized in Reagan news conference By United Press International WASHINGTON-President Reagan left the door to budget compromise jarey yesterday, saying he would listen to proposed changes in his policy. He said he left the Pentagon and his tax cut program alone. Reagan also said he intended to appoint a private-sector task force to find waste and inefficiency in the federal government, which he said spent $23,000 a second. Reagan's statement came in a prepared statement that led off his eighth news conference. However, Reagan's refusal to answer questions on the news conference may have been a mistake. REAGAN SAID the blue-ribbon panel, whose members will be announced soon, would bring to the problem of government spending "outside of improving management and outsider federal costs." Reporters asked 30 questions in the 40-minute period, and Reagan refused point-blank to answer 11 of them on grounds they dealt with three things he said he would not discuss—overt operations against another government, plans and options for U.S. actions in Central America, and options for the American economy would begin its recovery. Reagan also was asked whether he had approved any covert activity to destabilize the left side of Iraq. He said he did not. THEN, realizing his mistake, Reagan did not make the same sweeping disclaimer about Nicaragua and only gave the answer that government spokesman are instructed to give when asked about possible covert activity—"I will not comment." His mind on a previous question that dealt with El Salvador, he answered. "No, we're not sure." On the economy, Reagan said, "We have made progress. Inflation, our No. 1 enemy, is coming closer." Reagan said he expected the recession to "bottom out" in the coming year. City commissioners evaluate Watson; no decision made The Lawrenceaty Commission discussed City Manager Biofurd Wolf's job performance. Mayor Marci Francisco said all five commissioners agreed that, at least for last night, they would not take either of two extreme measures: firing Watson or giving him a raise. "The choices are not whether to fire the city manager tonight, without pay, or the choice to say to the public. "Buford has done a great job for the city. Buford has been in fact an exemplary city manager to the extent that we are going to vote to give him a raise," she said. The commission will continue to evaluate Watson in a closed session at 1:30 p.m. Saturday. COMMISSIONER Tom Gleason bad said recently that he would move to fire Watson at the evaluation yesterday, but he said the evaluation was not yet complete. Watson said he did not want to speculate about Saturday's meeting. "If I change my mind, I'll let you know," he said. In response to Glisson's letter, a group has been a petition drive to force an election to renew it. It was revealed two weeks ago that Gleason had written a letter to Watson asking that he should THE COMMISSIONERS eventually will release to the public the policy statements of the commissioners regarding saxon sand. "People have said to us, 'If there a problem with the city manager, you need to set policy,'" she said. "When we have policies, we'll release them." Francisco said the commission was not abusing the purpose of closed sessions, because it was not a formal meeting. "It not policy unless we vote on it," she said. "The meeting Saturday might end the uncertainty of whether Watson will remain city manager, Commissioner Barkley Clark said." "I hope that after Saturday, we'll know," he said. "I can't promise that." The commissioners tried to overcome their difference so that they could work as a team, CIM. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 19, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Accused Med Center killer to be judged for competence KANSAS City, Kan. —There will probably be a hearing within a week to determine whether the man accused of gunning down two people in the University of Kansas Medical Center emergency room is competent to stand trial, the man's attorney said. Doctors at the Larmed State Hospital have found Bradley Boan, 31, mentally incompetent. He will be up to a judge to explain on whether Bradley can continue his work. Boan is represented by Jay Vader, who said yesterday that he expected a hearing in a week. Bonn also is charged with aggramented assault on a law enforcement officer. A police officer was fired upon in the emergency room, but was not Boan has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the death of Dr. Mark Beck, a second-year resident at the Med Center, and Ruth Rybolt, a hospital visitor. Both were gunned down in the emergency room March 19, 1981. injured: A spokesman for the Wyandotte County sheriff's office said that although deputies were dispatched to Larned yesterday, Boan had not been returned to the county jail by late in the day. No Soviet talks now. Reagan says OSLO, Norway—President Reagan yesterday ruled out immediate prospects for a U.S.-Poland trade deal, saying in Poland had intensified during two months of partial lockdown. "1 don't believe a summit is appropriate at the moment, and we have no plans for one." Reagan told the Norwegian news agency in answers about the summit. "If real progress is to be made, a summit has to be carefully prepared and have a reasonable chance of concrete achievements." he said. Reagan said the Polish crisis wrought a major effect on moves toward arm control, but the Geneva talks on reducing medium-range nuclear weapons. Refugees refused political asvlum SAN FRANCISCO—The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service refused political assuaym to a group of 29 refugees from Soviet-occupied Europe. The U.S. Government asked the The case of the confused and desperate refugees, temporarily housed at Hamilton Air Force Base, will be heard today by an immigration judge. According to David Ichert, district director of immigration, the refugees arrived with no visas. "If I knew I would be in this situation when I came here, I would have stayed in Kabul and let myself be shot by the burgers, like most of my friends." Under the Immigration Act of 1809, President Reagan will allow asylum this fiscal year for 5,000 refugees from the Middle East, including Oil rigs evacuated for safety check ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland—Helicopers evacuated all but a handful of the 152 workers from two offshore oil rigs near here yesterday, but poor weather stymied efforts at an underwater survey of the recently sunken Ocean Ranger rie. The weather also delayed bringing in the two rigs from their moorings in the Hibernia oil fields for a full safety inspection at the shipyards of Marystown, on the island of Newfoundland, and also prevented efforts to recover more of the bodies of the 84 men who died aboard the Ocean Ranger. More than three days after the Ranger's sinking in an Atlantic storm, only 20 bodies had been recovered by five search ships in the area. A Mississippi family seeking $2 million in damages yesterday filed the first lawsuit stemming from the catastrope. Relatives of King join marchers MONTGOMERY, Ala.—About 3,000 marches, including the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s father and son, paraded peacefully through the streets of Montgomery yesterday demanding an extension of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and denouncing President Reagan's economic policy. The demonstration capped a 160-mile march-motocycle that began Feb. 6 in Carrollton, Ala., and traveled across central Alabama. march that attracted 40,000 people and often met with violence. "We're dealing with different times," said King S, martin Luther King III. In addition to young King and his $3-year-old grandfather, Dr. Martin father King Se., the slain civil rights leader's daughter, Berrice, and his daughter, Kate, died peacefully. "Anybody who says Martin Luther King Jr. is dead, then there's something wrong with them," said the elder King. "He still lives." Carlin vetoes reaportionment map TOPEKA-Charging that the Republican majority of the Kansas Legislature refused to allow Democratic participation in redrawing the state's five congressional districts, Gov. John Carlin yesterday vetoed the Legislature's reapportionment proposal. Carlin was critical of the splitting among districts of Sedgwick and Wyndottie counties, both considered Democratic Party strongholds. House Speaker Wendell Dendll said Carlin's rejection of the plan was one of the "most blunt political actions" Carlin had taken since he has been governor. "It was not a political map, in that it was not drawn to favor or hurt any of the current congressmen or either political party." Lady, R-Overland Park. Judges clear Kent State records CINCINNATI-A federal appeals court yesterday cleared the way for release of previously secret police information on the 1970 shootings of Vietnam War protesters at Kent State University by Ohio National Guard-smen. The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in a unanimous three-judge decision, ruled that the documents should be made public "because of First Amendment rights." Dekah Kher, a college freshman when he was partially paralyzed by the guardians's gunfire almost 12 years ago, hailed the appeals court's ruling. "I think, perhaps, it will help us to maybe not have situation like this happen again, although history doesn't show a very promising view of learning from the past," said Kahler, 31, now living in Amesville, in southeastern Ohio. Survev makes havoc for N.Y. man NEW YORK - A New York man is taking his pre-Academy Awards survey of the popularity of the movie, "Raiders of the Lost Ark", by académie New York. It's all because his phone number has the last seven digits of a toll-free number being used in a survey of the popularity of the five films nominated by him. Tuesday night, Jerry Camerata of Staten Island, got 586 calls. The next night, he got 363. "Sometimes, the calls come in at four a minute," Camerata said. "It's very hilarious." After receiving a dozen calls, and making a few himself, Camerata, a public relations man, found out that "Entertainment Tonight," a television program shown in 114 cities, was taking a survey of the Academy Award nominees. JERRY HARPER ATTORNEY 901 KENTUCKY Suite 204 841-9485 After a while, Camerata started greeting callers with: "Thank you for taking time to vote, and I know the cast of 'Haiders of the Lost Ack' will be happy." TGIF at THE HAWK THE GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL IS YOUR VOICE ON THE LAWRENCE CAMPUS. USE IT. WHAT: ANNUAL GSC MEETING WHEN: MARCH 1, 7 PM WHERE: FORUM ROOM, KANSAS UNION WITH SPRING BUDGET HEARINGS APPROACHING, YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS THIS EVENT . . . 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Time and 1,000 Third Prizes - A Lite Beer Superstars tennis visor --- Jite MINT PINNER BEER The celebrities depicted in promotional materials will not necessarily be persons competing in Grand Prize competition © 1982 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, WI. University Daily Kansan, February 19, 1982 Excessive sales worry dance organizers By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter Organizers of the Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Cointin B sweetheart Formal are worried that about 700 ticket buyers might overcrowd the 300-capacity ballrooms reserved for the Friday night dance. Linda Lentz, resident director of GSP-Corbin, said Wednesday that she had taken steps to prevent crowd problems at the dance, which is to be in the two ballrooms of the Lawrence Ramada Inn, 222 W. Sixth St. THE BALLROOMS have a combined capacity of 300, Kathy Rose, sales secretary for the hotel, said yesterday. More than 700 tickets were sold for the dance. Lennz said she arranged to rent another room at the Ramada Inn to help with the overflow of people from the hotel and to create extra room's capacity is 60. Rose said. Lenz sent a letter to hall residents Tuesday, explaining the situation and asking for their cooperation and patience the night of the dance. RESIDENTS PLANNING to attend the dance said they were concerned about getting in, but none had asked for a ticket refund. Lentz said that everyone who bought tickets would not be at the dance at one time, but would be coming and going throughout the night. Rose said she was not overly worried either. "I KNOW OF at least six sorority parties that night," Lentz said. "I's our understanding that they all not be here at the same time," she Lentz said that she, as well as the hall officers and some of the residence hall security staff, would be on hand to help with any problems that arose or any problems the dance of the hour. "There may be some tight moments," she said. RESIDENTS WITH tickets said they "Once you get there you're not going to leave, because you know you won't be able to get back in," Shey Pealey, Plainville freshman, said. might go to the dance earlier than they had planned, so they would be sure to get into the ballroom. Lenz said that she thought the residents would be cooperative and move between the rooms freely so that others could get in. ROTH LENTZ and Margy McMaster, president of the ball council, said ticket sales were surprising. "There was no way we could have anticipated the response," McMaster said. !Openings for Student Senate Budget Subcommittee! Applications Available in Senate Office Membership Closes: 1 March,5 p.m. Q The University of Kansas Theatre Present Q Qx SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER by Oi by Oliver Goldsmith 8:00pm February 19-20 & 25-27,1982 University Theatre Murphy Hall THIS PROGRAM IS PART OF THE 1982 UNIVERSITY ARTS CENTER PROGRAM IS PART OF THE 1982 UNIVERSITY ARTS FESTIVAL TICKETS ON SALE MURRAY ICKETS ON SALE IN THE MALL HALL BOX CIFE FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 084 3982 STUDENT AND NATIONAL CITIZEN AND OWN DISCOUNT AVIIL QxF Q NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA AND VIDEO GAME CENTER All New Now Playing Ms. PACMAN! Thats Right Ms. PACMAN!! All New COUPON Present This Coupon And Receive Two FREE VIDEO GAME PLAYS Expires 2/28/02 Limit one coupon per person Valid at checkout. COUPON COUPON Regular Pizza Prices LARGE Double Cheese '4.95 MEDIUM Double Cheese '3.95 SMALL Double Cheese '2.95 TINY Double Cheese '1.95 Additional Meat or Garden Topping 75° ea. Large 65° ea. Medium 55° ea. Small 45° ea. Tiny Present This Coupon And Receive ANY SIZE PIZZA $1'00 OFF Expires 2/28/82 Limit one coupon per person OPEN DAILY 10 a.m.-11:45 p.m. SUN. Noon-11:45 p.m. No other Coupons accepted with this Offer Coke ALEXANDRA GONZALEZ You'll Love Our Style. Headmasters. 809 Vermont, Lawrence, Kansas 60044 = Many happy Return The Kansas Union Bookstores are currently paying 6% of total purchases from the fall of '81 (July 1, 1981 to Dec. 31, 1981). These are period 70 receipts. They may be redeemed at the Customer Service Desk at the Main Bookstore or at the Satellite Shop, with your student ID. Period 70 receipts will be redeemed until June 30, 1982. K.U. BOOKSTORE Period No. 70 101 226 17/10/81 1242.10 2.95 HDS 30 96 HDS 19 78 HDS 19 7.10 IN 30 7.86 IN kansas KU union bookstores main union level 2, satellite shop SVA FILMS FRIDAY & SATURDAY Presents "The year's best film." Charles Champlin LOS ANGELES TIMES 'TESS' Photograph by Maurice Lambert. Columbia Pictures KATE $1.50 3:30, 7:00, 10:15 p.m. Beat the crowd—try the early or the late show! SUNDAY DIANA ROSS IS BILLIE HOIDAY "LADY SINGS THE BLUES' A RED HOT SMASH!" — Gene Shallis, NBC-TV "YOU CAN AND Diana Ross' NAME TO OUR LIST OF DEB- INTEGRAL CENTER CONTENTERS FOR 77 YEAR-OF-WILLIAMS AND A DUPLICATE KIDS SUPPORT THE CLUB EMANATHEUM" BILLY DEE WILLIAMS LIE DAY LADY SINGS THE BLUES PANAVISION - IN COLOR - A PARAMOUNT PICTURE 2:00 p.m. WOODRUFF $1.50 $1.50 ken's. PIZZA 843-7405 27th & Iowa Lawrence FREE PIZZA COUPON FREE Clip this coupon. Sediment at any Kite location. When the size of one Ken Pizza you will receive the next size smaller of equal value FREE No charge On Carry Bag Void With Shipping Promotions Offer expires February 25, 1982 SUNDAY SPECIAL Every Sunday, Buy 2 Pizzas Get 3RD FREE No Coupon Needed Void with Other Promotions Dr Rpper F 4. 7 -FRIDAY- Spiced Broiled Shrimp $1.50 1/4 lb. Free Hors D'oeuvres -MONDAY-- 50' PITCHERS from 7 p.m.-Midnight $1.00 Bar Drinks SATURDAY 10 p.m.-Midnight House Drinks $1.00 We invite all Club Members & Their Guests —SUNDAY SPECIALS— 75' PITCHERS from 1 p.m.-5 p.m. 60 OUNCE SUPER SCHOONERS for only $1.75 Reg. $2.75-Anytime Sunday- Memberships Available 1401_West 7th 843-0540 the SANCTUARY Everybody loves our Olé Enchiladas P 1 "I love the stretchy cheese!" Everyone finds something to love about our enclaves. Some people love the rich cuisine that we offer, others like the Still others love the breath of corn floss. Come all and by our enclaves, we love you. 2340 Iowa St. 841-4218 Everybody loves the taste. TACO TICO Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 19, 1982 What price for fame? Loyal Jayhawks, our chance for lasting fame is here. In a few short months KU students might see some of their very own classmates as Plavboy playmates. Of course, crimson-and-blue-blooded hearts were thrilled when the University of Kansas received a four-star rating in the "New York Times Selective Guide to Colleges." And many a Jayhawk's breast puffed with pride when KU's campus was named one of the most beautiful in the nation. And some students probably experienced a touch of excitement when a letter in Ann Lander's column announced that Lawrence was a great place to meet a husband. But now, Playboy readers across the nation will find out that KU is a truly great university. Because along with its insightful articles filled with social and political comment, Playboy might run insightful pictures of KU women in the feature "Girls of the Big Eight." Any other attempts to build KU's reputation will seem small next to the willingness of these students to bare all for KU. Of course, the women who pose for the pictures will be doing so of their own volition, but think what valuable publicity their efforts will generate for the University. Next fall, the pretty woman who sits next to you in one of your classes could be smiling from the glossy pages of Playboy's back-to-school issue. We'll certainly have something to be proud of then. Won't we? Rule could cause problems by opening communication When teen-agers use birth control, their parents ought to be told—or one man in Washington, D.C. is saying. A daughter's should be given consent that the mother should be open to family discussion he says. Unfortunately, Richard Schweiker is also a man with the court to make his wishes into action. Schweiker, secretary of health and human services, has promised to issue a rule that federally subsidized family-planning clinics notify patients within 10 days after a girl 17 years old or younger is given contraceptives. The state will next several weeks'. "Schweiker said last week." In his previous announcement, he said that the regulation would apply to females only. Apparently,young men will be able to acquire birth control devices without the clinics calling home. POLYNESIA JEFF THOMAS In Lawrence, both the Lawrence-Douglas County Family Planning Clinic and Haskell Indian Junior College provide the federally aided services, state officials said. Sixty-four of the 105 residents of Kansas were married or living year, about 41,000 Kansas of all ages, more than 98 percent of them women, receive the services. Nationally, about 500,000 people under 17 years of age receive birth control supplies from clinics By giving contraceptives to teens without them, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention between them, Schweitzer said. While Schweiker's intentions to bolster the family may be honorable enough, he seems to have a wall of his own blocking his unrivaled of the young women he's supposed to be servicing. For the good of American families, Schweiker wants to unclog the lines of motherly and fatherly advice to young women. And he's used federal muscle to pry open the channels. Most teenage women who come to the clinics have been sexually active for at least six months. Mary Whiten, section chief for family planning programs in Florida, said she has not been given any form of birth control. "A lot come to us because they think they're pregnant," Whitten said. The clinics typically give the young women a series of services including pregnancy tests, medical examinations, private counseling, group education, nutrition information, personal and written explanations of birth control, and, if the teen-agers wish, contraceptives. Now, ponder: How could adding notification to parents—that their daughter is taking precautions against pregnancy—better serve the health of the teen-age woman? Of course, Schweiker is probably right in hoping that parents be involved in their teen's growth toward responsible sexuality. But surely the time for the talk on the birds and the bees is before a daughter has been sexually active for months and is using a contreactive. Schweiker's proposal is like calling the fire department after a furniture store has installed a ceiling sprinkler system. The decision for this might not be for the fire trucks would only upstay the town folk. Whether from foresight or fear, these young women are already seeking birth control from competent authorities. Calling mom and dad, and the stormy scenes at the dinner table that would often follow, can only frustrate young women by saying to take responsibility for their own bodies. Yet, if Schweiker's proposal becomes effective, many teens won't let the situation reach the explosion-point at home. If the daughter had been exposed to the vaccine, the probably won't go to the clinic in the first place. And that's exactly the fear of the counselors who work most closely with the young women. One counselor, Ann Bentmanan, is a health educator at the Topka-Shawnee County Health Department, an office which provides family planning services to about 500 teenagers each planning time. "If notification is required the majority probably wouldn't come to us," she said. "They are afraid their parents will do something to them." "It will," she said, with a serious tinge to her chuckle. Of course, even for the teen-agers who avoid the clinics, private physicians and pharmacies would still be available. The problem would then become cost. Federal law requires that the clinics charge according to each individual's ability to pay. On a rough average, the services a teen-aged woman in Kansas receives for $5 or less would cost $20 or more from other sources, Whitten said. "Many times they have very little money," she said. "Very often we don't charge at all." Sadly, a move to open family communication may leave more teens starting their own "I'm sure most would go ahead with sexual activity if birth control was available at all to them." Young people across the country, including young Kansans, have claimed the freedom to sexual relationships. Even Schweiker's notification can't stifle those actions. KANSAN Instead, the regulation will only make it more difficult for young women to take on the responsibilities. USS 650 (440) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Subscription to mail are $15 for six months or $7 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $8 a year in Cleveland. Postmaster: Send changes to the address of the University Daily Kanon, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas. Bottler Business Manager Vanessa Herron Nateline Julie Managing Editor Tracee Hamilton Editorial Editor Karen Schlumberger Campus Editor George Genee Associate Campus Editor Jane Goldblad Assistant Campus Editor Joe Reibel, Rebecca Chaney Assignment Editor Steve Belebin Sport Editor Ron Hammastrom Retail Sales Manager Ann Hornerberger National Sales Manager Howard Shalinoil Carpow Sales Manager Perry Real Classified Manager Sara Besheer Production Manager Larry Lebednoff Treatment Manager John Barge Sales and Marketing Adviser John German Sales and Marketing News Adviser Rick Musser Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters. I'M ONE OF THE MILITARY TRAINERS WHO WAS REASSIGNED BECAUSE I GOT CAUGHT CARRYING A RIFLE IN EL SALVADOR. THE ADMINISTRATION SENT ME TO A COUNTRY WHERE THEY SAID I COULD PLAY WITH ALL THE GUNS I WANT. IT'S NICE TO BE BACK IN THE GOOD OLD U.S.A. Pot Shots Last week, about 1,000 other people and I crowded into a local church to hear the Jullard String Quartet. We all got more music than we bargained for. The strains of the first quartet had barely exploded, and the tenor in the balcony exploded into a couchiness. The snow has melted, and we are saved. After the first fit subsided, I assumed the poor, sick soul had left and gone home to work. But just as I sat back and started to enjoy the quartet, his cough again sang out with Of course, it will probably snow in March, but the temperature is above freezing, and for now we can put away the heavy down coat, hiking shoes, scarves, stocking caps and long underwear. No need to worry about the cold weather, because it will cover the winter—most of it was extra clothes. We had fog most of the week, and the sun isn't ready alone just give it time. The sun is out. Give it some light. This winter's snow was like a houseguest Most students took their first tests of the semester this week. The subject of my first exam is sleep. Jeresa Piordan As I reviewed my notes, I learned that while people sleep, not only does a pasty film cover their mouths, but their blood pressures, hearts and breathing rates relax. Also, people relax more when they are dreaming than when they are sleeping peacefully. added vigor. Being the die-hard Beetoven fan that he must have been, he stayd right there among the audience, refusing to let his audience keep him from enjoying the concert. Experts claim that people need to sleep and dream to refresh frazzled nerves, which work better when they are calm. The couchers kept on coughing and the quartet kept on playing I think. I couldn't hear the strings anymore for the coughing. That's what Elain's how moving furiously back and forth. Yup. We got more music than we bargained for at that concert. But I'm not sure the extra songs are worth it. His virtuosus must have inspired latent coughs in the rest of the audience because soon we had a cacophonic cough of coughing. A staccato soprano cough in the front. A wheezing baritone due on the side. A medley of throat clearing throughout the audience. Dan Torrelia who stayed too long. Sure, it was nice for a while, but the welcome was quickly worn out. Snow is appropriate in certain places, like in Colorado or the Himalayas. Snow is not appropriate on, say, Ninth Street, which you slide down trying to get to Iowa Street. The same goes for cold weather. Cold is unnatural. There is nothing worse than walking down Jayhawk Boulevard with a -20 windchill in your face, knowing that you could have received the same quality education in Florida or Arizona. The best climate is one where you have to wear shorts and sip amaretto and orange juice to stay cool. To those who say we need cold weather to balance the warmth, to keep things interesting, I say nonsense. That's why God created air conditioners. Johnane Waltz Because people usually wake up right after the sun sets, we remember best their last dreams of the night. may be a test run of nerve circuits, and when a test run shows the nerves are refreshed and working properly, the brain sends a wake-up call to the rest of the body. My notes also mentioned that people have different brain waves when they are aleep from when they are awake. While awake, people's brains emit alpha, beta or theta waves. While dreaming, people's brains act as if they were awake and emit beta waves, but when they are in a deep sleep without dreams they emit delta waves. Studying sleep is fascinating, but, as the night and the facts rolled on, I longed for more. Somebody help me! I feel intense delta activity approach, and I haven't finished Letters to the Editor Commissioner unhappy with Gleason's letter I view this recall petition as living proof of the principle of popular sovereignty, which means, very simply, rule by the people. This principle is based on the principle of alternative process and I see nothing improper about it. Other commissioners have called news conferences to discuss the recall of Lawrence City Commissioner Tom Gleason. I am simply availing myself of the same opportunity. I might add that I did not consult with the mayor about this news release. To the Editor: How can anyone call an expression of the people an improper act? Whether it succeeds or not, the principle is a valid one. Just as the police are called to a city commissioner be recalled by the people, Now, as for the letter that was written calling for the resignation of the city manager, Gleason admits to the authorship. However, I wish he has given it more importance, and he has given as to how the letter was made public. He also stated that he took it upon himself, without consulting other commissioners about his action. I look upon this action as irresponsible and unethical, as well as displaying a crass ignorance of the city manager form of government. In this form of government, no single commissioner has any power on his own. The hiring and firing of a city manager certainly must be done by a majority of the whole commission. I would simply ask our citizens to read Gleason's letter to the city manager calling for his resignation and make up their minds for themselves. It is my personal opinion that this letter is written for me or in search and not a city commissioner of law. Also, I would urge you to read the charges on the petition carefully, read the letters to the editor in the local newspaper and make your own decision whether Gleason should be recalled or not. Donald Binns. Donald Dinkley Lawrence city commissioner Planning not poor To the Editor: I am writing to reply to a letter from Bob Dowdy and Alan Rowe regarding what they perceived as the poor planning of the AURH elections. First, I am prepared to agree with them, in that information regarding the elections seemed somewhat vague at the Feb. 11 General Assembly meeting. However, the dates were set about a month. These dates were announced at the first General Assembly of the spring semester. Further, if Dowdy and Rowe would recall, it is the responsibility of AURH representatives to report information about AURH to their respective halls. If either had done his job, such information could have been available at a very early date for the residents of Templein and Ellsworth wards. Granted, definite information regarding policies and penalties of campaigning was not immediately available because of confusion about the location of the elections file, but once efforts were made on the part of various AUHR staff to contact the information was easily available for all the residents. Dowdy and Rowe also said that ample time was not allowed for candidates to take the initiative to run and complete the necessary steps. Apparently this is not such a difficult task, because these gentlemen have managed to show their interest and are currently accomplishing tasks in an efficient manner. In concern, the members of the General Assembly should have voiced their opinions in the form of a Ads ran in the University Daily Kansan the day before, as well as the day of, Dowdy and Rowe's letter to the editor, information packets and posters were distributed to all the halls before the letter ran and the AURI office phone "secret" elections. motion or an appeal to the elections chairman—but neither occurred at the Feb. 11 meeting. I regret any inconveniences to any interested residents. If there are still concerns or questions, I would encourage those people to contact Karin RUH ECH elections chairman, or to call me at home. Brenda Darrow AURH president Computers break bond To the Editor: By computerizing enrollment (a luxury for which guess who will pay), the University of Kansas has eliminated the only event that brought together every student in the University. Admittedly, this semi-annual ritual was deficient in social amenities, but it was an event, and one in which hundreds of thousands of students have participated. It was a joke, a rather sour joke, but at least a freshman joke, one of the few foods (good and freshman English) that has persisted. One day not too far in the future, we shall all look back with nostalgia to those times when there were such things as fallible human bank tellers and living check-out cashiers in supermarkets. We shall wax sentimental for surly police officers who once ticketed cars and are now replaced by robots with whom all remembrance is vain. Our hearts will yearn for gray-haired ladies in plastic mittens who dispensed dorytical fries. It is even possible that students will regret their failure to wear mittens, when their obsolescence, will shed a tear when they remember that there were once living students who swarmed about Mount Aureol, but are now represented by computer terminals that beep when in a language known only to themselves. Dennis B. Quinn, Professor of English University Daily Kansan, February 19, 1982 Page 5 Stokes From page 1 off, housing market being down and interest rates going up. "It's a white foks' paper," he said, laughing, "you know it's right." THEN READING from a copy of Thursday's Cleveland Press, he told of President Reagan giving his executive staff $7,000 raises. "When are you going to read the papers and get mat about it?" he asked. He said Reagan is not an ogre, and he is not sinister-looking like Richardixon. "But he is socking it to you like Richard Nixon never did." Stokes said. In a press conference before his talk, Stokes hammered at the Reagan administration. He said that the "kitchen Cabinet of millionaires from California" were determined to put the country back 50 years, to when Franklin D. Roosevelt was in office. Then, he said, 5 percent of the people earned more than the money, and everyone was taxed equally. "Roosevelt put a stop to that." he said. HE SAID he believes there is an unorganized coalition of interests against the Reagan budget that will be effective in the elections this fall. This coalition, he said, will affect the re-elections of those representatives, senators and governors who have supported Reaganomics. shift from the federal government to the states and cities the burden of providing for programs will work when these programs are floundering now, even with federal money. "The president has demonstrated a lack of intellectual awareness of economics and what importance his economic plans will have if Congress enacts the budget," Stokes said. However, he doesn't think Congress will accept Reagan's budget as it is. "They can't balance the budget on the backs of those who have the least," he said. He said he didn't see how Reagan's plan to Stokes said he was asked yesterday how he felt about what was happening in El Salvador, Poland and Haiti. They are having a much time than you are we are having here, he said. Budget From page 1 The Legislature, when appropriating funds to the University, predetermines the amount of shrinkage and withholds this money from an institution's allocation. In the 1982 budget, the shrinkage was 2 percent. This meant that the University actually received $800,000 of each $1 million of salary "Each year, every employee that was employed the year before, and is expected to continue, is named in the budget." Nitcher said, but he did not account the possibility that some will leave." HE SAID money would be saved when a part-time employee replaced a full-time employee, when a faculty member stayed on sabbatical leave for longer than expected or when a position went unfilled for longer than expected, or permanently. In Gov. Carlin's budget recommendations for fiscal 1986 he proposed that shrinkage be increased to 20%. Other Regents schools included in the five-year study transferred more funds from their salary budgets than KU did. Nitcher said one reason was because they thought certain equipment was more important than a particular employee's position. Nichler said he expected that out of the 1982 could be used for operating expenses left over to be used for operating expenses Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, has already discussed with the Senate Executive Committee the possibility of using any leftover funds for library acquisitions. Balloon-a-Gram "Rise on the Occasion" SEE A BALLON-A-GRAM! FD. 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Dudley 849 2107 B5 8271 Prudential The KU German Club presents The FASCHINGSBALL a traditional German costume party Prizes Beer Dancing Pretzels Music MARQUES D'AMY February 19th,1982 8:00 p.m. to Midnight Big 8 Room, Kansas Union Prizes donated by: Kief's Stinky Cheese Shoppe Commonwealth Theaters $3.00 if purchased in advance at the door Tickets can be purchased from the German Department at 2080 Wescoe Partially funded by Student Senate K KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 101 CARRUTH O'LEARY THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MAIN CAMPUS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66045 NOTICE: Telephone 913/864-3291 TO: MEMBERS OF KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION AND OTHER FACULTY AND STAFF OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS RE: OPENING OF NEW BRANCH OFFICE AT 2212 IOWA WE ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF OUR BRANCH OPENED AT 2212 IOWA HERE IN LAWRENCE, KANSAS! THE DOORS WILL OPEN AT 8:00 MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 15, 1982, AND YOU ARE ALL INVITED TO USE OUR NEW FACILITY AT YOUR CONVENIENCE! HOURS AT THE BRANCH WILL BE: 8:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON SATURDAYS TO ENTER OUR DOOR PRIZE DRAWING YOU NEED TO PICK UP YOUR TICKET OR TICKETS AT THE BRANCH OFFICE BETWEEN FEBRUARY 15, 1982 AND MARCH 6, 1982. TICKETS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED AS FOLLOWS: HOURS AT THE MAIN OFFICE at 101 CARRUTH WILL REMAIN THE SAME AS THEY HAVE BEEN, 9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M., MONDAY THRU FRIDAY. WE WILL HAVE AN OPEN HOUSE TO CLEBRATE OUR NEW BRANCH ON SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1982 FROM 2:00 P.M. TO 4:00 P.M. AT THE BRANCH OFFICE. AT THAT TIME WE WILL HOLD A DRAWING FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE DOOR PRIZE!...$100.00...DEPOSIT IN YOUR SHARE ACCOUNT. $ VISIT OUR NEW BRANCH...1 TICKET MAKE A DEPOSIT...1 BONUS TICKET OPEN A NEW ACCOUNT...5 TICKETS THANK YOU FOR ALL OF YOUR SUPPORT AND CONCERN FOR YOUR CREDIT UNION IN THE PAST, AND WE HOPE NOW THAT WE CAN HELP SERVE YOU BETTER WITH A BIT MORE SPACE!! KU Federal Credit Union established 1982 Cafe'Eldridge Affordable Fun Dining For fun dining at an affordable price, dress at the Cafe Eldridge. Choose from the many delicious homemade dishes prepared daily by our Chefs. Most meals at the Cafe Eldridge cost between $5.00 and $5.00. An extraordinary price for a fun meal served in the pleasant atmosphere of the Cafe Eldridge. The Cafe Eldridge is open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week. From 11 am to 11 pm, Mondays Saturdays and 11 am to 9 pm on Sundays. You can even call in for carry out. Whether it is a special occasion or you just want a delicious homemade meal, dine at the Cafe Eldridge. During February and the March the Cafe Eldridge features 99% cocktails from 9 pm to 11 pm 7th & Massachusetts Breast of Chicken Almondine 4.95 Veal Parmesan 4.50 Beef Melt 4.25 Italian Omlette 3.95 Triple Cheese Omlette 3.95 Monte Cristo 3.50 Gaucho Burger 3.25 Chili Supreme 2.50 Soup of the Day 1.25 Homemade Pies For Dessert MASS. 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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20 FROM 10:00 A.M. TO 6 P.M. AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS, DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 19, 1982 Spare time '66 KU alumna makes success of opera career By LILLIAN DAVIS Staff Writer Staff Writer She was an easygoing music education major at the University of Kansas in 1965, not a serious voice major. People said she had a nice voice, but outside out of a few musical lessons in University productions, no one really noticed her. She did not have that killer voice. Iris de Mazarin Patricia Wise Most important, she did not notice her talent. "I didn't dare become a singer," Patricia Wise, lyric coloratura soprano and 1966 KU graduate, said. "I never thought of myself as good enough." Now, 16 years after her graduation, the leading soprano with the Vienna State Opera has returned to her native Kina to perform Sunday at 3:30 p.m. in Murphy Hall. The performance is part of the University Arts Festival sponsored by the KU Concert Series. Wise will be accompanied by Robert Hiller Stuttzart, Germany, also a KU alumnus. Arts Festival Hiller is a member of the Stuttgart State Musik Conservatory faculty as a piano and vocalist. Wise, who has lived in Vienna since 1978, has performed in most major American and European opera houses and is considered to be as fine an actress as she is a singer. In September, she will perform the role of Voleta in the opera "La Traviata" at the Vienna Festival. Looking back, Wise sai she realized that she classified herself early, as do many students, measuring her talents and capabilities only by the limits of the academic "The world seems unnecessarily intimidating when you stay in the cocoon of college," Wise said. "But I found that with a real-world perspective, it was better than I thought it was." "You don't know what you can do until you are out there and are forced to do it," she said. A perfectly contented music education major during her junior year. Wise described herself then as easygoing and a bit lazy—very smart, patient, and and let the old calendar turn its own naces." Although she maintained her relaxed attitude, an apprenticeship with the Santa Fe Festival Opera the summer before her senior year set the tone for an operatic career that "It's a wonderful life," Wise said. "I'm a true rolling stone. I have an apartment in Vienna and one in Florida, but if both burned down, there is nothing I would miss. "I have my alarm clock, little radio, suitcase, and off I go." When she returned from her apprenticeship in the fall of 1965, Wise promptly entered every singing contest she could until she contracted a contract with the Kansas City Lyric Opera. "I think I surprised a lot of people that year," Wise said, laughing. "My attitude changed. I had been introduced to the big world, and it was exciting and challenging." She said her laziness, which she still has to content with, was her answer to not going over the fine print. "I had a lot of things on my plate." "I've seen too many others who were overly ambitious wind up hard around the edges and never get further," she said. "Living is the main thing." Wise, who is considered one of the most-loved European opera stars, said her experience with the professional world before graduation helped make the transition so smooth that she had been "chomping at the bit" just to get out. The week after she graduated, she was on the road for a series of concerts. "I don't know where I got the courage," Wise misted. "I really don't. I had just decided I wanted to be someone special, to become great." Although her original college dreams of being a choral music teacher, living in a big house in Kansas City, having 24 children and a 30-year-old son, she came true, she said she was extremely happy. *"Performing is my life," Wise said. "That seems funny for someone who used to get sick when I was a child." Bach harpsichordist plays plucky baroque By KATHRYN KASE Staff Writer Staff Writer When Peter Williams sits down at the脊箍硬希 he goes for baroque, and more But the practice has caused Williams, a Bach specialist and teacher from the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, mental discord. **we're kind of schizoid, you know, those of us who perform and teach," he said. "When we're performing we think we should be teaching, when we're teaching we think we should be performing." This week Williams had a chance to do both at the University of Kansas Bach Symposium and Arts Festival. Tuesday, Williams conducted a short music history course relating Bach's works for organ to his works for harpsichord. And last night he performed three Bach paintings on the hardboard harp-piece in Swarthout Restoral Hall. THE GOAL OF HIS RECITAL, Williams said earlier this week, was to give his listeners some idea of Bach's flair for baroque music. But that's more easily said "Harpischor playing in concert conditions is quite inaccurate," Williams said. The problem lies in the harpsichord. Unlike a piano, whose strings are sounded by tiny hammers, a harpsichord's strings are played with a key whose a key is pinched it will sound. Williams said. Furthermore a harpsichord has a limited loud-soft range, which can cause problems of expression for some performers, but not for Williams. FOR WILLIAMS THAT MEANS varying temps and phrasing, and improvising during the reading. "It just means you're expressive in different ways when you can't be expressive in the same way." music as "arrangement," Such practices aren't spur-of-the-moment, Williams said, but learned through study of the composer's life and works. Indeed, the study of Bach and baroque instruments has been an integral part of Williams's academic career. After receiving his doctorate in music from Cambridge, he became a professor since become director of the Russell Collection of Harpsichords and Clavichords. And according to Williams, the baroque instrument collection is one reason he has stayed at the University of Edinburgh for twenty years. During that time he studied Bach extensively and in 1890 and 1891 put out the first two volumes of a book, "The Organ Music of J.S. Bach," for Cambridge University Press. Williams expects the third volume to be out within the next year and a half. BUT IT DOESN'T TAKE YEARS of study, Williams maintains to appreciate Büch's music. "It has short melodic phrases, and, of course, because it has an underlying rythmic pulse, it can, with almost little arrangement, be adapted for jazz." he said. Although he's a serious student of Bach, Williams doesn't see any harm in adapting the composer's works for forums other than classical. The problem, Williams said, is that it's difficult to "sell" a traditional Bach performance. "If you try to do something unusual, if you're a university which has a kind of arts function, if you try to devote a whole evening to art, music, it's not so easy to fill the hall," he said. STILL, THERE IS A REVIVAL of interest in the harpsichord, Williams said, even though it is considered an obsolete instrument by today's classical composers. SUA theatre diverse "But in Boston today they are making more harriships that were ever made in Antwerp." Staff Reporter By MATT DE GALAN Staff Renorter The act ends with the shouts of an actor, but the curtain doesn't drow. The director, a lanky figure dressed in blue jeans, steps to center stage, waving his arms and clapping. "You're forcing it. You're pretending fun of having it." Bart Ewing, Kansas City, Mo. It's a rehearsal and more work lined ahead for Ewing and the cast of "Rats," one of four plays in the Third Annual SUA Theatre Series, before the opening night curtain falls. "Side by Side by Sondheim" opened the series last night in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The play will also be presented at 8 a.m. and tomorrow night and at 2 p.m. Sunday. NEXT WEEK THE three plays remaining in the series will open. "Taken in Marriage" will be performed at 8 p.m. Feb. 24 and 28 and March 6 and in the Sixth Fight Room of the Kwanza Drama. Two one-act plays, "Rats" and "Scenes from Soweto," will be presented at 8 p.m. Feb. 25 and March 31. The series is designed to offer the Lawrence area more theatre while giving local actors a chance to perform. Students from the speech and drama department direct the plays. Director Dennis Lichtie, Richmond, Kan, senior, bids "Side by Side by Sondheim" a musical celebration of Stephen Sondheim's best work. Sondheim is best known for his musicals "West Story" and "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum." THEATRE SERIES VETERAN James Olson director Thomas Babe's "Taken in Marriage." The drama follows the discussions of five women as they wait for the beginning of a wedding party. Throughout the play, inviting companions, the woman reveals deep feelings and long-hidden secrets in the course of the play. "It's a little play with big ideas," said Olson. "It's about five different sets of values thrown into a room together. There are a lot of ideas covered here." "Rats," by Israel Horovitz, and "Scenes from Soweto," by Steve Wilmer, are two plays with similar messages. Both show that the good intentions of a liberal society have not eliminated racism completely, said Ewing, who directs both the plays. . SUA organizers started the theatre series three years ago to "offer an addition to university and community theatre," said Irene Carr. SUA program adviser. ANOTHER GOAL IS to combine the talents of students, faculty, staff and community people on one stage. The cast of "Taken in Marriage" illustrates this diversity of backgrounds. The five member cast includes a theatre major, a freshman with an undeclared major, a junior teacher, a dance instructor, and a Lawrence resident with a bassist's degree in acting. "You're getting a mixture and that mixture helps," Carr said. "The Lawrence community people may be use to doing things one way and the other, so together they may be able to learn from each other." One of the unique features of the SUA series is the opportunity for undergraduates to direct the work of the faculty. "IT'S VERY RARE in a college situation to be able to direct as an undergraduate," Olson said. "It was a wonderful experience for me. It was one of those rare chances." Another unusual feature of the series is the absence of economic and academic pressures on the productions. No one is paid and only Ollon, whose work is part of an honors course, will receive academic credit. And SUA says it is not out to make a profit. THE FINANCIAL GOALS, she said, are to stay within the SUA-funded budget and to break even at the box office. Because of strong ticket demand, she discussed about the chances of achieving these goals. SUA to show Murnau films "With each year we become more successful, but we're not really planning on making money on the board." She stressed, however, that tickets for all shows were still available at the SUA office in the KUAS Union. Prices are $2.50 for students with KUID and $3.50 for non-students. Mike Gebert, Wichita junior and coordinator of the film series, said recently that Murnau is considered one of the top dozen film directors in cinema history. He is known for art cinematography and rarely use film director's The eight surviving films of German silent film director Friedrich W. Murnau will be shown, some of them for the first time in this spring, at the Spencer Museum of Art this spring. By CATHERINE BEHAN Staff Writer Included in the series is the first screen version of "Dracula." "Nosferat," meaning "the undead." Gebert said, is Murnau's most famous film and the most convincing Dracula film. ALL OF THE FILMS are silent, but several, including "Surprise," have musical scores. All of the films have no soundtracks. The series, co-sponsored by the University General Research Fund and Student Union (UJSU) for its research activities. of the films except "Sunrise," "Tabu" and "City Girl," were made in Germany. "Tabu," Murnau's last film, was released in 1831 before his death in a car accident the same year. will be presented in the auditorium of Spencer Museum. All films are free. JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff MANY OF MURUAU'S films are no longer in existence because many early films were shot on video. "Mostly films he made while in Germany did not survive." Gebert said. "It's a problem with a lot of old films. They were made on film stock that tends to disintegrate." THE SERIES WILL BE SHOWN every Saturday except March 20, starting tomorrow with one of Murnau's better known films, "Sunrise," and ending April 10 with "Faust." The other six films will be "Tabu," Feb. 27; "The Last Laugh," March 6; "City Girl," March 13; a double feature with "Nosferatu" and "Haunted Castle," March 17; and "Tartuffe." April 3. All the films except "Tartuffe" will begin at 2 p.m.; "Tartuffe" will begin at 1:30 p.m. Jeanne Averill explains her troubles with men in Julie Broakki, left, and Marv Neufeld, right, in the SUA Theatre Production, "Taken in Marriage." Trombone Week offers a variety of music BY ELIZABETH MORGAN Stuff Writer Staff Writer Music styles from Renaissance to avant-garde will be performed on the trombone by students and faculty next week. Tomorrow is the day of Trombone Week, sponsored by the KUCSH. The week Neil Humfield, president of the International Trombone Association and chairman of instrumental music at East Texas State University, will be the guest artist. HUMFELD WILL PERFORM with the KU Trombone Choir at 8 p.m. Thursday at Swarorth Rectal Hall, Murphy Hall, and with the KU University Theatre at 9 p.m. Feb. 28 in University Theatre. Murphy Humfeld is a native Kansan and a KU graduate. Stephen Anderson, assistant professor of music performance and assistant dean of the School of Fine Arts, said recently he asked Humfeld at an International Trombone Association workshop whether he would like to come to KU and work with the students, and Humfeld had said "he would love to." Humfield also will conduct clinics, master classes and private lessons Thursday and Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Humboldt College. TROMBONE STUDENTS will give recitals in Swarthout at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday Anderson will begin Trombone Week by giving a faculty recital at 8 p.m. Saturday in Swartwout. The Symphonic Band Winter Concert, teamed with Anderson and conducted by Anderson will close the week. Weekend Arts TODAY TOMORROW UNIVERSITY ARTS FESTIVAL is opening "SHE STORES TO CONQUER," a play by Oliver Goldsmith, at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre. All seats are reserved. For information call the Murphy Hall box office. The play also will be performed tomorrow night. A FACULTY TROMBONE RECITAL will be pammed. Anderson at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital. BACH SYMPOSIUM CLASSES will be given by PETER WILLIAMS, visiting harpschiordist from the University of Edinburgh, at 9 a.m. in 338 Murphy Hall. A FACULTY VOICE RECTALT will be performed by HUGH QIVENN assistant professor of speech language. SUNDAY UNIVERSITY ARTS FESTIVAL performance by PATRICIA WISE, operatic soprano, will be at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre. All seats are reserved. For information call the Murphy Hall box office. INTERNATIONAL THEATRE: COSAAN AFRICAN DANCE will be presented at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Tickets will be on sale at the door. University Daily Kansan, February 19. 1982 Page 7 Disabled need funds special ed official says The handcappled will be reduced to second-class citizens if the federal government shifts funding for special education to the state level, KU's special education told parents of special children last night in Lawrence. In a community panel discussion that also featured two Kansas legislators, Rutherford Turbull, chairman of special education, said the handicapped needed the protection of federal programs. "I don't see any way the state of Kansas can pick up the federal burden," he said. Turbull, father of a handicapped son in the Lawrence school program, said the University of Kansas received the largest federal grant for special education of any university because it excelled in these areas. Transferring the heat from Washington to Topeka will diffuse efforts to increase job training and research in special education, he said. Beside aid for special education, he said, federal monies were important in funding vocational rehabilitation and housing subsidies and in enforcing civil rights legislation for the handicapped The federal government has forgotten the historical background behind provision of this essential aid, he said. "It's unthinkable to let a person live one place one way and another some place else." Turbull said. Because some states are richer than others, he said, states would not evenhandedly provide aid for its handicapped citizens without federal funding. He said that deregulation, block grants and appointments to federal agencies of people unsympathetic to the handicapped were steps reflecting the government's emphasis on economic, instead of humanistic values. The government is reducing people to units of money, he said. "It's a terrible thing to have your child a pawn on someone else's chess board," Turnbull said. Federal agencies need to hear about real people who are affected by these policies when the Association for Public Safety makes its testimony in April and May, he said. Burglaries stole more than $1,800 worth of stereo equipment and tools from a parked truck at 1919 Rhode Island St. between June 27 and September 3, 30 p.m. Feb. 17. After breaking into the locked truck with tools, burglarized us an eight-track stereo deck valued at $300, speakers valued at $98, tools and a tool box valued at $200 and about $400 miscellaneous items, police said. There are no suspects. Drinking Myth of the Week. On the record THE FIRST ROUND SHOULD BE A "DOUBLE" TO BREAK THE ICE. Breaking the ice is a job for a good host and hostess . . . not for a bottle. You must have more to "give" your guests than just alcohol. BURGLARS STOLE more than $850 worth of items from a parked car at 701 Massachusetts st. B between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, police said. After shattering the wing window on the driver's side, burglar entered the car The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, B64-4064 Drinking Myth of the Week FRIDAY NIGHT SHRIMP PEEL tips and save ACADEMY CARENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $6.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841-0101 808 W 24th offer receipt. 28.1992 WHAT'S THE WORLD COMING TO! Male Strippers Mud Wrestling Julian X-Rated Movies Burlesque AND NOW MINGLES ANNOUNCES ITS ONLY $1.50 PER 1/4 POUND SPECIAL DRINK PRICES 4 PM-8 PM RATED: XXX TREMELY GOOD NO CAMERAS PLEASE! Friday Night 95' Well Drinks from 8:00 to 12:00 Saturday Night 2 for 1 from 8:00 to 12:00 MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE MINGLES LOUNGE 2222 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Ks. 842-7030 Ext. 136 AFTER BREAKING a window, burglar sails a cassette player worth $250 from a parked car at 2350 Ridge Court sometime between 7 p.m. Tuesday and 7:30 a.m. Wednesday, police said. There are no suspects. BURGLARS SMASHED a window and stole $300 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at 1722 W. 24th St. sometime between midnight and 7:15 a.m. Wednesday, police said. Burlars took a tape deck, an amplifier and an equalizer. There are no suspects. $ 3^{1/2} \mathrm {c} $ COPIES HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. — 842-3610 and took a CB radio, a CB antenna, a garage door opener and clothing. There are no suspects. Get Primed for The KU-K-State Weekend At Mr. Bills Mr. Bills Friday: From 2-6 All You Can Drink $3.00 Saturday: We are opening at 10:00 a.m. so come In and get ready for the game. The University of Kansas Concert Series Presents KU Alumna and European Opera Star PATRICIA WISE SOPRANO Accompanied by KU Alumnus Robert Hiller, Piano FEBRUARY 21,1982,SUNDAY 3:30 PM. UNIVERSITY THEATRE.MURPHY HALL Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved. Student and Senior Citizen Discounts available. For reservations call 913-864-3982 Miss Wise's performance is part of the 1982 University Arts Festival. In Colorado, There's Room To Grow... Straight To The Top. On-Campus Interviews February 25 Put yourself on the leading edge of technology with Storage Technology Corporation, a rapidly growing major Fortune 500 company and a leading manufacture of high performance tape & storage equipment and microtechnology. In just two years短短年 STC has earned an outstanding reputation for innovation and advanced technology simply because we encourage the independent, creative contribution of our people. 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QUALITY ENGINEERING: Concentrate on the investigation of design, monitor material handling methods and manu- facture of products. PRODUCT ENGINEERING/DEVELOPMENT: Here you would work with equipment and supporting hardware and/or software programs in production. Your opportunity to take an existing design and improve it. An excellent opportunity for engineers and technical persons to gain extensive knowledge of our equipment in the shortest time possible. If you are unable to meet with us on the scheduled interview date, please forward your resume to Ms. Donna Kormmueller. STOCKT TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION, 2270 South B8th St. Louis, Louisiana. BOQ 8072. We are an equal opportunity employer. STORAGE TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION GO Professional Hairdryting for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters 811 W. Hill 642-3123 Time - Set. 12-8 fashion eveland www.fashioneveland.com 841-9000 Holiday Plaza ALIVE AT ELEVEN! ALIVE AT ELEVEN! 11 p.m.-12 a.m. FRI & SAT $1.25 Bar Drinks 75c Draws GAMMON'S SNOWMAD DAILY Wed.-Sun. 6-10 live music nightly 10-? HAPPY HOUR $1.00 HIGHBALLS 70' BOTTLES of BEER 7th SPIRIT 642 MASS. 842-9549 YOUNG BALLET --- ❤️ THE THIRD ANNUAL SUA THEATRE SERIES SIDE by SIDE by SONDHEIM a musical celebration feb 18-20 feb 21 matinee forum kaneas union room by thomas babe TAKEN IN MARRIAGE reb. 24, 26 maraneas union big eight room by israel horovitz by dviee wilmer feb 25, 27 smith hall 8:00pm tickets: WITH AID INFORMATION BOW 12.30 SCENES from SOWETO & RATS by israel horovitz by bavee wilmer feb 25, 2016 another man mar 3.5 an evening of one-acts ALL EVENING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00 p.m. ALL MATTINE PERFORMANCES ARE AT 12:00 p.m. tickets: www.mattine.org mailto:mattine@mattine.org TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE BURKOFF OFFICE IN THE KANSAS UNION, LAWRENCE 451 8003 FOR TICKET INFORMATION CALL (913) 864-2477 MINORITIES & THE LAW CONFERENCE TODAY'S PROFESSIONAL: THE LEGAL IMPACT SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20,1982 9:30-2:00 KEYNOTE SPEAKER MS. ARNETTE R.HUBBARD PRESIDENT, NATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION Registration 9:00-9:30 T. H. WILLIAMS Morning Sessions Engineer Liability for Design Error Journalism: Open Records, Open Meetings Medical Malpractice and the Doctor Sports: Negotiating a New Contract Business: The Law & Business Hand in Glove Bill Hogan 9:30-10:30 Mike Kautsch 9:30-10:30 Rose Marino 10:45-11:40 Assi, General Counsel, KU Joe Johnson 10:45-11:45 Attorney Sammie Edwards 10:45-11:45 Attorney LUNCH 12:00:1:00 Keynote Address Arnette R. Hubbard 1:00:2:00 Presented by the KU Chapter of The Black American Law Students' Association and The American Bar Association/ Law School Division Law. PAID FOR BY STUDENT SENATE FUNDS Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 19, 1982 Brazilian gala to feature lore A pair of human dice, a few clowns and a lot of saamba music are expected at Saturday night's Brazilian carnival Dance Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St. The Brazil-Portugal Club hopes to recreate what Jon Vincent, chairman of the Spanish and Portuguese departures, said Brazil's largest national blowout. Last year, about 600 people came to the carnival dressed as die, clowns, vegetables, Latin dancers and other things. Vincent said recently. A prize will be given for the best costume, he said. Drinking and samba dancing are scheduled from 8 p.m. to 3 a.m. Vincent said samba music originated in Africa and was born in New York, pounded on percussion instruments. "After you get used to samba, it's hard not to get up and dance when you hear it," he said. THE CARNIVAL in Brazil, which is similar to, but much larger than New Orleans' Mardi Gras, according to Vincent, is held every year from the Friday before until the night of Easter. The carnival was historically a prelude to Lent. Vincent said that Brazilians spent six months talking about the last carnival and six months preparing for the next one. the carnival is held all over Brazil, but the largest celebration takes place in Rio de Janeiro. Vincent, a participant in the 1976 RIO carnival, estimates that more than million people in the streets of Rio at any given time during the festival. "It's kind of dangerous in Brazil at carnival time," he said. People with grudges against others have injured the people they were angry at, he said. How Is Wow A2 The Living Game DIET CENTER 841.DIET It's A Natural! 841.DIET 353 low利息 Medical Center HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKETPLACE, 470 NEW HAMBERT ST. SAT 841.DIET Mauro Nobre, president of the Brazil-Portugal Club, said, "The task of the Brazil-Portugal Club is to reproduce that same spark, that same atmosphere that is feeling imported straight from Brazil, with no tariffs or import duties." "There's usually more hanky-panky than violence though," he said. Tickets can be purchased for $4 at the SUA office and the department of Spanish and Portuguese, 3062 Wesco, or from members of the Brazil-Portugal Club. Tickets will be $5 at the door. FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION True Estimates THE PRESTON MCAIL COMPANY 314 1.N.3ed 811-606-667 "That is reasonable for seven to eight hours of the best party in Lawrence," Nobre said. Let the Kansan work for you. Call 864-4358 The office of study abroad will sponsor a LUNCH ABROAD at noon in Cork I of the Kansas Union. TODAY THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY AND THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will co-sponsor a panel discussion on Women in Revolution" at 7 p.m. in the Kansas University, Kansas Union. the Kansai University. on campus THE CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will sponsor a discussion on "Relationships and Dating" at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW THE SIMULATIONS GAMING GROUP will meet from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union. SUNDAY THE KU CIRCLE K CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 641 Malott Hall. THE ALL-SCHOOLARSHIP HALL CHRISTIAN SUPPORT GROUP will meet at 8:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. The KU German Club will sponsor its fourth annual "Faschingball" at 8 tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Club sponsors dance The Faschingsball is open to the public, he said. Tickets are $3 in advance at the department of Germanic language and culture 200 Wescow Hall, and $3.50 at the door. William Keel, club adviser and assistant professor of German, said the party would feature music, beer, soda, prizes and prices for costumes. The Faschingsbail has a purpose similar to that of celebrations in Grecian culture. The Karneval season in Germany begins Nov. 11, Keel said. It consists of parties, dances and meetings where people tell jokes and sing. The season ends before Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent, with parades and parties in the streets of such cities as Cologne and Munich. A panel of student judges will award six prizes for the originality and merit of the work. Kee said. Prizes will be move public on the monwealth Theatres in Lawrence and g certificates to Kief's Discount Records & Stereo Supply, 210 W. 258 St., and The Stinky Cheese Shoppe, 925 Iowa St. Keel said music recorded at the keel and Karwyn's "Fastnacht" in Germany. Karwyn's "Fastnacht" in Germany. MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY IN CONCERT. ON FILM. AT LAST. NEVER BEFORE SEEN performances of their greatest hits-plus Beatles classics! PAUL MCCARTNEY & WINGS ROCKSHOW= FULL DOLBY STEREO Varsity Downtown 843-1063 BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 11:30 ALL SEATS $3.00 INNOCENT BY REASON OF SANITY BUT . . . The eyes of the Florida Assistant State Attorney probably sparkled with the satisfaction born of a hard day's work as he surveyed the evidence before him: one deck of cards, poker chips and twenty-four dollars in cash seized earlier at a reinses' card game. The six defendants, the youngest of whom was sixty-three years old, were carefully watched for an hour by two undercover detectives as they unknowingly broke Florida's misdemeanor gambling law. After a two-day trial, during which two of the defendants were hospitalized, justice triumphed with each of the accused receiving thirty days probation and paying seventy-five dollars court costs. The very legal mechanism which uncovered and responded to this premeditated miscreancy both supports and financially benefits from other types of legalized gambling such as occur at the dog track, horse track, and jai alai court. Only a jailed citizenry would tolerate such an expression of righteous indignation; only a corrupted state would enforce it. William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terrace 12 is your lucky number! You have 12 chances to get involved in SUA. Applications and information are now available for 1982 officer and board member positions. Sign up today for a position in one or more of the following areas: 1. President 5. Films 2. Vice President 9. Outdoor Recreation 6. Fine Arts 10. Public Relations 3. Secretary 7. Forums 10. Public Relations 4. Treasurer 8. Indoor Recreation 11. Special Events Sign up for interview times now in the SUA Office located on the main floor of the Union. Interviews will be held Saturday, February 27. Sign up deadline for applications is Friday, February 19; 5:00 p.m. DOMINO'S PIZZA Weekend Special! Plus get 2 free cups of Perchita and poached pork. Not necessary, but ask Good on Friday, Saturday or Sunday only. Use this coupon toward milk wetting tape this weekend. We use only 100% real dairy cheese. Dominic La Salle Inc. Hours 4:30-1:00 Sun, Thurs 4:30-2:00 Fn & Sat Our drivers carry less than $10.00 limited delivery area DOMINO'S PIZZA Trailridge DUMBO'S PIZZA 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 $2.00 $2.00 off any 16"2 item or more pizza One coupon per pizza. Expires: 5/30/02 Good Friday, Saturday or Sunday only. Fast, Free Delivery Good at locations listed (918) 450-123 Fertilize Your Lawn Prevent Crabgrass Use ferti-lome Crabgrass Preventer Plus Lawn Food NOW! Only $9'95 5000 Sq. Ft. IN-ROOM MOVIES WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 843-980 Fertilhome CRABGRASS PREVENTER Plus Lawn Food + THE G 15TH 843-2044 GARDEN CENTER WEST 914 WEST 23RD ST. 842-1596 Oil Industry Announcing Honda's Second Chance Sale Cheaper thrills. Honda's Second Chance Sale is happening now. And that is new for Honda. On prior year Honda that are still new and still in our showroom. So you may get that bike you've always wanted. For even less than its original suggested price Just look for the bikers tagged Honda Second Chance Sale. And hurry. Before your second chance becomes your last chance. MK20 E 300/150 NC50 C70 $695.00 C19 Now Only $395.00 OPEN Tues.-Fri. -10:00-6:00 Sat.-10:00-4:00 1811 W 6th Lawrence, KS. 843-3333 Horizon HONDA Mondays starting March 1st --- The University of Kansas The University of Kansas Black History Month February 1982 Mupires and The Law Conference with Amirthie McDonald, President National Bar Association Registration and conference 8:30 a.m. green厅, Lancaster, 12:30 p.m in Kansas City, sponsored by BALMIRA A.B.A.S.D. Afro-American History Blueprint for Survival Saturday. February 20 Gugel Enterzergroup—BSU School — The impersonal Gugel School and other area schools. 8:00 p.m. - Ballroom, Kansas Union (No charge of time and place) Sponsored by the Black Student Union Sunday, February 21 Cedarana Dance Troupe 8:00 p.m. Sawmurah Real Hall MuralHall, Funded in part by Karya Arts Commission Sponsored by the Office of Military Affairs and International Relations Office; Danced at Murphy's Office SUA and Office of Minority Affairs Thursday, February 25 Friday, February 26 Tribute To The Black Woman. Eleanor Silvestri and others. Forum Room, Kansas Union. 7:00-9 p.m. *sponsored by* Bomber Air Force and Office of Minority Affairs Back and Buck, the sights and sound of the Haramen era anecdise in a deliberate setting. Kansas State University Ethelly College Museum. Kansas City, Kansas Union. 8pm. Sponsored by the Office of Military Affairs. Friday, February 26 and Saturday, February 27 Rats and Scenes from Soweto. An evening of two one act plays. 100 Smith Hall, 8:00 p.m. Admission $3.30 public; $2.50 wiki/kURO Saturday, February 27 This aid paid by the Black Student Union, funded in part from Student Activity Fees Safel Fund Donation, the culmination of Black History Month Activity. Guest speaker: Marion Washington. KU Masters in business law. Environment provided by Eikenuah Wainwright. Cost-Benefit Analysis — $80 per hour. Released by Eikenuah Wainwright COUNTRY Inn 1330 N. 3rd $2.00 OFF Chick or Steak M-Th only 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 COUNTRY Inn 1330 N. 3rd $1.00 OFF Chick or Steak Fri & Sat, 5-9 Expires 2/28/82 Sun, 11-8 COUNTRY mn WE ARE OPEN! WITH FREE LIVE MUSIC 5 NIGHTS A WEEK beth scalet 10:00-1:30 SAT.FEB.20th both could $1.00 Bloody Marys All Night SUN, FEB. 21 LYNCH & McBEE with special Guest HAPPY HOUR DAILY 6-10 $1.00 HIGHBALLS; 70¢ BTL BEER 7th SPIRIT 642 mass. 842-9549 --- Carnations TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. It's specially priced and ready to take home with you right now. You've worked hard all day. So treat you to our Friday Flower brunch. We'll have a bright weekend. Our feature will make it even brighter. Ceramic $5.00/dozen Assorted Spring Flowers $4.00/dozen Flower Shoppe --- KATHARINE HEPRIRE HENRY FORDNA On Golden Island A INVERSE A WOMAN'S HOUSE PR Tue, 7/10 & 25 Wed, 8/11 Sat, 6pm - 2.00 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 827-5188 PG DOWNTOWN TELFESTON TELEPHONE BOX 358 VARSITY JACK NICHOLSON THE BORDER Fri. 7:10 & 9:30 Wt. Sat. Sun 7:15 HILLCREST 1 17TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 862-8400 Enthralling... CHARIOTS OF FIRE (N) Sept 7, 8 & 9, 10 Mai 5, Sep 7, 15 HILLCREST 2 9TH AND TOWA TELFONE 842-8400 Eve 7.30 & 8.30 The French Lieutenant's Woman Mon. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 3 T11 AND OWA TELEPHONE 212-655-8400 RAGTIME PIC1 = 7.45 only Mat. 2:00 JAMES CARNEY PAGTIME 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS PCI = 1/3 amps. MHz. 2.80 JAMES DACNEY BEST FESTIVAL 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE PAGTIME PG2 - 7:45 pm Mat. 2:00 JAMES CACNEY CINEMA 1 THE STAR WINDOW Johnny Gargrethen's a terrifying performance! Join us for the premiere! Sonk HELD OVERI Evening at 2:00 & 9:15 Monday at 2:00 JONIE EARECKSON 39 AM - AVIADEN CINEMA 2 Windwalker REVENIR HOWARD 2PM Joni STARRING JONI EARECKSON AS SERENE Seni HELD OVER I Evening at 20 B & 19 SUNDAY JOHN KENNEDY JOE WOODS John Coates Accamped CINEMA 2 WINDWALKER REVIRON HOWARD JACK GRAHAM BROOKLYN MUSEUM OF ART 145 WEST 8TH ST. NASHville, TN 37206 ( 1 University Daily Kansan, February 19, 1982 Page 9 at the cht" in Tennis team opens season this weekend By GARY GRIGGS Sports Writer purpose ones in said. Firmany exists of where season, the names and cities as Tennis anvane? Penns, NYC That's right, amid all the snow and freezing temperatures, tenn season is here. The Kansas women's tennis team will make its spring debut tomorrow afternoon when the Jayhawks travel to Wichita State to face the Shockers in an indoor match. The two teams meet on Friday, with the Shockers prevailing, 9-1. "Wichita State definitely poses a tough test for us," Head Coach Kacy Merrion said. "They are very solid through their entire lineup." The Jayhawks have been practicing at the Alamar Racquet Club since mid-January. They will play one more indoor match next weekend in Springfield, Mo., before beginning outdoor play in March 5 in Tulsa, Okla. The number one doubles team will be either Guilfoil and sophonore Marn Jensen, or Willson and freshman Steffanie Dicke. The number two doubles team will be Runnels and Nason. "Injuries kind of hurt us in the fall," she said. "A long as we can stay healthy and play to our potential, I think we can have a real successful season." "The team is really looking great." senior Shawn Willson said. "We're all ready to have a great season. I know I'm psyched up." Freshman Laura Runnels said the key to the team's success was staying away from injuries. "Our lineup won't always be the same, week in and week out, because of the challenge matches," Merrison said. "One week, a player might be number one singles or doubles player, the next one, she might be number two newer." Merrison said the rest of the positions for the match were open and would have already been decided by challenge matches played in practice today. MERRION ISN'T the only one optimistic about the team's chances. The rest of the team is made up of Brainard and freshman Liz Jones. According to Merrion, Oklahoma State is the favorite to win the Big Eight Championship this spring. According to KU's other senior, Corey Nason, this year's team is exactly that—a team. THE TEAM isn't exactly in the best position to start the season. They have already lost the services of two of their top eight players. One of those players, freshman Beth Brainard, is expected to be out at least six weeks with a knee injury. Junior Marcee Procuari left the team for personal reasons. in the top three, but it's going to be tough," she said. "Oklahoma State is always tough. They won it all last year, and they pretty much dominated play in the fall. Colorado should be pretty solid also." ACCORDING T Merrion, who is in her first year as head coach, the number one singles player for Australia will be junior Maureen Guilford. Gulfoil believes the Jayhawks have just as good a shot at winning the title as any team. Runnels will be the number two singles player. We are going to surprise a lot of people." "We're going to be competitive, certainly it all more so than last year," she said. "We're real close to the other Big Eight schools." The Jayhawks are scheduled to play 17 matches this spring, including six in "We're very cohesive, a very close knit group," she said. "I'm very optimistic about our team," she said. "We have some experienced people back, and our freshmen are coming back real well. We need to concentrate on them, we just need to concentrate a little more on the mental part of our game." "The girls have really worked hard so far," Merrion said. "They have a lot of potential. We have a lot of confidence in them. "We were 8-7 in Big Eight play last fall, but we had some key people out with injuries. We were 7-2 in our dual matches, and that was with everybody healthy. The Big Eight schools haven't played us when we were at 100 percent. "It's really fun for me, see these young girls building, knowing they are only going to get better. Women's office KU sure does have a bright future." The University Daily Despite these setbacks and the these setbacks and the only two seniors on the team, Merlon Jenkins is one of the team, Merlon Jenkins is one of KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 "WE'VE SET our sights on finishing CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer . . . Each additional word. . . one nine two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen fourteen fifteenth sixteenth seventh eighth ninth tenth eleventh twentieth thirtieth四十四五十五六七八九十一二三四 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 2 p.m. Tuesday Friday 2 p.m. Wednesday Monday 2 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 2 p.m. Friday Wednesday 2 p.m. FOUNI ADVERTISEMENTS Fund items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be shown in email or advertisement with the Washington office at 406-258-1958. ANNOUNCEMENTS ERRORS POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996. 11 80 Elegant Chicken recipes Delicious, Nutritious. Different. $3.00 to Tastemakers Box 2330, Lawrence, KS 60045. 2-19 FOR RENT Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5000. If Call Don's Tax Service for fast. accurate ITR return preparation. Call 841-6983. App- pointments available day or night. 3-3 Studios airborne, International metals, materials, and electronics. looking for six cooperative group num- bers in the building. ULTITIES INCLUDED. Large house, appliances and laundry. Call 816-792-6092. For sublease. 2. Br. apt. $310 + elect. Available now. Telephone: 841-8138 - 218 For rent to mature male student. Quit, comfortable efficiency kitchen. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. tf HANOVI PLACE. Complete furnished, 14th & 16th on Mass. Only 3 blocks from KU. DON'T DESTAY. Reserve your apt. Room 841-1212 or 842-4455. FACULTY PREFERRED FOR BENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3 br. truck house, 2121 Drive. All appliances. 2 car garage. KU bus route. $45/mo. KU or 843-6300. Spouse commutes to K.C.7 Drive the drive Nice house for rent in DeSoto, after Mar. 15. 1-585-1603 or 864-4151. 2-19 For rent 2 bedroom apt. Convenient shopping. On bus route. Complete kitchen, central air and carpet. Heatped plus draps. Call 814-6888. Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt. Unfurnished, carpeted and draped, an electric heater, microwave, washer-dryer, campus, and on bus route. $33 per month. me. NEDA WOODBROOK 118 & Crestline 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. Two bedroom apartment, low utilities, two blocks from KU. 3 blocks from town, central air, equipped kitchen, carpet and draps. $250 million. 104 Tenn. A684-2-422-9. Clean, close to campus. Room for rent 2 rooms. Share bath, share baths 842-673-6011, bldg. 2-23 Extra nice 2 bedroom apartment in newer four-room, 1 and 1/2 beds, carpeted, baked area. 220 per month. 843-8571 or 1-782-3716. Comfortable apartment—large bedroom, kitchen, bath, inexpensive, available immediately. 749-1898. Call anytime and keep calling. 2-32 KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 V'lint Hall 864-4358 ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished hoopwalls available immediately. Mail the resume to the office. Must see. Located on 13th & Ohio. Only two short blocks from the Union. Call 842-8455 Subluxate 2 bedroom gas, apt paid. Complete home. Call 411-6086, central air conditioning. Call 411-6086, 2-256 3-Bedroom Apt. close to campus, carpet, furniture, and appliances. 2 Beds & 1 & tk unit. $30 per room. $300 per suite. Large 3 room apartment in nice older home. Kitchen appliances, fitted backyard. Call 841-336 (days) or 841-294 (evenings); 8-1 1. Br. Apartment available now, 1000 block of Miss. Call after 5. 841-2023. 2-24 APT-3| 2 Rooms* - 2 blocks from campus - ALL UTILITIES * INCLUSION* 841-1841 **2-22** 1 bedroom apt to submit first of March or April—$250.00 per month, all utilities paid. Cto close at campus (Oread) Contact Margeo- 841-6533 2-23 For rent 3 bldm. apt, $260 a month. Avail: March 1. Near campus. 749-1750. 2-11 Sub-lease at West Hill Apts. Ipr. 2B $200 Call: 617-843-2823 Call: 617-843-2823 2-266 Available immediately Heatherwood 1 bedroom apt., cent. air, W/D, dishwasher. 842- 4983 and 841-5500. 2-26 On campus studio apt. Mt. Oro Acpartment from Upland. conveniently located. Old Wi-Fi. looking well Lawerence. Available March 5. Cellular cell phone and electricity. Bq 841-1052 or 8464-2606. 3 bd. unfurn. apt. 260 Close to campus. W.D hookup, deposit required. Call 749- 1750 or 841-4201. 3-1 RENT SALE -Rent reduced on rooms in large quiet house 1 block from Union, smoke no pepa please. Call after 8 at 523-8430. Secure environment walk to class fast. Ten minute walk from Wecace. 1 bdmr at redbud on Madrox walk, 11th and Mississippi. Low utilities. Call 843-3222 or 842-3974. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! "New Analysis of Western Civilization: Makes sense to use them." As study guide for the New York State Pride Book, "New Analysis of Western Civiliza- tion: Makes sense to use them." The Bookmark, and Oedipus Bookcase 1709 Mobile Home 14 x 70, 3 bummins, AC, stone + refrigerator, 7 x 10 shelf, $11.20. Lot rent is 65.00/month, water paid: 843- 1758 after 5.00 p.m. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-9069. 3900 W. 6th. BOOKCASES, stereo cabinets, edel chair, etc. custom built to your needs. Michael Porter's Couture Collection. Gretchen Guitar and Pavey amp. 2-19 old music and sound greet. 845-3603. 4-19 Must sell great component stereo system. Price: $495.00 in Sears 5103. Lyle 842-5633. 2-19 Four drawer metal letter-size file cabinet. $55 Turkish-carpet approx. $24; double $30 carpet; $19; $60 carpet offer over $400. Must pay for trip. Day call $48-143, Evenings: 843-1771. 2-22 Bookcases, shelves, custom-built 8" or 12" particle or plate board unfinished or stained. Jim 842-8949 2-23 For sale TEAC A-4010 SL reel-to-reel and 33 pre-recorded tapes. $200. Call 841-2763 after 5 p.m. 1975 Opel Manta, 2-door. Automatic, Fuel Injection. New Heater. Air conditioner and Interior. $1590.00. 864-204 or 864-5774. 7:24 Ovation 12-String guitar model 1115. Sumburst. Excellent condition. Call 749-63513. Guitar, Les Paul copy, Electra, sunburst, good shape, w/case, $100.00 10 band EQ. $45.82-963.84 2-23 Italian Gueorietti racing. bicycle. Brand new. All Campagnoelle, Cimau, clira- onn, 55 cm. Will sacrifice. 110 Hanover Place Apt 5 For Sale—100 IBM Selenic II Typewriter —like new —cheap price call 842-600-4222 however washer $200 ; electric dryer $100; dishwasher $75 ; white, perfect for apartments $100. Clarinet, Wood Yamaha, Brand New sold for $425.00 will sell for $300.00 or best. 842- $340. 2-23 CALAMITY JANES SALE $4.00 off tops and $4.00 off skirts. West of Kiefs, Holiday Plaza, 814-5263. 2-19 Thousands of comic books, baseball cards, portraits, National Geographics, Playboy, Penthouses. Out. Hustlers. Wash. College. Game, etc. 811 N. Open. Sat. & Sun. 10-5 73 Nova, 37,000 miles, AC/PS. Like new $900. Canon AE-1 with case/flash. $220. 749-0653. 2-19 BMW Brand new 1982. 320I, two in stock. Immediate delivery. Sanders Lincoln-Mercer: 843-669-0 or 843-2383. 3-4 Set of keys with leather key ring—Campbells Soup. In front of Robinson, 814-3198 · 2-19 Small bag with a mineral crystal inside. Identify to claim. 814-7803 · 2-22 FOUND HELP WANTED Energetic, hardworking, pernicious waitresses wanted. Must work well under pressure. Hourly wage plus tips, commission. Excellent customer service at Gamonon's, Southern Hills Shopping Center. Stockbroker trainee. College grade- excels opportunity for hard working, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individual. PLEO P.O. Box 157 Bnd, Bank NJ 10781 - 6730 CRUISERS, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDITION Countrys, Europe, Caribbean, Worldwide Combators, Ocean, Warfare, Worldwide TION, OPENINGS, SACRAMENTO to CRUISE WILDLIFE, 153 Box 6029, Sacramento 3-12 Full, part-time kitchens & restaurant help. Apply in person, 9-5 Sawbucks Sandwich Shop. 1814 W. 23rd. 2-23 OVERSEAS JOURS--Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. All travel dates 2020 monthly. Lightening. Free info. MA Box 8x-1x-6-34. Free info. CA Box 925. MA D.C. 925. Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Personable. Contact Dan at the Exchange, 842-9539. Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, stduidium have own tools and equipment in cooperative. Call Daryl K81-8436. MANAGER OF MEMBERSHIP AND COMMUNITY AFFAIRS to assume responsibility for the development of programs, and committee liaison and assistance. Entry level position required a bachelor's degree in management skills. Salary Range $140,000 and benefits. A complete position announcement may be obtained from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce or may be obtained from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce or by calling (813) 441-211, Kumail or a by calling (813) 441-211. Reward for info, or return of Gold coin lost near or in Allen Fieldhouse. Sat. 2-13 In丹普in Mangan, about the size of U.S. 56 piece. Call Marc 843-8022 or 749-3354. LOST NOTICE Basin needed to augment quartet of individuals expressing discriminating interests. In the Parker, Squeeze, the Godley/Cerne, Kinks, and McCarthy groups, the Parker, etc., contact Todd at 842-711. 623 PERSONAL Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photograph. Students portrait, b/w, color. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-4821. tt Skilker's liquor store serving U-Daily nine hours a day. Skilker's Liquor Store, 1904. Incumbe 83-186-88. Say it on a sweatshirt with custom alik- printing to 1000 shirt art by Swen K @swenkart.com SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS Economic downturns every weekend and Economist reports every weekend The Kansas Relays needs students to volunteer as student officials for the 1982 Kansas Relays, April 14, 15, 16 and 17 If you are interested in making this the best Reallyets, stop by the store. In addition, Allen Field House and fill out the officials' questionnaire. Deadline March 5 The Kegger- who Sneelcals on Kegg]t Call 841-9450—1610 W. 23rd. Over stocked 20% off everything in store music mugs, inflatable fighter. @ £7.10 sale. Discount code: DGY45. MARY KAY COSMETICS-Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tf Join our Bible Study Group certificate upon completion of this course. 60 minutes, $49. patrons a.m., August Block. EVERY CAR IN STOCK $9.95 A DAY 10AM MIDWEEK THEN ONLY 8 AM A MILE Special weekend rates. We are now leasing trucks & cars. We accept Master Card Visa. Located at 705 W. 9th Lease one of our cars, It is cheaper that a bus fare home! Reserve your car now, for Spring break! LEASE A MERCHANT 749-4225 GREEN'S CASE SALE. COORS 86.55, BAPT 69.69, GREEN'S SALE. WEST 23RD. 2-19 You mademan who write clever verse Be-mer. If you don't want to meet the both of you But a Kansas ad just will not do. So he's a number—make a call Here is for Crawford that is, All 219 2001 246 Clothes and accessories with, a touch of charm. Barret Second Hand Rose. 3-1/2 inches. $19.00. Study Skills Workshop. Emphasis on study for exams and time management Tuesday-Friday. Available at Kansas Union. No registration required. The Student Assistance Center, 844-604-4041. WHO IS PAU LKIPLCH? What is he doing with the GRAUMHOP SHOP March 3rd? real testing. Do not use. Fast, efficient typing. Many years' experience. Located in Topeka area. 1-913-272- 5435 www.wolfram.com "Mike" Ball—Thanks for the cookies, pie, and Guinness. Sorry about busy excuse for no Valentine. Who writes my material Congrats on contract negotiation. Farkle. 2-19 **SPECTRUM OPTICAL** fantastic savings using the Lawrence Book or People book coupons on our large selection of frames. Open 10-6, M-341, 811-133. 4 E. 7th. 2-19 TOM GLEASON-GULTY OF expressing an opinion? 2-23 Household items for apartment living Barb's Second Hand Rose. $15 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-3 Top hats, derby's visors, 40-50-50's clothes, cummersbands, bow ties. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 51 Indiana. 842-4766. 3-3 TRAVEL CENTER GETAWAY! - Ski Packages - Scuba Diving Adventures * Windmacher "Barefoot Cruises" * Singlaware Cruises & Tours * Club-Med Resorts * Dune Ranches * Health Spas * Golf/Tennis Camps * Stainless Steel Boat cruise * Alaskas/Granada Fishing Trips 841-7117 FREE PARKING FREE PARKING "HOME OF THE NEON MAP TREE" 1601 West 23rd St. SOUTHERN UPHOLSTERY HCZENTER SOUTHERN TRIES CENTER 9:5-30 Mon.-Fri. * 9:30-2 Sat. Attention ALL K.U. Band Members! Warm up with the Band Office on Saturday, safety 2pm, 8th, 10th, Check the glass outside the Band Office for details. realha, alaah! 2-19 To whoever took my purse from Jolie Hall I had Friday; please return it to my mailbox there: The billfold has sentimental values. Thanks. 2-19 I don't mean to impose, but DON'T MISS IT AGAIN THIS YEAR! Brazil! Carnival. A warning for tonight seems fritil Mwear millets, Mwear millets, Well continually finch. As we are pinched, Or else spread the whole night satir! And any仰awp. The Kentucky Street MX-X Reward: For the return of a wine colored purse taken from Jolifie Hail Friday. No questions asked. 749-2125. 2-19 The Etc. Shop 10 Wet 9th (WEST of the CANDY STORE). Vintage and classic contemporary clothing—military coat, jackets, skirts, dresses, and lists of gifts, clothes and things... 2-22 Ragamonios get you down! Go upward! Ragamonios have 5 nights a week and free live music for 5 nights a week West Coast Saloon We doff our P.J.'s to the K.U. Walmers & invite everyone to TGIF today & every Friday with 25* draws Noon-6 p.m. 2222 Iowa 841-BREW COMMUNITY AUCTION. 700 N.H. every Saturday 11 am. Convenience stores Mon. Tues. Fr. 34-10, 700 commuting cars to applane. 842-HI. See also: www.early-31 Looking for a ride everyday to Olathe. Call 782-6351, 782-7179. Well, she .. the bed, it's finally here. A party in honor of Suite 21st year, George Brett Cavani, who was born on wild time. This Saturday. Come one, come all. And our victory over K-State! 2-19 LUNDI GRAS! FEB.22 8-12 pm OFF THE WALL HALL ADMISSION - $2.75 LUND! GTAS! FEB.22 8-12 pm OFF THE WALL HALL ADMISSION - $2.75 DE LA PART DE GAV & LEBAN SERVICES OF KANSAS Free Beer from 08:19 A warm welcome to our newly pledged AOPI's. Love your AOPI sisters 2-18 To Manhattan by way of Emporia State, love them in the tub, and nights at the night-Happy 21st Suite G. from yours tau. M-ASSOCIATES Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient therapy; gynocology; contraception & Roe; Overland Park, park (913) 642-3100. Meet me at the Opera House Feb. 20 and we'll dance away the snowbound blues. Brazilian Carnival. 2-19 4-level Reading students This notice to class Monday for 25 bonus points 2-19 Hark fair mademans you need look no farther, for administras the mademans you found two week after. When 26 days of February hauls passed, and then last, through Gummimann's you'll wander, to Nottingham vander. For here is the place where you can be honored or are honored to serve this deed. 2-22 HELP-1 lost my ski mittens in Strong or Summerfield on 2-4, I need them. 843-7286 ALL YOU CAN EAT—Stuffed Pig Sunday Buffet-$4.99--2210 Iowa-749-2885 2-26 Kay, Let’s behave like **ANIMALS!!** You little piglet. 2-19 EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 Wanted, someone who loves drinking 50r pitchers on Mondays at the Sanctuary 7:00-12:00 2:22 TGIF ict abchob. 1.00 pitheches from 2-4. 1.50 pitheaches from 4-6. 2-19 Hey Haimal? We're having a party and we're coming next to Dave the Haven's place. Hugger and Rocky can fill you in without you the party will easily begin! See you lake! *Gailahka* 2-19 SERVICES OFFERED UTORING MATH. STATISTICS, PHYSICS, MATH. B.S. in physics, MA in mathematics) time limit (B.S. in physics, MA in mathematics) Drifting (charges, maps, etc.) 6 years exp. Examining certificates for: certificates: 817-794 Another Encore exclusive: ENLARGEMENTS Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa 842-2001 للتدريس في التربية والتعليم العام للمنطقة العربية المتحدة Put your best foot forward with a professional printed resume from Encore. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2011, 25th and Iowa. 2-26 Schmelder Wine & Keg Shop -The finest selection of wines in Lawrence-largest supplier of strong kgs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212. WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it. Stop by The House of Ubike and pick up our FREE free resume on resumes. House of Ubike $8 Massachusetts. 8-M-F. House of Ubike $8 Massachusetts. Mandarin tutor; Chinese student with B.A. in Chinese teaching. Experienced in early childhood education. Children's Learning Center announces an expansion of services with an evening care option. Parenting classes for elementary age. Daycare 6:45 am to 6:00 pm a.m. 8:45 a.m-9:45 a.m. Phone 841-218-3658 Grad. student to tutor Calc. 115, 116, 121, 122 Very reasonable rates. Call 841-4031 for 5 o'clock p.m. 2-23 TYPING TYPING PLUS: Theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Asistance with composition, grammar, spelling. Bachelor's or foreign students or Americans 841-8264. It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. ff Experienced typist. IBM papers, theres all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting. Selectieve Elite; or Pica, and will correct spelling. Elite: 834-955 Mr. Wright. tt TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective I; II, Royal Correcting SF 500 CD, 843-5675. ff For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. tf Experienced typist will type letters, thesis and dissentations. IBM correcting selective. Call Donna at 842-2744. **tf** Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term papers, mails, IBM correct selecirtic. Barb. after 5 p.m. 842-2310 tf Reports, dissertations, resume, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct. Selective. Call Ellen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tt Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric, Elite or Pien. 842- 6644. 2-26 Graduate students tired of typing, retyping Save time and money by word processing I Save time and money by word processing I Quality typing and word processing avail- able. Encrypt Copy Corp 252-881-3001 2-20 Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM TCM Selective Sectile Deb 843-9082. 2-26 Fast, efficient typing. Many years' experi- ence. Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call evenings, 841-please. tf TYPING-EDITION-GRAPHICS IBM Corp. correspondence to compilation assistance. Email: tps@ibm.com www.ibm.com Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 3-4 Former medical research secretary will type term papers, theses, books. Call Nancy 841-2802 5802 Quality typing and word processing. Reasonable price includes revisions. 841-2781 after 5.00. 2.22 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE IS ALIVE AND WELL. 842-2507. 2-10 Roommate needed immediately! Nice apartment, 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 - 2-16 WANTED 2 roommates $150 each + deposit 1 each. Beautiful house and excellent location: 1065 Indiana. 842-4630. 2-19 Male roommate to 3 bedroom house: 12th & Muss $108/mo. + 1/2 utilities + dposit. Liberal, smoker okay. 843-6518 2-26 Roommates wanted: Graduate student in business management share apartment living, expires beginning June or August, 1982. Must be nounsman or graduate degree, evenings and weekends. 2-22 Wanted a bridge expert with patience, capable and wanting to teach casual bridge lessons on summer afternoons for beginners or intermediate bridge players. Courses 843-0540 843-0540 2:22 Need place to live? 3-br. house $83.33 + 1/3 ult. Closet to campus. Prefer female & non- smoker. 841-3779 3-12 Roommate: Two bedroom house East Lawn Roommate: Two bedroom house West Lawn lease lease in 841-791-8191 2-24 Looking for a nonnaming female roommate to share a bedroom apartment 1-2991-18091 Wanted to buy—KU-KJ-SYTEE basketball tickets—several needed—will pay a fair price-Call Jim 842-6070 Share 3 bedroom house next to campus. Share 3 bedroom house next to campus Reasonable. Call for details: 834-4842 2-26 Classified Heading Write Ad Here: ___ BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Classified Display: 1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00 Dates to Run 15 words 1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 Additional words .02 .03 .04 .05 .06 Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 19, 1982 GOOD NATIONAL JOCK TRACK & FUNDRAISING AIAWA Tudie McKnight grimaces as she lands after a practice jump in Allen Field House earlier this year. McKnight holds the KU long jump record at 20-11%. Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Athletic Division Team W L W Pct. GB Philadelphia 37 37 142 12% Washington 36 36 500 11% New Jersey 36 36 500 11% Washington 28 28 494 13% Hawaii 13 13 104 12% Milwaukee 37 14 725 Detroit 37 14 725 Dearborn 23 30 434 Atlanta 21 28 829 Chicago 19 28 836 Houston 11 40 216 Western Conference Midwest Division San Antonio 33 17 660 Denver 28 28 549 Dallas 28 28 549 Utah 18 18 333 Texas 17 17 333 Las Vegas 14 33 277 Los Angeles 14 33 277 Los Angeles 35 17 673 Seattle 35 17 674 San Diego 28 23 605 Colorado 28 22 560 Golden State 27 23 605 Texas 18 14 291 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Indiana 119, San Diego 114 Seattle 105, Washington 87 BIG 8 STANDINGS Team W L I Pct GB Missouri 12 1 1 923 Kansas State 7 7 4 384 Kansas State 6 5 345 Oklaklahoma State 6 5 345 Oklaklahoma State 6 5 300 Kansas 4 7 384 7 Colorado 4 7 364 7 Colorado 2 9 182 9 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. Missouri (4)18. Oklahoma 55 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Oregon State (5) 55, Washington 44 Iowa (6) 59, Michigan State 53 Colorado State (10) 58, West Virginia 10, 68, Stevenson 10 France State (10) 69, California-Santa Barbara 10 Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Patrick Division Team | W | L | T | GF | GA | Pts. Hawaii | 10 | 7 | 1 | 25 | 18 | 67 Philadelphia | 31 | 2 | 5 | 6 | 24 | 67 NY Rangers | 28 | 21 | 10 | 220 | 220 | 67 Pittsburgh | 18 | 21 | 10 | 220 | 220 | 67 Chicago | 17 | 25 | 10 | 220 | 220 | 67 San Francisco (19)84, Portland 72 Montreal 34 11 13 97 275 189 81 Buffalo 32 18 13 97 258 169 73 Boston 32 19 13 97 280 294 74 Boston 22 19 10 14 296 142 65 Hartford 16 27 10 14 190 74 65 Campbell Conference Norris Division Minnesota 23 15 18 18 18 251 217 64 St. Louis 25 10 19 5 5 231 65 53 Chicago 24 16 20 20 20 217 54 Winnipin 16 20 16 11 217 254 51 Toronto 16 20 16 11 217 254 51 Calgary 16 20 16 11 217 254 51 Edminton 37 13 15 11 327 236 58 Calgary 22 13 15 14 243 258 58 Vancouver 22 36 13 11 231 210 269 Chicago 13 16 13 11 210 211 39 Colorado 13 16 13 11 210 211 39 McKnight's attitude, ability put her on top VERSTEDA Y RESULTS New York Rangers Philadelphia 4 New York Rangers Colorado 4 Detroit Tortoise 4 Toronto 1 Montreal St. Louis 2 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W L Pet. GB Pittsburgh 17 7 573 Baltimore 18 16 752 Detroit 16 16 752 Buffalo 12 13 480 % Cleveland 9 14 381 % Houston 9 14 381 % Philadelphia 15 18 381 % St. Louis 20 14 4 833 Wichita 14 12 5 634 Tampa 10 13 6 9 Memphis 10 17 370 11% Phoenix 8 18 370 11% Indianapolis 8 18 380 11% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled! By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer When she was a little girl, her father nicknamed her "Tudie" because she smiled a lot. Sports Writer And indeed, KU high jumper and spinner Tudie McKnight does smile a lot. Even after a long work recently with the KU women's track team, she was still smiling and cracking jokes with her teammates. IT'S HARD TO imagine that anyone as effervescent and outgoing as becknight, a girl from the Bronx before she came to New York, would ever be frustrated by anything. "Sometimes I get really frustrated in practice," McKnight said. "As an example, in last year's intersquared contest, my shoes for not jumping well." But this year, McKnight has put much of that frustration behind her. After jumping 19.4% at the Mason-Lynch Stadium, McKnight has established herself as one of the best long jumpers in the Big Eight this year. iut, despite her record-setting performance, it has been inconsistent. My manager is inconsistent. IT'S NOT THAT McKenny had been a poor long jumper in the past. Last year, she won the Big Eight indoor meet with a record-setting 19-3% jump. She also won the conference outdoor long jump title, again setting a conference mark by jumping 20-11%. That mark is also a KU outdoor record. "I've had problems getting off the boards on my right foot," Mcknight, a right-footed jumper, said. "I'm tired of being now so much that everything will sweep." One thing that has made McKnight click this year, besides improving in his leadership, is the THE ROAD TO Lawrence for McKnight began in Jamaica, where she was born. Her family moved to New York City when she was young. After an outstanding high school career, she was recruited heavily by several schools. Eventually, she narrowed her choices to Florida and KU. anyone. This person has noticed the difference is her coach, Theo Hamilton. Besides being an outstanding athlete, McKnight is also an excellent student, as her 3.5 grade point average in child development attests. While both schools have strong women's track programs, Florida doesn't offer a "SHE SEEMS more comfortable with herself," Hamilton, the women's assistant track coach, said. "She has been a long way since she's been here." "It's up to her how good she wants to be." Hamilton said. you do your best, then he'll yell at you." 'I hope the whole team goes in with the same enthusiasm I have. If everyone goes in with the same attitude I do, we can surprise a lot of people.' We Sell Service, We Sell Quality We Sell Fuji. RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT • LAWRENCE KS 66044 • (913) 841-6642 "He's like a dad in a way," she said. "And if yelling at you is going to make major in child development, which is what she wanted to study, she said. —Tudie McKnight 'If I went to Florida, I'd be more of a kid in a night said. I'd rather go to school to get better.' If anyone would know how good a long jumper McKnight is, it would be Hamilton. He holds the men's Big Eight long jump record and was the NCAA outdoor long jump champion in 1975. To see it, he McKnight has a lot of potential. While some people might think that she would miss the fast-paced lifestyle of New York City, McKnight said she liked Lawrence. Besides being one of the conference's best long jumpers, McKnight is also a very good spinner. At last weekend's triangular meet with Arkansas and Oklahoma State, McKnight ran the 440-yard dash in 57-74, placing second to "IT REMINDS me a lot of back home," she said. "Jamaica was quiet, but then we moved to New York, which is not the same place." Lawrence has a nice slow, quiet pace." teammate Lorna Tucker. Last year, McKnight was a member of the 4 X 400 relay team that placed second at the Big Eight outdoor meet, and ran on the 4 X 220 team that took second at the indoor. problem, she said, stemmed from not having her approach down right. McKnight said that she would be hard-pressed to pick her favorite event. "If I could do only one event, it would probably be the long jump," she said. "But I like the quarter as much as I like the long jump. “IN THE long jump, I'm more of a technician. I know more about doing the long jump than running the quartet.” Currently, McKnight and the rest of the women's team are getting ready for the Big Eight Indoor Championships, which will be held next weekend in Lakeland. Neb. According to Hamilton, the women's high in the conference long jump. "I think she has an excellent chance," Hamilton said. "I've matured a whole lot," McKnight said. "I don't get frustrated anymore—take it everything in stride." MEKNIGHT DOES face some tough competition in Lincoln. Her 19-84 mark is the second best in the conference this season. She played Kelly Wenlock, who has injured 20-2. But McKnight feels confident that she'll clear the 20-foot mark at the conference indoor. She did have a few 20-foot jumps at the Mason-Dixon games, she said, but she poured on all of them. "I hope the whole team goes in with the same enthusiasm I have," Madden said, "everyone goes in with the same attitude. I do, we can surprise a lot of people." KU faces 'Cats; women travel IN THE JAYHAWKS earlier loss, KU was playing its second straight road game and it was the Jayhawks' third of four road games. The Jayhawks will try to avenge an earlier loss this season against the Wildcats. KU, 13-10 overall and 4-7 in the Big Eight Conference, were defeated in Manhattan Jan. 23 by 17 points, 70-53. The Jayhawks shot just 41 percent in the rame, hitting on 21 of 51 shots. The Kansas Jayhawk men's and women's basketball teams will try to get back on the winning track tomorrow. "There is not much you can say about this rivalry that hasn't already been said," Coach Ted Owens said. "There is the state pride factor, the fact that they beat us badly earlier this season, plus our team's fighting for a first round home site." The effect of the road games showed on the Jayhawks, who now are 1-8 on the Nuggets. KU's men's team will play the Kansas State Wildcats in Allen Field House with topp off schedule at 7.10 p.m. to Minnesota for the Gophers. "In the first game, we weren't sharp offensively, and that did us in." Owens said. "To be successful, we will have to use our skill with all-in intensity and effort." Against the Wildcats in the earlier meeting, the Jayhawks were led by center Kelly Knight, who scored 13 points. Mary Dahlan leads the Gophers in scoring, averaging 14.9 points a game. Freshman Laura Coenan adds 13.2, and Debbie Hunter 10.3. COMING OFF a two-point loss to Big Ten Conference champion Ohio State last week, Minnesota's record 42-36 was the highest of three players scoring in double figures. The women Jayhawks, who, like the men, have had trouble winning on the road, have two games remaining after the Minnesota game. They play K-State on Tuesday and play the Creighton Bluejays in their season finale. Owners won't open up books By United Press International WHEN: FEBRUARY 20, SAT, from 8 p.m. to 3 a.m. HOLLYWOOD, Fla.-Ae Garvey, executive director of the NFL Players Association, accused league negotiators yesterday of reneging on a promise to allow an auditor to look at the leagues' books. But Jack Donlan, who heads the NFL negotiating team, said no such promise had ever been made. The Gophers, who have failed to beat the Jayhawks in the teams' previous six meetings, seem ready for the Jayhawks this year. The two sides have been negotiating since Tuesday, and yesterday's HOW: DRESSED, OF COURSE, IN A COSTUME WHERE: OPERA HOUSE-642 Mass WHY: RECAUSEUH? The players association has said that its primary demand called for the players to be paid 55 percent of the 28 teams' gross revenue. The league has said that it would not even negotiate that issue. "The concept of the league and the clubs sharing their revenue with the players is not negotiable." Gene Upshaw, veteran Oakland Raider guard, said. meeting lasted well into the night with no voices of real presence. This series will be broadcast and end too. Tickets: $4 each Buy them at TICKETS The 16th-ranked Wildcats will try to bounce back after falling to Oklahoma State. 79-62, in Manhattan. The women's team will try to come back from a loss they suffered at the hands of Wichita State. On Tuesday, they travel to Minnesota. "Kansas State is a fine ballclub with excellent experience," Owens said. "You cannot pick a single player to be on the team because they have so many fine ones." KNIGHT RETURNED to the KU weekend Wednesday night in Colorado after missing several games with a thigh bruise and a sprained ankle. In 14 minutes against the Buffaloes, Knight scored 6 points and grabbed 4 rebounds. CARAVAL CAN'T STRESS ENOUGH: BRING YOUR OWN DRINKS Start Your Day Right. With A Pam's Delight! 4th ANNUAL BRAZILIAN Dept. (Wescoe) SUA box office, or Spanish & Portuguese 2 Buttermilk Pancakes Only $1.99 2 Strips Bacon and 1 Egg Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner • Daily Buffet Spanish & Portuguese PP PAM'S PLACE 2907 w 7th 841-6844 Mon-Sat 6 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday 6 a.m.-8 p.m. Intramurals etc. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Greek Men Rea B. (Pluccio) Independent Me Kpi Pappa Sigma 39, Hempemer 40 No Greek Letters 30 AKJ Shmores 32 Kpi Pappa Theta #e Bombers 28 Kpi Pappa Phi 17 Ackerson 32 Kpi Pappa Phi Epsilon 34, Theta Chi II 25 The Eight Balls 46, Buckets 37 Sauce Kuiper 39, Skimberly 32 Sauce Kuiper 42, Skimberly 32 To find out, you are invited to attend KU Rugby Informational Meeting at 4:00 p.m., Sunday, February 21 above Johnny's Tavern 401 North 2nd. Rec. A (Payoffs) The Band Its 17, Stars Inherits h30 Scorpte 37, Wilber Nethil 1 The Drunks 34, Battenfield Airdvarks 12 Rec. A (Playoff) Vicious Valumps 33, Skyhawks 21 Sonics 21, The Magnetos 11 Greek Men Food and Refreshments Provided by KU Rugby Club. Independent Women WHAT IS KU RUGBY? Rec Bowers Sellards 38, Cheluers Wooders 10 Combes 25, L W's 3 Snob Hillbirds 67, Blisters I 6 Shooting Stats 38, Face John 32 Weak Tetaks 74, Ecobucks 87 Somnifly 2, Chicken Chickens 6 Kids' Kim 56, The Disease 19 But out of the loss, Kempf said, the Jayhawks improved on some things. The Orange Man 38, Sewell Dilhite 24 Harland's Hoggers 69, C.I. #38 Brown's Bombers 70, C.I. Cowbirds 52, Sigma No 330 Snowshoees 12, C.I. The Fruitt-U Mats 43, Meet Packing 30, 38 Independent Women Bee B. The Jayhawks will attempt to bounce back the weekend's road loss to Nebraska, 79-19. "We did some things better," he said. "We've started to swim races right. Like in the 50-yard freestyle, we were in the water all the time." The first, which we hadn't been doing, "We didn't want to end our season with the loss to Nebraska," Coach Gary Kempf said. "Obviously we weren't hanny with the score." Men's swim team faces SIU The Jayhawks, 2-4 in duel meets this season, with both victories occurring at home, with face a team which Kempit had beaten last season. That to overcome this, the Jayhawks The Kansas men's swim team will take on national swimming power Southern Illinois in their last duel meet this weekend at 7:00 p.m. in Robinson Natatorium. The women's swim team is idle this weekend and is preparing for the Big Eight championships next week in Ames, Iowa. The men will be off next weekend with the Big Eight meet the following week. "This is the final time for seed times," senior co-captain Dave Killen said. "I n' rated seventh in the mile and fifth in the down one in be in the fastest bed." The Jayhawks will use this weekend to help their seatings in the Big Eight championships. Swimmers are ranked sixth, and they want to be in the fastest heat. "They're a solid team," Kemp said of Southern Illinois. "They beat Nebraska in a duel meet this year." would have to perform well in their strong points—the distance races. "It's time for us to swim. We're looking to be quicker and have more enthusiasm. We need for everyone to do their part this week." Allen named top executive of Alouettes By United Press International TORONTE-George Allen, the strict disciplinarian who compiled the fourth-highest winning percentage in NFL history, yesterday accepted the first win of his career. Skalabania's debt-ridden Montreal Alonettes of the Canadian Football League into a winner at the box office and on the playing field. Uganda disclosed that he is negotiating to sell Allen a minor share with an option to become majority owner of the club, which lost more than $4 million in the 1981 season. The millionaire said Allen would be announced as the club's chief executive officer in Montreal today. 万象 Feeling Buzzed About Exams? Study Skills Workshop Tuesday, February 23 7:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m. FREE Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064 THIS WEEKEND'S FOR YOU! START IT RIGHT WITH A T.G.I.F.AT TIME OUT take BUD IS BACK ON TAP AT TIME OUT! CELEBRATE THE WEEKEND THIS AFTERNOON AND TONIGHT AT TIME OUT!! 2:00 P.M. TO 8:00 P.M. 25' DRAWS 75' SCHOONERS ALL DAY 1 TIME OUT THE PLACE TO PARTY 2408 IOWA Monday, February 22, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 101 USPS 650-640 KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Watson won't be fired. citv commission agrees By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter Lawrence city commissioners decided during a closed session Saturday to not fire City Manager Buford Watson because all five commissioners agreed that Watson's shortcomings A. E. B. M. did exist and that they could be improved, City Commissioner Tom Gleason said this weekend. Gleason, who had asked for Watson's resignation in a letter to Watson made public earlier this month, chose not to move for the city manager's firing as he said he would. "We can either have one massive division now and hope that things will start working better after that was over," he said, "or we can say, 'We must short-circuit that process right here, right now.'" MARK McDONALD/Kansan Staff Tom Gleason The commission met in closed sessions the following days to discuss Gleason's reason for writing the letter. "I did this in large measure because I did not see the change in attitude and the recognition of shortcomings which I think the city manager has been candid enough to allow for," he said. Gleason's letter sparked a group of citizens to start a petition drive to recall him from office. Among the items talked about Saturday was the reported harassment of a city employee who said she found problems with the quality of the city's water, and the differences between the original some city ordinances and the final version in the League of Kansas Municipalities code. In the fall of 1978, Linda Frost, who worked in the laboratory of the city water plant, said she took two samples of water that a state lcb found to contain coliform bacteria. The bacteria is an indicator of traces of excrement possibly being in the water, she said. "After I took the second bad sample they took that job away from me." Frost said. She said her supervisors, including Roger Coffey, director of the utilities at the plant, refused to check out the problem, insisting she made a mistake. "They said, 'You must be contaminating these samples,'" she said. "There's no way I drink the water in the building where I took the sample." but the problem does not mean that all the water in the city is bad, she said. Coffey said he could not recall any sample showing bacteria in 1979 and said he could barely detect it. Watson said he did not know anything about the incident. She was not fired from the city job, but she said offishly, "made life miserable until I quit." Frost now works as a pharmacist in analytical researchers-Research Corporation on KKW West Campus. "I feel real apprehensive about drinking the water," she said. "Just the attitude and the way they operate at the water plant—the way they would cover un a possible problem." The second issue that was disclosed concerned differences between some city ordinances originally published on March 2, 1981, and their final form in Lawrence's city code, which is updated by the Kansas League of Municipalities, Commissioner Nancy Shontz said. Although members of the city staff had received copies of the city code, which contains errors, several months ago, commissioners did themselves until she discovered them herself, Shontz tell. "I'm concerned that the staff members must surely know about these errors and that we were not informed of it," she said. "There were changes in language that went beyond simple editing." She said most of the errors had to do with development on the city's flood plain. "We have to know where the floodway is because you're not allowed to build on that," she Because of one omission, a developer would not have to state what path, or floodway, the storm water would take during an occasional flood, she said. Watson said the city staff had not been using the form to announce the code city arrive at the city on account. No problems have been caused by the planning no "using the official version of the city ordinance." After Saturday's session, commissioners Barkley Clark and Don Binsis said that commissioners had brought up issues of which they were not aware. M. H. B. "There have come to my attention a number of problems that I was not aware of," Clark said. "I think one of our biggest comments was there had been some feelings about government interference in the economy," she said. But he said that had all the commissioners known of some of the concerns earlier, their MARK McDONALDI/Kansan Staff Buford Watson not meeting the job requirements. GIVEN that the other four commissioners' support for his concerns made him think that it was possible to improve the job performance of the city manager. desire for improvements might have come earlier. "I don't believe that Barkley and Don wanna aware of the depth of concern about his performance." Glesea said. "I don't know why told me to touch withouch with the people who told me of trouble. "All five commissioners recognized (Watson's) shortcomings and said they have to be corrected. If we can't remedy the shortcomings, he has not performed his duties." INTERNATIONAL Mauren Regan, Wichita senior, had more than just her hands full, as she gobbled pancakes Saturday in a pancake eating contest sponsored by KLZR radio station and Rax Roast Beef. Regan recognized Chi Omorpha surgery in the one-minute-six-second contest. Dance company brings Africa to KU By JANET MURPHY Staff Reporter The nine-member dance troupe, now in residence in New York City, performed three spirited dances backed by traditional African drums. With the percussionists pounding a deafening, rhythmic beat, the dancers appeared in a choreographed sequence. The troupe appeared as part of the Black History Month celebration. They were sponsored by the office of minority affairs and the International Theater Department. The CoSha African Dance Company of Senegal, West Africa, presented a program of social and religious dance last night in Swarthout Recital Hall. Ibrahimha Camara, acting director and master percussionist, said that the troupe maintained the traditional dances from all parts of Africa. He said the group returned once a year to keep in The dances they perform, he said, are stories that were often happened in Africa as far back as 14 years ago. He said they liked to perform on college campuses because of the teaching they did. During their performances, Camara said, they taught the audience about the instruments, like violin and cello. formed at Emporia State University and Kansas City Community College. This week, they will appear at Southwestern College in Winfield. Now on a two-week tour, the group has per- The performance opened with three percussionists performing a drum call, which is an introduction to all ceremonies. It asked for a blessing on the ceremony. The first dance, called Yhardalad, was from the Mandoingo tribe. It was a ceremonial dance for women during childbirth. In the dance, it asked her to give birth to the child for the life and happiness for the mother. Monday Morning The second dance, Ballet Malinke, also was a ceremonial dance used for a good harvest and for circumcision. The tradition in parts of Africa was when children reached a certain age, they were taken to the forest, boys to one part, girls to another, and they were circumcised. The dance is performed by their parents on their return, honoring their new adulthood. In the third dance, audience members were asked to participate. About 30 people joined the troupe on stage for the finale. Those that didn't their seats joined in the chant and clapping. Four women appeared in each of the dances, first as a group, then dancing separately. Two male dancers also performed in each of the dances as soloists. In between dances, the percussionists told about their instruments. Holding the chalice-shaped drum called a See DANCE page five. Library plan disputed By DON KNOX Staff Reporter Increased funding for building improvements in the University of Kansas library system was one of Chancellor Gene A. Budig's biggest concerns when he arrived in Lawrence last year. But Jim Ranz, dean of libraries, said a recent study, prepared by a New York account firm for the Kansas Legislature, could jeopardize parts of a planned $2 million science technology library to be built on the Lawrence campus. THE $100,000 preliminary study, conducted by Peat, Mawat and Mitchell Co., said KU had overestimated space needs at the planned science library. The study proposed that the size of the future structure be reduced from 230,000 sq. ft. to 99,000 sq. ft. Ranz said he objected to the firm's report. "The library system has been sorrowly lacking in space for students and readers," he said. "We need more books." State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, agreed. "We're not talking about storing books, but keeping books in such a way as they can be used by people," Charlton said. "I am really terribly concerned about the study." Charlton said she thought it was very difficult for a library to overestimate its needs. "IF WE SCALE down the plans for a new library, we will come up with the same problems we had before," she said. "We will outgrow the library before it is even finished." Allen Wiechert, KU's facility planning director, said even though the Peat Marwick study conflicted with similar University studies in the field, he felt it was the University needed a new science library. "But the library project was not recommended for funding this year by the governor," Wiechert said, "and right now, we're not optimistic for funding during 1982." State Rep. Jess Branson, D-Lawrence, said that although she had not seen the actual report, she believed it was true. "I BELIEVE that there should be some way of using our own people in Kansas to come up with a thorough and fair analysis," she said. "I would imagine there will be much discussion about Branson said she was concerned particularly about the consultant's lack of knowledge about The Peat Marwick study has been criticized for ignoring a state building code that requires a basement to be above ground. See LIBRARIES page five Arson squad declares arson cause of Royal College fire Staff Reporter By BECKY ROBERTS Arson has been determined as the cause of a fire that resulted in more than $290,000 worth of damage to the Royal College Shop, 837 Massachusetts St., and three other downtown buildings. The Douglas County Arson Squad announced Friday in a prepared statement that the fire at the Royal College Shop on Feb. 3, 1982, had been determined to have intentionally set it. The arson squad also said that investigation of the basement of the Royal College Shop showed an unfinished fire pit. "We're piecing it all together," Stanxw said. So far the investigation has taken more than 450 hours of work and investigators have followed up on 50 leads, McSwain said. Although Fire Chief Jim McSwain refused to say how many fires were set, he did say that investigators have suspected multiple fires for some time. "We confirmed that more than one fire was set in the last couple of days," McSwain said. Police Chief Richard Stanwix said three investigators would continued the search for the motives and suspects in the arson. The arson squad refused to comment on possible motives for the arson or possible assault. "We're still working on the suspects," Mech says, "but we'll not know until the investigation is complete." Johnson, however, said the arson squad had conferred with lab officials by telephone. The arson squad has not received written lab reports from the Kansas Bureau of investigation crime labs in Topeka. The squad sent samples of basement floor materials from the Royal College Shop to the lab to determine materials that could have been used to start the fire. "We expect the written lab report by next week." Rex Johnson, Douglas County sheriff. The Feb. 3 fire was the second fire at the Royal College Shop in five years. In 1977, owner Tom Black rebuilt the store after a fire caused more damage than expected. The cause of that fire was never determined. A sign on the front door of the Royal College now says that the shop will be open for business Tom Black has refused to comment about the fire. A LITTLE WARMER Weather Unseasonally mild weather will prevail today, with sunny skies and temperatures reaching the middle 60s. The National Weather Service in Topeka. Light, variable winds will become southerly at 5 to 15 mph by tonight, with the low temperature in the middle 30s. Mild temperatures and little chance for precipitation will continue through the week. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 22, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Survey of oil rig disaster begins: 62 bodies missing ST. JOHNS, Newfoundland—Calm seas allowed Mobile Oil vessels to begin an underwater survey at the Sea Ocean Ranger oil rig disaster, while maintaining its capabilities. sips up from the water as the searchers have recovered 22 bodies from the giant semisubmersible rig, which last week sank in the stormy Atlantic, killing all 84 "This will not be a quick process," Cooney said. "It will be a process of slowly going around the area and then making a close, piece-by-piece Mobil spokesman Tom Coney said the company's survey crew, consisting of two research vessels and two one-man mini-submarines, would try to discover why the rig capsized during a storm less severe than others it had weathered. One of the mobil research ships, the Polaris V, was to pinpoint the exact location of the wreckage. The other ship the Balder Cabot, carried two camera-equipped Mantis mini-subs. The subs will send video pictures to the research vessels, where the information will be analyzed. The calm seals also enabled Mobil to begin towing one of two other rigs in the area to bore for a safety inspection. Low clouds find search planes to remain grounded in St. John's, but two Coast Guard vessels and two supply boats continued the search for the Warsaw bans further union actions WARSAW, Poland –Poland's martial law government released guidelines on union activity yesterday that ban Solidarity leaders and officials from any future role in the country's unions and forbid strikes in almost all circumstances. It was also announced on Warsaw Radio that martial law ruler, Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelowski, will pay an official visit to the Soviet union early next month. In a purported interview published in an underground leaflet, two fugitive union leaders said the time was not right for a mass uprising and called for an armed attack. The long-awaited guidelines, which the government said were intended for public discussion and not final, severely limit union membership, allow strikes only as a "last resort" and hint that contacts with the western trade unions would be banned. Lack of funds closes Philharmonic KANSAS CITY. Mo.—Last-minute donations could not land businesses it. No doubt a 24-hour telephone that inspired nearly $172,000 in sales. Blame it on rising costs, an improverished endowment, a dwindling bank account or all of those causes, but what scapegoat is chosen, the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra has been silenced for the rest of the season—and perils permanently. The Philharmonic's executive committee announced Saturday evening that it would end the 49th winter season 13 weeks early because there wasn't enough money to finish, despite the 25-hour telethon. The committee had booded the fund raiser could stir up $800,000. Disappointed musicians and 1,800 grieving patrons trudged to the final concert a few hours later. Archbishop condemns military acts "Itadds me greatly to see what's happening in Kansas City because you are losing something vital to our culture," guest conductor Calvin Huffman wrote. SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—the leader of El Salvador. Catholic Church lashed out yesterday against alleged human rights violations by the military, and a 1,000-man government force pounded rebel positions in the eastern part of the war-warraged nation. In his weekly sermon, acting Archbishop of San Salvador Arturo Rivera y Damas said soldiers routinely put up any civilians by informers in the city. "Interrogations are done using physical violence, a fact that I believe escapes the control of the high command but that is out of line with the true professionalism of the armed forces," Rivera Y Damas said at San Salvador's Metropolitan Cathedral. Governors ready to fight cutbacks WASHINGTON - The nation's governors, struggling to find a bipartisan approach to President Reagan's New Federalism, said yesterday they would fight any plan that included the proposed $10 billion cut in federal aid to the states next year. After a two-hour closed meeting the governors agreed to reach a position on New Federalism at their winter meeting, but save no hint on what But since Reagan has said his 1983 budget would be the base for what states get under New Federalism, the governors made it clear they would be able to afford a lower tax rate. "If we're going to go in health in 1884, we can't take another hemorrhage like we did in 1928." Scott. Matthew D-Utah, said. Matheson referred to the $25 million federal aid cut that states suffered in the first Reagan budget slashes. Oil expert says gas prices may fall The price, which includes taxes, dropped 1.79 cents per gallon, from 130.26 cents to 128.47 cents, based on Landbender's survey of readily dealers in all 50 states. LOS ANGELES—The overall price of gasoline dropped nearly 2 cents during the past two weeks and could drop 6 cents more by the end of the year, according to the Bloomberg Market Intelligence report. The basic cause of the price decline, Lundberg said, was consumer resistance to high prices, which has resulted in lower consumption. The industry's response to the price decline has been to establish a complicated series of rebate programs designed to encourage dealers to sell WASHINGTON -- Alaskan Gov. Jay Hammond presented the 50th and final state stone for the Washington Monument yesterday, at a ceremony on Tuesday in downtown Seattle. Alaska dedicates monument stone The solid jade stone, mined at Jade Mountain, Alaska, is 1 inch thick, about 2 feet long and 3 feet high. Later this week it will be implanted inside the cave. The stone, inscribed with the words, "The Great Land," was unveiled to a crowd of 150 people as the Athletic High School Band of Columbia, MD. Harmmond praised Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, for discovering that the Washington Monument lacked a state stone from Alaska. Koch to run for governor of N.Y. NEW YORK--Mayer Edward Koch has decided to run for governor, a spokesman said yesterday. The spokesman, Evan Cornog, said Koch would "announce his intention to run," at a news conference today at Grace Mansion. "that is all we are going to say right now," Cornog said. "You can certainly say he is going to run." Koch, 57, won re-election last fall on both Democratic and Republican lines by the widest margin ever afforded a New York mayoral candidate. After Democratic Gov. Hugh Carey announced in January he would not seek re-election, the candidates to succeed Carey by announcing that he might enter the race. On the record Lawrence police arrested a 27-year-old Lawrence man Friday night for aggravated assault, aggravated burglary, felony theft and criminal possession. Mr. Stobbs also stole a class ring valued at $130 from a residence in 1690 Tennessee St. Police arrested Jeffery A. Reed, 1521 Kentucky St., after officers answered a burglar-in-progress call at the Tennessee Street residence. Police said two residents called them after returning to the house, hearing footsteps and smelling burning matches. After hearing the residents return, the suspect jumped out of a second-story window, fell backward, stopped, whirled and threw an object at one of the residents who chased him from the back door, police said. Police officers chased the suspect, subdued him and took him to the police station. Police found a class ring engraved with one of the resident's names in the suspect's pocket, police said. Saturday morning, police found the object the suspect threw and identified it as a four-inch folding knife. Balloon-a-Gram "Ride to the Occasion" SHOW A BALLOON-A-GRAM P.O. Box 2122 Lancaster, KS 60044 Mackenzie Capital Management POLICE REPORTED an aggravated robbery Friday night at an apartment in the Eldridge House, 701 Massachusetts St. Police said a male and a female suspect entered a 90-year-old woman's room. The victim and his wallet the wallet contained a $20 bill, police said. There have been no arrests. POLICE ALSO reported an aggravated assault Friday night at the Pliodium, Police said two victims were assaulted with a red Cordoba. The victims were walking across the parking lot when the car speeded up. One victim was hit on the back of the legs and fell. The other victim jumped onto the hood of the car to avoid injury. The second victim fell off the car at Ninth and Illinois streets, police said. Neither victim was taken to the hospital. Police said there were four male suspects. There have been no arrests. BURGLARS STOLE $1,700 worth of office equipment Friday night from the LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley Prudential PATRICIA TAYLOR You'll Love Our Style. Headmasters 809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66041 843 8771 21 North Air New York Tie In With Us Recreation Services Racquetball Mixed Doubles Tournament Entry fee is one can of unopened racquetballs submitted with completed entry form. Entry deadline is Thursday, February 25, 5:00 p.m. In 208 Robinson. Play begins Sunday, February 28. For more information call 864-3546. BURGLARS STOLE more than $1,500 worth of stereo equipment from three parked cars in the 1500 block of Lynch Court, between midnight and 1 p.m. Friday, police said. Burglar entered the locked cars with an unknown tool Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St., police said. Burglaries took two typewriters valued at $1,200 and $400. There are no suspices, police said. BURGLARS STOLE more than $1,400 worth of silver from a residence at 2726 Belle Haven Drive. Police said the burglar occurred sometime between December 1980 and Friday night. The burglar entered the house and took five spoons, four forks, eight soup spoons and one tablespoon from a box in a closet. There are no suspects, police said. IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 843-9803 THEIEVS STOLE a parked car at 1612 Crescent Road sometime between 2 and 7 p.m. Friday police said. Thieves entered the car and possibly used keys to take the 1973 blue Mercury. There are no suspects. and stole one AM/FM stereo, two cassette decks, two speakers, 39 cassette tapes, one equalizer and one amplifier. There are no suspects. ACDEMV CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREES miles per day. 841-0101 808 W 24th 9R BURGLARS ALSO tole 1585 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at 643 Tennessee St. sometime between 7 p.m. Thursday and 9:30 p.m. Friday, police said. Burglaris used physical force to enter the car and stole a cassette deck, a radar detector and an equalizer. There are no suspects. 841 0101 808 W 24th office address: 79, 1867 Feeling Buzzed About Exams? UNIVERSIDAD DE MADRID Study Skills Workshop FREE Tuesday, February 23 7:00 p.m.~9:30 p.m. The Student Assistance Center. 121 Strong. 864-4064 Jaynawk Hoom, Kansas Union --- HAWAII The World is Coming... Hawaii TRAVEL CENTER Feb. 27th & 28th a soil life Living a agrarian lifestyle Mona, I've finally decided where I'd like to make my career: State Farm! State Farm? Great Plowshares! You're going to be a soil filter. Living an agrarian lifestyle! Come on now! State Farm is an insurance company. Virgil, you're going to be a salesman? How could you? Even if they'd have you... Mona, there's more to insurance than selling policies. Insurance is opportunity. State Farm is looking for people interested in a data processing career. I don't have a computer science degree but I do have six hours of data processing courses. So I qualify! Virgil, you're putting me on. No way, Mona. State Farm is looking for men and women with any degree and six to nine hours of data processing courses. Of course, you've got to be interested in a data processing career. Good grief! They're omnivorous. No, but they're also interested in people in mathematics, accounting, law and actuarial sciences. Incidentally, the pay is great! Uh, Virgil, wear a clean pair of jeans to the interview. For information on career opportunities at State Farm write Ron Prewitt, Assistant Director, Home Office Personnel Relations, One State Farm Plaza, Bloomington, Illinois 61701, or contact your Campus Place- Come on now! State Farm is an insurance company. Virgil, you're going to be a salesman? How could you? Even if they'd have you... 3 1 4 Virgil, you're putting me on. 6 Good grief! omnivorous. No, but they're also interested in people in mathematics, accounting, law and actuarial sciences. Incidentally, the pay is great! Uh. Virgil, wear a clean pair of jeans to the interview. For information on career opportunities at State Farm write Ron Prenott Assistant Director Home Office Personnel Relations. One State Farm Plaza Bloomington, Illinois 61704 or contact your Campus Placement Director, or visit the State Farm Recruiter on campus February 23, 1982. STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES Home Officers Bloomington, Illinois An Qual Opportunity Employer. University Daily Kansan, February 22, 1982 Page 3 Dole says end games start work on budget By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter It's time to stop playing politics and get down to work on the federal budget, U.S. Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., said Wednesday. The Chamber of Commerce Friday. He spoke to a crowd of more than 100 at a congressional forum at the All Seasons Motel, 2309 Iowa. "We're going through that two- or three-week period when Congress reacts to the president's budget," she said. "The Senate Finance Committee, said." BUDGET HEARINGS before the committee start tomorrow, when Treasury Secretary Donald Regan outline the president's proposals. Dole said high interest rates were the biggest problem with the economy today. He said President Reagan needed to act quickly to bring down interest rates soon. "He has to make some bold move to get interest rates down somehow," he said. Dole suggested that the president meet with Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volker to decide on a policy for lowering interest rates. Dole said that some Republicans had tried to pin the blame for the high interest rates on Volcker and Kohl, but he didn't. He says his policy, but that this was unfair. "I think Volcker would say that Congress has been piling up debt after debt, year after year. And he's right." Dole said record-high deficits in the federal budget were keeping interest rates up. "WE'VE GOT TO get a handle on the deficit," he said. "We can't afford to continue spending at current levels." S. Robert Dole Reagan's 1983 budget includes a $91.5 billion deficit. Dole said the proposal of Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., which would postpone Reagan's promised income tax cuts, was not the answer. "We must address the spending side. We're not going to postpone the tax cuts," he said. He said social programs would have to be cut back. "I don't think it's political suicide to say that somehow we're going to have to reduce Social Security in odd-numbered years," he said. Dole said that if the Medicare program was not cut back, it would cost the federal government $115 to $120 million a year by 1990. "Why can't we touch Medicare?" he said. "It's a program that's almost out of hand." Dole said he also favored a cutback in military spending from Reagan's proposals. He said he and other senators would begin working on an alternative to the Reagan budget that he expected his president would be willing to accept. on campus TODAY THE UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY will present "Blackmoll," a film by Alfred Hitchcock, at 7 p.m. in 300 Strong Hall. TOMORROW THE STUDENTS CONCERNED WITH DISABILITIES will sponsor a discussion group at 4 p.m. in 7-D, Lincoln Hall. THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a dutch lunch for members of the Kansai Union. p.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union. CURRENT ISSUES AND THE JEWISH COMMUNITY will be discussed at a lunch sponsored by Hillel at 12:15 in Cork I of the Union. David Goldstein, executive director of the Community Relations Bureau will speak. THE GOSPEL OF MARK will be discussed at a BIBLICAL SEMINAR at 4:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Mysteries Center. sponsor "Pigs and Battleships" at 7 p.m. in dvcy Auditorium. THE JAPANESE FILM SERIES will THE CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CAMPAIGN I m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Room THE TAU SIGMA DANCE group will meet at 7 p.m. in 240 Robinson. THE LINGUISTICS COLLOQUY will feature Robert Rankin, professor of linguistics, speaking on phonemic aspiration at 7:30 p.m. in 108 Blake THE KANAKUK CAMP OF BRANSON, MO., will sponsor the film "The Second Coming" at 8 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Union. The Count finally changed the records on THE HAWK JUKEBOX But is anyone besides The Count old enough to remember those scores? BELIEVE IT OR NOT songs? SenEx passes teaching skills class plan Excellence in teaching sought By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter The University Senate executive committee decided Friday to recommend that the Academic Policies and Procedures committee establish a program to teach professors teaching skills. "When one gets an advanced degree, that might not have anything to do with teaching ability," Laurence Rose, member and professor of law, said Friday. "My whole teaching background is 12 education credits." The suggestion was a response to recommendations on excellence in teaching from the Long-Range Planning committee. SENEX DISCUSED specific suggestions for the committee. Teaching background should be gained when potential professors are graduate students at the University, or in other places where Lawrence graduate student, said The need for an excellence-in-teaching program points out the necessity of classroom experience for teachers instructs, he said. SenEx informed the office of academic affairs that University governance would be involved in teaching the excellence-in-teaching program. The University could set up a central area with information about teaching techniques, Shirley Harkess, SenEx associate professor, associate professor of sociology, said. Rewards for good teaching also could improve teaching, Ernest Angino, SenEX chairman and professor of geology and civil engineering, said. He said he didn't think teaching awards in general had provided the incentive they were meant to. Good professors of small graduate classes rarely get nominated for teaching awards because they don't know enough students, he said. "They should go to somebody who's consistently made a commitment to the University of Kansas," she said. THE LACK OF proper equipment essentially ex-planted teaching. Angino said. Prepare For: April MCAT MCAT Stanley H. KAPLAN Educational Center Call Days Evenings & Weekends (913) 341-1220 collect Class will be in Lawrence starting the last week in Feb. TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Prepare For: April MCAT MCAT Tools for teaching include books as well as hardware, he said. Part of the problem with teaching at the University is that professors are geared toward research rather than teaching, James Maloney, SenEx member and professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, said. The University faculty executive committee met in a closed session to nominate three hearing officers for the Board of Parking and Traffic appeals. Based on a fineed person's salary, the officers would decide whether fines should be paid all at once or on an installment plan. Angino said. "The hearing officer doesn't decide whether the fine will be paid." Anginio said of the judge. Outside NY State CALL TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 For information About Other Centers In More than 85 Major US Cities & Abroad !Openings for Student Senate Budget Subcommittee! Applications Available in Senate Office Membership Closes: 1 March, 5 p.m. 9:30 and 11:30 Advance Tickets $2.00 At the Door $2.50 Also: All You Can Fat Ribs & Salad Bar $5.95 TOMORROW NIGHT AT SGT. PRESTON'S CALVIN COOLIDGE TWO SHOWS Also: All You Can Eat Ribs & Salad Bar $5.95 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT SGT. PRESTON'S 815 New Hampshire We Sell Service, We Sell Quality We Sell Fuji. RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841-6642 VOLLEYBALL TRYOUTS KANSAS MEN'S UNDERGRADUATE TEAM Mon. Feb. 22, Wed. Feb. 24 5:30-7:00 p.m. Robinson Gym—Gymnastics Room (old south gym) For more information contact: Steve Guenther 842-4387 ken's. -PIZZA 843-7405 27th & Iowa Lawrence FREE PIZZA FREE PIZZA FREE COUpon FREE Clip this coupon. redeem at any Ken's Pizza location. When you buy one Ken's Pizza place, the next size smaller of equal value FREE. No Charge On Carry Out Orders Void With Other Promotions Offer expires March 4, 1982 Offer expires March 4, 2022. and The Best Pizza Buffet In Town All you can eat! Old Fashioned Thin Pizza & Deep Pan Pizza, Spaghetti, Rigatoni, Garlic Bread & a Grand 21 Item Salad Bar & Soup All For Only 3.19 Monday - Friday 11:00 - 1:30 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN 819 753 1088 KATHARINE HEPBURN HENRY FONDA On Golden pond A UNIVERSAL PICTURE PG Eav. 7:15 & 8:35 Mst. Sat. 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The Southern Hills Shopping Center 23rd and Ousdahl Hours: Monday thru Saturday 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Sunday 12 a.m.-5 p.m. J MICHAEL'S Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 22, 1982 Opinion Senate bill, now brewing, would aid alcoholics WE CAN'T HAVE BEER ASSOCIATED WITH ALCOHOLISM! I PROPOSE ANOTHER PLAN... KANSAS BEER WHOLESALERS ASSOCIATION Senate Bill 592 proposes to buck up the state's alcoholism treatment program with a little help from the beer industry. The plan would increase the sales tax on beer by 10 million and enmark the $3.2 million collected and restructured the alcoholism prevention and fund treatm In other words, it would help people who drink too much by taxing the people who buy beer. It seems like a perfectly simple solution to cut the revenue, but budget-cutting at every level of government. But actually, the plan is not as simple as it seems and it's not perfect. But it is a solution. Created by the Citizens Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, the bill would allow alcohol prevention and treatment programs administered by the division of alcohol and drug abuse. The division could lose up to $7.7 million in federal and state funds from an assortment of sources in the next 18 months, according to division commissioner Loren Phillips. A beer tax increase could save the division's alcohol abuse programs relatively misstimeless. Predictably, the beer distributors of Kansas oppose the tax increase. More specifically, they oppose earmarking for farmers from the increase for pigment treatment. Wholesalers now pay an 18-cent-a-gallon tax, which goes to the general fund. The alcohol abuse division must compete for funding with more concern-provoking causes. Phillips noted during the hearings on the tax, "the image of an alcohol does not evoke the same response as does the image of a handicapped child." Ten percent of the $2.50-a-gallon-tax on wine and other hard liquor already is earmarked for alcohol abuse programs. But alcoholics don't just guzzle cheap wine from paper-bag-shredded bottles or have a few too many every night after work. Lobbyists for beer retailers and wholesalers say their 18-cent tax is already too high compared to the states surrounding Kansas. They drink beer, too. Beer sellers can't sell alcohol and not simply a steep up from soft drink. Those states, however, are licensed to brew beer because of the a lower rate "because of the volume they produce." Lobbys also warn that state residents who live in the suburban order will drive to the next street. At the consumer's level, the tax would raise LISA BOLTON MIRANDA SILVERMAN the price of a six-pack by slightly less than six cents. Considering that it costs about a nickel to start the average car, most consumers wouldn't save enough money to justify a trip across the border. But refusing to pay for treatment of those who do abuse alcohol will not make them go away. One lesson children learn early in life is that a few often spoil things for everybody Lobbists also protest that taxing all beer drinker is unnecessary, since out of 10 of them "you can't buy a bottle of it." At least there is a pleasing logic in alcohol consumers paying taxes to take care of alcohols, much as Kansas couples pay higher marriage license fees to take care of the children of couples who abuse their children. Bob Storey, lobbyist for the retailers' association and member of the National Council on Alcoholism, says that private and local programs can deal with alcoholism better than can the Department of Social and Rehabilitative Services, which would distribute the $5.2 million. He says the money would be squandered on a few more staff members and a few more typewriters, though only 10 percent of the money can cover administrative costs. He also points out that about 45 percent of alcoholics treated by the alcohol abuse division's detoxification program, one of a variety of programs for different kinds and degrees of alcoholism, return for treatment again and again. But just as some victims of diseases die from getting better, some alcoholics do not. Those alcoholics are a burden that the responsible residents of the state must bear, as they do the aged, the mentally ill, the poor and the elderly. The law doesn't just disappear when their fundin is cut. George Heckman, chairman of the citizens' commission sponsoring the bill, says that the state cannot escape dealing with alcohols. Those who can't afford treatment at private institutions are treated at public expense. If the public isn't buying, they are left to navigate the highways in greater numbers than they already do, to take up space in hospitals and to hurt themselves and their families. Some will die, if they have no place to dry out between liquor binges. That's a solution, too, but not one that caring, responsible people will suggest. At the bottom of the cacophony of committee members and lobbyists and legislators trying to decide how to finance alcohol abuse programs are the alcohol abusers themselves. They are the Kansans who will be hurt if the bill fails. Compromise gives jump start to stalled auto industry talks Last summer, Douglas Fraser, president of the United Auto Workers, stood firm on the position that his union would not agree to salary concealment and General Motors as a taker of talks ahead. "there is no Chrysler agreement in Ford's" "future, he told UAW delegates at a convention" "last week." But last week, he stood smiling in front of the Ford logo with UAW Vice President Donald Ephin and Ford Vice President Peter Pestillo. It was clear that the fact that Ford really did have a better idea. The recent UAW concessions, which still must be approved by the union's 170,000 Ford- MARK ROBINSON DAN BOWERS employed members, represent an abrupt about-face in labor negotiations and could set a precedent for many other struggling U.S. industries. In reaching an agreement, both sides of the bargaining table have looked ahead as well as backward in determining the new contract's terms. The framework was set for this agreement when Ford announced earlier this month that it would begin the development. Already, Ford has been forced to lay off about 54,000 workers indefinitely. Just since October, six plants have been closed and 11,000 workers laid off. The reason for these layoffs? Union workers refused to make salary concessions, and at the going cost of labor, Ford simply could not afford to keep the plants open. The recent, and remarkably quick, agreement shows that the union has come to accept the fact that further wage increases would price the workers right out of their jobs. Granted, the union has a right to scratch and claw for every penny it can get, but as workers take bigger and bigger bites of the hand that feeds them, they may soon find themselves unfed. It's hard to sympathize with a group whose average compensation amounts to $21.56 an hour per week. This figure is more than double that of assemblers in Japan who do the same kind of work. It is these exorbitant labor costs (along with poor management) that allow the Japanese to underster American autos by an average of $1,650, even after shipping costs. And recent trends have shown that U.S. automakers can no longer claim that their cars cost more because they are made better. That was spent out with 30-cents-a-gallon gasoline. In recent years, the Japanese have doubled their share of the U.S. auto market to 22 percent, and there are no indications that the trend will ston. But the recent Ford-UAW agreement might help slow the Japanese automakers' invasion. The primary trade-off in the auto talks has been the union's agreement to a 31-month salary from the company. Ford has promised not to close any plants for petroleum and will stop purchasing parts from manufacturers. In reaching this agreement, each party has stuck its neck out for the other. The worker must tighten the belts on their family budgets (the agreement also includes a nine-month freeze on the $2.63 hour cost-of-living allowance, which is based on increased sales and chon awn of bloated inventories. Last summer, leaders from the UAW and Ford traveled to Japan to watch that country's automobile plants churn out cars. No doubt, the U.S. officials received an eye-opening lesson in efficient management, labor-management relations and worker productivity. The promise not to close plants will surely keep the company with even more virgin autos alters. Last week's agreement shows signs that the two groups just may have learned something. USPS 6045 (pulated at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July罢祭 Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage payed at Lawrence, Kansas 6064). Subscriptary mail are $12 for an amorton or $7 a year in Douglas County and $48 for an amorton or $64 for a first-class payment. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, First Hall, The University of Kansas KANSAN The University Daily Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Natalie Jolie Managing Editor Tracey Hamilton Editorial Editor Karen Schuster Associate Editor Jen George Campus Editor John Needell Associate Campus Editor Joe Needell Assistant Campus Editors Joe Reibel, Rebecca Chaney Assignment Editor Steve Rubrain Sport Editor Ron Haugemann Associate Sports Editor Corea Beach Entertainment Editor Lisa Massoth, Liliana Diva, Sharpe Appleburn Wire Editors Ellen Markey, Teresa Hourdan, Lisa Maschot Photos员 Jon Harkerty, John Haskammer, John Eskie Photographers Bob Greenman, Tracey Thompson, Mark McDonald Retail Sales Manager Ame Hern伯米德 National Sales Manager Howard Shalimkir Campus Sales Manager Perry Bajer Classified Manager Savoy Bolin Production Manager Larry Leibengood Tearnables Manager John Egan Sales and Marketing Adviser John Oberman Sales and Marketing Adviser John Oberman Some who shine too brightly burn out he always was the over-achiever, the person others in the office would call on to get the tough jobs done. Since the day he joined the company, he had been the Golden Boy. Suddenly, he changed. He began showing up late for work. When he arrived, he was irritable and couldn't get along with the other workers. He began to drink more, first after work and then at He talked of being "burned out", of not being happy with his job or life. He was in the middle of a fight with a doctor. A midlife crisis at 28? In the past, professionals began to doubt the PATRICK MAYER DAN TORCHIA of the work only after 20 or 30 years. Now, the doubts come after only five or 10 years. According to Richard Berry, a psychologist at the University of California at Berkeley, more 20- to 35-year-old professionals are seeking counseling for midlife crises. "behavior Today," a behavioral psychology newsletter, Berry said these professionals were unhappy because they had made it to the top and had found that they didn't like it there. We pay a high price for our ambitions and our upward mobility. Midlife crises are a larger manifestation of everyday stress. Uncontrolled stress can lead to many problems, including heart disease, high blood pressure, alcoholism and rocky relationships. The villain is our attitude that college is less of an opportunity for education than a job-kills ability. Use it. Most of us concentrate on the economic advantage of college instead of on getting an education. This is obvious in the trend away from the liberal arts and into the professional schools. Students are not asking their students trying to cover their economic bases, but there is a danger in thinking only about money. Generally, according to Berry, college students in the 1960s and early 1970s looked only at what interested them, and not what would get them interested in the two coincided. Sometimes they didn't. A cartoon from an early 1970s Mad magazine illustrated this. An unemployed young man sat on a park bench, dressed in rags. An older man walked by and asked why he didn't have a job. Now we have the opposite situation. Many people look only at the economic gains of occupations. That is just as bad as looking only at the income gains that has to be a middle ground between the two. Berry told the story of a college freshman who came in to see him because he couldn't decide on a career. He couldn't decide between computer science, law, medicine, business or engineering. "I wasted a lot of time," he said. "I went to college." "The choices we are so diverse that it was clear what was happening," Berry said. "He was looking for income, prestige and job market demand, and giving no thought to his own This attitude is not limited to freshmen. Many graduating seniors also have it, though it may be different. Most students probably have friends who say they won't accept less than $15,000 for their first job; are planning to go to graduate school for the future economy advantage, even though they don't want to start snickering because they haven't lined up a job yet. There is a problem in always looking to the future, to the time when the hard work and unhappiness will pay off, and one can finally relax. It usually never comes. There is so much dissatisfaction in the working world that it is important to be satisfied with an occupation. Recent studies show that most workers are unenthusiastic about their jobs, without the help of midlife crises. A 1979 study by the American Academy of Family Physicians showed that 82 percent of business executives had significant work stress. And in 1977, the University of Michigan Survey Research Center found that 40 percent of people surveyed thought that time dragged at work. Thirty-six percent felt their skills were underused, and 32 percent felt they were overeducated for the work they did. This dissatisfaction can add up to stress. And a possible midlife crisis. What can be done? Mainly being aware of the situation. The possibility of having a midlife crises 20 years early is a frightening possibility and it should be avoided at any age. There is nothing wrong with ambition when it is tempered with realism. We all can't be a chairman of the board or a corporate president or the publisher of the New York Times. Realistic goals will help pace a career and avoid crises and burnout. Being a Golden Boy in your twenties isn't worth it if it turns your golden years into a shell. BILL WALZ University Daily Kansan, February 22, 1982 Page 5 Libraries From nave one provide adequate accessibility for handicapped students. "It makes me wonder about the efficiency of the study," Branson said. Sandra McMullen, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents, said the Regents had dismissed a jobstack space law at its meeting in Topeka Friday and advised Paul Marwick of the state's code. Wiechert said Peat Marwick would be able to reassess its proposals when the entire study was completed later this spring. Proposal would exempt actors from labor law Law aimed at luring movie-maker Proposal would By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Renorter TOPEKA *a* starry-eyed Kanana child with dreams of movie acting has a lot going against him. Besides the discouraging odds facing every silver-screen hopeful, young Kansans are up against child-labor laws that prohibit them from starring in films produced within the state. dijembe, he demonstrated the different sounds the drummer could make from the goat-tak top. The cymbals attached to the side of the drum, he said, were to carry the sound a long distance. The Institute was founded for the purpose of introducing authentic African art to American artists, enriching American culture with the introduction of traditional African cultural heritage and promoting intercultural and educational exchange throughout the world. The CoSann, or "roots of culture," is part of the Institute for the Study of African Culture. From page one Dance Another performer explained the difference in languages in Africa. He said there are about 90 languages in Africa. He demonstrated the language using another member of the troupe, talking as two people greeting each other, using the native language of West Africa. The troupe is able to remain in the United States in part with a grant from the National Forest Service. Under the direction of master percussionist, Mor Thiam, the group has performed all over the United States, including the White House and the Smithsonian Institute. But in an effort to movie producers to the Kansas prairie, the Senate Labor, Industry and Tourism Committee last week approved a bill that would exempt young actors from child-labor laws. HOW MUCH demand could there be for child, or for that matter adult, actors in Kansas? The state receive about five calls a month from people asking whether Kansas welcomes movie-makers, Cathy Kruzic, director of the state division of tourism, said yesterday. And many of these calls come straight from Hollywood, she said. "If you consider ABC, NBC or CBS small-time operators, then that's what we've been hearing from," she said. "These are major motion picture companies making legitimate requests." One of the first questions asked by movie-makers concerns the availability of children, according to Mary Ellen Reese of the Kansas Department of Economic Development. Reese, who requested the legislation, said she recently had heard from three movie producers who wanted to know about Kansas child-labor laws. the bill now in the Senate would merely put Kansas in time with the times. "We want to be sure that all movies starring children are Granted," she said. Reese said she learned from Kansas Atty. Gen. Robert Stephen that it would be illegal to employ them. But Kruczik said state laws other than child-labor regulations protected children from contributing to pornographic films. The federal government also exempts young actors from child-labor laws, she said, and The Senate bill lists as exceptions to the child-labor law "children employed as actors, actresses or performers in motion pictures, theatrical, radio or television promotions." "Already existing laws would impede in the case of pornography," she said. Already, Kansas child-labor laws do not apply to children who deliver newspapers or messages, do casual labor around the home, work for their parents in "non-hazardous occupations," work CHARLES BERG, associate professor of radio, television and film, said the change in the programming on the station is due to "Unless someone is planning a re-staging of 'Leave It To Beaver,' I don't think a change in child-labor laws will have much effect." Charles Berg, associate professor of media. —Charles Berg, associate professor of radio, television and film in domestic services or work in "agricultural, horticultural, livestock or dairying services." KRUZIC SAID the child-labor law had not prevented many Kansas children from starring in movies, although some had lost the chance to work in commercials. With more and more movie productions looking toward Kansas, however, the child-labor law has been criticized. more lucrative to movie-makers, who sometimes come here for a natural setting or because of strict union laws in Chicago, New York and Los Angeles. One concern of the Legislature is the grade of movies to be made in Kansas, State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, and a member of the Labor, Industry and Tourism Committee, said. But the legislation probably would be of little consequence, he said. "Unless someone is planning a re-staging of Leave It To Beaver, I don't think a change in its programming would be safe." The last movie filmed in Kansas was in 1979, when producers for "Up The Academy" were on location in Salina. Two of the more successful NCAA teams were "In Cold Blood" and "Paper Moon." Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 841 DIET DIET CENTER It is a Natural BEST OUTSTANDING Medical Center Tie In With Us Recreation Services Intramural Track Meet - Thursday, February 25, 7:00-10:00 p.m., Allen Field House - Events: 60, 440, 220 yard dashes; 880 yard run; 880 yard relay; mile relay; high jump; shot put; long jump - Entry deadline is Wednesday, February 24, 5:00 p. m. in 208 Robinson. There is no entry fee. For more information call 864-3548. 98 The World is Coming . Europe TRAVEL CENTER Feb.27th&28th Applications for Student Senate Spring '82 Budget Hearings Now Available in Senate Office Deadline for group application: 1 March at 5 p.m. (no late applications accepted) SOPHOMORES COULD THE NAVY INTEREST YOU IN 2 YEARS PAID TUITION? If you are a sophomore at the University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Two-Year Scholarship. The Navy will even include $100 a month spending money. When you graduate, you will have a job in the fleet as a naval or marine officer. You will train in Nuclear Submarines, Surface Ships. Naval Aircraft or one of many other exciting fields. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF 2 YEARS PAID TUITION Call the Professor of Naval Science at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps (NROTC) Paid Tuition, Spending Money, and a Job. That is Navy ROTC. 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And the price that means more for you on prior year Honda that are still new and in their showroom, or just want one. w and sat in our sun room. So you may get that bike you've always wanted. For even less than its original suggested price N50 EXPRESSE Just look for the bikes tagged Honda Second Chance Sale. And hurry. Before your second chance becomes your last chance. MC50 1298.35 C70 $695.00 NOW EXPRESS Now Only $395.00 OPEN Tues.-Fri.-10:00-6:00 Sat.-10:00-4:00 1811 W 6th Lawrence, KS. 843-3333 HONDA cm $695.00 Horizon HONDA Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 22, 1982 Diaper, liquor found after game By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter The final buzzer sounded. Few wanted to stay around for very long. As the pep band played a mournful "Home on the Range," more than 15,000 spectators made their way to the Allen Field House exits. Abraham Wildcats won the Kansas State Wildcats had won the Saturday afternoon contest on the court. But as the fans made their way home, they left behind much more than just the echo of their last-minute efforts to scream their team on to an unrealized Someone had left a baby diaper in the crow's nest, the upper-most seating section in the house. SECTION II OF THE BOOK Someone else had left behind an empty Windosr Supreme Canadian Whisky bottle in section seven. Blue streamers from stick pompons lay lifeless on the floor of the arena. Eighteen people stayed to pick up the pieces, to clean the arena, as they do after every home basketball game. "They do a bell of a job," said Norm Stuart, facilities operations supervisor for the athletic department. "We've never had a team or anyone else come in here and tell us that the place was dirty," he said. Work for Stuart's crew begins even before the last fan has left. saturday's clean-up was a lesson in efficiency, although the K-State basketball game "is always the dirtiest." Stuart said. The first things to go were the tables and chairs used by the scorers and teams on the west side of the field house. As workers grabbed chairs and piled them on a small lift truck, others climbed under the student bleachers on the north end of the floor, collecting newspapers that had been dropped between the bleachers. There were dozens of University Daily Kansan pages and one page from the Wall Street Journal. Suddenly, a CLACK, CLACK, CLACK, CLACK, CLACK punched at the steadily growing silence in the field where the bleacher were folded against us. Above, workers wearing trash bags in their belt loops climbed to the top seats and began picking up the heavier items left behind-plastic cups, M&M boxes, popcorn boxes, empty and filled paper Coke cups and hot fodd log One worker filled a trash bag, tied it up and expertly rolled it down four flights of stairs to the landing below. "We probably used a case of bags today," Stuart said. "There's 100 bags in a case." As the workers made their way down toward the lower seats, five men with Buck Rogers-like backpacks appeared near the entrance to the silence of the field house was broken. A steady hum filled the arena as the men with the "blowers" walked along each row and blew the smaller debris down to the landings. Popcorn kernels and dust flew into the air and danced in the sunlight streaming in from the windows. The other workers continued their stooping and lifting process below. On the floor, the small rear of a sweeper, the same one used on the football field, reminded the reporters remaining in the press room and at the press table that time was running out for them. The noise of the sweeper did not hamper Steve Physioc, a sportscaster HARVEST RESTAURANT Commercial Cuisine IN THE MARKETPLACE, 114 NEW HAMPTON AVE. W 110-127-8311 3 1/2¢ COPIES Service Beyond Duplication HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. - 842-3610 SNA FILMS TONIGHT THE FILM THAT STARTED THE FRENCH NEW WAVE! for Channel 13 television station in Topeka, as he interviewed Jack Hartman, KState basketball coach, on the southeast end of the court. MICKEY SPILLANE'S LATEST H-BOMB! KISS ME DEADLY RALPH MEEKER Swinging ALBERT BERKER • PAUL STEWART JUAN HERNANDEZ 7:50 p.m. Woodruff $1.50 Inside the upper arena sections, workers with push brombs, including members of the women's track and golf teams, methodically swept the area around the concession stands and pushed dirt to the section entrances. "All the work is done by sections." Stuart said. There are 22 sections in the field house. "After it's all blown down, it's picked up by sections." uply sections. What is thrown out is debris. But some of the things found by the workers can be valuable. caribe reliable. "I found a watch once," Frank Norman, Lawrence senior, said. norman said the watch was a $9 Timex pocket watch. He turned it in to "A lot of people come in and ask about things." Norman said. the ticket office, which is the procedure followed by all workers who find valuable articles left behind. See related story page eight In the past, they have found sunglasses, Hot Wheels cars, sweatshirts, gloves, keys, umbrellas, and whiskey bottles—opened and unopened. "We find all kinds of personal stuff," said J.B. Roy, Lawrence sophomore. "There are a lot of people who could lose a lot of things." Keith Davis, a full-time employee of the athletic department, said he once Money left behind isn't what it used to be, according to Stuart. found a 22-carat gold wedding ring and a 14-carat gold fraternity ring. "We don't find much money anymore," he said. "Three or four years ago you found a lot more." "I turned them in," he said. Mike Stuart, a full-time employee of the athletic department, pulled off his navy blue Nike and looked inside it. I brought his孝堂 today, he said. But D.W. Acker, Lawrence special student, said he found $10 after the Kentucky game. "It was in coins and bills. I find money in the bleachers and on the court," said Acker, who pushes the blue broom across the basketball floor before and during the basketball games. Besides leaving uneaten popcorn on the floor and in the popcorn machine in the press room, the press covering each game leaves behind pencils and pens. Kenny Long, a systems technician with Southwestern Bell, pulled a red and a black marking pen from his shirt pocket. practice "I find pens and throw them into the press room," he said, referring to pens left on the table press. "That way there's always pencils in there." An then there are the whiskey bottles. "We found about a half bag of whiskey bottles today." Davis said whiskey bottles today, but it's sad. He said they usually didn't pick up more than a bag full of bottles. But what the workers do pick up takes only three hours to do. Saturday they worked quickly. The game ended at about 4 p.m. By 6, the arena was dark and silent. "When we leave here it's just like it was when you walked in," Stuart said. The World is Coming ... Alaska Canada TRAVEL CENTER Feb. 27th & 28th The Grinder Man 27th & Iowa 842-2480 Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 11-10 p.m. Fri., Sat.. 11-10 p.m. dine-in 11-1 a.m. drive-thru 7-10 SPECIAL OF THE WEEK 1.99 Mini Meatball Chips Med. Coke dine-in only Tuesday Night Special Tuesday Night Special BUY ONE VISTABURGER GET ONE FREE Vista RESTAURANTS Feb 23 only • 4 pm to close 1527 W. 6th GET ONE FREE Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W. 6th Feb 23 only • 4 pm to close Skin donations from dead help burn patients survive KANSA *CITY*, Kan.- The ability to save is necessary to be able to do it. By TOMHUTTON Staff Reporter Mani M. Mani, Burn Center director at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said Friday that a kidney was saved by donating skin after death. Mani directs the skin donation clinic at the Med Center in connection with his work with burn patients. Human skin, willed to the Med Center after death, is used by Mari to treat severe burns. Patients **who** have third-degree burns can receive skin donations in the form of surgeries for sun "WHEN A SEVERE BURN occurs, the victim loses his primary protection. Mali said "Without a serious illness grow and multiply, causing infection." Donated skin, which is placed over the burned area, is a living remnant of the burn. "The most important asset of this procedure is the time it buys time for the Manage Skin donations differ from other organ donations such as kidneys, because the patient does not actually take the skin into his body, Mani said. There are no problems with skin in the system, but skin is removed after a short period. The storage technique for skin, far different from simple freezing, allows the skin to be preserved at minus 79 degrees without killing the "Cells at that temperature would expand and burst, ruining the use of the skin," Mani said. "We must use cells with no stress to keep the cells from expanding." Although the Med Center has the capability to store skin indefinitely, Mari said, it has been rarely used. The Burn Center had about 65 prime candidates for skin donations last year. However, only about 10 patients, most of whom were children, actually received donations. donations. "It's just a case of non-availability." Man said. The Med Center is the only hospital in the Kansas City area that accepts skin donations. But the amounts received are not nearly enough, Mani said. "TECHNICALLY, WE can take skin from any part of the body, but what we're really interested in is the large sheets of skin," Mani said. Mani said that the initial shock of a family member's death often blurred the reasoning process of the survivors. “Our luck in procuring skin is still bad,” Mani said. “It seems like everyone, even some physicians, have strong prejudices against it. We need to prepare for this kind of thing, and it just goes against the grain.” "The most frequent response we get when we request a skin donation is 'He has already suffered enough,' " Mani said. "That's preposterous, how can someone who is dead suffer anymore?" The State of Kansas provides a method to ease the decision that a family must make in deciding to donate organs. On the back of every driver's license is a space where can be signed over in cast of death. Although the document is not valid after the holder is dead, Mari said, it makes the process easier for the family. Election Information Open Offices: President/Vice President Secretary (a team) Treasurer AURH More Information at your hall desk Filing deadline, Wednesday, February 24, 5:00 p.m. The Association of University Residence Halls monday madness Fast...Free Delivery 841-7900 1445 W 2 3rd St. 841-8002 610 Florida Hours: 4:30-1:00 Sun.-Thurs. 4:30-2:00 Fri. & Sat. Limited delivery area. ©1982 Domino's Pizza Inc. DOMINO'S PIZZA $6.50 Good Mondays only... Pay only $6.50 for a large 16" 1 item. Pizza plus 2 free cups of Pepsi. Price includes tax. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 5/30/82 Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations. Our drivers carry less than $10.00. 19985/8301-2 LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA SIPRING BREAK SPECIAL Coupon ALIGNMENT SPECIAL TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA LA WRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842 7191 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up $18.00 All Japanese Imports Includes: - checking and adjusting toe-in - checking and adjusting of caster (and camber where applicable) - examination of shock absorbers for leaks - inspection of tires for cuts and proper air pressure - 4-wheel drive and mag wheels slightly higher $29.95 TUNE-UP SPECIAL LOCATION INGNITION (included all parts and labor-6 cyl. models slightly higher.) yes! * install new spark plugs * set engene to recommended manufacturer's specifications * adjust carburetor * installation of choke * install new fuel filter/Mazda and Toyota only. * rotary engines not included TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842/191 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up Standard Ignition $36.95 Sanitary ignition (included all parts and labor-6-cyl. models slightly higher.) We'll * install new spark plugs * replace points and cond * replace ignition coils or modified manufacturer's specifications * adjust carburetor * inspect operation of choke * refill fuel tank (liter/Mazdas and Toyota only) * rotary engines not included LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA University Daily Kansan, February 22, 1982 Page 7 ot nearly can take body, but d in is the said a shock of with oftenness of the response we donation suffered "That's one who sand kin is still eems like nysicians, gainst it. pared for just goes not valid ni said, it r for the provides a son that a deciding to of every where in cast of ENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA or and per ntly 6-cyl na zdzdas AZDA 1976 Ron Neugent gasps for air after winning the 1000-yard freestyle at Saturday night's dual between KU and Southern Illinois. Nugent also won the 500 freestyle and swam a leg on the winning 400-yard freestyle relay. JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff In one of its best meets of the year, the KU men's swim team pushed national power Southern Illinois before a 51-31 decision to them Saturday night. "It was a good way to end the season," Coach Gary Kemp said. "They swam really well. We handled our own throughout the meet." SIU swimmers nip Jayhawks Last weekend, the Jayhawks lost to Nebraska 79-34, and Kempf said he didn't want the team to end its dual meet season on a note like that. SIU, rated in the top 15 teams in the nation, jumped ahead of the Jayhawks at the beginning, but were never able to put them away. KU's distance swimmers won their events to keep the meet close. Ron Neugent won both the 1000-yard freestyle and the 500 freestyle, while Bob Vince came in second and By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer While SIU was able to win most of the events, KU stayed in the meet by taking many of the second and third place finishes. "We competed all the way down the line," Kempf said. "Saturday, we competed as a team. We did it together." Kempf referred to Vince's two second-place finishes and one third-place finish as a "tough triple." Our first place finishes for the Jayhawks were Brad Wells, first in the 260 freestyle, and the 400 relay team, Neugent, Wells and Doug Hiemstra. "IT WAS A tough triple," Vince said. "I was happy with the first two, but I was hurting on the third." Vince said the team knew that they could do well against SIU. "Our distance swimmers had been doing good all season. The sprinters are starting to come around." The University Daily In contrast to last weekend's meet in where Kemp said KU was in most of the events at the start, this weekend the teams were in the races at the finish. KANSAN WANT ADS "We won a couple of close races instead of losing them." Kemp said. "They did a good job. They started to swim well. They wanted to swim well." GO The men's team will be idle next weekend while the women travel to Ames, Iowa, for the Big Eight Championships. Call 864-4358 Professional Haircutry for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters CLASSIFIED RATES Call 864-4358 15 words or fewer ... Each additional word Place a want ad one two three four five six seven eight ten years two.50 two.75 two.10 two.15 two.20 money two.50 two.75 two.10 two.15 two.20 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Tues. Set. 12-8 fashion eveland MORRISON STREET 841-6000 H+ | Place 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. Monday Thursday 9 p.m. Tuesday Friday 9 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 9 p.m. Friday Wednesday 9 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed, in person or simply by calling the Korean business office 463-8490. ANNOUNCEMENTS place, in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 864- POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996. tj 843-970E Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. If FOR RENT Call Don's Tax Service for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 841-6983. Appointments available day or night. 3-3 HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished, 14th & 18th on Mass. Only $2 blocks. 14th & 18th on Mass. Reserve your spot. today. Romulus, RIO MIDWEST- mw-faith. 841-1212 or 843-1245. Studios at atmosphere, International meals, careers. Locate office and look for looking for sixteenth group menu furniture. Furnish UTLITIES INCLUDED. Laundry room. Lail: 841-702-692 to campus PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect placement. 1 room, 3 baths. 2 car garage, 2 oar garage, with electric or water/ dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen, quiet surround. Open house weekdays only. Call 842-5275 for additional information. tf THE ETC. SHOP Vintage & Classic Contemporary Clothing And Antique Accessories West of the Candy Store Mon-Sat; 11-5 10 W. 9th 442 8700 Available now. Two bedroom spacious apts with private bathrooms, kitchen, heat and water included. Close campus, and on bus route $33 per month. BROOKLYN BRAVEHIGH 15th & Crestline 842-4300. lease at West Hills Apts. 1 Br. $220 a. h. electricity not included, starting 1. Call 843-2822. 2-26 For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4135. tf ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished furnished apartment immediately. Flexible for plan featuring a living room and see! Located on 31th & 18th. Only two short sheets from the Union. Call 842-455-4345 comfortable apartment-large bedroom, kitchen, bathroom, inexpensive, available immediately. 743-1988. Call anytime and alling. 2-23 people to share home | 4th & Miss +1356 + share of unill. 749-3833 eyes. 2-26 inable immediate Heathered工房 1 immediate imm. W, B.D, water顾 841-5500 841-5500 2-26 bedroom apt. to submit first of March or pril-2010 per month, all utilities paid. lodge to campus (Oread) Contact Margo- t-1-6533 2-23 For rent 2 bedroom apt. Convenient shopping. On bus route. Complete kitchen, central air and heat. Carpeted plus draps. Call 841-8688. 2-26 For sublease, 2 Br. apt. $100 + i.e. Available now. Telephone: 814-8138. -812-28 Sublease 2 bedroom apt. gas paid. Complete kitchen apartment plus draps, central air and windows. Telephone: (814) 8138-7699 adh, close to campus—Room for rent 2 us from campus. Share bath, kitchen. 2-23 1-5 pm, 1-5 pm THE PRESTON MECALL COMPANY 314 N.3rd 811-6057 PT—3½ Rooms-2 blocks from campus— 75 month-ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED. 1.4887 9.29 3 bd. unturn apt. 2260 Close to campus. W/D hookup, deposit required Call 749- 1750 or 841-4201. 3-1 FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION On campus studio apt in Mi Oread Apart- ment, located OLD World Charms. Look at looking West Lawrence. Available March 5. Coffee & Tea. Call (843) 841-6212 or Electric Call (843) 841-6212 or 844-206-5000. RENT SALE-Rent reduced on rooms in large quiet house 1 block from union, smoke alarm, no pets please. Call after 6 a.m. 843-275-6000. Secure environment walk to class fast. ten minute walk from Wescoe. 1 bdm. modern at Redbud adbs, 11th and Mississippi. Low utilities. Call 843-3222 or 842- 3974. PACULTY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3. br. truck house, 212 Drive. All appliances. garage, KU bus route, $450. mn, 84-126, 84-830. 1 Br. Apartment available now, 1000 block of Miss. Call after 5. 841-2623. 2-24 Nice one bedroom house, hardwood floors, close to campus, nice neighborhood. 842- 9917 or 843-1717. 1. Bedroom apartment, Spacious clean. Close to downtown and campus. 200. Utilities Paid. 842-6114 Sunday thru Thurs. after 9:00 pm. . . . 2-26 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them-1). As study guide. Makes sense to use them-1). As study guide.oration. *New Analyst of Western Civilization Notes.* Or read Bookmark, or Oread Bookstore. **if** Mobile Home, 14 x 70, 3 bdmrs. stove + refrigerator, 7 x 10 ahd. $1130 Lot rent is 65.00/month, water paid: 843- 1758 after 5:00 p.m. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-9069. 2900 W. 8th. Four drawer metal letter size file cabinet $35 Kitchen-carpet approx. 31 x 5 double doors $75 Kitchen-carpet plus $75. $125 feet over $406 Must pay for 8-piece furniture 424-4835. Evenings: 843-1771. 2-22 BMW Brand new 1982, 3202, two in stock; immediately delivery. Sanders Lincoln-Mercury. 843-6697 or 843-2383. 3-4 1978 Honda Hawk 400cc automatic. 80 miles on it. Perfect condition. Call 913-796-6766 after 4 p.m. 3-1 1975 Opel Manta, 2-door, Automatic, Fiat Injection. New Heater, Air conditioner & Interior: $1590.00, 864-2004 or 864-5774, 2-24 Guitar, Les Paul copy, Electra, sunburst, good shape, w/case, $100.00, 10 band EQ, $45, 842-9634, 2-23 inail bag with a mineral crystal inside. identify to claim. 841-7833. 2-22 SURPLUS JEPS, CARS. TRUCKS Car-any- value $2143, sold for $100. For informa- tion on purchasing similar bargains call 602-998- 6575 Ext. 3093. Call Refundable. Bookcases, shelves, custom-built 8" or 12" pine or particle board unfinished or stained Jim 842-9949. 2-23 Holiday Plaza Black Fender Musicmaster bass. Excellent sound and condition. This is the best short-neck you have heard $200. Call 812-6750 Hoover washer $200 + electric dryer, $100; prickly new, sink hookup, no special venting, white, perfect for apartments. Call 749-1138 2-23 For Sale - One IBM Selectric II Typewriter Like new - cheap price 824-402-00, 2-25 FOUND Italian Gocciori racing bicycle Brand new. All Campagnolo, Cilnell, braune, 55 cm. Will sacrifice. 110 Hanover Pace 2-23 Apt. 5 New women's clothing, jeans-Calf Strips, Levin Calvin Klein (all $150). Blooms. Oxford shirts and sweaters (all $10.00). Good call. Qual. 842-1583. 2-24 Clarket. Wood Yamahs Brand New sold for $425.00 will sell for $300.00 or best. 842- 5540. 2-23 HELP WANTED Energetic, hardworking, personable waitresses wanted. Must work well under pressure. Hourly wage tips, commission. Gamma membership. Gamma's, Southern Hill Shopping Center, Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Personable. Contact Dan at the Exchange. 842-9539. Stockbroker trainee. College grad—Excerc opportunity for hard work, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individual. PLE- P.O. Box 157 Bank, N.J. 0780- 38. Full, part-time kitchen & restaurant help. Apply in person, 9-5 Sawbucks Sandwich Shop. 1814 W. 23rd. 2-23 CRUISES, RESOURTS, SAILING EXPEDI- MENTS Europe. Cruises Europe. Cruises Europe. Worldwide Su- cer. Careers. Cruise Succ. Cruise Bustle. Cruise 153. 153 Box ©129. CRUISE 9-12 CRUISE 153 Box ©129. CRUISE 9-12 OVERSEAS JOB$ - Summer/year round Europe, S. Ameer, Australia, Astrail. All. Fields. Wide monthly. MCHY. Sightseeing. Del Mar, CA 92625. Box 83- x4- 1- C-3 Del Mar, CA 92625. Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable of owning tools and can participate in cooperation. Call Darryl 841-836-8988. MANAGER OF MEMBERShip AND COMMUNITY APPAIRS to assume responsibility for Chamber committee membership and assistance. Entry level position requires a college degree with strong communication/ and benefit skills. A complete position announcement may be obtained from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, 829 Vermont, Lawrence, MA 01453. LOST Reward for info, or return of Gold coin lost near or in Allen Floodhouse. Sat. 2-13. Minted in Panama, about the size of U.S. piece. Call Marc Mare 843-8022 or 749-3524. NOTICE Basit needl to augment quartet of individuals expressing their interest in TCG Graham Parks Squeers, the Godly, Gadoy/Creme, Kinks. The band is original, original, original, etc. Contact TcG. PERSONAL Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1929. Come in and compare. Willford Skillet Enday. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tf PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- HUG, 843-4821. Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color w/lls Studio. 749-1611. EVERY CAR IN stock .99.95 A DAY FIRST 100 MILE FREE THEN ONLY 86 A MILE The Rt. Shop 10 West 9th (WEST of the CANDY STORE). Vintage and classic contemporary clothing—military coats, junkets, dresses, and lots of items of clothing and clothes. 2-22 Say it on a sweatshirt with custom alk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-1611. Special weekends rates. We are now leasing trucks & vans. We accept Master Card Visa. Located at 705 W.9th Lease one of our cars. We can rent a car a buree home! Reserve your car now. www.carbrook.com Top hats, dorby's, visors, 40'-50' clothes, emurom bands. bow ties. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 51 Indiana. 842-7446. 3-3 LEASE SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, WINTERKAMP, DILLON AND OTHERS Economical packages every weekend and school breakicals *Ski Ec.* Sci Ek. 814-8386 today. MARY KAY COSMETICS-Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. Iff The Kegger-Weekly Specials on Kegge!! Call 841-9450-1610. W 23rd. HEY! Need a ride to Texas Spring Break! I need a far as Austin and need one or two persons to share driving and gas on-road and bus; Call Bill evening at 841-5081. Study Skills Workshop. Emphasis on study for exams and time management. Tuesday, June 25. Jayhawk Education Kansas University. No parking. The Student Assistance Center, 864-404-6447 Clothes and accessories with a touch of charm. Baby's Second Hand Rose, 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-3 Household items for apartment living. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-3 TOM GLEASON—GUILTY. Of expressing an opinion? 2-23 COMMUNITY AUCTION 700. N.H. every Saturday 11 am. Conglomerates accepted Tuesday. Tues. 2-4. 160 commissions. Item available. 941-221. We sell every thing. Looking for a ride everyday to Olathe. Call 782-6391, 782-7179. 2-24 COMPRESIENE HEALTH ASSOCIATES: Free pregnancy testing, early and advanced cut patient abortion; gynecology; contra- natal care; & Rox. Overland Park, PA. (912) 643-3000 (912) 643-3000 LUNDI GRAS ! FEB.22 8-12pm THE WALL HALL OFF THE WALL HALL- ADMISSION - $2.75 DE LA PART DE SERVICES OF SHEENY Free Beer from 8:19 Mark fairmale you need look no further. Mack fairmale you need look no further. The time has come for us to meet matrons. The time has come for us to meet matrons. The time has come for us to meet matrons. The time has come for us to meet matrons. The ching of the clock doth strike seven at 2:22 Nottingham yanker. For here is the place honored in the court of justice. They are honored to serve this deed. HELP - I lost my skin in strong socks. In tough shoes. My life is in danger. I am honored to serve this deed. HELP - I lost my skin in strong socks. In tough shoes. My life is in danger. I am honored to serve this dead. ALL YOU CAN EAT- Stuffed Pig Sunrise Buffalo-$2.99—2210 Iowa-749-2853 2-26 Wanted, someone who loves drinking 250 milchs on Mondays at the Sanctuary 7:00 a.m. Hillel Lunch "Current Issues and David Goldstein, Executive Director Jewish Community Relations Bureau, K. Tuesday, February 20, 09:45am Tuesday, February 23, 12:15 to 1:00 Cork 1, Kansas Union Cafeteria Need ride to Denver or Aspen as soon as possible. Will share expenses. Call Janet after 8:00 pm. 841-2070. 2-26 WANTED Ambulatory female over 21 (must have had a previous marriage) at resort. Always lawful driver type preferred. Before preferred but not mandatory. RADR preferred but not mandatory to your favorite bus driver-Correct choice. Live music—The Exchange. Phil Klein on the guitar Wednesday, February 24, 9:00 pm. 2-24 LOST: Black P-coat at Hatter last Friday. I took blue P-coat by mistake. Please call 843-7590. 2-26 THE EXCHANGE A Private Club Fire Place • Videos Great Drinks at Great Prices 2406 Iowa Memberahips Available SERVICES OFFERED EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 50% ALL-all clothing in showroom 5 days only * February 23 through February 27. Extended hours for this week only 9.99 * Cashier-only for this week only Change, 601 Kasol. 841-6123 2-30 Tired of the high cost of T.G.I.F.? 25k DRAWS this Friday, Feb. 26, 2-6 pm, at THE ENTERTAINER. **SPRING BREAK ESCAPES:** 8 days/7 nights accommodations. Welcome party. Sports activities. Airplanes/motor or motorcycle transportation to Nassau and Niagara. 419. Ford Lauderdale-5139 & Nassau. Boat tours. 6 days/8 nights to Tournai-Park-5139. Tours at Huron-8495, 8500, 8514 more details To know Sturlaan is to Love Younger. Until then Maedgen . . . Your Lawrence 2-22 ALL: newtofu 2.34 TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. CALL 341-699-6601 (f.S.B. in physica, M.A. in mathematics) or call 841-6475 (m.k.for ABK). tf Drafting (charta, magge, etc.) 6 years experiences, competitively prized. Also Script Lettering for M41-7943. 3-8 Schneider Wine & Keg Shop - The finest selection of wines in Lawrenc- largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843- 3212. WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say it? If you buy by The House of Uber and pick up our FREE resume on resumes at the Job Center, 8-4th Floor, 9-3rd Near-Sun. NOON-3 SUN. Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, if we print it, and it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, 520w, and 12w. 2-26 Established band, seeking BASSIST and KEYBOARD play. Steady work. Serious inquiries only. Call 749-0691 or 843-8481. Mandarin tutor; Chinese student with B.A. in Chinese Studies Experienced Call evening 814-4678, Min-Shi. 2-23 مسؤولية الموقع الشخصي copies ROW 4 ENCORE COPY CORPS 3 $ \frac{1}{2} \textcircled{c} $ self service copies 25th and Iowa 842-2001 Grad student to tutor Calc. 115, 116, 121, 122 Very reasonable rates: Call 841-4031 after 5.90 pm. 2-23 Children's Learning Center announces an evening event with an evening catering service, 2:30 pm to midnight. elementary age. Daycare 6:45 am to 6:80 pm. pre-school age. Phone 812-216-8 more information. DIET ANALYSIS—Concerned about your hair and nutrition? Get a comprehensive Diet Evaluation. It's simple and inexpensive. 842-2278 2-26 It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing 843-5820. U TYPING Experienced typist. Tern papers, these, all miscellaneous. IB Correcting the manuscript. Eri or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone: 843-5654 Mrs. Wright. tf TYPING PLUS. These, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. Assistance with composition, grammar, spelling, reading. Travel to foreign student or Americans. 814-6254. Experienced typet. Theses, term papers, e. ibm Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting 5200 CD, 843-765; tf For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-4980. tt Experienced typist-thesis, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selective Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-210. tt Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting electric. Call Donna at 842-2744. **if** Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric, Elite or Pica. 842- 5644 2-26 Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore Call 842-2601 for more info 2-26 Quality typing and word processing... able at Encore Copy Corps 25th and Iowa. 842-2001. 2-26 Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call evealings. 841-please. tf TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Corp. Selectrite, full-time tiff, spelling correction to composition assistance. Emergency service available. 841-2607. Former medical research secretary will typeterm papers, theses, books. Call Nancy 841-5802. 2-23 Would like to type dissertations, terms, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 3-4 Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. Call 842-3203. 2-4 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE 842-2507 Quality typing and word processing. Reasonable price includes revisions. 841-2781 after 5.30. 2-22 Professional typing. Dissertations. these, term papers, resumes. legal, et al. IBM Correcting Selective. Deb 843-8992. 2-26 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. 842-2501. WANTED Wanted a bridge expert with patience, patience and wanting to teach casual bridge lessons on intermediate afternoon for beginners or intermediate bridge players. C$-22 835-046 Male roommate to share 3 bedroom no...13th & Mass. $118/mo. + 1/3 utilities + deposit. Liberal, smoker okay. 843-6319 2025 Need place to live? 3-br. house $5.33 + 1/3 ult. Close to campus. Prefer female & non- smoker. 841-9779. 3-12 Looking for a nonamusing female roommate to share a 2-bedroom apartment: $140.00 + utilities. Call 841-3891. 2-24 Roommates wanted: Graduate student in exercise science needs to two persons for training and ginnning June or August, 1982. Must be non-military. Requires weekends and weekdays. 2-22 Roommate. Two bedroom house East Lawrence 975.70-50 plus 1% utilities. Can assume lease in May. 841-7915. 2-24 Share 3 bedroom house next to campus. Reasonable. Call for details. 843-4842. 2-26 Roommate needed immediately. Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment. 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 + ½ utilities. 842-5591. 2-26 SCREEN THE DORM! Roommate needed: non-smoker student, reasonably clean Private room, $137 + 1.9Utilities 89-281. | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Roommate | Roommate | Roommate | | Student | Student | Student | Classified Heading: Write Ad Here:___ BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kensons 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Name: Classified Display: Address: 1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00 Phone: ___ Dates to Run: to | | 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 | --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 22, 1982 Sports Defense leads K-State Jayhawks beaten, 63-53 By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editor The Kansas-Kansas State game Saturday had everything you would expect, an intrastate game that was more competitive. But in the second half, the roof fell in on them when they went scoreless for the first 84 of the game. DURING THAT time the Jayhawks missed eight shots from the field, missed two free throws and committed three turnovers, while one an off 10 points to open up a 13-point lead. 40-27 "Obviously when you don't score in the first eight or nine minutes of the second half, you're going to have some problems," Kansas Coach Shaun Williams said. "You have to take good shots. They just won't fall." "Maybe we wanted it too bad," said co-captain David Magley, who led the Jayhawks with 19 points and grabbed a career-high 15 rebounds. "It didn't go down. That happens sometimes." nowever, according to Owens, that wasn't the turning point of the game. "I think that the turning point of the game was when we closed it to 22-all," he said. "We had the "Then we let them slip out with a six-point lead at halftime." THE JAYHAWKS tied the game at 22 with a real crowd-pleasing play. After the Jayhawks came up with a steel, Tyke Peacock, cutting off the ball, and Grant turn before dashing off to Mackay for a layup. From that point on in the first half, the Jayhawks could score only two points in the last 3:35, which enabled the Wildcats to open up a 30-24 lead. After intermission, it was all downhill for the Wildcats and up a 10-point lead, 57-38. KU was plagued by an additional problem in the second half when Tony Gau, suffering from a bruised calf muscle that is developing into shin splints, could only play nine minutes. "TVE HAD THE injury since September." Guy said, and he sighed, my leg that just *would* hurt and words were In the 28 minutes Guy played, he scored just 4 points, but he handed out 5 assists and had 2 It was Kansas State's defense in the game that proved to be the difference. the wucwuca offense held the Jayhawks to hitting only 32 percent from the field in the game. See related story page six With the victory, the 16th-ranked Wildcats upped their Big Eight record to 8-4 and 18-6 overall while the Jayhawks fell to 4-8 in the conference and 13-11 overall. THE JAYHAKWS, who are virtually assured of playing on the road in the first round of the Post-Season Tournament, must try to get back some of the momentum they had earlier in the season against Oklahoma and Iowa State this week. "The next two games we just have to come out and play as hard and as aggressive as any team can for 40 minutes," Guy said. "I think that's the only way we can be successful now." "We have to come back," Magley said. "We still can think we win the tournament." Center Kelly Knight, who returned to the startling lineup against the Wildcats, said, "We have come to out and be ready to play. We're ready to go." But we're always flat at the beginning of the game." JAYHAWK NOTES: The startling time of next Saturday has been prompt the Iowa State College basketball team. KANSAS David Magley is fouled by Kansas State's Lafayette Watkins in Saturday's game. Magley scored 19 points and grabbed a career-high 15 rebounds, a the Javahwaks were beaten by the Wildcats 63-53. JOHN HANKAMMER/Kansan Staff high 15 rebounds per Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Team W L W. L. Pet. GB New York 34 19 16 17 18 Boston 27 15 17 18 New Jersey 27 28 49 13 Washington 27 28 49 13 Houston 34 31 43 16 Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee 39 14 736 Atlanta 28 28 641 Dallas 28 30 444 Indiana 24 11 436 Chicago 19 13 458 Chicago 19 14 628 Cleveland 21 28 27 Los Angeles 27 17 685 Seattle 36 18 967 Golden State 18 16 57 Portland 28 24 538 Phoenix 28 24 538 San Diego 15 17 23 San Antonio Houston Dover Dallas Ulah Kansas City 34 18 654 29 34 347 28 34 8% 18 18 340 18 35 340 18 35 16% 18 35 340 18 35 16% New York 122nd, H婆姆 106th Arizona 118th, Dallas 113th, Chicago 97th Indiana 118th, New Jersey 107th Indiana 118th, Seattle 105th Seattle 105th, Boston 100th Team W L W L Pct. GB Missouri 12 12 13 1% Kansas State 6 6 6 4% Oklahoma State 7 5 583 4% Nebraska 6 6 600 4% Okla State 6 6 600 4% Kansas 4 8 333 2% Lewis State 4 8 250 8% Columbia 3 10 189 Georgetown = 12, Mlissauga = 43, Missouri = 15 Kansas State = 16, Kansas = 53 Iowa State = 62, Nebraska = 61 Team NY Islanders W 40 L 14 T GF 69 GB 186 Pts Nationals 31 14 16 FG 181 GA 56 NY Rangers 38 22 29 10 222 230 66 Pittsburgh 32 22 29 10 222 230 66 New York Jets 24 24 24 24 242 242 66 Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Patrick Division montreal 35 11 14 81 281 173 79 Boston 35 11 14 81 244 179 64 Buffalo 33 18 10 233 188 168 Qubec 33 18 10 233 172 168 Houston 28 18 28 272 156 164 Campbell Conference Minnesota 24 19 18 188 220 60 Oklahoma 25 30 18 288 261 54 Texas 20 30 17 288 261 54 Winnipenny 20 77 12 284 261 52 Toronto 20 77 12 284 261 52 New York 17 72 12 284 261 52 Detroit 17 32 12 284 261 46 Edmonton 39 13 11 13 11 241 243 69 Calgary 29 12 14 16 24 264 284 Vancouver 23 25 11 12 121 218 243 Los Angeles 26 15 11 12 120 218 245 Toronto 13 38 11 11 198 276 37 Watson wins Los Angeles Open Washington, 6; Winnipeg 5 Buffalo, 6; Calgary, 7; Detroit 5 Boston, 1; New York 4; New York Rangers 4 Pittsburgh, 4; New York Islanders 3 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W L W Pct. GB New York 18 18 5 74 Pittsburgh 18 18 764 10% Baltimore 18 8 992 10% Buffalo 14 13 519 10% Cleveland 8 16 360 10% New Jersey 8 16 360 10% Philadelphia 7 16 30% 10% St. Louis 21 15 498 - Wichita 21 16 615 - Denver 10 14 458 - Memphis 10 18 357 12% Phoenix 10 18 333 12% Baltimore 10 18 296 12% "I made a putt I shouldn't have made, and I won the tournament," the 33-year-old Watson said. "I just wanted it. I wanted it very badly. I wanted for awhile, and this feels good all over." Bv United Press International Watson climaxed a brilliant comeback by sinking a 43-foot bird putt on the third hole of sudden death to defeat Johnny Miller and capture the $300,000 Los Angeles Open. LOS ANGELES—It had been eight months since Tom Watson experienced victory and when the dry spell ended yesterday, he showed his obvious relief. Watson and Miller finished the 72 holes at 13- under-par 271, after Watson began the final round at 9-under, two strokes behind Miller and Tom Weiskof. Walton earned $45,000 for the victory, $21,600 more than Miller, who refused to be interviewed Wiskopch struggled to a 2-over 73 yesterday and finished along in third place at 9-under. WEEKEND RESULTS Pittsburgh 5, Cleveland 4 and New York 10. Photos 7 After Miller and Watson carped on the 15th and 16th holes in sudden death, they moved to the par-5, 61-3-and 17th. Watson's third shot was blocked by Miller and Dropter dropped his third shot 10 feet away. Watson then rolled his long putt in for a birdie and Miller's attempt slid by the right side of the cup. He dropped his putter in disgust. It was Watson's 26th tour victory and boosted the four-time player of the year's 1982 earnings to $72,484. It was his first victory of the year, his last coming in the Atlantic Classic last June. PETER KING Tom Watson Minnesota beats women's basketball team By GINOSTRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor The Minnesota Gophers use a big first half to band the KU women's basketball team their second straight loss, 73-57, Saturday night in Minneapolis, Minn. The Jayawhacks came out sluggish in the first half, and the Gophers, who had lost all six previous games they had played against the Jayawhacks, returned to the game in the first half to lead at the intermission 38-27. "WE DIDN'T come out ready to play, and they did," guard Angie Snider said. "It too us an opponent." The Jayhawks could not close the gap in the second half, as the Gophers ran their record to 12-8 with the victory. The 16-point loss was the first time the Jayhawks were beaten by 10 or more points. "We weren't getting back on defense," miher said. "They got 15 to 20 points on layups because they were better." The Jayhawks struggled in most aspects of the game. They shot just 35 percent from the field on 23 of 65 shooting, compared to 52 percent on 33 of 64 shooting for Minnesota. THE ONLY thing worse than KU's shooting was its rebounding. The Jayhawks were outbreded by the Gophers 54-27. Before the Bengals went up against an outbred rebounding its opponents, 44-14 a game. "They had a couple of big girls that did the job," Sindler said. "We didn't do what we had to Snider led the Jayhawks with 15 points. Tracy Claxton, the Jayhawks leading rebounder and scorer, had 12 points. Chris Stewart added 11 and Angie Taylor 10 for Kansas. The 15-13 Jayhawks, who post-season hopes are all but finished, travel to K-State tomorrow to play the Wildcats. The Wildcats beat the Jayhawks 83-74 in their previous meeting on Jan. 26. In that game, Claxton had 23 points and 15 rebounds. Freshman sensation Laura Coenan led the Gouthers with 30 points and 17 rebounds. Barb Meredith chipped in 12 and Marty Dahlen 10 for Minnesota. The Jayhawks will close their season Friday against the Creighton Blue Jay in Allen Field Rome People 9:04 0, Angie Singer 8:14 3, Tracy Clemont 6:04 12, Angie Taylor 9:04 10, Clair Stewart 7:51 11, Barbara Adams 2:3-6, Sybra Holda 1:2-3, Leonora Taylor 0:4-0, Totals 12:11-57 Bart Meredith 04:12, Marty Dabbell 42:10, Laura Corman 14:20 2-4-30, Christine Durand 2-4, Debbie Huntzer 32:28, Mary Drussen 1-1, 4.3, Cathy Kulianum 0-4,0, Dense Freese 2-4, 6.4, Crystal Boles 1-4, Total 33+17 (4) 27:30 - Kansas 27-35-39 Minnesota 36-35-73 Minnesota Total Funds: Kannan 18 Minnesota 18 Technical Funds: none --in the number two match. In the number three match, freshman Steffanie Dicke was defeated by Karen Gibbs, 7-5, 6-3; Senior Corey Nason lost to Maine in the number four match, 6-3, 6-4, and senior Shawn Wilson fell to Jan Laudberack, 2-6, 7-6, 3-6, in the number five match. Wilson captured a 17-15 tie-breaker in winning the second set of her match. KU tennis team falls to Shockers Sports Writer By GARY GRIGGS Despite the outcome of the match, Jayhawk coach Kathy Merrion was pleased with her team success. The Kansas Jayhawk women's tennis team made its spring debut Saturday afternoon in an indoor match against the Wichita State Wolfpack at the Kansas Jayhawks' way as they fell 7-4 to the Shockers. "The girls really gave 100 percent and that is all I cared of," she said. "I was really happy." "This was a big improvement from when we played them last fall. Wichita State is probably one of the better teams we will play this spring, and I thought we held our own with them." GRABBING THE other win was the number two doubles team of junior Maureen Gullifol and sophomore Marn Jensen, who defeated the team of Susan Dean and Molly Maine, 6-3, 1-4, 6-2. "Maireen and Marn simply played a great match," Marn said. "They really are a super star." In singles matches, Gulloff lost to Sandy Hawkins at 5-6, number one position. Freshman is a Runner. The number one doubles team of Willson and Dicke was defeated by Sadder and Gibbs, 6-3, 6-2. The number three doubles match won was by Robinson, a twin, who defeated Rumpel and Nason, 6-3, 6-3. GUILFOIL AND Naason seemed satisfied with the team's performance, considering it was their own. "We were a little shaky since it was our opening match, but that is only normal," Guilfoil said. "We lost some pretty close matches, although the scores might not indicate that. We needed to point the wees needed to. Give Wichita State credit though, they have a real good team." "We wanted we to win, but everybody gave it their best," Nason said. "I think we need to be more mentally tough. We could also stand some more running and conditioning so our endurance was better." According to Merrion, the match was a good learning experience. "YOU COULD tell it was our first match," she said. "We did some things well, but more than that, we didn't." improve ourselves. We definitely need to show more intensity in our play. "We felt going into the match that we were physically ready, but we found out elsewhere," she said. "We still have to go, but as long as the girls are working hard, we'll be okay." KU plays its final inado match of the spring this weekend when they travel to Springfield, Mo., to play in the Southwest Missouri State Invitational. Teams compete besides KU and SWMTS will be Tulsa University and Stephens College from Columbia, Mo. WICHITA STATE 7, KANSAS 2 Sandy Sailer, Wichita State, defeated Maureen Guilfoil, Kansas, 63-60. Susan Dearm, Wichita State, defeated Laura Runnels, Kansas, 64-3. Karen Gibba, Wichita State, defeated Steffanie Dicke, Kansas, 7-4. No Impressions Molly Maine, Wichita State, Defeated Corey Nason, Kansas, 6-3 No. $15 Signs Jan Launderback, Wichita State, defeated Shawn Wilson, Kanaas 6d, 6d, fd, 6d Liz Jones, Kansas, defeated Cindy Baker, Wichita State, 24-6, 1-4. Sandy Saddle-Karen Gibbs, Wichita State, deferred Steffanie Dicke-Wilson, Kanson, 63-62. Maureen Gulford-Martin Jensen, Kanaas, defeated Susan Deam-Maline Maine, Westhill 6-3, 1-4, 6-2 No 3 Doubles Greta Simens-Cindy Paula, Wichita State, defeated Laura Sigma Sienna-Cindy Pauls, Weibla State, defeated Laura Renner-Colemae Nawakam, Kannas 63-63. 63-63. etc. Intramurals Basketball Greek Men Trophy League (Playoffs) Delta Chi 38, Sigma Chi #18 Delta Chi 39, Sigma Chi #18 Fj41 J45, Alma Alpha II 29 Delta Sigma Chi A 236 Delta Sigma Chi B 236 Sigma Nu 42, Delta Upsilon #21 Phi F41 Kappa Terta 33 Phi F41 Kappa Terta 33 Beta F41, Teta Kappa Terta 33 Teta Kappa Epsilon 36 Phi F41 Kappa Terta 36 Delta Upsilon #43, Phi Beta Terta 36 Tarantulas 46, Sixers 39 1 L's 2, The All-Stars 0 McCollum 6 West 45, Gunners 43 Rick's Running Rubber 69, Law School 44, Football Phi 54, Saratoga 38 The Inferno 12, Hurricane 2, Hurricane 68 Backyard Basketball 68, South Start 30 Backyard Basketball 58, South Start 30 Taylor's 50, The Inferno 41 Hortonstg 14, College St. 41 Greek Women Rockesta 25, Viscosity 20 Erickson Trucking 33, The Thumpers 28 Creek Man Sigma Nu #2.2, Dragon 0 Fantasia 32, Rallers 29 Ballers 30, The Resistors 22 Tris Delta 25, Alphas Delta 30, Galmanura Della 4 Alphas Delta 31, N3.7 Alpha Gamma P14 Alphas Delta 32, N3.8 Alpha Gamma P15 Kappa Kappa Gamma 25, Tris Delta 15 Delta 14, Galmanura Della 8 Delta 14, Galmanura Della 10 independent women Bucks defeat Kings By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Marques Johnson scored 28 points to help the Milwaukee Bucks extend their winning streak to 12 games with a 110-104 victory yesterday over the Kansas City Kings. Brian Winters and Bob Lanier added 15 points apiece, Quinn Buckner 14, Patt Cummings 13 and Mickey Johnson 12 for the Bucks, who have now won eight games on the road and are 10-4 in February. Milwaukee outscored Kansas City 20-5 during the opening six minutes of the fourth quarter to take a 98-41 lead, and the Kings could never get closer than five points thereafter. Steve Johnson scored 24 and Mike Woodson 20 to pace Kansas City, which saw its own two-strike run. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN ursan Staff ounds, as n hopes morrow meat the on Jan. s and 15 en 10 for Friday en Field Tuesday, February 23, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 102 USPS 650-640 maxton 6 0-0 a Adkins 2 ails 23 11-16 Coenan 14 2 8, Mary ese 2 0-0 4. to show we were sewise." as long xay." .27 30----57 .38 35----73 Is: none. s, Kansas. spring engfield ri State KU and tephens il, Kansas. e. Kansas, ansas, 6-3. on, Kansas Re, 2-6, 6-1. n scored n extend n 110-104 lings. 5 points s 13 and ave now are 10-0 Steffanie during charter to ever get an Dearn- ed Laura odson 20 wn two- Time for a look Group's future may hinge on study By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter The Student Senate will evaluate the Associated Students of Kansas during the next two weeks for the first time ever, David his student body president, said yedeker. The evaluations will help senators decide whether KU should remain a member of ASK. "Basically the evaluation represents a fact-finding mission to inform the Student Senate how we can best represent our goals in Legislature." Adkins said. Adkins said some of the problems ASK had were that its administrators were students, and as such, changed offices early. Students also do not have enough money to donate to political campaigns, he said, and they do not use their votes to their advantage. Because members of the Senate had questioned ASK's effectiveness, Adkins wrote a list of fact-finding guidelines to determine how much information about ASK to present to the Senate. Adkins and David Welch, student body vice president, will write letters and survey student groups to determine whether ASK is the most effective student lobbying organization, or whether another method of lobarbism should be considered. But Maria McDougal, student senator and an ASK member, disagged with Adkins' views. "I don't like it coming from him," he McDougal said. "He just using it because he was going to do something." She said Adkins had spoken in favor of Senate allocating money to ASK for a second KU campus director. But he changed his mind about the organization after attending ASK's state legislative assembly in Topeka last week. McDougal participated in ASK was the student students could get involved in student policy. "Why not an evaluation of all the other grounds Senate funds?" McDougal said. In his evaluation, Adkins will ask the present and past ASK leaders to submit statements detailing their personal evaluations of the organizations' strengths and weaknesses, long term goals, anticipated needs and areas in which they seek to affect change. These leaders include Mark Tallman, executive director; Steve Linberger, administrative assistant; and John Keightley, KU campus director. PART OF those responses would have to See ADKINS nage 5 ASK's influence limited, reps sav By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter TOPEKA—the young man rises before a legislative committee. Testifying on an issue that may not directly involve students, he hears arguments from students of Kansas urges this committee . . . But do legislators listen when ASK speaks? Overwhelmingly, legislators say they do. But many of them think that ASK, a student lobby based in Topeka, defeats itself by overthrowing the dead issues such as the severance tax and proposed state holiday for Martin Luther King Jr. "They are effective when they lobby for issues that deal with students." State Rep. Mike Glover said. "But they lose their credibility when they lobby in other areas." The credibility and effectiveness of ASK has raised questions at member institutions, where students pay an involuntary 40-cent fee each semester to support the group. "If students are going to be part of the political process, they're going to have to be organized," Solbach said. "Higher education programs only if it has support from all over the state." State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said a KU split from ASK would be a mistake. Admitting that the Legislature regarded ASKJobbers less seriously than other jobbarians, Solbach said group selection was effective because of its state wide representation. Any break-up in ASK would cause competition among the state's universities, SCHOLARS. And although the efforts of ASK do not always produce concrete results, the group's presence in a Legislature that might other-words be worth $14,000 from KU, he said. Sobach was one of about 10 legislators who said yesterday that ASK was valuable in the war. But Senate Minority Leader Jack Steinerge, D-Kansas City, said those legislators were merely concerned with student votes. "I should be politically smart and say, yes, we appreciate ASK's efforts. But if you're spending $1,000 on ASK out of student fees, I am in a lot better way to spend that money." Steinerge said legislators would be more influenced by the lobbying efforts of particular students than by those of ASK. KU students should be spared the funding of ASK and given the responsibility of lobbying their local legislators, he said. See ASK page 5 I am a teacher. I teach math and science in the school. I also help with homework. I love to work with students and make them feel comfortable and confident. Hobart Woody seems at home in the Nuclear Reactor center near Learned Hall. He should—he has operated the nuclear reactor for 20 years. See related story page 2. --- Two men bask in the unseasonably warm weather yesterday afternoon on a pier at the ice-covered Clinton Lake. Weather A large bird wearing a scarf is walking on a grassy field with a sunny sky in the background. CLOUDY It will be cooler today, with cloudy skies and temperatures reaching the high 60s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will switch to the north tonight at 10 to 20 mph, with the lows in the middle 20s. Tomorrow will be cloudy and colder with temperatures from 35 to 40 degrees. It will be warmer Thursday with highs in the 40s and little chance for precipitation remains for the rest of the week. State considers new formula for determining KU budget By ANN WYLL Staff Reporter BVANN WYLIE State officials may use KU full-time equivalency enrollment to determine the University's budget, Martin Jones, associate director of business affairs, said yesterday. But some members of the state Senate Ways and Means Committee said they were satisfied with a formula for planning university budgets that did not include the FTE approach. The FTE is determined by dividing the total number of undergraduate student hours by 15; the total number of law student hours by 12; and the total number of graduate student hours by nine, and adding the three numbers, said Michael A. associate dean of admissions and records. The FTE for the University of Kansas is 20,499 this semester, 401 less than last year. Gov. John Carlin suggested in his proposed budget that the Legislature should use FTE to decide how much money universities get this year. Jones said. The formula-funding approach that the Legislature is using now, called the corridor approach, is based on the quality of semester hours, not on the quantity. Jones said. UNDER THIS approach, the Legislature gives the university certain students, such as graduate students, to attend U.S. colleges. as microbiology, because they cost more to teach The next budget hearing will be tomorrow in a Senate Way and Means subcommittee. The FTE-based formula was used four or five years ago. Jones said. The reason for this semester's decrease in FTE may be that more students work during school and take fewer academic hours to make up for the hours they spend working, Kelly said. A slight decrease in academic hours for many individual students can make a big FTE decrease. "Take 3,000 students, if they're taking 14 hours (rather than 1), you're dropping 3,000 hours." Martin said he did not know how much money he was allocated for each FTE student under Curtin. Although the governor suggested the formula change, the legislature makes the final decision about which formula to use and how much money the University gets, Martin said. SOME STATE senators are satisfied with the current formula. "I think that last year we made a commitment to go with the corridor system for at least a three-year period," said State Sen. Merrill Werts, R-Junction City, a Aways and Means Committee member. "I think we should stick with it." See FTE page 5 Union plagued by bad-check increase By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter Ferguson said the increase in bad checks probably contributed to the economic weakness she was fearful of. The Kansas Union has been saddled with $15,000 in bad checks so far this year, and the debt may deepen as the economy worsens, a former director of the Kansas Union, said yesterday. He said that the students who caused bad check problems were in a small minority, "I would take a guess that there is no more than 1 percent of the student body who are guilty of this. Most of the students at KU are good on their checks," Ferguson said. There are four main causes of bad checks, he said. The most common reason is a banking error. The second cause is that students have mistaken figures on their bank records. The third reason is that students think their parents have deposited money in their accounts. Ferguson said the general policy of KU's banking services was that when a student wrote a bank account KU sent the student to the credit union. The fourth reason, and most important, is students make withdrawals when they know something is wrong. "Fifteen to 20 people were taken to the district attorney's office in Douglas County last If the person does not respond after two letters, he will be summoned before the district attorney. "Once they were taken to the district attorney, it's up to the D.A. to determine what type of punishment should be enforced," he said. "It's not a collection of money policy." He said that considering the volume of checks and the burden, KU's problem was not as big it could be. "We have 24,000 students on this campus, and although we have $15,000 outstanding in bad loans, we will have no problem." Ferguson said that if it was feasible, he would eliminate the fee imposed on students when they left. "Up to two years ago we had a 10-cent fee charge on cashing checks," he said. "However, back then we were only losing $2 to $3,000 in bad checks. All of a sudden it jumped up to $10,000 and has remained in the $10,000 to $20,000 range ever since." He said the economy was the main reason for the jump in bad checks. One thing he did was realize that the fee had to be increased because of the increased number to "The fee has always been a way to make up for the bad checks that we receive." Ferguson said. "We had to raise it to 20 cents because the increase in bad checks warranted it. Ferguson said there were ways to beat having to pay the service fee. Furthermore, Ferguson said that he did not foresee any additional increases. "I if we raised the fee to a quarter, I'm sure that many student would start complaining. I believe that there is a certain stigma that students have in them they had to pay a quarter to a cash check." "I feel that you have to draw a limit somewhere, and increasing the fee any more would be unfair for the majority of students who use the system properly," he said. "There have been some complaints by students against the fee, but after we talk to them, most of them realize that it's our safeguard." "If you use one of the local bank credit cards then you don't have to pay," he said. "Also, if you buy something in the bookstore you are not charged for cashing checks." Ferguson said the reason behind this was the banking service needed to impose a limit on personal checks or an enormous amount of cash checks that checks would be placed on the services' shoulders. Another source of student complaints was the $25 limit on cashing personal checks. "We like to accommodate as many students as possible, and I feel that the $25 personal check option is helpful." "If we didn't set a limit on checks then we would have to stock the bank with a ton of money, which would create security problems at the bank. You can't spend the amount of money in the Kansas Union at nighttime." A problem recently brought to Ferguson's attention was the "breaking of the bank" at the Satellite Union on Friday afternoons and Saturdays. "I've been aware that the Satellite Union runs out of money every once in awhile. However, if this is a regular Friday occurrence then the Satellite Union will be alleviated immediately." Ferruison said. "This problem shouldn't be happening on Friday afternoon because that is an essential day for students, but I can see the bank running dry if an abundance of students use the facility. "However, it should be corrected as quickly as possible after the money runs out. The bank should close." Ferguson said he could not be so confident that the bank would not run out of money on Saturday. "On Saturday I can't be confident that the bank won't run out because our office is closed and we usually put a minimal amount of money in the bank—again for security reasons." Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 23, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Reagan, governors negotiate new federalism proposals WASHINGTON - President Reagan said the nation's governors yesterday he was ready to negotiate on his "new federalism" despite their rejection of key proposals for the states to take over most welfare and food stamp programs The governors' sentiments were echoed by several local government groups, including the National Association of Counties, which adopted a position similar to the state chief executives' on the new federalism plan. "I think there is the beginning here of a pretty good romance," said Gov. Bruce Babbit, D-Ariz., after meeting with the president. He was the chief governor to oppose transferring welfare programs to states, saying "the safety net ought to be a national function." The governors said they would pick up the cost of other federal government programs if Washington would pay the states' share of Medicaid. Although most governors said they were pleased with Reagan's reaction toward their scaled-down version of his program, they said Reagan made no promises about what would be in the legislation he hoped to send Congress within six weeks. The governors will hold a final session of their winter meeting today to formally adopt their revised version of the president's plan, which they will release on Tuesday. Williams denies knowing victims ATLANTA—A nervous Wayne Williams testified at his murder trial yesterday that he had never met the two young blacks he is accused of killing. Williams, called as his defense team prepared to wrap up its case in the eight-week-old trial, wasted no time in challenging the only motives presented by the prosecution for the犯害murders of Jimmy Ray Payne and Leroy Dillen. Williams also faced a 22-month period. Prosecutors have linked Williams to 10 other killings. "Aim 'no way I'm homosexual," protested Williams. "I don't have no grudge against them as long as they keep their hands to themselves and Asked by Alvin Binder, defense attorney, about a prosecution witness's claim that Williams fondled him sexually, the defendant replied, "He's a He also denied testimony from another witness who said he saw Williams holding hands with Caterer on the night that prosecutors think Caterer was guilty. Cooke immune from court-martial WASHINGTON—The U.S. Court of Military Appraisal ruled yesterday that 2nd Lt. Christopher Cooke could not be prosecuted for passing missile secrets to the Soviets. Cooke was discharged from the Air Force and released from prison. The appeals court, which is a civilian court, said Cooke, a 26-year-old former deputy commander of a Titan II missile site in Kansas, could not be court-martialed because he was offered immunity to cooperate with authorities. The court, which decided 2-1, was highly critical of the way the military handled the case. The Air Force "created reasonable expectation that if he satisfactorily cooperated with command in matters concerning national security, there would be no risk of any harm." The Air Force released a statement saying that Cooke had left the Air Force under conditions "other than honorable." Polish militants face treason trial WARSHA, Poland—In the first big political trial since martial law was declared, four leaders of a militant anti-communist dissident group, charged with trying to overthrow the government, went before a military court yesterday. At the same time, a government security official warned that the regime might be under criminal mental law restrictions if what he called acts of torture and subversion is not avoided. The indictment said the dissidents passed sensitive information to the West and were "financed and supported" by "hostile centers of foreign subversion"—a code phrase for Western intelligence services and radio stations like Radio Free Europe. PAP, the official Polish news agency, published one of the harshest attacks on Lech Walessa, the interned Solidarity Union leader, since the imposition of martial law in December. The test, administered to civilians on a broad scale for the first time, was undertaken to measure the quality of recruits in the all-village force (VMF) of Afghanistan. WASHINGTON-Military recruits reread better than the average civilian in qualification tests, according to a Pentagon study released yesterday. Critics of the volunteer force, which started in 1973 when the draft ended, have charged that military recruits were less skilled than the general. The study indicated that recruits fared better than civilians in mathematics and verbal skills. In the tests of civilian men and women, whites averaged 56 percent, blacks 24 percent and Hispanics 31 percent. LONDON - Day-long talks on voluntary staff reductions to save the Times and the Sunday Times taken in connection with Rupert Murdock, publisher, and 101 clerks workers. London papers fire 210 workers Murdock, who is calling for 600 resignations to save the papers, maintains that with 2,600 employees, the newspapers are so overstaffed that they are "bleeding to death" financially. He said he would lose more than $27 million on their operation this year. LIBERAL—Contestants failed to break the world pancake-eating record yesterday in pre-Lenten festivities that climax today with a pancake footrace between the women of Liberal and their counterparts in Olney, England. Traditional pancake gala continues Murdoch's announcement, issued after 10 hours of negotiation, left the unions with few options besides accepting Murdoch's demands for staff reduction or staging a strike that would almost certainly lead Murdoch to shut down both historic newspapers. Every Shrove Tuesday since 1951, the women of Liberal and Oline have donned traditional dresses, aprons and head scarves to race down the streets of their respective towns and compete for the international pancake championship. English legend says the race was started in Otney in 1445, after a woman made a last-minute dash to church carrying a skillet and a pancake as the horse. Disc jockey, 'the fifth Beatle,' dies LOS ANGELES—Murray "the K" Kaufman, the king of rock 'n' roll jockeys who anticipated the British rock invasion in the early 1960s and was dubbed "the fifth Beatle" by George Harrison, died Sunday of cancer. He was 60. Murray the K, perhaps the first American disc jockey to grasp the importance of the Beatles' popularity, led a contingent of thousands of screening teenagers to meet the "fab four" when they arrived in New York in 1964 for their first U.S. tour. Nuclear Reactor Center declared safe By ANNE CALOVICH and LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporters One student's complaint has caused the vice chancellor for academic affairs to question the safety of the Nuclear Reactor Center. "Our radiation safety officer has inspected the building thoroughly and has certified it as safe for human habitation according to all of the standards. Dennis Tarba, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said yesterday. "For this semester, I am confident it is safe." However, Teddi McCullough, Lawrence junior, said she dropped her biology class, Environment and Human Cancer, last week because it was held in the reactor center, which is near Learned Hall. "I'ts my decision to fly in an airplane, 'it's my decision to watch a color TV, but it's not my decision to go to a nuclear plant.'" He answered. I dropped the class." McCullough said." The reactor, in the south end of the THE COMPLAINT reached Tacha, who contacted the radiation safety officer, Benjamin Friesen. Tchaa said that Friesen assured her that the class would remain in the nuclear center for the rest of the semester. McCullough complained to the instructor of the course, Edward Shaw, and the head of the department of biological sciences, Gunther Schlager, who is in charge of the students should have to go into a nuclear reactor to go to a class at a university." center, is visible from the classroom in which McCullough had her class. McCullough dropped the class anyway. Tacha and Schlaiger said they knew of Tacha not other student complaints about the school. FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Free Estimates THE PREMIUM MICALL COMPANY 3115 S. Med. 814-6067 Tacha said she would consider the necessity of holding classes next week. "I'll be fine," Tacha said. We're Here at The Loving Center DIET CENTER It's a Natural Life! BUT! No! We're the Medical Center 841 DIET HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKETPLACE, 47TH AVE. HAMPTON, RI 02810-5432 of safety, but on whether the classroom space was needed and the room was suited to courses taught. Tacha said classes had been held at the center for 26 years. HOBART WOODY, operator of the nuclear reactor for 20 years, said any radiation emitted from the reactor was minimal. "It's a research reactor, not a power reactor," Woody said. "People have some funny ideas about nuclear reactors." KU'S "swimming pool" type reactor was built in 1961. It stands approximately 30 feet high and is cooled by 7,000 gallons of water. It is shielded by three tiers of solid concrete walls, Woody said. "But the radiation is very minimal," he said. The reactor was used to make materials for nuclear medicine and is now used to produce radio active samples for classes, he said. "It's a facility for the University in case someone wants something to be activated," he said. "It gives off some radiation and radiation is what we use to activate the samples. 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Remember the night your roommate fixed you up, and you had to force yourself into going because usually all the guys she knows bark? And shock of shocks, this one turned out ok. So ok, in fact, that you've been seeing him ever since. Some things that happen are just too good to keep to yourself. When you share them with your friends out-of-state after 11pm tonight-or any time between 11pm Friday and 5pm Sunday-you'll save $60\%$.* Reach out and touch someone. Southwestern Bell - DIscount applies to tails d跌 One-Plus wifh operater assistance University Daily Kansan, February 23, 1982 Page 3 Tylenol, alcohol damage liver By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter KANSAS CITY, Kan- Swallowing a few tienlens tablets after an evening of heavy drinking may help alleviate the pain. They may permanently damage the liver. "The problem exists for the habitual or chronic drinker," Snodgma said, "not the once-a-week drinker or the amount that drinks only a small amount." Wayne Snodgrass, assistant professor of pediatrics and director of the poison control center at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said yesterday that Tylonel and large amounts of alcohol might cause a reaction with liver enzymes resulting in permanent damage. The intake of alcohol by a habitual drinker causes the liver to increase its production of enzymes, Snodgrass said. This overproduction of enzymes occurs when the alcohol is filtered from the blood by the liver. HE SAID that small amounts of Tylolen would not cause adverse reactions with alcohol. A reasonably large amount of Tylolen taken with a large amount of alcohol is necessary for the reaction with liver enzymes to occur, he said. Snodgrass learns that about five tablets of Tylenoil, taken by a person who drinks three times a week, could kill the bacterium. Then the poison control center handles. Another problem that the poison control center deals with is alcohol in combination with other drugs. Some of these drugs cause reactions in the liver, while others work as severe depressants. Phenobarbital, a depressant and hypnotic drug, can cause an effect on the liver similar to Tylolen. The effects of phenobarbital are much more damaging. Snordgrass sart. "The problem exists with Tylenol, the problem exists to far greater extent with phenol it takes." PHENORBARBITAL, in its crystalline form, can be easily mixed with alcohol. "Just about our biggest problem exists with sedative drugs accompanied with alcohol," Snodgress said. "Sometimes one plus one doesn't equal two," he said. "Sometimes they equal three." potentially陆联合, when mixed with alcohol, Snodgrass said. The combination of sedatives, such as Valium, Quaalude and Doriden, make a "Qualude and Doriden should be off the market," Snodgrass said. "There are just too many other drugs that work and have less potential for abuse." The Med Center's poison control unit handles about 400 cases every year of sedative and alcohol combinations. While not all of these people required hospitalization, most did require emergency room treatment, Snodgrass said. He said that there were definite patterns of abuse of alcohol and depressed drugs. The majority of young adults in the young adult group from 20 to 35 years old. "Of course we have some in their teens and definitely a few older ones, but most of them are pretty young," he said. Deliberate mixtures of drugs and alcohol are divided into two groups by the poison control center staff. They are suicide gestures and suicide intents. "Gestures" are attempts to gain attention. Snodgrass said "Unfortunately these gestures often end up with someone being dead," he K. U. PRE-LAW CLUB MEETING TONIGHT at 7:30 Council Room, Kansas Union Topic: Environmental Law All Welcome! The University of Kansas Rock Chalk Revue 1982 presents ... InThe Spotlight Thursday, Feb. 25 7 p.m. $2.50 Friday, Feb. 26 8 p.m. $3.75 Saturday, Feb. 27 8 p.m. $5.00 Tickets available at: SUA Box office, Kiefs, Saffees, Hillcrest. Raney Drug, KU Information Booth. On the record The Douglas County Ambulance Service answered a call at Jayhawk Towers at 12.30 a.m. yesterday, KU police reported. A resident at the Towers was cooking doughnuts in a frying pan and the grease caught on fire, police said. Friends extinguished the fire and there was no damage to the apartments. The victim for second-degree burns and took her to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for further treatment. LAWRENCE POLICE reported a burglary at a mobile home at 3323 Iowa St. sometime between 7 p.m. Burglar's broke a rear side window, entered the mobile home and stole more than $300 worth of jewelry, household goods, televisions and stereos. There are no suspects, police said. Saturday and 10:45 a.m. Sunday, police said. LOW COST RENTER'S INSURANCE Protect your valuable personal property John E. Dudley 842 1870 842 8771 Prudential POLICE REPORTED a burglar in the Massachusetts Street Delachette, 941 Massachusetts St., sometime between 12:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sunday. After breaking into a safari, bargains礼$1,200 in cash. Police said that burglarls could have concealed themselves in the store before it was closed because there IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 843900 were no signs of forced entry. There are no suspects. BURGLARST STOLE a Spectronic 21 measuring machine from Hallmark cards about 2:30 a.m. Friday, police said. Three people walked out of the bank, where the machine, which was valued at $2,900, police said. There have been no arrests. KU POLICE reported $200 worth of damage on the first floor of Jayhawk Towers B sometimes between 2 a.m. and moon Saturday, when wanda possibly kicked in a west glass door. There are no suspects. 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Advertise it in Kansan want ads.Call 864-4358 AURH Election Information Open Offices: President/Vice President Secretary (a team) Treasurer More Information at your hall desk Filing deadline, Wednesday, February 24. 5:00 p.m. The Association of University Residence Halls Cafe'Elridge Affordable Fun Dining For fun dining at an affordable price, dine at the Cafe Eldrige. Dine from the many delicious homemade dishes prepared daily by our Chefs. Most meals at the Cafe Eldrige cost between $3.50 and $5.00. An extraordinary price for a fun meal served in the pleasant atmosphere of the Cafe Eldrige. The Cafe* Eldridge is open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week. From 11 am to 11 pm. Mondays Saturdays and 11 am to 9 pm on Sundays. You can even call in for carry out. Whether it is a special occasion or you just want a delicious homemade meal, dine at the Cafe* Eldridge. During February and the Cafe Eldridge features 999 cocktails from 9 pm to 11 pm 99c cocktails from 9 pm 11 pm 749-0613 7th Massachusetts Baked Lasagne . 4.95 Hamburger Steak . 4.25 Humble Pie . 4.25 Hot Beef Sandwich . 3.95 Triple Cheese Omelette . 3.95 Ham & Cheese Omelette . 3.50 Soup of the Day . 1.25 Grilled Cheese . 1.00 Homemade Pies for Dessert You have something to god made me god doesn't make junk WOMEN: Glenmary Sister share with the people of the rural South and Appalachia you can help, as a Catholic Brother, Sister, or Priest. Your request will be treated confidentially. I'd like information about opportunities with the Glennary Missioners and the free poster. I'd like a free copy of the poster only. Glenmary Missioners Room #14 Box 46404 Cincinnati, Ohio 45246 Name___ Address___ City___ State___ Zip___ Age___ WOMEN: Glenmary Sisters, Box 39188, Cincinnati 45239 Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 23, 1980 Opinion Issue over-for now This weekend, Lawrence's five city commissioners met in their second closed session in less than a week. The subject—City Manager Buford Watson The verdict—retain Watson, for now. The issue—whether Watson should be fired after serving as the city's chief administrator for more than 10 years. As it turned out, though, Gleason decided not to carry out the threat that started all the trouble. He decided not to move to fire Watson. Instead, the commissioners quietly discussed Watson's shortcomings in their executive session. And, full of Christian charity, they said the city manager could improve his faults. As Gleason said, his move—or nonmove—probably helped avoid the creation of a "massive division" in the commission. But in some ways, Gleason's move seemed like a retreat, not a compromise. And the Buford Watson issue seems to have ended too quietly. The commission gave few specifics in its decision to have Watson improve his shortcomings. What, exactly, are his shortcomings? When will he improve them? And how will the commission measure that improvement? This month's controversy pointed out several ills in Lawrence city government. But it seems that in their quiet executive session, the commissioners decided that the city should heal itself. Scientists unearth dangers of colas, coffee, candy bars It's one of the most widely used drugs on campus, a stimulant that comes in many flavors. Machines are even stocked with it. Caffeine. Cola, coffee and many over-the-counter drugs, such as aspirin and cold remedies, contain caffeine. Chocolate and tea contain caffeine but they differ in their effects similar to the effects of caffeine. One reason why caffeine is such a popular drug is that it keeps people awake and alert. That's valuable for students who often find themselves facing all-nighters. Caffeine is speed, literally. Researchers have observed that people under the influence drink more caffeine than others. PENGUIN JOLYNNE WALZ faster, do math faster and read faster than normal, another plus for students. However, on the negative side, caffeine is addictive. That's not just an old-wife tale. People don't drink lots of cola merely because it tastes good. One of the reasons why people learn to like the bitter taste of coffee and tea is because they are addictive, and the scientific term for that addiction is "Caffeinism." There is a way to find out if you are a cate- tonic. Just answer the three questions below. 1. Do you get a headache when you go without caffeine, and does drinking something with caffeine in it cure your headache? 2. Do you have trouble sleeping? 3. Do you feel anxious and tremulous if you do without caffeine for a day? If you answered "yes" to any of these questions, you can cease caffeine regularly, then you must be added. Incidentally, be careful about how you answered the first question. You may think your headache is unrelated to caffeine or cures it, but many aspirins contain caffeine. Because caffeine is such a popular—and additive—daily, scientists have started studying it more closely, to see how safe or unsafe it really is, investigations are just beginning in earnest, but already, scientists have discovered that the lowest every physiological process in the body. In the past six months alone, studies have disclosed that: - Breast-feeding mothers pass the ill effects of caffeine to their infants. - The health of women with fibrocystic bursal neoplasm improved when they quit taking caffeine. - A study group of middle-aged men who did not drink caffee performed better on a fitness test than a group of middle-aged men who did drink caffeine. - Patients suffering from chronic diseases drink more caffeine than healthy people. The answer begins with the Renaissance, when traders from the East introduced tea and coffee to the West. Back then, people knew the drinks were drugs, and they considered them luxuries, reserved for the rich and powerful. Some people may ask why the dangers of caffeine are becoming known only now, even though people have been drinking the drug for centuries. By the 1800s, coffee and tea had become popular beverages among all social classes and were considered more a drink than a drug. Tea had become an institution in England, and the morning cup of coffee had become one of the most important discussions about caffeinated drinks continued. Children were not supposed to drink coffee because it would "stunt their growth." Like some South American Indians who are adduced to chewing a hallucinogenic drug that turns their gums orange, Americans are drinking a stimulant that rots their teeth. Today, when people drink a caffeinated beverage, they may recognize that it contains a drug, but they generally do not take it seriously. Jokes about "shooting up with Coke" are popular among students around exam time. Although amphetamines, uppers, speed—whatever they're called on the street—are illegal without a doctor's prescription, caution not. It is a drug that has won social approval. Doe's anybody body have 35 cnts i can bobrow? THE COLUMBUS DEPARTMENT IN THE VOLUME COMPANY GRAPHIC ...BEAUTIFUL, RON BABY, BUT COULD YA SPEED IT UP A LITTLE? THE MEDIA ECONOMY Letters to the Editor KU's Spencer Library a gift of rare worth To the Editor: THIS EBOOK The Foresman Spencer not only "contributed to KU's research library" as your editorial of Feb. 17 stated, she donated the entire Kenneth Spencer Research Library building to the University. She also supported it by her books of and by her continuing interest in it. An exhibit of a few of the books and manuscripts which Mrs. Spencer gave the library is on view in the north gallery of Spencer Library for the next few weeks. It will open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturdays. Ms. Spencer was particularly happy that the rare books library which she had built—one of the 10 such libraries in this country—has always been open to undergraduate and private researchers on an equal basis with distinguished scholars, unlike most major rare books libraries. She wanted the students of Kansas to have the best and did more than to mast this about. Alexandra Mason Spencer Librarian To the Editor Peace Corps valuable In the United States, a lot of questions are being raised about the relevance of the Peace Russia, England, France, the Republic of China, Canada and North Korea all have government-sponsored volunteers overseas. If we can not afford their programs, how can we not afford ours? The Peace Corps has two basic aims: foreign aid and cultural exchange. An American living in a Third World nation spending his or her living allowance gives a boost to the local economy without fattening the Swiss bank account of some official. The cultural exchange breaks down barriers of insequence on both sides. In "The Ugly American," 1958, authors Religious fervor clouds secular issues Cults, Bob Jones University and creation science. Each phrase brings to mind a topic of current public interest and, seemingly, each one is the most important issue. religion is not the most important issue. *retention is a delicate subject. To attack belief is to attack the believer, or so it usually appears. People become sulken, defensive, even hostile if that their faith is being called into question. But often, the difficulty in arguing against TOM BONTRAGER Of course, the confusion can spread in both directions. In his essay, "Why I Am Not a Christian," philosopher Bertrand Russell cites instances of cruelty in the name of Christ as arguments against the whole of Christianity. He called themselves religious for the belief itself. religious groups on public issues is not one of belief but of misunderstanding, a problem of failing to separate the pertinent from the incidental, and reliation from non-religion. Today, several issues arise in which the complementary mistake is being made: Problems are taken to be religious when they are not. Russell's own examples, for instance, could be used effectively against cults in which mind control and exploitation of insecure, young people are cloaked in the trappings of religion. Clearly religious freedom is no defense for Another case of mistaken identity presents itself in the controversy over creation science. This view, admittedly, is different from the straight creationism taught in Sunday school, yet it falls short of meeting the demands of scientific method. these groups. The notion that any group calling itself religious is necessarily performing religious duty reeks of the old avant-garde and current musical art of an artist." Saving it just doesn't make it so. The trouble with bad art is that, sooner or later, somebody will buy it, granting it undue credibility. The same holds true for cults. People subly coerced to join seem to validate the groups' religious standings by their very presence. Just what is the purpose of the creation "model?" Scientists construct hypotheses in view of observed data. Insofar as a hypothesis explains what goes on in the world, it also should serve to predict future occurrences. What can the creation theory predict? The facts that will be found? That sounds a bit odd—putting the inferential cart before the empirical horse. Supporters contend that the biblical account of the beginning of the universe can be rendered scientific if evidence is found to support it. They use the creation "model" as a framework for inquiry. The problem is that they rely upon a work of faith as the basis for fact-finding. None of this denies that the scientific community would gladly pay attention if earth's history had been known. The universe had existed for only a few thousand years. Until that happens, though, science cannot afford to favor one document of faith, however compelling and valuable, over any Many who interpret the Bible literally will no doubt be offended by this view, although they "columnist William F. Buckley Jr. argued in favor of the exemptions, saying, "... to tell Bob Jones that it may not receive tax exemption because of its interpretation of the Bible is to arrogate to the Internal Revenue Service the right to interpret the Bible; and this we don't really want to do." But religious freedom was not at issue in the court's original decision to abolish exemption. The real arrogation took place when President Obama issued the 2013 law, which legal precedent against Bob Jones and company. In the furor over tax exemptions for two racially discriminatory colleges, most notable for Bob Jones University in South Carolina, religion is clouding a primarily legal problem. need not be. Their faith is not under attack. Religion and science both hold treasured places in human activity. The point is simply that one should not be mistaken for the other. The Constitution provides for free thought and for the expression of religious attitudes. But to give biblical interpretation a free hand to invite upon personal rights is absurd. What if a group called the "New Inquisition" held that, by its interpretation of the Bible, sinners be tortured into a new relationship with Almighty, and then sought to enforce that belief. in American legal institutions—the IRS, the courts, Congress—would the issue be taken as religious? No, because interpretation is a function of the mind. The practices that result from it are different. Neither is discrimination at Bob Jones University. Religion will probably always be a delicate subject. But much offense and injustice can be avoided if we remember what religion is not, and recognize of instances in which religion has no bearing. One of the most important benefits the United States receives from the Peace Corps is the thousands of ex-volunteers who are filling the ranks of American business and agencies John Kennedy responded to this unflattering yet accurate picture by creating the Peace Corps in hopes of having a generation of policy-makers familiar with the peoples and politics of the world. Lederer and Burdick portrayed the United States as inexperienced and inadequate in the battle for democracy. These people are in such demand because they speak languages from Spanish to Swahili, can work in cultures with radically different standards, and results where there isn't modern technology. I do not pretend to be informed in the affairs of Central America, but I wonder if even one unentailed individual intimately acquainted with the people and history of El Salvador was exposed to thoseending military or Or did we depend only on those informal individuals with vested interests? Volunteers frequently see a different picture of the building that was displayed in our home town newspapers. Craig Whitaker, Craig Whitaker, Shawnee Mission graduate student New Wave normal To the Editor: This letter is in response to the recent comments concerning New Wave in Lawrence, Jim and Darrel, there are people in Lawrence with purple hair. I should know, I'm one of them. Slam dunk is exotic. You can ask a friend of who was hit by the stomach with a spiked leather wrist band. To the Editor: To Cathy, Jim and Darrel, the Lawrence punk scene is neither closely related to L.A. punk (Cathy) or Mayberry R.F.D. (Jim and Darrel); it falls somewhere in the middle. The music of all three films is very similar only way for anyone to fairly judge its value is to go on to Off-Wall Hall some night and DANCE If more people would go see what is happening, there would be no need for such articles. Hey Cathy, next time, why don't you do an article on what's happening at Gammons? We would really like to know what those people who are living in Gammons do for fun. Do they really dance in booty cowbots? Jane Roberson Hutchinson jurio Playboy is prostitution What people do with their own bodies is their own business, but what the Kansan does with its front page is my business. It is, indeed, the business of the entire student body, since the Kansan receives about one-fifth—$3 out of $14.50—of each student activity fee, making it the largest single user of these student-supplied funds. To the Editor: Let me point out, then, that Playboy Magazine is a money-making business and a very successful one at that. If they want an advertisement, let them buy it. I, and the student body of this University, should not be made to subsidize their profits—or the pimping. After all, art is art and business is business, and Playboy is prostitution. Anne Wallace Anne Wallace, Lawrence graduate student To the Editor Dan Torchia apparently is less concerned with the crime rate than he is with removing handguns from society. This attitude is detrimental to personal freedom and the light against crime. I will concentrate on the constitutional and procedural issues raised by Torchia, as I dealt with the ineffectiveness of gun control in a guest room during a visit to an online芳香 anyone interested with a copy of that column. Present firearms registration systems are riddled with abuse. Appeals systems have not worked, forcing expensive litigation and further contesting the courts. The ultimate abuse of registration could occur in Morton Grove. The use of state firearms ownership records is a widely discussed enforcement possibility. Residents of Washington already have fallen victim to such use of registration records. "nearms laws will not prevent people from obtaining handguns. If they were smugged into the United States at the same rate as marijuana now is, 22 million handguns would enter the country annually." There is evidence that people are being drawn in to risks to obtain handguns than they do for drums. The "exceptional reason" for overturing the Martin Grove program is either the U.S. Government's failure to implement Illinois state laws. the purpose of the Second Amendment in the Constitution is much clearer than is commonly believed. When one considers the comments of the farmers, the wording of the First, Fourth and Ninth amendments and the changes made in drafting the Second Amendment, it is obvious that the right to keep and bear arms was intended to be an individual right. The Illinois constitution is even clearer. The official comment to Article II, Section 22 reads, “A citizen has a right to possess and make reasonable use of arms that law-abiding persons commonly employ for purposes of recreation or training must comply to ban such arms . . . would be invalid.” Law abiding persons own 99.6 percent of all bandguws. The federal district court judge who upheld the ordinance ignored the Illinois constitution, basing his decision on Crulkshank v. U. (1875). The holding in that case was that a groupid not withstanding a clause in the Constitution had black men by confiscating their firearms, preventing them from voting and killing them. There is great irony in Torchia's contentions that people want stricter gun laws, but Congress will not pass them in an election year. Although polls tell us that people want stricter gun laws, referendums and elections tell us other-instance. In instance, 83 percent of respondents referendum of the gun control measures was defeated 2.5 to 1. Polsters had predicted that it would pass. We do not have "a moral obligation to try to reduce crime and death from handguns." We have a moral obligation to reduce crime and death, period! The most effective way to do this is putting more police on the streets and con- ferring with law enforcement in enforcement of gun laws is conduction to neither. As always, I would welcome any inquiries on the subject of gun control. John B. Barrett, Clearwater law student The University Daily KANSAN USS (654-60) published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class class publication at Lawrence, Kansas or at St. Louis outside the county. Student subscriptions are a B@ session and the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Dull Kansai, Fint Hall, The University of Kansas. Vanessa Herron Sales and Marketing Adviser General Manager and News Adviser Business Manager Nateeline Judiet John Oberran Rick Munster University Daily Kansan, February 23, 1982 th ott dtdt tee bdr arss ofn mnoas eee acew dnnt aee ese eoch nH ece) ., o,, shh ts at ceed sr n tt From page one ASK The rep. David Miller, R-Eduora, agreed. "In my opinion ASK is not hard but a cut-out for the students at KU," Miller, a former KU student body president, said. "The most effective lobbyists are going to be the people of the student body." However, Mark Tallman, executive director of ASO (American Society for Oral Medicine) of Utah and the business owner of such clinic, student of St. Joseph's University. "I agree completely that it's KU students who need to be lobbying," Tallman said. "But I think there needs to be a full-time staff here to watch what's on." Tallman said that since he took over as executive director in January, ASK had worked toward emphasizing its presence on university campuses. The responsibility for this job is delegated to the campus directors, who in the past have stirred up more than 2,000 letters from students to legislators, Tallman said. Tallman said the campus directors also were responsible for answering questions that students might have about issues coming up in Topeka. John Keightley, campus director at KU, said he could be reached for legislative information at the Student Senate office five days a week. Mr. Keightley said students contacting him at home, he said. "I don't have a phone at my residence. And even if I did, I don't think I would have it when I am doing what things on around here right now in all these days, they earn about $5,000 a year from ASK. Both Keightley and Tallman said that the university year was pay increases for faculty members. But State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Awood, who praised the efforts and accomplishments of ASK, said the group could not affect issues dampened upon the state's general revenue fund "ASK has some impact on lawmaking," he said. "But major issues such as budget determinations are based on state resources, not testimonies from lobbyists." From page one include specific details justifying ASK's budget, Audetkins said. "By saying you want so much for postage and so much for printing, you have to sit down at some point and plan programs," Adkins said. "ASK has never been forced to do that." Adkins The existence of the Senate is established by Senate Code and is not subject to cancellation, but Adkins said the Senate could disband ASK. "ASK, has no legal justification for its basis of subjective judgment. It's purely on the basis of subjective judgment." "We may find ASK is the best it can be, we may find it has inherent flaws and we may find ASK is no longer a viable vehicle to legislators." The Senate and its finance and auditing committee could decide not to allocate to ASK the $14,000 it receives yearly from the student activity fund. Adkins said KU would have to present good reasons to the other member schools for pulling out of ASK. The other schools are Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburgh State University, Wichita State University and Washburn State University. Adkins said he wanted to reach a decision on ASK during his administration. Last year, K-State threatened to pull out of units that were not amendments to the ASK.bylaws.weiss was passed. Adkins' evaluation guidelines also stipulate that the name of the case ASK has supported from 1979 to 2003. Comments from student senators will be solicited on what contribution students could make to the Kansas Legislature and to Kansas Board of Regents issues; how ASK's resources should be allocated; what goals student government would have for any lobby organization; and on the KU Senate's ability to address national issues. FTE From page one State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said she was not happy about the governor's actions. "It certainly is a decrease over last year, and is based on full-time equivalency and classes in higher education." "I think what happened was because this was a tight year, perhaps the governor felt this was a realistic approach to take," she said. The FTE figures were sent to the Legislature and Board of Regens after they were tabulated on Feb. 10, the 20th day of classes. Feb. 10 was the final day for final enrollment figures, Kelly said. The on-campus FTE fell from 19,919 in spring 1981 to 19,443 this semester. The off-campus FTE rose from 983 in spring 1981 to 1,056 this semester, Kelly said. Although off-campus enrollment increased in number, a larger number of off-campus students did not cause a proportional increase in FTE for the University. Kelly said. GAMWONS SNOWWONS Proudly Presents LUPE Tonight thru Saturday, 1st Set Starts at 9:30 Tuesday is Preview Night at Gammons—no cover charge for the band. Wednesday Ladies Night - the ladies get two free drinks after 9:00 pm. 25¢ draws 10-11 pm. Thursday $1.25 Bar drinks all night long. 25¢ Draws 10-11 p.m. Friday and Saturday come alive at eleven! $1.25 drinks. 75¢ draws 11 p.m.-2 a.m. 2 for 1's and Free hot Hors de oeuvres from 5-7 pm every Friday. SUNY Feeling Buzzed About Exams? Feeling Buzzed About Exams? FREE Study Skills Workshop Tuesday, February 23 7:00 p.m.-9:30 p.m. The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4064 --hair lords shoppe pour maison et jardin 1012 7 Moss 491 8970 Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Spring Break Is Coming! So, get your hair in style. A. R. C. H. Come to Hair Lords and Consult our professionals SPECIAL Hrs. M-Fri, 9-5, M-T-Sh evenings, open Sat, at 9 $2.00 Little Buck Sandwich and Monday thru Wednesday SAWBUCK SANDWICH SHOP 10¢ for a small drink Offer good thru March 3 Introductory Coupon Offer 50¢ OFF Offer good thru March 7 1814 West 23rd Southwest Plaza Shopping Center Mon.-Thurs. 11-9 Fri.-Sat. 11-10 Sun. 12-9 CARRY OUT 843-3700 Present Coupons before ordering. The World is Coming... Caribbean Feb. 27th & 28th TRAVEL CENTER Carib STAR MOON Moonlight Madness TUESDAY February 23rd Door Opens 3:00 to 11 p.m. Shorts 99c-9.99 Reg. to $2500 SPRING DRESSES 9.99 & 19.99 Reg. to $50^∞ Sweatshirts 9.99 Reg. *23** * Corduroys 9.99 Reg. to $30^{15}$ Striped T-Shirts 8.99 Reg. $14.99 Blouses 9.99 Reg. to '35° 1/2 off all winter items 10% off All New Spring Fashions Carousel Charge Mastercard Visa 23rd & Louisiana Malls Shopping Center carousel Free Parking! the touch of Nina For Spring the touch of Nina For Spring Available in. Navy, Bone, White Available in. Navy, Bone, Red Arensberg's =Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 Available in Navy, Bone, White Available in, Navy, Bone, Red H Arensberg's =Shoes 6 819 Mass 843-3470 Hrs M-Sat. 9.OO-5.3O Thurs. til 8.3O 1 Page 6 Universitv Dailv Kansan, February 23, 1982 Spare time "She Stoops" cast conquers vintage script with freshness By ERLEEN CHRISTENSEN Contributing Reviewer Directed by John Gronbeck-Tedesco "SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER" BY OLIVER GOLDSMITH Directed by John Grounbet-Tedesco University Theatre Performance—February 20th Oliver Goldsmith wrote "She Stoops to Conquer" more than 200 years ago, but the University Theatre's production of the play has the freshness of a brand-new play. Much of the credit must go to the director, John Gronkeback Tedeschi, who has written and expectations of a modern audience and the vitality and uniqueness of the eighteenth century and Goldsmith's play. Costuming and manners are definitely eighteenth-century. Rodney Caldwell's Servant Diggory might have posed for "The Rake's Progress" we've seen his crazy queue and Review awkward pose in the caricatures in our history books. Mr. Hardcastle's mannerisms are the same ones captured in old pictures of Benjamin Franklin and Samuel Johnson—and they are used to underline the sort of witty authoritarian proclamations we associate with the two men. The ladies, with their fans and four-foot-wide dresses, and the gentlemen, in powdered wigs, seem to have stepped from the paintings on the second floor of the Spencer Museum of Art. The illustrator took back into the eighteenth century is strong indeed. But director Gronbeck-Teedeso is not slavishly reproducing the past. There are plenty of twentieth-century innovations. Servants in pastel costumes do set changes, their work accomplished as a part of a modern dance routine that has a whirling kaleidoscope of gold-brown sets and pastel costumes, of purely entertaining movement and real work, of eighteenth-century music and twentieth-century interpretive舞。 1 one snow has any major fault, it is a temptation to show off this technique. Was this prop or that set change really necessary? Or was it just too much for the use of dance interlude just a lot bigger? The sets themselves (with the exception of the rather ordinary-looking bar set) are the quintessence of this play's happy blend of the centuries. The lightweight, painted sets give a three-dimensional effect and are quickly lowered and raised on wires. Walls and paintings hang against the blackness of the space behind them, using that space as if it were solid. This not only gives the set an illusion of great depth, and space, it also subtly underlines the theatrical quality of the stage, the realization that we are watching a play. The mechanism and the concept of the sets are distinctly modern—but the eighteenth-century illusion is strong. Anyone who has seen actual works by Clement Moore, for example, looking at these sets; not only are the details correct, the sets have aged into the same colors and tones as old ones have. From the first scene, the audience gets caught up in the plot. All the things that can be done with a budget large enough for an opulent production have been done in production as a simulation and opentables set, let extractors and undermine the play itself. Will pretty Kate make a match with the absurdly shy young man her father hopes she will marry? What kind of complications will the well-meaning but interfering father provide? Will his pretentiously foolish wife foil fair Constance's plan to marry the man she loves? What sort of monkey wrenches that will booby Tony Lumpkin throw in everyone's plans? Dialogue, often a problem in plays from a few centuries back, is handled well. The actors speak with a precision and projection far from the monosyllabic casualness of everyday twentieth-century speech, but they deliver their lines slowly enough so they can be understood by those in the twentieth-century wit. The sense of class distinction is easily underlined by having the gentlefokel speak in a clipped King's English and the servants in a rowdy country-cockney manner. Heroine Kate, the gentleman's daughter who at one point passes herself off as a barmalde, does a beautiful job of shifting from verse to prose—and it is no surprise that the audience that she is able to sutor Marlow with her ruse. The quality of the acting is consistently good, but special praise should go to Sturtf Litchfield as the boony Tony and Stacey MacFarlane as the lady who "Stoops to Conquer." One-man play recreates editor's life By MATT DeGALAN Staff Reporter Two KU drama professors have spent the last month in Kansas. journalist William Allen White is life for them. "The Sage of Emporia" made its road debut Feb. 3 and 4 in White's home town of Emporia. The play, directed by Ronald A. Willis, professor of speech and drama and director of University Theatre, premiered last March as a University production. After the shows in Emporia, the play moved to Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Mo., and the Bowls Fine Arts Center in Iola. The tour will wind up with performances March 5 and 6 at the Performing Arts Center at Kansas City, Kan., Community College. THE ONE-MAN SHOW stars Jack B. Wright, professor of speech and drama, as the editor, White, who owned the Emporia Gazette for nearly half a century before his death in 1944. Haskell, also a newsman, Haskell, who died last July, worked 39 years for the Kansas City Star. Director Willis describes the play as "a touching portrait of a man who has lived a full life and is preparing for a great uncertainty." The uncertainty, he said, is his impending death. "The play is a very informal, personal work, with Mr. White sharing his thoughts with the audience. He talks about his life and the people who influence him." Wright explained. "He liked the challenge who injured him little while. "His assailant, as an actor, Wright said he liked the challenge difficult as any role an actor has to try to portray a man who was alive and is still known to many "IVE ENJOYED IT THOROUGHLY. It's as To help prepare for this difficult role, Wright went to Emporia and looked through White's old clothing and possessions. Wright said he hoped such research would help bring out some of the editor's obscure mannerisms that might otherwise be forgotten. "We are trying to shed light on his humanity. That is the point of the play," Wright said. NO DATES after the March 6 performance have been set for "the Sage of Emporia," despite appreciative audiences and several requests from groups wanting the play staged in their area, Willis said. Wright said the show probably would return to the stage this summer on campus TODAY THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a dutch lunch for members from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Cork II of the Kansas Union. CURRENT ISSUES IN THE JEWISH COMMUNITY will be discussed at a lunch sponsored by HILLEL at 12:15 in Cork 1 of the Union. David, Jewish Community Relations Bureau, will speak. **194E JAPANESE FILM SERIES** will present the films *Battletoads* and *Battleship*. at 7 p.m. in Dyche Audition. THE GOSPEL OF MARK will be discussed at the Episcopal Christian Ministries Center. THE CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the THE LINGUISTICS COLOQUO will feature Robert Rankin, professor of linguistics, speaking on phonemic aspirations at 7:30 p.m. in 108 Blake Hall. THE TAU SIGMA DANCE GROUP will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. in 242 Robinson. THE KANAKUK CAMP OF BRANSON, MO.,O.C. through the Second Cormington" at 8 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Hotel St. Mary's. TOMORROW THE UNIVERSITY FORUM, featuring guest speaker Aaron Horton, Universities Field Staff International, will begin at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Minstries Center. To reserve a hot lunch call 843-4933 by 4 p.m. today. THE OFFICE OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES will sponsor a LEADERSHIP TRAINING PROGRAM at 7 p.m. in the Walmart Room of THE DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. There will be a VISTING ARTIST'S LECTURE BY SCULPTOR ROCKNE KREBS at 8 p.m. in木ruffruit Auditorium of the Union. There will be a FACULTY RECITAL BY BROOKS TOWNSHIP piano at 8 p.m. In swarthworth Recital Hall. ALEXANDRA KRYSTAL Special to the Kansan Alexandra Borrie portrays Lizzie Curry in the Guthrie Theatre's touring production of "The Rainmaker," which will be performed at p.m. tonight in the University Theatre. 'Rainmaker' visits KU By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Bill Starbuck would have made a top-notch weather forecaster by today's standards—his predictions were never realized. Tonight, on the University Theatre stage, Starbuck will once again make his hollow prophecy of rain when the curtain goes up for the performance in its production or "The Rainmaker" at 8 p.m. The touring production is part of the 1982 University Arts Festival and is sponsored by the University Arts Festival. Founded in the spring of 1963 as the Minnesota Theatre Company, the Guthrie Theater of Mineapolis is the oldest of the regional theatre movement in the United States. IT IS DESIGNED to serve the art patrons of suppliers in the company rarely taught far south as Kansas. performance planned during the 1982 spring tour. David Chambers, who recently directed "A Midsummer Night's Dream" at the Arena Stage in Washington, D.C., is directing the touring production of the play. "The Rainmaker," a romantic comedy by N. Richard Nash. centers around the Curvy family The KU performance is the only Kansas The play's central character is Lizzie Curry, a woman stranded in a man's world on her broken arm. Suddenly, Starbuck appears with promises of rain and rainforest. The world of the Currys and his brothers is a whimsical wonderland. Alexandra Borrie, who recently appeared with Elizabeth Ashley in the Broadway production of *Saturday Night Live*, died peacefully at home. Joel Colder, who played the title role in the PBS production of "Bartley, the Scrivener," in 2013. THE EWEN TAYLOR WOMENS RESOURCE CENTER TICKETS FOR THE Guthrie's KU performance are on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats are reserved for $$$, $$ or $7. Student, senior citizen and group discount are available. Feb. 25,1982 Ecumenical Center, 1204 Oread 7-8:30 P.M. Please bring a dessert. For further information call 864-3552 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR GRADUATE WOMEN !Openings for Student Senate Budget Subcommittee! Applications Available in Senate Office Membership Closes: 1 March, 5 p.m. The World is Coming... Mexico TRAVEL CENTER Feb. 27th & 28 BREWING BACKYARD GLASSWARE SPECIAL! Mon. Feb. 22, Wed. Feb. 24 5:30-7:00 p.m. Robinson Gym—Gymnastics Room TUESDAY, FEB. (Starts at 2 p.m.) Pitchers of Bud, Busch, or Natural Light served with 2 Bud-label Bell Glasses . . (old south gym) VOLLEYBALL TRYOUTS KANSAS MEN'S UNDERGRADUATE TEAM For more information contact: THE HAWK (Pitcher Refills without glasses—$2.00) It Could Only Happen at . . . $3.00 1340 OHIO The Glasses Are Yours To Keep! Steve Guenther 842-4387 TACO BELL EVERY TUESDAY Burrito Tostada }39¢ 1408 West 23rd St. good only at this location Sunday Thursday 10:00 A.M.-1:00 A.M. Friday and Saturday 10:00 A.M. 2:00 A.M. University Daily Kansan, February 23, 1982 Page 7 Commission to ponder Bluffs agreement By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission will examine tonight a tentative agreement between the city and the Vanguard Corp., which will to build an apartment complex on the Bluffs, a hilly area within the intersection of Sixth and Iowa streets. But some residents of the Pinkney neighborhood, near the Bluffs, have taken legal action to block the development because they fear it will increase traffic and storm water runoff and lower their property values. Pickney residents filed an appeal last Thursday of a Douglas County District judge's recent decision not to block the rezoning of the Bluffs from single-family to multi-family zoning, Robert Freihilf and Daniel Freihilf owners near the Bluffs, said recently. THE PINCKNEY residents are not involved in negotiations for the tentative agreement, he said. Under the terms of the proposed agreement, Duane Schwada, developer, would drop his lawsuit against the city in return for the city property. In order that prevents building permits from being issued for the property. Schwaba filed suit last August in response to the city's refusal to issue building permits for his planned 28-uilt apartment on Fifth and California streets. The proposed agreement was worked out last week by Richard Zinn, attorney for Vanguard, and Gerald Cooley, the city's attorney. Vanguard will have to submit development maps for the rest of the Bluffs' development if it decides to move them. The proposed apartment units, Zinn said. VANGUARD HAS been trying to build the apartment units since last May. Schwada said. He said he did not know how much the project would cost or how much the delays had cost Vanguard Corp. "The real damaging thing is this project represents 20 percent of Lawrence multi-family construction in 1981." Schwada said. "The real cost is in terms of lost jobs, and units not put on the tax base." Commissioner Nancy Shontz, who voted against Schwada's plan, said she would not comment on the settlement and said the development is still under litigation. But Freilich said that if the commission approved the agreement, developers would be able to ignore nearby neighborhood growth plan in the city. There is no reason for the tentative agreement to be on the regular com- mission. The development would be a violation of Plan '60, the city's long-term plan for design. Here's a plan that this beautiful Bluffs area will be preserved by the city," he said. "I don't understand why it doesn't get used for zoneoning and planning in this city." "There's two sides to that Plan 9*" thing, he said. "It wasn't feasible to build single-family there. That property had been for sale 23 years as single-family residences and it had never sold." STORM WATER RUNOFF and traffic will not increase drastically as a result of the 20-unit apartment development, Binns said. "We directed the city manager here a while back to put a retention basin in a park near the development" he said. But City Commissioner Don Binns disagreed. "Of course, you're going to increase traffic. It'll increase it but not drastically." Freibell said any agreement between the city and Vanguard would be thrown into doubt because the resident' lawsuit was still on appeal. But Binns was not worried. BALSA fights tension "One of the terms of the agreement might be that if it is overthrown by a judge, it is the developers who are responsible and not the city," he said. Cutthroat competition may seem to characterize law students, but one organization at the University of Wisconsin system to ease students' tension. The Black American Law Students' Association provides academic and social help to its 20 members in several ways. Their buddy system pairs each first-year law student with a second- or third-year law student. The advanced student guides the newcomer and answers his questions. "Law school is highly competitive, and there aren't many kinds of support systems," Cedric Gardner, BALSA treasurer, said recently. "I would wager that half the law students who drop out do it because they're disenchanted, and they don't have somebody to encourage them." GARDNER SAID that BALISA helped minority students make the transition to a primarily white law school. Forty-one of 579 students, or 7 percent of the law students at KU, are minorities. Anyone can join BALSA, he said. I meets academic needs by providing tutors in several areas, particularly writing skills. The need is for a varied set of diverse backgrounds and low quality of prior education for some students. Michael Davis, dean of the law school, said minority legal education had evolved from a function of "separate but not very equal" black professional schools to an integral part of state-funded universities. He sees a potential for "full, complete integration of everything." "In many cases, black students do not get the same quality of education that white students get," said Lilian Six, director of admissions at the KU School of Law. "I think percentage-wise, black students may have poorer grade school and high school educations." The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six eight seven nine ten ten $2.75 $3.25 $3.75 $4.25 $4.75 $5.25 $5.75 $6.25 $6.75 $1.25 $1.50 $1.75 $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.80 15 words or fewer ... Each additional word. AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can place, in person or by calling the Kansan business office at 864-1358. ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996. t. Call Don's Tax Services for fast, accurate tax return preparation. Call 841-6983. Appointments available day or night. 3-3 MOVING AHEAD LEADERSHIP PRO- CESSIONS discussion marking, conflict resolution or- ganizations making, conflict resolution or- ganizations making, conflict resolution or- ganizations making, conflict resolution or- ganizations making, conflict resolution or- ganizations making, conflict resolution or- or The Ec. Shop, 10 West 9th (Wet of the Candy Store) Vintage and classic contemporary clothing - military coats, jacket hats, turtlenecks and gait and other accessories & things ... 2-25 FQR RENT Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 941-5500. tf For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. tf HANOVER PLACE • Complete furnished, 14th & 16th on Mass. Only 3 blocks from K.U. DON'T DELIT. Reserve your apt. 240-8121 or 824-8455. month-water 841-1212 or 824-8455. Studiosia atmosphere, International morns, crazy rainydays with Christian perspectives bed. Own room $140 furnished. Bedroom $65. Two rooms and laundries and laundry. Bedroom C41-8629. Close to the beach. Call 841-7628 Available now. Two bedrooms spacious apts, unfurnished, carpeted & draped, all electric bathrooms, gym, kitchen, campus, and on bus route $35 per month. MEADOWBROOK 10th & Crestell 877-264-2530 PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces, roommate rooms, wood-burning fireplaces, weather-dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen, dining room, kitchen cabinets, 30 daily at 9:30 in Princeton Blvd., or 10 daily at 9:30 in Princeton Blvd. ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished tenuitions available immediately. Flexible pricing. Call us now to see! Located on 3rd & 1th Bank. Only two chairs from the Union. Call 644-851-8812. Sublease 2 bedroom ant., gas paid. Complete kitchen carpet plus drapery, central air and heat. Call 841-6868. 2-26 For rent 2 bedroom apartment. Convenient shopping. On bus route. Complete kitchen, central air and carpet. Heatpedal plus draps. Call 814-8689. 2-26 Comfortable apartment-large bedroom, kitchen, bath, inexpensive, available immediately. 749-1989. Call anytime and keep calling. 2-23 Clean, close to campus—Room for rent 2 blks. from campus. Share bath, kitchen. 49-679 1-3 pm. 2-23 1 bedroom apt to suitable first of March or April-$210.00 per month, all utilities paid. Close to campus (Oread) Contact Margo— 841-6553 2-23 Sub-lease at West Hills Apts. 1 Br. $220 a month, electricity not included, starting Mar. 1. Call 843-2822. 2-26 3 bd. unfurn. apt $260. Close to campus. W/D hookup. deposit required. Call 749- 1750 or 841-4240. 1-2 people to share home = 4th & Miss. $100-150 = share of util. 749-3203 eyes. 2-26 Available immediately Heatherwood 1 bedroom apt, cent. air, W/D, dishwasher. 842-4932 and 841-5500. 2-26 On campus studio apt. in Mt. Ogre Ad腑安 Blocks from Union Hall Conveniently located to the back of the building, looking West Lawrence. Available March 5. $190/mo. $150/unit. Payments paid except on weekends. Fees are subject to change. FACULTY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3 br. townhouse, $712 University Drive. All appliances. Air conditioning. Fees $45/mo. 84-265 or 843-6300. RENT SALE- Rent reduced on rooms in large quiet house 1 block from Union, smoke alarm, no pets please. Call after 4 38-503-7260 to secure entrance walk to class fast. Ten minute walk from Wescoe. 1 dbm. modern at Redbud ash, 11th and Missauga. Low utilities. Call 843-322 or 842- 2974. 1. Br. Apartment available now, 1000 block of Miss. Call after 5. 841-2623. 2-24 Nice one bedroom house, hardwood floors, close to campus, nice neighborhood 842- 9917 or 843-1471. 2-25 1. Bedroom apartment. Spacious. Clean. Close to downtown and campus. 200. Unilities. Pay. 842-6114 Sunday thru Thursday. After 5. p.m. 2:26 Small furnished 1 bedroom house near campus & downtown. 145 per month downtown & utilities. No children. cats ok. After 5:00. 811-8897. 2-26 FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense to use them 1-2. As study guide. Makes sense to use them 1-2. As study guide. Preparation of West. Examination preparation. Available now at town Crest. The book is available now at town Crest. The book Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Automatic ELECTRIC. 843-909-2600. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-909-2600. 1979 Mobile Home, 14 x 70, 3 brics, AC store + elevator / refrigerator, 51 x 110, $130. Lot rent is 62.00/month, water paid, 843- 1758 at 5:00 p.m. 2-23 Bookcases, shelves, custom-built 8" or 12" pine or particle board unfinished or stained. Jim 842-8949. 2-23 1953 Opel Manila, 2-door Automatic, Fuel- conditioner, Center Air conditioner & $1290.00, $1690.00, $644.77, 2-24 Gutter Low Poor Efficiency Kit, good shape, wedge, $1090.00 Italian Gueuriello racing bicycle, Brand new. All Campana cntlll, braze-on, 55 cm. Will sacrifice. 110 Hanover Place Apt. 5. 2-23 Clairmont, Wood Yamaha. Brand New sold for $425.00 will sell for $300.00 or best. 842- 5340 2-23 BMW Brand new 1982. 3201, two in stock, immediate delivery. Sanders Lincoln-Mercur- y. 843-669 or 843-2283. 3-4 However water $200 + electric dryer, $100 + washing white perfect for apartments. $40 + vending white perfect for apartments. 1978 Honda Hawk 400ee automatic. 80 miles on it. Perfect condition. Call 913-796-6786 after 4 pm. 2-1 New women's clothes; jane-Calfo Straights. New Lee Calvin Klein (all $10.99). Buses. Oxfordirts and sweaters (all $10.00). Good quality. Call 842-1853. 2-400 50% off on all clothing in showroom. 50% only day Feb. 23rd through Feb. 27th. Extruded hour for this week only 9-14 Days from February 28th to April 6th. Change, 61 Kaoland, 841-6132. 2:26 Black Pearl Musicmaster bass. Excellent condition and condition. Need neck piece for $200. Call 848-7587. IBM Solecific TYPEWRITER $250 Call 843- 834 after 2:20 2-25 Pioneer's 12" 4-way speakers assembly in U.S. brand new in box $160/pr., best offer 749-2758 2-26 Ventura elec. bass, hard case, cord $125. 842- 8752 FOR SALE 1975 Flat station wagon. good condition, condition $1950.00, wagon 841-5897 841-5897 Energic, hardworking, personable waitresses wanted. Must work well under prescriptions and incentive bonuses. Apply after 5 pm to Garnison's, Southern Hills Shopping Center. HELP WANTED Set of keys in 900 block of Indiana. Keys are on paper clip. Owner may claim them at Hoch Floor/Lound. 2-25 FOUND Bartender, Private Club. Must be Energetic and Personable. Contact Dan at the Exchange. 842-9593. 3-12 Gold watch, unique face, 13th & Kentucky 18 Feb. 841-6492. 2-25 Found penil case, call to describe. 864- 2508. 2-25 Full, part-time kitchen & restaurant help. Apply in person, 9-5 Sawbucks Sandwich Shop. 1814 W. 23rd. 2-23 Stockbroker trainees. College grade-Extram opportunity for hard working, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individuals. P.O. Box 157 Red Bank, N.J. 0709-380 CRUISES, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDITION Counselors Europe, Caribbean, Worldwide Counselors, Oceanography, TATION. OPENINGS. GIVING TO CRUISION. WORLDWIDE. 135 box. 601M. Sacramento. $12 Person interested in doing old house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, have own tools and be a participant in cooperative. Call Darryl 841-8386. OVERSEAS JOBBS - Summer/year round. Europe, S. Australia, Amer. Australia, Asia. Fields Driving, Lighting Behind Write JBC Box B-54-I-Com 3-Car Ma. DE CAIRZ 922. MANAGER OF MEMBERSHIP AND COMMUNITY APPAIRS to assume responsibility for Chamber membership development, management and orientation. Entry level position requiring a college diploma or equivalent in management skills. Salary Range $14,000 and benefits. A complete position announces the opportunity to work with an agency may be obtained from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce in Kansas or by calling (933) 4431-211. Qualified lifeguard for summer swimming season. Lakeforest Swim Club, Topeka, KS 66058. Topeka, KS 66058. line, Topeka, Kansas 66058 676-1322 3-1 RESEARCH ASSISTANT Hairline appointment. Duties include data collection (direct observations, data summary and analysis, supervision of practicum students and other research assistants). Must be KU student to Topeka a minimum of two days a week and must be mentally坚持ed some work directly with following areas is desirable: applied building engineering, biomedical (bifeedback) response, same with two references to 'Michael Ks 66058 -A213 Bristol Terrace, Lawrence Ks 66058' NOTICE LOST PERSONAL Reward for into, or return of Gold coin lost near or in Allen Field House. Sat. 1-23 Minter in Panama, about the size of U.S. piece. Call Marc. 843-8022 or 749-3354. Bassiai needed to augment quartet of individuals expressing interest in latest music. The TKG Company Squeeze the Jam, Godely/Creme, Kinka, Van Morrison, Frank Sinatra, original material, and more. Skillite's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfred Skillet Eudaly. 1960 Mass. 843-8156. tf Say it on a sweatshirt with custom alik- printing 1 to 1000 shirt by Swellis 769-161 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-4821. tf Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-1611. MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time consultant. 842-6641 Soviet Jewry **Study Skills Workshop. Emphasis on study for exams and time management. Tuesday, February 28 - 5:30 pm. Jaswyn Room.** **Study Skills Workshop. Emphasis on study for exams and time management. Tuesday, February 28 - 5:30 pm. Jaswyn Room.** **The Student Assistance Center. B44-6644** The Kegger--Weekly Specials on Kega!! Call 841-9450-1610. W 23rd. tf SKI THIPH, SKI THIPH, SKI THIPH, SKI THIPH, SKI THIPH, SKI THIPH, SKI THIPH, SKI THIPH, Commercial cookware, every weekend and holiday, in NYC and across the U.S. February 24,1982 Information Table: Kansas Union, 11:00-2:00 p.m. household items for apartment living. Barb's Second Hand Rose, S15 Indiana, 842-4746. 3-3 Top hats, derby sviers, 40>30>50 clubs, cummerbulls, bow ties, Bard's. Second Hand Rose: 515 Indiana. 842-4746. COMMUNITY AUCTION 700 N.H. every Saturday 11 a.m. Conn.签购会 accepted Mon. Tues. Pt. 71, 2-46, N.H. commissioned Wednesday 8-41, 821 W. said we will thing that Movie: "The Fixer," Dyche Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. TRAVEL CENTER Looking for a ride everyday to Olathe. Call 782-6391, 782-7179 2-24 TRAVELING! Admission: $1 Hillel Members $1.50 Non Members HEY! Need a ride to Texas Spring Break? I'm going as far as Austin and need one or two cars. Call Bill and gas expenses there and back. Call Bill over at 841-0581. — cars and accessories with a touch of Second Hand Rose. 518-3679. - Student & Faculty Travel * * Childrens Rates * * Group Travel * * Group Travel * * Charter Trips * * Honeymoon Plans * * Sports Holidays * * Study Education Trip * * Fly Drive Go-a-ways 841-7117 TOM GLEASON—GUILTY. Of expressing an opinion? 2-23 - Super Saver Fares - Student & Faculty Travel FREE PARKING "HOME OF THE NEON PALM TREE" WILLIAMS, ORLANDO 1601 West 23rd St. SOUTHERN CENTER 1601 West 23rd St. SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER 9-5:30 Mon.-Fri. • 9:30-2 Sat. COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES. previous pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient abortion; gynecology; contraception; and Roe. Overland Park, PA 6123-6100. (818) 612-3000 HELP—I lost my ski mittens in Strong or Summerfield on 2-4. I need them. 843-7268. ALL YOU CAN EAT—Stuffed Pig Sunday Buffet, $29.90, 291-705, 349-285, 3-26 Need ride to Denver or Aspen as soon as possible. Will share expenses. Call Janet after 8:00 p.m. 841-2070. 2-26 WANTED Ambulatory female over 21 (not adult) to participate in prepartum dating during hospital stay. The school preferred but not mandatory. RARE Female with diabetes to choose your favorite bus driver-Correct choice. Live music—The Exchange. Phil Klein on the guitar Wednesday, February 24. 9:00 pm. 2-24 Happy Birthday D.W.E. BYRD Happy Briffflady D. W. E.Y.-Thrd You Are 23 On The Twenty-four Everyone Will Ask, What Is A D.W.E All They Have To Do Is Look At You To See The Only One To Whom You Cannot Lie Is A Sweet, Beautiful Pi Phi Ho To, Ho Don, Ho Tom, Ho Pat, Ho Stu, Ho Ken LOST: Black P-coat at Hatter last Friday. I took blue P-coat by mistake. Please call 843-7500 2-26 50% SALI All clothing in showroom 5 days only February 23 through February 27. Extended hours for this week only. 9:00-6:00 Change, 161 Kasol 841-6123 Change, 161 Kasol 841-6123 Tired of the high cost of T.G.LIF? 25. DRAWS this Friday, Feb. 26, 2-6 pm. AT THE ENTERTAINER. 2-25 **SPRING BREAK ESAPES:** 8 days/7 nights accommodation. Welcome party. Sports airfares or motorcross transportation to Auckland from Naurau, Naurau-Bahamu—$160 Also, a bik trip for 6 days/water to Winter Park—$149 Also, a bik trip for 8 days/water at Kaitaia-484-899. See more details ALL newfoxt. 2-24 Established band seeking BASSIST and KEYHOARD PLAYER Steady work. Serious inquiries only. CD 749-0891 or 824-8841. Over stocked! 20% off Everything in store, 40% off coats, furniture, clothes, household equipment. 10% off M-F 10-30 Sat 12-20 AM M-F 10-30 Sat How many more days until Nina Lea's retirement? How many more days until Nina Leon's 21st birthday? 2-23 K.U. Pro-Law Club Meeting, Tuesday. February 23, 7:30 pm, Council Room, Union. 2-23 Plain Jane, Fri. & Sat. night at the Pladium. Plain Jane, Fri. & Sat. night at the Pladiff. 2-25 Wed. night $3.50 all you can drink at The Plaidium. 2-25 Thursday poor_persons night. No co- vice. Thursday poor persons night. No cover. $2.25 pitchers, Ts draws, at The Pladium 9.98 Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 123 Strong Hall, 864-4064. 3-38 Special Ladies Night. Male burleque, Fri. March 5. All you can drink from 7-9.00, ladies only until 9:30. Show starts at 7:30 At the Piafium. 2-25 Chlamade for the ladies. 50r a glass. Tues. 9-90-12-90, now that's real class. The Sanctuary 2-23 SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in your Dnr. prescription or we can duplicate present materials. Have all necessary mont- ent and lone frames available. Com- fortable. Open 10:30 - 6:45, M-F, M-13, 13, #7, R-T. Wow, you ought to see our bookers, price just right, you'll get your booker 3:00-9:30 on Wed. 75s are all you'll pay. The Sanctuary 2-23 SERVICES OFFERED 75 *e* schooners at Ichabod's. 2-23 TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY, MICROBIOLOGY 3 in. bp physicles, M.A in mathematics (2 yrs) or 4 in. physics (6 yrs) Drafting (maps, maps, etc.) 6 years ex- perience Lettering for certificates 811-7944 Script Lettering for certificates 811-7944 3 1/2¢ self service copies now at ENCORE COPY CORPS MIDDLE EAST FESTIVAL OF HIGH SCHOOL CHEERLEADERS 25th and Iowa 842-2001 Schneider Wine & Keg Shop -The finest selection of wines in lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212. tf Put your best foot forward with a pro- fessional. Call us, type it, list it, and print it for your Call Invoice #82-1000, 25th and Iowa. 2-26 WRITE A RESUME "What to say? How to say? to say 17. How to State the House of Uber or House of Uber. 885 Massachusetts, 8-M-F. House of Uber. 885 Massachusetts, 8-M-F." Mandarin tutor; Chinese student with B.A. in Chinese Studies. Experienced. Call evening: 841-4678, Min-Shi. 2-23 Call 843-6583 Stop Smoking With Our Program S Smoking Clinics The only smoking program that guarantees results. Children's Learning Center announces an announcement for a daycare program. Ages: 2:30 pm to 12:30 pm. Ages: 2- elementary age. Daycare: 6:45 am to 6:00 pm. Ages: 2 wks-8 yrs. Phone: 841-2185 for more information. Grad. student to tutor Calc. 115, 116, 121, 122 Very reasonable rates. Call 841-4031 after 5.00 pm. 2-23 DIET ANALYSIS—Concerned about your health and nutrition? Get a comprehensive Diet Evaluation. It's simple and inexpensive. 420-2378 2-26 Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064. 2-26 EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 8-10 TYPING **TYPING PLUS:** These, dissertation, papers, letters, applications, ammes. Ansis. English tutoring, grammar, spelling, English tutoring, foreign education, or Americans. 841-6234. It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820. Experienced typist. Theses, term papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selective. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf Experienced typist. Term papers, themes, all types. IBM Computer Science, Sectile. Either or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-5545 Mrs. Wright. For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-4980. tf TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced tylist-IBM Correcting Sellect II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-5675. **tf** Experienced typist will type letters, thesas, and dissertations. IBM correcting selective. Call Donna 845-2744. tf Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, seM-correct Selectric. Call Elen or Jeann AN 841-2721. tf Experienced typist—thesis, classroom term papers, mise. IBM correcting selective. Barb, after 5 p.m. 823-2310. tf Graduate students tied by typing, retyping and filing taxes and money by word processing I saw fil pressbooks EDITING-GRAPHICS, IBM Corp. Selective, full-time typetype, spelling correction company, Emphasize, 414-252-3800, IBM Corp. Former medical research secretary will type term papers, thesis, books. Call Nancy 941-252-3800. Professional typing. Dissertations, term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Cor- recting Selective. Deb 414-3692 Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Cor- recting Selective. Deb 414-3692 IBM FENCE TYPING Service 414-252-3800 Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric, Elite or Pica. 842- 5644. 2-26 Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call evenings, 841-please. ff WANTED deposit Liberal, smoker okay. 843-258 - 258 Need place to br-3 base house. okay. - 128 Close to campus. Prefire female & non- smoker. 843-258 - 12-18 Two bedroom house law-fair. $750/mo. plus 1; utilities. assume leave in May. 843-258 - 254 Looking for a females room female room. $1400/mo. + utilities. call 843-3891 - 32 Share 3 bedroom house next to campus Reasonable. Call for details. 843-4822 Roommates need immediately. New apart- ment. Roommate bed. 843-4268 utilities. 843-3591 SCREW THE DORM! Roommates need: Private room. $137 + 1/2 utilities. 748- 3591 Male roommate to share 3 bedroom house 13th & Mass. $108/mo. + 1/3 utilities + deposit. Liberal, smoker okay. 942-6319 --- BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot or pot of with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Name: ___ Address: ___ Phone: ___ Dates to Run: ___ Classified Heading: Write Ad Here:___ | | 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 | Classified Display: 1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00 --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 23, 1982 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Team W W 19 Pct. GB Delphia 39 14 L 1.72 Boston 27 28 L 1.50 New Jersey 27 28 491 13 Washington 27 28 491 13 Houston 24 31 L 1.68 Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee ... 39 14 .738 Atlanta ... 23 26 .451 15 Baltimore ... 32 36 .451 15 Indiana ... 24 31 .436 16 Chicago ... 19 31 .436 17 Houston ... 13 41 .226 27 San Antonio 34 18 654 Houston 24 18 547 6% Dallas 18 18 340 16% Dallas 18 18 340 16% Ukah 18 35 343 17 Los Angeles 37 17 685 — Seattle 37 17 685 — South Carolina 28 34 576 7 Portland 28 34 538 7 Portland 28 34 538 7 San Diego 15 39 278 8 Santa Cruz 15 39 278 8 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. | Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Missouri | 12 | 1 | .923 | .87 | | Missouri | 8 | 1 | .923 | .87 | | Oklahoma State | 7 | 5 | .583 | 4½ | | Nebraska | 6 | 5 | .583 | 4½ | | Tennessee | 6 | 5 | .583 | 4½ | | Kansas | 4 | 8 | .333 | 7½ | | Iowa State | 3 | 8 | .283 | 7½ | | Oregon | 4 | 10 | .281 | 7½ | Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. Tulsa (10) 68, Southern Illinois 67 Louisville 65 Memphis 13 (13) 61 NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Montreal 35 11 14 8 281 173 74 Boston 34 11 19 8 244 169 70 Buffalo 33 18 10 8 244 169 70 Qubec 32 16 10 11 272 158 64 Quebec 32 16 10 11 272 158 64 Team W W L T G FG GA Pts NY Islanders 40 14 1 6 28 18 60 Orioles 14 14 1 6 28 18 60 Rangers 28 22 10 10 222 200 Pittsburgh 23 22 10 5 223 260 Boston 18 18 10 5 234 346 Hockey Minnesota 25 19 18 18 264 227 58 St. Louis 25 30 19 26 287 65 58 New Orleans 25 30 19 26 287 65 58 Winnipipe 20 77 12 12 224 364 52 Detroit 19 37 12 12 264 364 46 Detroit 17 32 12 12 264 364 46 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota 8, Hartford 7 Erdnimon 39 13 13 11 341 243 64 Calgary 29 18 18 14 245 204 69 Vancouver 23 26 13 12 215 213 64 Los Angeles 16 36 12 12 250 264 78 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Bv United Press International Virginia No. 1; Missouri drops YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No answer submitted NEW YORK—The Mountaineers of West Virginia, unranked only a month ago, continued their rapid climb toward the top of United Press International's Coaches weekly, basketball ratings yesterday, by advancing for spots to No. 8. St. Louis 21 16 5,008 Wichita 16 13 815 Lawrence 16 13 59 Memphis 10 18 357 12 Phoenix 10 18 357 12 Rocky Mount 10 18 19% Team W 1 L Pct. GR New York 18 5 376 Pittsburgh 18 18 754 Nebraska 18 18 692 Buffalo 18 13 692 Cleveland 9 16 360 Philadelphia 9 16 353 103 Philadelphia 7 20 199 The top three places: remained unchanged from last week with Virginia holding on to the No. 1 spot followed by North Carolina and DePaul. UPI TOP 20 etc. Virginia (26) / Maryland (22-2) DePaul (15) / Hawaii (14) Oregon State (32) / Missouri (24) West Virginia (21) / Florida (19) Idaho (23) / Kentucky (19-6) Tennessee (14) / Georgia (14) Georgeson (14) / Louisiana (14) Memphis State (37) / Minnesota (18-5) Alabama (18-5) Alabama (18-5) Tennessee (16) / Kansas State (18-4) Missouri (18-5) Intramurals YESTERDAY A RESULTS R. R. BAYLEY A Res. R. A Playboy Have Note 44, A Playboy Average Blue Bay 32, Lumberjack Bay 29 G. Doornbeer (60), C. 23 Doornbeer (60), C. 23 Tusa. Sat. 12-6 fashion eyeland P.O. Box 841-9000 Houz Place Buffalo Fb Bob The Herd 49, Moonstone Nine 48 Longhobe孙 Codes 43 Gun Gur灵 Gur 52, Suzanne 20 Owl Snoopoo Snoopoo Swoopoo Sw Balloon-a-Gram Ticket to Occasion! SEND A BALLONA-A-GRAM! Phone: 512-734-0891 Email: balonamagram@hotmail.com Loomis Loomis up and save ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841 014-808 W 24th $3^{1/2} \text{¢}$ COPIES HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. --- 842-3610 Applications for Student Senate Spring '82 Budget Hearings Now Available in Senate Office Deadline for group application: 1 March at 5 p.m. (no late applications accepted) 8th Anniversary Specials herssary by taking advan tage of this coupon. Help celebrate our 8th anniversary by taking advantage of this coupon. Head Into with Style... $200 off Haircuts $500 off Perms —expires March 20— —offer valid with coupon only— Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her. GQ Gentleman's Quarters 611 West 9th • 843-2138 • Lawrence GQ GQ Gentleman's Quarters 611 West 9th • 843-2138 • Lawrence Referees take flak while trying to do job A stop in at Robinson Center during almost any intramural basketball game gives a pretty good idea of the situation. By BILL HORNER Sports Writer "Good call, ref, good call," says one player after a rebound was stripped from his hands by a group of opposing players and no whistle was blown. A few minutes later on another court, a whistle is blown. This time the foul is called, and the charged player raises his arms in disgust, shakes his head, glares at the official who called the foul and walks off the court in disbelief. ON YET ANOTHER court, an acid-tongued player lashes out at an official, and is promptly booted out of the game. The student referees assigned to officiate the University's intramural basketball league games, like officials at almost every level of the game, absorb their share of abuse from players. "One of the most controversial things in our intramural program is student officiating," said Ron Richardson, assistant director of Recreational Services and head of the intramural sports department. "Most of the problem is with language that the players use," he said. "We play by National Federation of High Schools rules, and most of the players we have played high school ball RICHARDSON said that when a student gets to college, away from home, the language he uses changes. And since a player is at college, he feels more comfortable with language anywhere, particularly on a basketball court, Richardson said. "But the players say things to the referees that they could never say in high school. They'd get kicked out of a game if they did." The officials and the players themselves seem to agree that there is a rather generous supply of abuse directed towards officials, but the reasons for the existence of the abuse differ. Several players echoed the feelings of one trophy league player who said, From fan chants of "kill the umpire" in Ernest Laverton Thayer's "sCasey at the Bat," to the antics of tennis player John McEnor or baseball manager Earl Wear, abuse, in fiction, and in the fact has been a long-standing part of the sports world. This year for the refs of the KU intramural league, has been no exception. A STACK of incident reports as thick as a small book sits atop Richardson's desk in Robinson. Each report represents a time when at least one person will be removed from a contest because of abuse directed toward an official. "intramural basketball is like street ball, only with refs. The refs are there to make it look good." "There's going to be that kind of abuse in any kind of situation," Richardson said. "A team gets behind you and you get caught up with his constructions on the official." Virtually all of the abuse that is directed towards officials is verbal. Richardson, however, cites one example of a player who threw a basketball at an official after a call and is no longer in the program. As for the players themselves, they claim that the officials are not competent, and that others are so inimpedient that it is hard not to get posset. JESS ARBUCKLE, Hutchinson senior, who has referred in several leagues in the past and is in his fourth year of trophy league competition as a player, said, "That's the main thing on the abuse—the inconsistency." "Then, in the final two or three minutes, they call it close again, especially if the game is close. You never know what to expect." "The way I could best describe it is that in the first two or three minutes, refs call the game close. After that, they let them play football." Another player, Chuck Wellman, who also acts as one of the program's 50-plus referees, agreed. “As a player, all I ask for is consistency—even if the refs are consistently wrong, it's better than the way they are now.” Arbuckle and Wellman both cited "THE PROBLEM isn't with the judgment calls, but with rule calls," Arbuckle said. "Some of the refs out there are using it." He just too easy to become a reference." knowledge of the rules as another big problem with officials. Richardson answered to that claim by saying that "Basically, the players don't know the rules. The officials basically do. You have the mid-ground, the 'in-between' area—that's where we have problems." Richardson went on to say that most of the 62 persons who put in applications to referee games have worked as officials. He stated that if the students took time to attend initial meetings, required rules meetings and on-the-court situation clinics, he felt that they deserved the chance to work games. "Some that came weren't cut out for officiating," he said. "But they should have a chance to work." The intramural program currently has several officials that have three or more years of officiating experience, leading to Richardson, that is not enough. Included in the ranks of the program's officials are three state-certified referees and three female assistant referees. The program has ten years of referencing experience. INTRAMURAL REFEREEES are paid the federal $3.35 minimum wage, and work varying schedules, according to each referee's available time. The officials are each evaluated individually, visor, with the reports turned in to Richardson. Evaluation criteria include knowledge of rules, consistency, mechanics, hustle, attitude, quick positive decision-making, sensitivity and on-court appearance. Officials that need improvement in any of these areas are informed of their weaknesses, and may be required quite doing the job are let so he said. "Officials are only human," Wellman said. "Sometimes it's hard to realize that. They're doing the best job the can. A referee is trying to do what he's paid to do. Sometimes he may make a mistake and take a lot of abuse for it. An official doesn't have to accept abuse." Tomorrow Night at Sgt. Prestons CALVIN COOLIDGE TWO SHOWS 9:30 and 11:30 Advance Tickets $2.00 At the Door $2.50 Also: All You Can Eat Ribs & Salad Bar $5.95 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT SGT. PRESTON'S 815 New Hampshire T Tie In With Us Recreation Services Intramural Track Meet - Thursday, February 25, 7:00-10:00 p.m., Allen Field House - Events: 60, 440, 220 yard dashes; 880 yard run; 880 yard relay; mile relay; high jump; shot put; long jump - Entry deadline is Wednesday, February 24, 5:00 p. m. in 208 Robinson. There is no entry fee. For more information call 864-3548. SUA FILMS O Presents TONIGHT NEW INDEPENDENT ANIMATION if you like the TOURNEE you'll love this collection of the WILDEST, WACKIEST and most stunning animation around! Due to content of some films no one under 18 admitted. (NOT FOR KIDS!) 7:30 p.m. WOODRUFF $1.50 MAMAMON NEW INDEPENDENT ani-mation Professional Haircutting for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters 809-231-3538 GO DIAL DOWN TO 68° Did you realize that you can nearly glue your car to a tabletop without damaging it? Simply ... set your thickness of 48 inches at 72°. You'll love it! KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE TAEKWONDO KATA NOJI KATA NOJI 1982 Midwest Toe-Kwon-Do Karate Championship Saturday Feb. 27, 1982 starts at 12:00 noon Coffin Sports Complex Haskell Indian Junior College 23rd & Barker Road Since many years of teaching Tae-Kwon-Do five Tae-Kwon-Do masters and their schools are sponsoring this meeting. Please come and enjoy watching fascinating fights and masters demonstrations. Tournament Director KI-June Park Both Arbuckle and Richardson feel that the caliber of officiating has improved over the years. "The officiating has gotten better in the last four years," Arbuckle said. Richardson said, "Once, all we had were warm bodies with whistles. It's different now." And, he said, abuse has slackened off, "The verbal abuse is really minimal compared to the past." Dave Kressin, another intramural referee, said that abuse was rare in his experience. "We might have some officials that won't listen to complaints," Richardson said. "If there is a problem, the team will speak up." If you floor should bring it up, not a player. "You give a player a warning and they calm down. A lot of the time a player who said something to you will come and apologize afterwards." BUT STILL, some players hold to the opinion that officials in the intramural program just cannot do the job, he said. Complaints that officials will not even listen when a player calmly tries to explain something to an official are common. In many cases, several players have lawsuited for firing or being is said to an official, a technical is called and that player is out of the game. The refs come to officiate three games. If they get abused in the first game, and then again in the second, there's a tendency to expect to get abused in the third, and therefore, a ref just won't take it at all." THAT ALL GOES back to a point shared by many officials that a player uses an official to take out his frustrations or aggressions. All in all, though, Richardson said he is satisfied with the intramural basketball program. Good, competitive play, hard-fought contests, good fan experience and corps of officials yet have contributed to the program's best year, he said. Wellman said: "Most of the referees are competent, and all of them are performing the best that they can. The players are trying to play, and the refs are trying to ref. If everybody realizes this, things would be a lot better." BELIEVE IT OR NOT Sign on the bridge for a shipwreck songs? The Count finally changed the records on THE HAWK JUKEBOX But is anyone besides The Count old enough to remember those DARE TO VENTURE ! PITH AND MOMENT (hanks) A personal, interactive game where you interact with a character in a virtual world. You can move through the environment and interact with objects such as buttons, switches, and pipes to solve puzzles and achieve goals. 100 pgs $8.50 US pdp 100 pgs $8.50 US pdp CAMILLA PUBLISHING CO. INC. BOX 510 MPLS., MN 55440 BY MAIL ONLY - SEND CHECK, OR M.D. COMMONWEALTH TMATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-5788 KATHARINE HEPBURN HENRY FONDA On Golden Playground A UNIVERSITY FESTIVAL 7:30 A.M. & 10:30 M.T. Sat. 2:00 HILLCREST Enthralling... CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Fri 7:15 6:30 21 Mat. Sat. Sun 2:15 VARSITY JACK NICOLSON THE BORDER JOHN TOWN TELEPHONE 871-253-0883 Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 5 Academy Nominations The French Beaupréens, Woman Mat. Sat. 2:15 MILEWEST Ev. 7-30 & 9-30 HILLCREST 3 PAGTIME PH = 7:49 only, Mon. 2-80 8 ACADEMIC AWARD NOMINATION INCLUDING BEST PICTURE ANNE CAVENY CINEMA 1 315 406 1090 Joni perlargimento A - a spectaculo performance Seni. HELD OVEREI Evening at 8:00 p.m. Sunday at 2:00 Monday at 1:00 JONI EARRECKSON AL MEHNAN CINEMA 2 TUESDAY AND SATURDAY Windwalker TREVOR HOWARD NBC HBO NBC 7:30 PM - 8:45 PM Weekend Mat. at 2:00 The University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, February 24, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 103 USPS 650-640 JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff diet pepsi Fulfilling one of his main duties, running errands for legislators, Gene Payton (above), 14, Pittsburg, Kan., brings a soft drink to one of the representatives yesterday morning. Taia Felder (below), 11, Kansas City, Kan., looks up at the call board waiting for something to do on a slow afternoon in the House of Representatives chamber. TEL 212-874-3900 图 A Pages run errands, offer views on Senate By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter TOPEKA—Two junior high school girls in fancy dresses sit fidging in straight-backed chairs. One leans over and whispers something to the boy next to her. Suddenly, she hears an impatient pair of fingers snapping and looks guiltily over her shoulder. it's her turn to go, and she gets up quickly to see what the slightly irritated state senator needs. Soon, she is scurrying across the Senate floor, a note in her hand. JON HARDESTY/Kansan Staff So goes a typical day in the life of a page in the Kansas Legislature. Each morning, a new group of young people arrive in Topeka from schools all over the state for a day of errand running, a chance to tour the Capitol and meet the governor. Each legislator sponsors a page from his or her district, but the pages work for any legislator who needs them, according to Ginny Scrinopskie, Senate page supervisor. "We go get Cokes and things for the representatives and take things back and forth." Mark Ducey, 13-year-old page from Lawrence, said. Several of the pages said they were aspiring to make sure full of suggestions to improve the government. Scripinopika said students could also write to the representative or senator and ask to be a page. The boys said their representative, State Rep. Koehlen, to Charles D,Lawrence, ask them to beRep. "But they must let us use the elevators," complained Allen Levine, 14, also from the district. Most were not in awe of the representatives they were working for. "It's all just having fun—they sit there and talk about golf," George Hanson, 15, from Lawrence, said. "They talk about anything but what's going on." Levine said, "George find I want to be the first liberal senators from Kansas." Hanson agreed. "We're going to really redo the political philosophy," he said. They announced that they were for the Equal Rights Amendment, pro-choice, against the death penalty and strongly against the Moral Majority. Hanson asked, "Did I mention that we'd cut military spending in half?" "This is what we believe." Levine said. But Toby Cook, 14-year-old from Independence, Kansas, disagreed with Hanson and others. "Reagan is doing the best job since-who should I say, you guys?—Abraman Lincoln," he said. "No one could balance the budget in four years." Cook said it was not unusual for people his age to be interested in government. "They know a lot more than people give them read if they be read." Scrispinis said most pages enjoyed their day and learned a lot. Midwifery issue pondered in House "They might be a little nervous at first, but after a couple of errands, it's old hat," she said. "The only thing that keeps a page away is heavy snow." She said that when the houses were not in session, pages waited at their "base of operations" on the House of Representatives or Senate floor for signals that they were needed. By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter While in session, page sit on each side of the Senate or House chamber. In the Senate, legislators snap their fingers when they need a page. Pages also bring snacks and drinks to legislators' secretaries. The 125-member House is too large for head signals, so a lightboard above the pages' heads flashes when a representative needs their services. TOPEKA- Supporters of midwifery yesterday told a House committee that home births were less expensive and less traumatic for mothers than hospital births. But representatives from medical associations said midwives who were not also nurses were able to provide care. See PAGES page 5 Debate over midwives, who assist in home births for pay, was prompted by a bill that would call for state licensing of midwives who are not nurses. Now, the state licenses as midwives only people who are registered nurses trained in childbirth. Some mothers, testifying above the wail of infants at the hearing, called midwifery a more humane and natural form of childbirth than services provided by 'strangers' at the hospital. There are now only three nurses in the state who are licensed as midwives, according to Lynne King, director of the Kansas State University Center for Childbirth. They to increase the availability of legal midwifery. But State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, a registered nurse and member of the House Public Health and Welfare Committee, said after the hearing, "I'm so upset I can hardly talk "They're talking about a measure that could be terribly destructive to babies," she said. Jerry Jumper, secretary of the Kansas State Committee on Correctional Committee not to be plagued by non-nurse midwifey. "lay midwifery—what can we compare with the Jumper." Jumper said. "Lay brain surgery Pituitary." Pituitary said. "Lay brain surgery Pituitary." "Reductions in the current level of care during pregnancy are almost certain to cost lives of newborn babies and their mothers," said Jumper, a physician. '1 am outraged that the act of delivering a baby is taken so lightly by people who should be held.' But supporters of the bill said the money saved in home births justified the remote chance of survival. State Rep. The Cribs, D-Wichita, who sponsored the bill, said the spiraling costs of medical care had grown out of reach, especially for people without health insurance. "We want to make it so that everyone who wants a family can have a family." Cribbus. Supporters of the bill said an unlicensed midfielder would have to be about $1,600 charged by nurse officials to about $1,600 charged by nurse officials. midwives and about $3,000 for comprehensive delivery services at the average hospital. But opponents said the cost of non-nurse midwives would go up if extensive training was required to gain a state license. Although midwives now legally operate in Kansas without licenses, Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan released an opinion two years ago against unlicensed midwives could be prosecuted for any misdresses occurring during a childbirth. Midwives would have to go out of state to obtain their training because Kansas has no programs for educating and licensing midwives. That would cause their costs to increase dramatically, according to Josie Nerris, a midwife in Holistic Birth and Growth Center in Wichita. Norris said that since the state legalized registered nurse midwives in 1971, the Birth and Growth Center had tried to send nurses out on a case-by-case program had not been cost-effective, she said. "I'm in favor of natural birth," she said. But it'll be to provide optimal care, even if needed for nursery. "My experience with midwives is that they learn by the seat of their pants, and they do the best in a way." Supporters of lay midwifery, questioning the childbirth care of doctors, said the United States ranked 15th among countries with low mortality rates in childbirth. Chris Burger, secretary of Peace At Home of Wichita Inc., a pro-midwifery group, said the countries with the lowest mortality rates were in Scandinavia, where 80 percent of all infants were Burger called the practice of midwifery in the United States "the awakening of a new age, in which women desire to gain active responsibility lives, their bodies and the birth of their children. However, the medical profession is holding back midwifery, she said. Although Burger tried to have a home birth of her own last year, she was unable and she was forced to enter a hospital, she said. While there, she said, she was subjected to inhumean treatment by the staff, which she said resented her demands for the most natural birth possible. "From the time I was admitted, I was treated in an unfriendly, hostile manner," she said. "But when I was at home in labor, my midwives were surprised to see me responded to my needs before I expressed them." See MIDWIFE page 5 Kansas journalism giant Oscar S. Stauffer dies Oscar S. Stauffer, KU benefactor and founder of Stauffer Communications Inc., died yesterday afternoon in a Scottsdale, Ariz., hospital. He was 95. Mr. Stauffer, who served on the Kansas Board of Regents for 25 years and helped found the William Allen White School of Journalism, was admitted to Scottsdale Memorial Hospital Jan. 19 after a mild stroke. He suffered a severe stroke Jan. 25. He died shortly after 2 p.m.yesterday from complications resulting from the strokes. At the time of his death, Mr. Stauffer was honorary board chairman of Stauffer Communications Inc., which owns and operates 30 radio stations, nine station stations and nine radio stations in 11 states. Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, called Stauffa a journalism giant. "He ranks with his beloved mentor, William Allen White, in the immense influence he has had on state and area journalism," Brinkman said in a prepared statement. "His influence on the William Allen White School of Journalism lives on in the many scholarships, the Stauffer Distinguishedorship and his recent gift of a million dollars. "But his greatest contribution to his profession and to his school has his ability to make big dreams come true. All of us will miss Mr. Oscar." John B. Breemner, the Oscar S. Stauffer Distinguished Professor of Journalism, said, "We at the William Allen White School of Journalism will miss him. We had wanted him present at the dedication of our building, renovated thanks to his generosity." Mr. Stauffer gave the School of Journalism $1 million for renovation of the building housing the students. Bremner said that Mr. Stauffer was a kind and generous man. "If he is not in heaven, there is no heaven," he said. Mr. Stauffer was born Nov. 26, 1886, in Hape. Kan. He first entered the journalism profession as a cub reporter for William Allen White's Emmoria Gatzna, earning $8 a week. After two years, White encouraged Mr. Stauffer to go to college by firing him and offering to help him with expenses if he would attend the University of Kansas. It was at the University that Mr. Staffer met All Landon, who is elected governor of Texas and a STAFFER. Commission reaches settlement on Bluffs standoff By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission last night voted 3-2 to settle out of court a lawsuit by a local developer. The suit was brought against the city last August by developer Duane Schwabs on behalf of Vanguard Corp. in response to the city's refusal to issue building permits for his planned 20-unit Bluffs apartment complex on Fifth and California Streets. However, Schwada must wait for a judge to lift a restraining order that resulted from an earlier lawsuit before the city will be allowed to issue the building permits. Commissioners Tom Gleason and Nancy Shontz voted against the settlement. The development has been opposed by a group of residents in the Pinkney neighborhood near the Bluffs. They have been concerned about increased traffic and noise. The Bluffs is the hilly area just east of the intersection of Sixth and Iowa Streets. Under the settlement, the city will issue the building permits after a judge allows it, and Vivendi will pay the landlord. One result of the suit, which is now under appeal to the Kansas Court of Appeals, has been that a judge has restrained the city from issuing the building permits. Gleason wanted to deter action on the settlement until Robert Freilich, the attorney for residents opposed to the development, could be present. Those residents filed an earlier suit to prevent a city commission from reconizing the Bluffs to allow water access. present at the commission meeting and that the settlement was the first step in resolving both Clark said that Frellich should have been Gleason said he thought the city should have tried to settle both lawsuits at once. "If we give one party to a tri-lateral agreement their goal, we dilute that party's incentive to negotiate with the other party," he said. But Mayor Marc Francisco said such matters could be worked out in the planning process. The city is still negotiating with the developer over general questions such as placement of buildings, he said. However, Gleason said the city may have lost some of its leverage in the planning process by making the settlement. But Francisco said the commission already had agreed with the developer on the general terms. But the commission disagreed. In other business, the commission agreed to have the city staff prepare an information sheet to explain the city's 50-cent monthly water management fee added to the city's water bills. Phil Halverson, treasurer of the group opposed the fee, said it was unfair to make everyone in the organization pay. The city is collecting the fee to finance a study of storm water runoff. r the special election will cost the city at least $80, possibly more, said Vera Merger, city clerk. Commissioners discussed preparation of an information sheet about the fee in response to a petition trying to force an election to repeal the fee ordinance. "When you're talking about a fee in an amount, I think it's fair to do that way," Clark said. Everyone benefits by the city's storm water management, Francisco said. Weather TROLL It will be mostly cloudy today with highs in the low 40s and north winds at 10 to 20 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tonight will be clear and cold, with the low from 10 to 15 degrees. Tomorrow will be sunny and cold, with highs in the middle to upper 30s. 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 24, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Williams faces prosecutors contradicts parents' story ATLANTA—Prosecutors began chipping away yesterday at Wayne Williams' testimony that he is a serious rock 'n' roll impresario, not a mass murderer who preyed on Atlanta's poor young blacks. "I haven't done anything wrong," he said when the defense handed him over to grim-faced prosecutor Jack Mallard for what promised to be a conviction. Williams spent nearly four hours testifying in his own defense beginning late November 27, and in his trial for the murders of Ninety-Four Cater, 27, and Jimmy Jay Burton, 23. The 23-year-old Williams was a strong friend for himself but destroyed nearly everything his parents had told the jury about the hours leading up to his 3 a.m. appearance on the Jackson Parkway Bridge on May 22, when he first came under suspicion in the slavings. During his testimony, Williams' recollection of May 21 differed considerably from that of his parents. Williams said he was on the telephone from 10 p.m. until he left the house at "1" or 1:30" the morning of the 22nd. His parents testified that Williams was in bed asleep when his father came home at 11:30 p.m. and that he then left bed at midnight or 12:30 a.m. The times are critical because the state claims Williams killed Cater that night and had just dumped the body in the Chahachooche River when it was discovered. Despite the discrepancies between Williams's story and that of his parents, neither complete version leaves room for him to be seen by one of the state's witnesses on a downtown street, holding hands with Cater, at 9:30 p.m. May 21. U.S. spy ships watch El Salvador WASHINGTON--U.S. destroyers have been dispatched to waters off El Paso on Wednesday and are now conducting manned administration officials and intelligence sources said yesterday. The USS Deyo, a Spruance class destroyer specially outfitted with sophisticated electronic gear for spying purposes, is to dock at Charleston, S.C. today after having spent nearly two months on station in the Gulf of Fonseca, the body of water between El Salvador and Nicaragua, the sources Another destroyer of the same class, the identity of which was not revealed, has taken the Deyo's position in the gulf, which Pentagon sources is said being used as a route to funnel Cuban-supplied arms from Nicaragua to leftist guerrillas in El Salvador. The Naval presence in the Gulf of Fonseca coincides with warnings by Secretary of State Alexander Haig of possible U.S. action in the Caribbean basin to intercept the arms traffic flowing from Cuba to Nicaragua. The gulf is on the Pacific ocean side of Central America. The defense department has cautioned against setting up a U. Navy blockade unless the administration is prepared to order Navy ships to sink vessels carrying weapons to the guerrillas, incurring the risk of war. The Pentagon has warned the United States it is ill-prepared to go to war. New busing amendment proposed WASHINGTON -Sen. Slade Gorton, R-Wash., proposed an amendment yesterday that would prevent courts from ordering school busing but that would allow them to take other steps to bring about desegregation of public schools. The freshman senator offered his compromise as the senate leadership took steps to shut down a liberal filibuster that has prolonged for months the senate consideration of the most sweeping anti-busing legislation ever to move through Congress. Gorton's "racially neutral" amendment would forbid the assignment of a student to a school by virtue of his or her race, but would not prohibit local school boards or the courts from ordering such devices as magnet schools or clustering. Earlier, Howard Baker, senate republican leader, moved to strike all committee amendments to the bill. Sen, Lowell Weicker Jr., R-Conn, has proposed hundreds of his own amendments as a device to delay a vote on the bill. These would be out of reach for all members of the House and Senate. Use of Hinckley statements barred WASHINGTON—A federal appeals court yesterday barred prosecutors from using notes seized from John W. Hinckley's jail cell, or his statements to the FBI shortly after his arrest, when he stands trial for trying to kill President Reagan. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington upheld a ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Barrington Parker in November that the information about Hinkley was illegally obtained and could not be used as evidence. A Justice Department spokesman said the appeals court ruling is being studied and no decision has been made on whether to appeal. But further court action appeared likely, since prosecutors have said the material is crucial to their case. Hinckley's trial on a 13-count indictment was delayed while prosecutors fought to win use of his statements to the FBI and documents obtained from him. Bell officials testify for divestiture WASHINGTON—The heads of several Bell System telephone companies said yesterday they believed their firms would remain strong after divestiture from the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. under a proposed government consent decree. "Some people seem to believe that the proposed divergence of the local exchange companies will create an environment in which those companies cannot be viable," said Delbert Staley of New York Telephone Co. "I strongly disagree with that view." The officials tested before the House Telecommunications Sub-committee, which is studying a proposed agreement under which the Justice Department would drop a 7-year anti-trust suit if AT&T divests its 22 companies. The companies represent two about 40% of AT&T's $120 billion in assets. "New technology and the innovative use of existing plants place us in a strong position to serve well in the new environment." Staley said. “There’s a sense they will go the way of the railroads,” Tauke said, because the firms still would be barred from providing information services by the railroads. But Ian Ross, president of Bell Laboratories, said, "There is great potential for technological development in the local exchange services." Rep. Thomas Tauke, R-lowa, said there had been "considerable concern" that the companies would be left at a financial disadvantage. Lennon's killer on hunger strike NEW YORK—Mark David Chapman, convicted of killing former Beaule John Lennon, has been on a hunger strike for the last 19 days, saying he The state attorney general's office said it regarded Chapman's action as a "determined effort to commit suicide." It has won a court hearing on a Chapman, an amateur guitarist who idolized Lennon, is serving 20 years to life for shooting the rock star no death Dec. 8, 1986, outside Lennon's posh apartment. Chapman pleaded guilty to the killing last June against the advice of his lawyer. In entering the plea, Chapman said he was acting on instructions from counsel. Gay Carl, the assistant attorney general in charge of the case, said Chapman began the hunger strike while at the Attica maximum-security prison. Applications for Student Senate Spring '82 Budget Hearings Now Available in Senate Office Deadline for group application: 1 March at 5 p.m. (no late applications accepted) Racque Tie In WithUs Recreation Services Racquetball Mixed Doubles Tournament Racquetball Mixed Doubles Tourname. Entry fee is one can of unopened racquetballs submitted with completed entry form. Entry deadline is Thursday, February 25, 5:00 p.m. In 208 Robinson. Play begins Sunday, February 28. For more information call 964-3546. 841 DIET Rent it. Call the Kansan. 99 Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 813-733-834 SCHOOL OF MEDICINE • CIFAS UNIVERSITY • How To Win At The Losing Game DIET CENTER If It's A Natural! 841 UNIT! © 2019 Whitney Medical Center "CLASSES TAUGHT IN ENGLISH" The University is located in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Our Medical Program is tailored to meet the needs of US Model of Medical Education and is fully accredited. ALEXANDER MORRIS For More Information and Application Form please write to CIFAS UNIVERSITY OF MEDICINE DEAR JEAN-AMISHING 8th Anniversary Specials Help celebrate our 8th an- niversary by taking advan- tage of this coupon. Head Into with Style... $2'00 off Haircuts $5'00 off Perms — expires March 20— — Offer valid with coupon only— Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her. Gentleman's Quarters 90 West 10th • 843-2138 • Lawrence GQ GQ Gentleman's Quarters 611 West 9th • 843-2138 • Lawrence OPENINGS AVAILABLE "Our school is listed in Vol. 35, No. 4 of the WHO chronicle published by the World Health Organization (VALUABLE COUPON—CLIP AND SAVE) This Ain't No Disco!! DEAN OF ADMISSIONS 12220 WHITER BLVD. SUP 20 + WHITER CALF. 986524 THIS AINT NO DISCO! FREE LIVE MUSIC 5 NIGHTS A WEEK —TONIGHT— BLUE PLATE SPECIAL Hot 4 Piece Blues Band $1.50 WHITE OR BLACK RUSSIANS ALL NITE! THIS AD IS WORTH ONE FREE SINGLE DRINK OR BEER ANYTIME FEB. 24-FEB. 27 LIBRARY PERSON PERSON PERSON PERSON HAPPY HOUR WED.-SUN. 6-10 PM $1.00 HIGHALLS 70' BTL. BEER 7th SPIRIT (Valuable Coupon-Clip and Save) 842-9549 MASB. 642 MASB. 842-9549 642 MASS. N∑ Outstanding Freshmen - Lambda Sigma, sophomore honor society is now taking applications for 1981-82 membership. - Pick up your application in Room 220 Strong or in any living group. These must be returned with references to 220 Strong by March 12, 1982. - Don't Delay—this is your chance to guarantee a fun sophomore year! --- BUSCH CASSIDY BUSCH CASSIDY RIDES AGAIN! CAMPUS CONTEST CAMPUS CONTEST Nine last lines for the nine clue verses to help you win a vacation for 2 in Daytona Beach, Florida. 1. He will seek an alternative thrill. 2. So for him, gang, a river's a moat! 3. And for our boy that hardly would do. 4. And the sun makes them both thirsty too. 5. It's likely your answer would fail. 6. At pass-making our boy is not deft. 8. Bv some other route you've yet to see. 7. That this means is not likely endearing. 9. "That's for dudes. I'm not ridin' a cage!" If you're stumped and need one final clue Don't panic, grab another BUSCH * brew Try over and under Around and asunder And consider the option of through! And consider the option of through! BUSCH Beer HEAD FOR THE MOUNTAINS If you think you have the answer, call the following toll-free number: 1-800-453-4800 Note: This number is only in service on date of this publication between the hours of 12:00 Noon and 6:00 PM. When you call, have your completed rhymes with you. The operator will check to see if you have collected all the clues. BUSCH BUSCH BUSCH Bock of Pilsen, Premium Street, Röthenbach 1937 1 Anheuser-Busch, Inc.; Brewers of BUSCH BEER • St. Louis; Missouri; USA University Daily Kansan. February 24, 1982 Student Affairs reorganizes departments By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter The division of student affairs will be reorganized to better meet student needs, David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday. The student affairs program now is divided into three areas: admissions and records, student life and student services. The reorganized program will eliminate student services. Its departments will be distributed between student life and admissions and records, which will come under the new heading of educational services. Because of the change, there will be more help for students seeking campus jobs or preparing to enter the job market and more help for enhancement of out-of-class activities. AMBLER SAID he considered the reorganization after the January death of Donald Alderson, former dean of student services. The position left by Alderson will not be filled. Instead the money will be funneled into the rest of the departments. Implementation of the program will begin immediately, Ambler said, but will not be completed until the beginning of the next fiscal year, July 1, because it involves some reallocation of funds. Under the reorganization, admissions and records will become separate departments under educational services Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and !Openings for Student Senate Budget Subcommittee! Applications Available in Senate Office Membership Closes: 1 March, 5 p.m. V The World is Coming... Caribbean Feb. 27th & 28th TRAVEL CENTER COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRANSFER STUDENTS The 33rd Annual COMMUNITY COLLEGE Conference will be held on Thursday, February 25 in the SATELLITE Union Each year the Office of Admissions and Records sponsors a conference which brings to the campus community college personnel for a program of academic and student affairs presentations. On the basis of attendance, students meet with their former students who are community college transfers. The Office of Admissions and Records invites interested students to take part in this year's Conference. It will be an excellent opportunity to discuss your preparations for K.U., how well you have met the academic challenge of the academic programs, and your concerns for the future here. Your participation also helps the University build a stronger relationship with your former school, while gaining valuable information about making your K.U. experience a more meaningful one for you. Students attending the morning meeting will be excused from attendance in their class between 9:30 and 10:00 a.m. on the 25th. If you cannot attend, students should send an email that the student conferences are scheduled until 11:00. If you could stop by for a brief visit from 10:30 to 11:00, it would be appreciated. The following community colleges will be attending the Concord College and Wake Forest University. The students in the Satellite Union. The locations are indicated below. COMMUNITY COLLEGES: Allen County, Iola-P Barton County, Great Bend-P Butler County, El Dorado-P Colby-P Dodge City-P Donnelly, Kansas City, Mo.-P Garden City-P Haskell-P Highland-P Hutchinson-P Allen County, Iola-P Independence-P Johnson County-SE Kansas City Kansas-SP Labette, Parsons-P Maple Woods, Kansas City Mo P. SE: Conference/Lounge Level 3 Independence-P Neosho County, Chanute-P Penn Valley, Kansas City, Mo-P Prailt Seward County, Liberal-P P: Party Room Level 1 This is your opportunity to give feedback information about experiences at K.U. to your former community college. Room Schedule for Student Conferences 9:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. February 25. SATELITE Union In case you have any questions concerning the conference, please contact the Office of Admissions and Records, 128 Strong Hall, phone 864-3911. Other departments under educational services will be admissions, student orientation programs, student financial aid, student employment, the University Counseling Center and the KU Placement Center. records, will become dean of educational services. UNDER THE heading of student life will be all departments having to do with students' special needs, Ambler said. Barbara Ballard, coordinator of the women's resource center, will continue in that position and also become associate dean of student life. Ambler In addition, the student health services will report directly to Ambler. He now oversees the Kansas Union and the department of housing, two other services that operate on their own income and not on money from the state. dinator of student employment in the financial aid office will become full time. "There's going to be a lot of special problems with the health services." Ambler said. "As enrollment stabilizes, the income to the student health services stabilizes because it's based on the student health fee." To avoid increasing the health fee, Ambler said he would examine the health services now being offered. FRESHMEN STUDENTS (Plus any interested upperclassmen) The 33rd Annual Principal-Counselor-Student Conference will be held on Thursday, February 25 in the Kansas Union Each year the Office of Admissions and Records sponsors a Conference which brings to the campus high school principals and counselors a program of academic and student affairs presentations. The conference also meets with their former students who are freshmen or sophomores. The Office of Admissions and Records invites interested students to take part in this year's Conference. It will be an excellent opportunity to discuss your preparation for K.U., how well you have met the academic challenge of the academic programs, and your concerns for the future here. Your participation also helps the University build a stronger relationship with your former school, while gaining valuable information about making your K.U. experience a more meaningful one for you. Students attending the morning meeting will be excused only from attendance in their class between 9:30 and 10:00 a.m. on the 25th. The following high schools will be attending the Conference on the Development of Emerging Student in the Kansas Union. The locations are indicated below. KANSAS HIGH SCHOOLS: Abilene-B Aquinas-B Ashland-Englewood-C Atchison-B Augusta-B Baldwin-B Beloit-C Bishop Mege-Sunflower Room, Level Blue Valley (Stanley):Alcove D, Level Central Heights-C Chanute-B Chaparral-C Chase County-C Colby-B Conway Springs-C Decatur Community-C DeSoto-B Dodge City-B Elkart-C Ellsworth-C Emporia-B Eudora-B Field Kindley Memorial-B F.L. Schlagle International Room, Level 5 Fort Scott-B Gardner-B Garnett-B Goddard-B Goodland-C Gorham-C Great Band-Alcove F, Level 3 Herlington-C Herington-C Hiawatha-B Highland Park-B Hill City-C Holosington-B Horton-C Humboldt-C Hutchinson-Alcove A, Level 3 Immaculata-B Independence-B Jetmore-C Junction City-Alcove B, Level 3 Kapaun-Marmel Carmel-B Labette County-C Lansing-B Larned-C Lawnmore Big Eight Room, Level 5 Leavenworth-Trail Room, Level 2 Lincoln-C Lindsburg-C Louisburg-C Locust Larry-G Lyndon-C Manhattan Cork I (Cafeteria) Level 3 Mankato-C Marquette C MCheron-B Meade-C Medicine Lodge, Sharon-C Mountain Valley C Montezuma-C Moundridge-C Mulvane-C Nemaha Valley-B Neodesha-C Norton-C Olathe-Traditions Room, Level 4 Olpe C Osage City-C Osawatomie-B Osborne-C Ottawa-B Parsons-B Perry-Lecompont-C Philipsburg-C Plainville-C Peaceman Ridge-B Pomona-C Prairie View-C Quivira Heights-C Rossville-C Russell-B Salina Central Cottonwood Room, Level 1 South Meadowlark Room, Level 3 Santa Fe Trail-C Scott City-C Swanbury-B Shawnee Mission East-Woodruff Aud, Level 5 Shawnee Mission North-Centennial Room, Level 6 Shawnee Mission Northwest-Kansas Room, Level 6 Shawnee Mission South-Forum Room, Level 4 Shawnee Mission West-Pine Room, Level 6 Southwestern Heights-C St. Marys-C St. Paul, Erie, Thayer-C Summer-Berwyn-C Syracuse-C Tonganoxie-Alcove E, Level 3 Topkeah High-Patior A, Level 5 ILLINOIS HIGH SCHOOLS: New Trite Winnetka-Governor Room, Level 4 Valley Falls-C NEBRASKA HIGH S.C. Central, Omaha-B Creighton Prep, Omaha-B B-Ballroom Level 5. Tonganoxie-Alceve E, Level 3 Topkea West-Partar A, Level 5 Topkea West-Partar C, Level 5 Wabauanse-C Wahburn Rural-Cork 2 (Cafeteria) Level 3 Washington(K.C.)-B Watheena-C Wellington-B Wellville-B West Smith County-C Wichita East-Regionalist Room, Leve Wichita Heights-B Wichita North-Mt. Oread Room, Level Wichita North-ML Oread Room, Level 5 Wichita Northwest Council Room, Level 4 Wichita South-B Wichita Southeast-Walnut (Conference) Wichita West-B Williamsburg-C Winfield-B Wyandotte-B MISSOURI HIGH SCHOOLS: Chicago South 8 Raytown South, Raytown 8 Liberty 8 NEBRASKA HIGH SCHOOLS: Millard North High School, Omaha-B Millard South High School, Omaha-B C-Cafeteria Level 3 This is your opportunity to give feedback information about our periences at K.U. to your former high school. Room Schedule for Student Conferences Room Schedule for Student Conferences 9:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKETPLACE NEW WAY ST & W 2ND AVE. GA February 25, Kansas Union In case you have any questions concerning the Conference, please contact the Office of Admissions and Records, 128 Strong Hall, COORS LONGNECKS $7.00 the KEEGER THE DIVISION AWARDS 2016 IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 843-9803 841-9450 TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK NEW PRICES First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills: 6.30-7.30 $0.50 7.30-8.30 $0.75 8.30-9.30 $1.00 9.30-10.30 $1.25 10.30-11.45 $1.50 It Could Only Happen at... THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO 1846 Headmasters. 809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044 You'll Love Our Style. - Applications for 1982-83 STUDENT ORGANIZATION OFFICE SPACE IN THE KANSAS UNION ARE NOW BEING TAKEN, ANY STUDENT ORGANIZATION MAY APPLY Pick up Information & Applications at the SUA Office, 4th level, Kansas Union Deadline is March 26. 5 p.m. Use Kansan Classified NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA AND VIDEO GAME CENTER All New TURBO is Here All New The No. 1 Race Car Game COUPON Present This Coupon And Receive Two FREE VIDEO GAME PLAYS Expires 2/26/02 COUPON Present This Coupon And Receive ANY SIZE PIZZA $1'00 OFF Expires 2/28/82 Limit one coupon per person COUPON Regular Pizza Prices Megalian Pizza Flat LARGE Double Cheese *4.95 *3.95 MEDIUM Double Cheese *3.95 *2.95 SMALL Double Cheese *2.95 TINY Double Cheese *1.95 Additional Meat or Garden Topping 75' ea. Large 65' ea. Medium 55' ea. Small 45' ea. Tiny OPEN DAILY 10 a.m.-11:45 p.m. SUN. Noon-11:45 p.m. No other Coupons accepted with this Offer Coke G Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 24, 1982 Opinion Study short-sighted Building a library that will probably not meet the needs of the University of Kansas in 18 years may sound impractical. But a study, commissioned by the Kansas Legislature, recommends just that. The Legislature hired a New York accounting firm, Peat, Marwick and Mitchell Co., to study KU's proposed science technology library. The firm's preliminary study would cut the size of the proposed library by more than half, from 230,000 sq. ft. to 99,000 sq. ft. According to Allen Wiechert, KU facilities planning director, 99,000 sq. ft. falls far short of the space needed to accommodate the estimated growth of the library by the year 2000. The proposed $22 million library would house materials now found in the Malott Hall earth science library, the Strong Hall mathematics library, the Murphy Hall music library and the engineering library, currently buried in the Satellite Union. The Legislature will probably not approve the money for the library this year, but some KU officials are hopeful that the plan will be adopted next year. KU's original proposal would provide ample study space for students, easy access to the materials and some growing room for the library. The Peat, Marwick study severely limits the library's potential for expansion and cuts the number of student work stations from about 4,000 to 2,000. It also ignores a state building code that requires that aisles in libraries be wide enough for wheelchairs. The company will complete the second phase of its study by June 30. If the Legislature decides to finance the library, it should consider the plan that will best serve the University. Rather than spending millions of dollars to build a library that will be barely adequate when it is completed, and will be outdated in a few years, the Legislature needs to look to the future. Cutting corners is not always the cheapest, or the smartest, route. United States losing sight of U.N.'s international goal The worth of the United Nations has constantly been questioned since its creation on June 26, 1945. And the United States, the most populous nation in the organization, has been doing much of the criticizing. American criticism intensifies every few years, but gradually subsides, leaving the United Nations to continue on its same course. However, the latest round has been especially sharp, reflecting the general sentiment that what they see as a democratic organization being manipulated by a majority of non-democratic nations. Edward Koch, mayor of New York City, home of the United Nations, recently laughed out at the nations of the organization for the hypocrisy of their resolutions on Israel. An article in the Washington Post said the three main goals of the United Nations seemed to be to embarrass the United States, delegitimize Israel and exorcise South Africa. But most significant is the criticism levied by the U.S. ambassador to the United PETER MAYER CHRIS COBLER Nations, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick. Kirkpatrick called the United Nations "a dismal show" in which conflicts are "polarized, extended and exacerbated" rather than solved. This criticism comes from a high U.S. official and supposedly reflects government policy. Kirkpatrick concluded, "It's a very serious problem. That's not the sort of activity we want, in fact, to underwrite. Many states have failed to reach the conclusion. They don't like that the United States pays for the lion's share of U.N. operations and then gets pounded around in the General Assembly by a bloe of nations, each with a population smaller than that of Rhode Island." When the United Nations was created following World War II, there were only 51 members, giving the United States a much greater degree of control. Now there are 154, each with the same one vote in the General Assembly that the United States has. And the Security Council, the enforcing branch of the United Nations, is responsible because of the veto power of the five permanent members, the United States, the Soviet Union, China, France and Britain. Consequently, tangible results rarely come out of the U.N. headquarters. Instead, rhetoric is battered about, as each nation tries to protect its own national interests. And increasingly in recent years, these national interests are directly conflicted with U.S. national interests. Of course, even ardent critics of the United Nations allow that certain U.N. agencies, such as the World Health Organization, the refugee commission and the meteorological service, do good work, but these accomplishments are greatly overshaded by shortcomings. In attaining its main goal, that of helping the United Nations often has failed miserably. The only war in which the United Nations has intervened is Korea, and that was possible only because Russia had voluntarily left it. Russia has also intervened, such as those in Vietnam, the Middle East. It's all too easy to point out U.N. shortages in the Middle East, where Martin Becker's book "Is It the United Nations Dead?" Hungary, Iran, Afghanistan and Poland, the United Nations was powerless to act. - The United Nations is unable to act conclusively in disputes. No single dispute has been resolved by the United Nations with finality. - The United Nations does not possess military force adequate to keep the peace. The United Nations is without the necessary force to enforce its resolutions. - No worldwide decisions are made in the United Nations, except, where to send health information. - The United Nations cannot act without great-power unanimity. - The General Assembly has grown so large that it has become unwieldy. Getting the General Assembly to accept reasonable proposals is difficult. Letters Policy - The United Nations cannot act with sufficient speed to cope with emergencies. - The United Nations is paralyzed by its continuing financial crisis. These and other shortcomings make it easy for American critics to dismiss the United Nations as an idealistic, impractical hope that has outlived its usefulness. But before the United Nations is allowed to die, Americans should more closely examine the ideals of the United Nations and perhaps their own reason for wishing its demise. The United Nations was established after the second of the great wars by a world fearful of its own power. It was hailed as "last best hope for peace," an international organization promoting cooperation, equality, human rights, social and economic progress and, above all, peace. All nations who embraced these ideals were welcomed. Javier Perez de Cuellar, U.N. secretary-general, points out that the United Nations is "the only forum for discussing international issues in a way that is relevant to which the United Nations operates, it is prevented from doing more. Nonetheless, the importance of this purpose should not be discounted. Discussion is the first step in solving a problem, and, if nothing else, the United Nations focuses attention on world problems and exerts pressure for peaceful cooperation. And even though pointing to tangible accomplishments of the United Nations is difficult, the intangibles do exist. Nations attempt to solve their conflicts through discussion rather than force. More interaction leads to greater understanding. The United Nations at least attempts to overcome national interests and biases and hit upon an international solution. The United States has begun a policy of cooperation, but it also keeps its national interests uppermost. Not coincidentally, the United States has begun to issue disaggregated statements about the worth of the United States in the context of the Third World in the General Assembly. During the first years of the United Nations, the United States dictated which resolutions would be passed. The power structure of the world has changed so drastically since then that the United States must struggle to gain approval for one of its resolutions. But before the United States gives up on the United Nations, it should remember that international, not national, solutions are the only foundation for attaining this lofty goal. The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-bleed and not exceed 100 words. They should be the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or rewrite letters. THERE'S ONLY ONE PROBLEM. WE CAN'T FIND ANYBODY SMART ENOUGH TO OPERATE IT. EDUCATION BUDGET DEFENSE BUDGET © IGZ MIAMI NEWS Letters to the Editor Student leaders' manipulations hurt ASK To the Editor: During the past year there has been a barrage of criticism directed against the Associate Students of Kansas. Much of the criticism is based solely upon inexcusable ignorance and personal prejudice, but it is not to this criticism which I address myself. It is the more recent attacks, more harmful and destructive in their intent which I feel obligated to refute. An unsigned editorial in the Feb. 9 University Daily Kanasan said ASK was ineffective and a great waste of student funds. These charges are untrue. ASK is one of the most active and valuable student organizations in Kansas. It is involved with both while group than our own KU Student Senate. Indeed, it is because of the gross ineffectiveness of the Senate that ASK at KU suffers from internal conflict and organizational difficulties. Critics of ASK should be reminded that it is only at KU that ASK is treated with casual indifference. Student governments at all the other universities in the Regent's system place a great emphasis on and actively participate in them. In the Feb. 15 University Daily Kansan, David Adkins, student body president, said that it was obvious that KU's delegation to ASK's Legislative Assembly was disorganized and ill-prepared. If this were true it would be largely his fault. The ASK bylaws and constitution invest Adkins with the authority to select the ASK board member from KU, and he, along with the KU faculty, is an active assistant choose KU's ASK campus director. The organizational effectiveness of our ASK delegation depends to a great degree on the abilities of the two individuals selected. In turn, their ability to succeed depends upon the commitment of the student body president and the Senate to actively concern themselves with ASK. Presently, and in the past, student body presidents and the Senate have used the power given them by the ASK bylaws and constitution to undercut, disrupt and essentially blackmail the organization. They have done this and still do so. What is the problem? How can we ask what ASK is and what it has the potential to do. With the exception of Greg Schnacke, I have yet to see a KU student body president do more than attend legislative assemblies and speak in ignorance about internal difficulties, which, because of their lack of participation, they truly know very little about. Adkins chose to ignore those members of the ASK delegation who had committed a great deal of time and sincere effort to the organization, and selected a board member with no previous experience in leadership. Ask was the ASK. Ask did our last student body president, Adkins willfully chose a board member not on the merits of his abilities, but because the nominee was a personal friend of his. No attempt was made to seek applications, and no attempt was made to qualify the appointed ASK participants for a board member. I think this action was totally irresponsible and illustrated a complete lack of concern for the continued viability of ASK. This belief is intensified when I remember that Adkins stood before the last Senate meeting and cooled eloquently about mentioning the fact that ASK at KU, only to turn around in less than a week and slap down the group's efforts. Many of the delegates who attended the legislative assembly were members of Adkins' own staff. It's funny, but I do not remember them spartanly presenting themselves on any of their presentations presented at the assembly. The inherent hypocrisy of such wily-washy politics only illustrates that all Adkins is concerned with the truth. It is simply not true that the KU-ASK delegation is without committed and active volunteers. However, as long as student body presidents use their authority to manipulate and obstruct the group's efforts, the KU organization will never realize the value of its potential. Student body presidents and student senates do not sit outside Wescoe Hall during finals to get students to write their legislators. They do not encourage students to learn about the legislative issues and processes which affect their lives. They do not sit at tables during registration seeking participants in their activities. But, for whatever it is worth, ASK does, and will continue to do so. Any student can be a member of ASK, and any student is more than welcome to write letters, work at post card drives, research issues and talk with legislators. The same cannot be said of the Senate. More than ever, it is a closed organization, open only to a select few, many of whom are only interested in filling up their resumes. Maria McDougal. Liberal arts and sciences student senator and former ASK board member Unified voice needed To the Editor: As the new executive director of what David Henry considers a terminally ill creature, I am naturally disappointed by his call for KU's secession from the Associate Students of Kansas, which he considers an act of political mercy killing. However, I find him a more competent winner than a veterinarian. It seems he would protect the family dog when all it needs is a flea collar. Throughout his column in Feb. 16 University Daily Kansas, Henry never identifies what is really the greatest hindrance to a successful statewide student lobby. Critics are always demanding the disbanding of ASK, but rarely suggest how to improve it. Thus, valuable time is diverted from working on student issues to running around the state putting out fires, Hopefully, Henry's comments will remain a harmless snark. Faced with declining state support of higher education and the most severe financial aid cutbacks in history, the last thing students need is a long, bitter fight over which lobbying organization looks best on paper. As Lincoln says, it's not change horses in the middle of the stream. Some facts misstated in Henry's article should be clarified. AKM employs two full-time lobbies and a full-time staff assistant, not a single lobbie. The average number of Dues are less than $18,000 per year, not $17,000. Henry claimance KU students would be better served by withdrawing from ASK and spending the money for dues on a lobby for KU only, which is also one of their core claims is claim is woefully short of supporting evidence. Are too few students aware of and interested in ASK at KU? Certainly, and this is the case at every university. But could a KU-only lobby do any better? If Henry has a plan, I'd like to hear it, because I see no reason why improved organizing methods for Henry's KUSL couldn't also be applied to KU-ASK. One thing established by internal reform in 1978, this fall was that ASK uses the student government. I believe that KU's student leaders can organize an effective ASK group. But if not, as Henry suggests, how can they organize an effective KU-only group? Does ASK 'bite off more than it can chew?' Perhaps. But again, what will prevent KUSL from taking on as many issues—or more—and having fewer resources to deal with them? what issues would a KU-only group deal with? KU is a member of the state university system, and virtually every education issue, from faculty salaries to graduate fee waivers to tuition, affects the entire system. What helps or hurts KU helps or hurts every other school the same way. But instead of having three-full-time staffers, KUSL would only have one. Instead of drawing on 80,000 students, constituents and voters, there would be only 25,000. Instead of an office five minutes from the Capitol, it would be nearly an hour away. Instead of having member institutions in districts with representatives on every major committee, there would be no one in charge of delegation, which has no member on either of the important Ways and Means committees. Certainly there are some issues affecting KU alone. But KU students already have a paid job. I would like to thank you for your help. Kansas Legislature: the student body president, who sits on the Regents' Student Advisory Committee and who goes unmentioned in Henry's article. Henry's plan makes as much sense as advocating that the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at KU withdraw from Student Senate to get more of its students involved in student life. But Henry would affect the student voice at KU just as Henry's plan would affect the student voice in Kansas. What Henry's article didn't tell us is that ASK is responding to the very problems he described. In the last six weeks, we have: published an eight-page newspaper for mass distribution to students, begun a bi-weekly newsletter for senators and student leaders, approved a plan to involve more than 1,000 students in a post card writing campaign to the Legislature, testified three times on ASK issues, met with nearly 50 senators, delivered all memorabilia of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, been unanimously accepted as members of the American College Testing Program's Kansas Council and visited four member campuses, including two functions at KU. ASK is moving in the right direction. Critics face the choice of helping that or hindering it. They must decide. Mark Tallman, ASK executive director The University Daily KANSAN Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom--864-4810 Business Office--864-4358 (USPS 5640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday; Sunday and holiday for August and September. Subscription@usps.com. 60463 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $7 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $4 a year in Carnegie County and $1 for six months, mail through the student activity fee. Pastmaster: Send changes of address to the University Dakar Kenyan. Fint Hall, The University of Kansas, Kansas City, KS 66105. Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Tate Jessie Jude Editor Tate Hanley Karen Schlueter Editor's Editor Karen Schlueter Campus Editor George Gene Campus Editor Jon Beebe Assistant Campus Editors Joe Rebein, Rebeena Canchey Assignment Editor Steve Robrenau Associate Sports Editor Gerry Stiproil Entertainment Editor Carla Beach Tailors Lia Masson, Sharon Appelbam Wire Editors Eileen Mary, Tayler Masson Photo Editor Lia Masson Staff Photographers Jon Hardesty John Hanbaugh Job Exhibit Joe Exhibit, Bob Greenman Tracey Thompson, Mark McDonald Copy Chief Candy Clarzer, Cindy Clarzer Columnians Bren Abbott, Daniowers, Chris Coller, Dan Toricha, Jolyn Walee, Liss Holton, Ben Boatanger Jane Boatanger, Ben Jones, William Andrew Editorial Cartoonists J邦 Bartes, John Richardson, Shaft Artists Jan Bryan, John Keeling, Lorrance Rangani Staff Artists Warni Kelly, Kebert Harshan, Jon Gun Retail Sales Manager Ann Humberroe National Sales Manager Howard Shanklin Campus Sales Manager Perry Boil School Sales Manager Kelsey Simons Production Manager Larry Leibengood Teamleader Manager John Egno Representatives Larry Marmurter Larry Marmurter, Susan Cookey, Richard Dugan, Jerr Gremes, Amy Jones, Matthew Langan, Phillip Lim, Jia Mao, Robert O'Bannon, Kathryn Myers, Myer B) O'Bannon, Mike Pearl, Campus Interns Susan Snyder, Jane Wendertbeck University of Miami Susan Snyder, Jane Wendertbeck Denise A. Popovita, Vera Zakaryan Sales and Marketing Advisor John Obertan General Manager and News Advisor Rick Mauzer nct, pry in ad- dand to ent cce the SK akn to an to or rd cedly ers ers the as as acs cs it to University Daily Kansas, February 24, 1982 Midwife From page 1 Martha Roberts of Newton who gave birth to one child at home and one in the hospital, agreed that midwives were more attentive than doctors to a mother's needs. "Many doctors and nurses feel threatened by people who maintain their right to make their own choices in health care, especially when a situation goes against common practice," she said. "We have found non-nurse midwives to be more accepting of our philosophy. Also, a woman giving birth receives far greater physical and emotional support. However, the Kansas State Nursing Association has questioned how much training a midwife should have to go through to obtain a license. The bill merely states that the training, as well as the midwifery program, should be monitored by the State Secretary of Health and Welfare. But Ron Smith, a spokesman for the state division of Health and Welfare, said the secretary opposed the implementation of the program. Smith said all programs were required to conduct studies and make a presentation before the committee. the right not to issue midwife licenses in the interests of health and safety. "My only statement is that this program should undergo that same procedure," he said. In action on a similar issue yesterday, a federal judge in Illinois ruled that the state has But U.S. District Judge James B. Mcran stopped short of outlawing midwifery in Illinois. "The state does allow the practice of midwifery in a sense," Moran said. "The real question is how much medical training for licensing is appropriate. "The state of Illinois is saying that training must be an R.N. plus an acceptable program." South lures students for spring break Stauffer Spring vacation is drawing near. And as usual, many KU students are preparing to visit popular sun places. Among the most popular spots are South Padre Island, Texas, and Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Padre, located on the Gulf of Mexico, is a popular vacation resort because of its warm climate, Gene Wee, SUA program adviser said recently. He said that there was a local flavor to South Padre Island that attracts many students. Kevin Orr, Merriam freshman, said that he had enjoyed his trip to Padre Island last year. "Down at Padre you feel comfortable because you can relate with other students from Kansas." "People down there are nice, and organizations have many activities planned for the Kansas colleges. We have intense rivalries because you can that you can create good friendships with them. "I went down with a couple of friends last year, and this year I plan to do the same. I really enjoy swimming down there and the great feeling you get when you know school is out for a week." Wally Brandshaw, St. Louis freshman, said that many students flocked to the Fort Worth campus of Texas Southern. He said that he liked Fort Lauderdale because he met people from a cross-section of the country. "Padre Island is a nice place to go, but the people who go there are usually from this part of the country and the Southwest," he said. “At Fort Lauderdale you get people not only from the Midwest but also from the Southeast and especially from the states in Florida. You’ll find Fort Lauderdale seems to be the most popular.” Bradshaw also said that he enjoyed girlwatching at Fort Lauderdale. "Best-looking girls I've ever seen are down there," he said. Padre Island and Fort Lauderdale are not the only hot spots to go to over spring break, Wee said. Daytona Beach, Fla., Miami Beach, Fla., Orlando, Florida and Mexico are among the other popular choices. From page 1 Kansas. Mr. Stauffer avidly supported Landon's bid for the presidency in 1986. "I have lost a longtime friend whose memory I will treasure as long as live," Iland said. Mr. Stauffer is survived by two sons and a daughter. His son Stanley is president of Stauffenberg College. His other son, John, is vice president of Staufer Communications Inc. and the publisher of the Topkea Capital-Journal. His daughter, Mrs. Betty Ann Collins, lives in independence. Mo Mr. Staufer is also survived by 11 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending. Pages Levine said he would advise all pages to wear comfortable shoes. "These things are killing my feet," he said. "We needed more action," he said. "This was a slow day. I was told." Every afternoon, pages get a break in their work for a special tour of the Capitol dome. "When you get up there, you look down, and the only thing that struck me was how far down it was and if it fell, how many people would go to their splattering deaths," he said. The day did have its high points for the pages. "I got to sit in the governor's chair," Ducy said. Usually, all the pages get their picture taken with Gov. John Carlin, but yesterday, the governor took it for himself. Most pages said their jobs were "okay," but the pay's too low." They also said they didn't think legislators were very business-like. "It's just an animal house," George said. Levine said, "A lot of things they do seem unnecessary." They said that being a page was their own They said that being a page was their own idea, but that their parents were happy about it. "They probably thought it was real neat," Levine said. Hanson said, "Anyway, it's better than English class." I am a woman who is not afraid of the dark. I am a woman who is not afraid of the dark. 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KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO GRAMOPHONE Holiday Plaza • Lawrence, Ks. DNE shop 842-1811 Page 6 University Daily Karisan, February 24, 1982 BELLES D'ANES A tired Carnival-goer rests under a paper wall decoration during Saturday night's celebration Festivals offer chance for pre-Lenten fling Plastic grapes augmented her colfurce, so Barbara Harris thought her identity was obvious. "I'm Carmen Miranda—who else wears fruit in her hair?" asked Harris, the administrative assistant of the department of English, Saturday night. But it was a weekend for shedding identities and for close encounters of the cultural kind. It was the weekend for the KU German Club's Faschingsball and the Brazil-Portugal Club's Carnaval. DESPITE THEIR different names, both celebrations mirror pre-Lenten carnivals in Brazil and Germany. And, as more than 600 persons found out this weekend, both were good reasons to party most of the night—and the next day—awav Faschingsball led the weekend festivities on Friday night. The smaller of the two celebrations, Faschingsball attracted approximately 70 people, said William Keel, assistant professor of German and German Club adviser. But size was not a prerequisite for a good time—at least not for Nancy Elliot, Kansas City, Ks., senior. "Why am I here?" she asked. "Because it was fun last year, because I'm a German student, because it's here." As Elliot spoke, about 20 people danced the polka and waltzed to original German Karneval music in the Kansas Union's Big Eight Room. Almost all of the Faschingsball-goers were costumed, representing everything from clowns to characters from the Wizard of Oz. "IN CLOGNE (Germany), Karneval is a state of mind where you accept the idea of having a different perspective on everything," Keel said. "You know, 'Let's not take life so seriously; let's enjoy ourselves.'" bur Karneval in Germany is also a time for political statements, according to Sabine Schnitker, Munster, Germany, graduate student. "People will dress up to make a comment about the government, and its policies," she said. Friday night, however, KU's version of Karneval was closer to Keel's statement about enjoying life. "The Union tells us we went through two kegs of beer, eight packages of pretzels and two cases of soda," Keel said. "Basically, we didn't make any money. We just made enough to pay our Union bills." After attracting about 660 people to the Lawrence Opera House Saturday night, the Brazilian Carnaval made about $2,000, according to Mauro Nobre, president of the Brazil-Portugal Club. The event cost $1,635 to produce, Nobre said, which leaves the club a profit. "PROFIT WILL be used just like it was last year," Nobre said. "We'll use it to get the Carnaval started for next year." Money seemed to be the last thing on anyone's mind Saturday night. By 9 p.m., the main floor of the Opera House was crowded with costumed men and women, exuberantly dancing to samba music. Confetti and streamers rained from the Opera House's private club area above. In costumes, metallic gold and silver trim, as well as sequins and glitter, were the order of the evening. If there were any rules for successful costumes, they were, "be creative," and "the barer the better." Although an overwhelming majority wore costumes, some people wore their street clothes. "Why do I need a costume? You don't need a costume to have fun." Bernardo Webel, Maracay, Venezuela, freshman, said. "I just wanted to be comfortable." Indeed, the constant movement on the dance floor lasted until 3:30 a.m. and generated a tropical-like heat that caused some to leave the general milieu and dance on the tables. Carnaval in Brazil is supposed to be the one last fling before Lent, but not everyone observes the religious part of the season. “Well, I’ll tell you what,” said Niboe. “I love Carnaval, but I’m very pagan. I don’t give up anything for Lent.” TAMPA BEACH, FLORIDA - DECEMBER 12, 1970 -- A woman dances under a rainbow of snowflakes during a winter holiday celebration in Tampa Bay, Florida. No Carnival celebration would be complete without confetti, streamers and bright decorations. A Fritz Keel looks on as an Fassingham participants join in a polka. Fritz is the son of assistant professor William Keel, one of the organizers of the Fassingham ball. Story by Kathy Kase CANADA'S LOST MUSIC Winners of the Faschingsball costume contest watch as other contestants parade by. Photos by John Hankammer --- University Daily Kansan, February 24, 1982 Page 7 0.94 Soviet Jewry day observed "We have not forgotten you and we will not forget you." These words, printed on a poster in the Kansas Union lobby, express the concern of some American Jews for the plight of Soviet Jews. The poster was part of a display by Hilile, a campus Jewish organization, in observance of National Soviet Jewry Solidarity Day today. This is the second year of the observance, Ellen Kort, Hillel adviser, said yesterday. She said it was part of a national effort to make people aware of the conditions of Jews in the Soviet Union and their efforts to emigrate. Soviet officials have started a crackdown on how many Jews are killed. Two years ago about 5,000 Jews were allowed to leave the Soviet Union in January. Kort said, but this year, in the meantime, he reported, only 280 were allowed to leave. Soviet Jews who apply for a visa must have a blood relative living in Israel. However, Kort said, this was no longer guaranteed that a visa would be granted. She said the refusenski, people denied visas, were often blacklisted, which could mean loss of a job, demotion or some other form of harassment. Hillel participates in a continuous letter-writing campaign to Soviet and U.S. officials, asking that the Jews who want to leave be allowed to, she said. She said letters also were written to refusenicks to help keep their hopes Hill will sponsor a table in front of the Union today with information about A movie, "The Fixer," will be shown at 7:30 tonight in Dvche Auditorium. "The Fixer" is about a Jewish handyman living in anti-Semitic Kiev, who becomes the victim of a czarist frame-up. Admission to the movie is $1 for Hillel members and $1.50 for non-members. KU police reported a theft of tools and instruments sometime between 1 and 1:30 a.m. Sunday at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Police said thieves took an amplifier valued at $400, tools valued at $300 and a cymbal stand valued at $75. Band members, who were participating in a Black History event, were leading some equipment in the ballroom when the articles were taken. There are no suspects. On the record said thieves used bolt cutters and cutting tools to cut the lock on the Motobecan bicycle. THEVES STOLE $250 worth of car equipment from a parked car at 162 1W. 15th St. sometime between midnight and 2 p.m. Saturday. Burglar entered the vehicle and picked up radar detector. There are no suspects. THEVES STOLE $115 worth of pilot's equipment sometime between 6 p.m. Sunday and 11 a.m. Monday from a parked car at 3041 Nathan Dixon Road in San Francisco where the unlocked car and took a pilot's case filled with charts and maps. TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK NEW PRICES First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 6.30-7.30 $0.50 7.30-8.30 $0.75 8.30-9.30 $1.00 9.30-10.30 $1.25 10.30-11.45 $1.50 It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO NEW PRICES First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 6.30-7.30 $0.50 7.30-8.30 $0.75 8.30-9.30 $1.00 9.30-10.30 $1.25 10.30-11.45 $1.50 It Could Only Happen at... THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO cnn Entry Deadline for the Recreation Services intramural track meet is 5:00 p.m. today in 208 Robinson. THE AIRLINES The World is Coming... VIASA VENEZUELAN INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS TRAVEL CENTER Feb. 27th & 28th We Sell Service. We Sell Quality We Sell Fuji. RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT • LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 • (913) 841-6642 SPECIAL Monday thru Wednesday SAWBUCK SANDWICH SHOP Fuji. Introductory Coupon Offer 10¢ for a small drink Offer good thru March 3 $2.00 Little Buck Sandwich and 50¢ OFF Offer good thru March 7 1814 West 23rd CARRY Southwest Plaza Shopping Center OUT Mon.-Thurs. 11-9 Fri.-Sat. 11-10 Sun. 12-9 843-3700 --- The University of Kansas Rock Chalk Revue 1982 InThe Spotlight Thursday, Feb. 25 7 p.m. $2.50 Friday. Feb. 26 8 p.m. $3.75 Saturday, Feb. 27 8 p.m. $5.00 Tickets available at: SUA Box office, Kiefs, Saftees, Hillcrest. Raney Drug. KU Information Booth. MASS. STREET DELI inc 941 MASSACHUSETTS now featuring . . . Soft-Serve Frozen DESSERT YOGURT So Nutritious . . . So Lo Cal . . . So Natural So GOOD! Try Some Now Bring in This AD Buy One Yogurt Cone get the second one FREE No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Many Fruit Flavors To Choose From Offer Expires 2/28/82 J Michael's DEPARTMENT STORE SPR '82 ESCAPADE REGISTER NOW THRU SUNDAY, FEB. 28 FOR J. MICHAEL'S BIGGEST GIFT EVER! WIN AN EXCITING TRAVEL BAG FILLED WITH SPRING FASHIONS! Don't Miss: THE TRAVEL SHOW '82 Our center will be bustling with activity all week. Saturday and Sunday will climax the week. ESCAPE THE WINTER DOLDRUMS WITH A BRIGHT SPRING WARDROBE ... JOIN OUR SPRING '82 ESCAPE! The Southern Hills Shopping Center 23rd and Ousdahl Hours: Monday thru Saturday 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Sunday 12 p.m.-5 p.m. J. MICHAEL'S COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELFONO 843-1780 KATHARINE HEPBURN HENRY FONDA On Golden Pond A UNIVERSAL PICTURE PG 4.90 5.90 VARSITY COURT LANE TEL: 212-853-7905 JACK NICOLSON THE BORDER R Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 Md, Sat, Sun, 2:15 HILLCREST 1 91X AND IOWA TELEPHONE 862-8400 Enthralling... CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Feb 7 15 & 8 30 Met. Sat. Sun. 2 15 HILLCREST Feb 7 30 & 9 30 HILLCREST 2 TWO NATIONAL MUSEUMS 5 Accenture Memorials The French Neptunian's Woman Eve: 7:30 & 8:30 Mat. Sat. Sun: 7:15 HILLCREST 1 TELFONE & BROUGHT RAGTIME 8 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE PHG = 7.45 only Mat. 2.00 JAMES CANNY CINEMA 1 1935 TWO DAYS IN Joni por jour pour jour • marking performance Joni HELF OVERI Evenings at 7:00 B & 15: Sunday Mat. w a 2:00 JONIE BARRECKSON AT MEILLI Joni Accepted CINEMA 2 WINDWALKER TREVOR HOWARD INS. WEEKEND ON MAY Lunar at 7:30 & 8:20 Weekend Mar. 2 & 8 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 24, 1982 Losses spark talk about Jaybowl future By JIM LEHNER Staff Reporter A decrease in business at the Jaybowl has sparked much concern over its future. Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas Union, said recently. FERGUSON SAID that the Jaybowl, which is on the first floor of the Kansas Union, lost $1,718.07 this year, a 21.8 percent decline in revenue from last year. Last year the Jaybowl made $1,290.6 in profit, according to the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation Boardreport. "I echo the Memorial Board's opinions when I say that I don't think the Jaybow will experience any rapid recovery, because of the economic times that we are now facing." Ferguson said. "We really have to look into the possibility of whether there is any future in the Union's recreation facility at all." Ferguson said that the Memorial Barret had decided what it would do about him. "We haven't formalized any directives on what action we're going to take," Ferguson said. "We have to sit down and see what direction we'll go in." Ferguson said that he didn't think the Memory board would do anything to it. "The most frequent complaint that I've heard from students and board members about the facility is the deterioration of the lanes." Ferguson Another problem, and probably the most serious one, according to Ferguson, was that Jaybowl patrons often couldn't find parking spaces. Also a problem, Ferguson said, was the possibility that the increased number of video games in Lawrence and on campus cut into the Jaybowl's "ONE THING THAT befuddles me is the fact that we have the lowest prices in town for our pool and bowling facilities, but they're not being patronized by the students," Ferguson said. At the Jaybay, one game of pool cents, and a game of bowling, 12 cents. Ferguson said that the Jaybow!'s location could be a key to the situation. "Maybe the location of the place is the problem, because some people have told me that they didn't know that the facility existed," he said. Bids for hall officers accepted through today Students who want to run for office in the Association of University Residence Halls must file petitions by 5 p.m. today. Any University hall resident may run. The petition should be filed in the AURH office in 210 Colm Hall, according to Brenda Darrow, AURH president. AURH is a conglomeration of the presidents and vice-presidents of the eight residence halls plus the executive board members of AURH, Sheri Schmidt, McCollum president said. 'They are supposed to represent the residence halls to the Student Senate and the University as a whole,' Schmidt said. Official campaigning for the positions of president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer Friday, February 13 in Lampe, elections chairman, said. Students will vote during dinner on March 3 and 4 in the residence halls. on campus TODAY THE NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS ORGANIZATION will sponsor a Dutch lunch for members at 11 a.m. in Cork of the Kansas Union. THE UNIVERSITY FORUM, featuring a talk by Alan Horton, American Universities Field Staff International, will begin at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center THE STUDENT SENATE RIGHTS COMMITTEE will meet at 4 p.m. in the Regionallist Room of the Kansas Union. THE MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRIES will meet at 7 p.m. in the PINE Room of the Kansas Union. THE DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CHEESE p.m in the Trail Room of the Kansas University The Office of Student Organizations and Activities will sponsor a WORKSHOP 17 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. THE KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH AFRICA will sponsor a film, "Generation of Resistance," at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW R.L. Sailing Club THE STUDENT SENATE SERVICES COMMITTEE will meet at 4 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. Sail the Bahamas! Spring Break Mar. 13-20 $300 from Miami Seven full days on a 44 foot yacht scuba, snorkeling coconut rum Gourmet food No experience necessary HURRY! Call: 749-2988 TIME OUT'S WEEKLY SPECIALS TONIGHT: 75* SCHOONERS ALL NIGHT THURSDAY: ANNHILATION NIGHT, $3 ALL YOU CAN DRINK take FRIDAY: T.G.I.F. 25* DRAWS 2-6 PM THE PLACE TO PARTY TIME OUT 2408 IOWA "SYRIA TODAY" An analysis of the background and events taking place in Syria A lecture by Mr. Adnan Barakat, Representative of the Islamic Front in Syria—the leading group in opposition to the present regime in Syria AURH Everyone is Welcome Friday Feb. 26 8:00 p.m. Sponsored By M.S.A. Kansas Union Forum Rm. Election Information Open Offices: President/Vice President Secretary (a team) Treasurer More Information at your hall desk Filing deadline, Wednesday, February 24. 5:00 p.m. The Association of University Residence Halls BANQUET Featured Speaker: D Dr. Emily Taylor Retired Director, Office of Women in Higher Education, American Council on Education,and former Dean of Women at KU. March 7,1982,6:30pm, Kansas Union Ballroom Reception to follow Call 864-3710 for information and reservations. General Public $6.75 Students $3.50 Higher Education Week BRITCHES CORNER 843 Massachusetts Men's 843-0454 Suits & Sportcoats Buy 1 get 1 FREE! Dress Shirts 2 for $25 Dress Slacks 30% off Cord & Cotton Slacks $19.95 Sweaters & Sportshirts— 50% off ALL REMAINING FALL ITEMS 1 Large Group Blouses $15.00 each Women's 1/2 off TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842 1291 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up ALIGNMENT SPECIAL $18.00 All Japanese Imports Includes: - checking and adjusting toe-in - examination of shock absorbers for leaks - checking and adjusting of caster (and camber where applicable) - inspection of tires for cuts and proper air pressure - 4-wheel drive and mag wheels slightly higher TUNE-UP SPECIAL $29.95 (included all parts and labor 6 cyl. models slightly higher.) WARNING: * install new spark plugs * set engine to recommended manufacturer's specifications * wear oil filters * inspect operation of choke * install new fuel filter/Mazda and Toyota only * rotary engines not included All Japanese Imports TOYOTA LAWRENCE MA7DA DA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PIAZA 842 1911 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA Standard Ignition $36.95 Standard ignition (included all parts and labor-6-cyl) models slightly higher. We'll • install new spark plugs • replace points and cond • replace required accessories • manufacturer's specifications • adjust carburetor • inspect operation of chewke • fit fuel filter/Mazdas and Toyotas only • rotary engines not included LAWRENCE TOYOTAJMAZDA University Daily Kansan, February 24, 1982 Page 9 Black leader suggests pooling of resources Blacks need to plan for survival in these hard economic times, the president of the Kansas City National Guard of Colored people said last night. Rev. Ommie L. Neilss was to have spoken on the Black History Month theme, "Blueprint for Survival." His speech, sponsored by Student Union Activities, was canceled because of poor attendance. However, Neilss did spend time talking with the students who showed up. Nelms said it was time for blacks to pool their resources in order to survive. The Kansas City NAACP office is now concerned mostly with the immediate needs of the people, such as coping with high utility bills, he said. But he said the office was still actively involved in the important issues of civil rights, such as the voting rights bill. Nelms called President Reagan the "new pharaoh of the land," and said he didn't think the president was aware of how the average person lived. "He is completely eroding the basic gains the '0s brought about for blacks in sports," he said. 31½¢ COPIES Service Beyond Duplication HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. — 842-3610 Nelms said he also doubted whether Ada would survive because of Reagan's stance. BG Pharmacy Footnotes RX Pharmacy Footnotes by O. Newton King R.Ph. P. B. SMITH It is estimated that more than half of all Americans are footless beyond the age of 65. However, many don't wear boots in hand with the loss of youth. You are responsible for good oral hygiene, not your dentistry. Proper and regular brushing and flossing are essential. When a soft-bristled toothbrush is used twice to four minutes using proper brushing technique, it will usually wear out after six weeks. It should be obvious then that a replacement is necessary. Good oral hygiene habits are necessary for teeth fleeshion your brush as needed. It shall not harm your hair. KING PHARMACY is dedicated to your good health, whether that means keeping a good inventory of dental floss, toothbrushes, and toothpaste; or wearing braces. We are professionals with professional service and professional products. You can depend on our Jobst support items, our online customer service, and other pharmaceutical items and home consolescant equipment. We're at 1112 W. 6th St. in San Francisco, 941-843-5416, Mon-Fri. Saturd He said the president was having trouble getting his nominations for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission approved. We Honor Student Insurance Claims HANDY HINT HANDY HINT: Sensitive to a particular brand of toothpaste? Switch to another. KING PHARMACY "He is trying to take the teeth out of the Affirmative Action program," Neils says. "When the federal will let us up, the public will follow." Lawrence Medical Plaza 1112 W. 6th 843-4516 Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-4 DID YOU KNOW? Noah Webster said: "Never cease then to give religion, to its institutions, and to its institutions, and to institutions that support it. They are firm supporters of law and good order, the friends of peace, the expounders and teachers of Christian doctrine. They have hardly a tolerable idea of the influence of the New England clergy, in sustaining the patriotic exertions of the people, intervening in the movements of war. The writer remarks their good offices with gratitude." History of the United States New Haven.1833 THE CHRISTIAN HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, p. 265-286 (San Francisco: Fou- nnesson, 1974) and Education, 1976) Vernia M. Hall --we're working on a tight schedule," Barbara Watkins, extension associate in the Division of Conduct, Educate and ment the committee that was established to produce the book, said yesterday. It was Watkins' idea to produce Give him Something SPECIAL this year Jack Daniels NO 7 WHISKEY Great selection of Jack Daniel's gift items. Large selection of Over 500 types o pipes Famous brand pipe tobacco CIGARS Jose Meliendi Colombo Valencia Havaian Blunt Romeo y Bluet PIPES Savinelli GBD Ulley Pioneer Meerschaum Butz-Chogurin SCHRADE pocket knives 1 yr. guarantee for loss SAVINELLI quartz pipe lighters Pictures in demand Tobacco Leaf The Bookmark's Literary sources, such as old diaries, are needed to complement the photographs, Watkins said. PIPE & TOBACCO SHOP In the Malls Shopping Center 842-7152 special $199 TURTLENECKS Reg. $15.00 red, mint, pink, blue, teal, beige & more! THE ATTIC History book will document KU's past The other committee members are Carol Shankel, public information coordinator at Spencer Museum of Art; Tom Averill, Division of Continuing Education instructor and a former KU faculty member; Virginia Adelson, Lawrence freelance editor, Steven Skaggs, assistant professor of design, is the committee's design consultant. Pictures from the 1940s are in particular demand, Watkins said, because the war-time film shortage began in late 1943, available KU photos during that time. By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter The history of the University of Kansas, from its founding in 1866 until 1980, is being recreated in words and photographs for a pictorial history scheduled for publication in the fall of 1983. The book, which will spotlight the people, activities and campus of the University, will coincide with the KU. Alumni Association's 100th anniversary celebration and dedication of the K.S. Boots Adams Alumni Center, now under construction at 13th and Oread Avenue. "It came from a book I received from Iowa State about seven years ago," she said. It was Watkins' idea to produce the book. Watkins said the book was a Christmas present from her father, who was a dean at Iowa State University. "We intend to use that and several other books for models," she said. The six members of the committee are searching through the University Archives in, Spencer Research Library and the Kansas State Historical Society in Topeka to find photographs for the publication "I'm very excited about it. I've been interested in lawrence history for several years," Katie Armitage, assistant at Spencer Research Library and a committee member, said. She said that people who had photographs that could be used for the publication should turn them into the University Archives office on the fourth floor of the Spencer Research Library. Each member was recently assigned a certain time period of KU history to research. Armitage said. Theresa Schmidt Announces the Opening of: the haircut with Lee Lane and Mary Traul Elniff. The haircut is located at 810 W. 23rd. We are open 10 a.m to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Hair cuts are by appointment only, please Call now at 843-2696 for details. Day you visit day you'll wear your hair "Looks good. 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MC40 EXPRESS C70 $695.00 MOSO EXPRESS Now Only NC50 EXPRESS Now Only $395.00 OPEN Tues Sr 5:00 10 1811 W 6th Lawrence, KS. 843-3333 Horizons HONDA C10 $605.00 Horizons HONDA Q Q Qfx SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER The University of Kansas Theatre Presents SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER by Oliver Goldsmith 8:00pm February 19-20 & 25-27, 1982 University Theatre Murphy Hall THIS PROGRAM IS PART OF THE 1982 UNIVERSITY ARTS FESTIVAL TICKETS ON SALE IN THE MURPHY HALL BOX OFFICE FOR RESERVATION CALL 910 844 3882. STUDENT AND SENIOR UTIZEN DISCOUNTS AVAIL. ABLE by Oliver Goldsmith Qf Qx FREE BEER AFTER ROCK CHALK! Bring in your Rock Chalk ticket stub after the show and get a free draw. GAMWONS GAMWONS GAMWONS Old Carpenter Hall Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse the finest in deep pit BBQ flavor HOG HEAVEN RIB SPECIAL Now thru Sunday Feb.24th to Feb.28th Half Slab Big End $3.95 Half Slab Small End $5.95 Full Slab To go only $7.95 Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer usetts 719 Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks. Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 24, 1982 Endowment cash pool expanded by $1 million A cash management pool established by the Kansas University Endowment Association Nov. 1 has increased by $1 million this month. Richard Porto, Enrollment treasurer, said yesterday. He said the cash pool consisted of more than 280 short-term trust accounts handled by the Endowment Association. The interest from these trust accounts goes to areas designated by the accounts' owners. These areas include scholarships and construction and research for all University's campuses, Porta said. "The pool is designed to better meet the needs of accounts that require a high amount of liquidity," Porto said. High-liquidity accounts are those that can be converted into cash quickly, he said. The cash pool has made income distribution to accounts more convenient and bookkeeping easier, be said. Porta said the accounts in the cash pool received a monthly income based on the average daily interest rate of the whole pool. He said January's interest rate was 14.35 percent and this month's rate also was expected to exceed 14 percent. when accounts were first converted into the cash pool, Porta said, some had an increase in income and others a decrease. The pool's high average interest rate. Other accounts, he said, had a decrease in income. But this was offset by the benefit of receiving a monthly income, he said. Porto said that the accounts now in the cash pool previously had received their income on a quarterly or semi-annual basis. Senate mav continue budget philosophy Decision expected soon By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter When the Student Senate's budget committee conducts hearings next month to fund clubs and organizations with student activity fee money, it may follow a funding philosophy approved by faculty and auditing committee yesterday. The philosophy proposes that any program funded with student fees shall be open to all students of the University; that funding for groups should be determined by the scope of their activities and the services they provide rather than the amount that of effort must be elected from KU students; and that all allocations must comply with Senate rules and regulations. Loren Busby, Hutchinson junior, who was last year's finance and auditing chairman, wrote the philosophy along with three other senators last year. The philosophy was approved last year and could be used again this year by simply changing the date on it, Tom Berger, and auditing chairman, said yesterday. The Student Senate executive committee also must review the policy at its March 3 meeting. The Senate will consider any changes with any changes StudeX will have made. The budget committee will apply the philosophy, if formally approved, during budget hearings March 22-26, March 29-April 1 and April 5-9, David Zimmerman, finance and auditing committee co-chairman. BERGER SAID teams requesting funding must be registered as student organizations with Caryl Smith, dean of student life. "We will be checking this year," Berger said. Zimmerman said, "I know of at least one group that was funded that wasn't recruited last year." Berger also explained the difference between organizations funded by the Senate unallocated funds. Funded by Senate unallocated funds. "The Senate developed a revenue code that will provide for activities in the Senate budget," Berger said. "They have budgeted every year and that is all they get." Berger said groups such as Associated Students of Kansas, the Kansan and forensics received their funds through the revenue code. Additional money requests for revenue code-funded groups must go through a Senate committee, the board of Regents, Berger said. However, such changes are made only once every two years. This is the first year a single budget committee will allocate all the activity money. In the past, individual committees judged groups. For example, the cultural affairs committee funded international and dance groups. ZIMMERMAN explained the difference between the finance and auditing committee and the budget committee. "An unlimited amount of people can be on the budget committee if they apply by March 1 at 5 p.m.," Zimmerman said. The finance and auditing committee is a smaller group that exists throughout the year. Berger said that two dozen clubs and organizations had picked up budget packets from the Senate office. The packets include forms requesting information about the organizations, inventories of all capital equipment and hints for preparing budget requests. BOCO seeks Senate funding for unsettled debt payment "If you cannot accurately itemize your costs with up-to-date cost estimates, don't expect to be funded!" the form states. Organizations must file request forms with the Senate office no later than March 1 at 5 p.m. By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter KU's Board of Class officers will present a bill to Student Senate soon requesting funds to赦 previous students in the case of its cases (a ROQ officer said recently). For several years, BOCO officers have either graduated or left office and neglected to pay outstanding debts that had been paid. In 2013, John Best, class treasurer, said, Although this year's BOCO already has paid $800 in debts from previous years, several hundred dollars in phone bills from four years of administrations have yet to be paid. BOCO wants help, Chris Meth, senior class president, "WE FOUND the phone bill sitting on the desk this summer. You own us 490-some dollars. Pay it." "Meh! said much谋划 for BOCS." Best said, "I feel like this (Senate) bill is important because I think maybe for the first time we can establish ourselves." "I really don't understand how somebody could be that negligent." Best said he, Mehl and Mollie Mit chell, student senator, were working on the bill stating BOCO's needs and reasons. "This is something we feel we shouldn't have to nav for." Best said. He said that he knew Senate had $40,000 in unallocated funds left over last year when he was a senator, and that he had not even known that money was available. David Welch, student body vice president, said that he did not know how the Senate would respond to a request for money from BOCO. "THEY ARE NOT a Senate-funded group, so I would have my reservations. But again, if they come to me and provoke me, I provide can sure file and petition." Welch said. Mehl said BOCO supported itself solely through selling class cards. Best said BCOO never has asked Senate for money before, but that he was working on plans to participate in next year's Senate budget hearings. Best said that he had planned a GO system to prevent leftover debts for future years to BOCO. Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her Gentleman's Quaters 611 W. 80th 843-2138 Under his plan, every time a phone bill for BOCO goes to the University comproller, he will automatically sign it and pay for it out of BOCO's budget. Best said. At the end of each school year, BOCO will meet with the BOCO sponsor and review all outstanding debts to prevent problems for future officers. He said BOCO had about $2,400, but that at least $1,500 of that had to be saved for the senior class gift and that he would go to other end-of-the-year activities. Those plans include a junior-senior party after spring break, an open house at the Kansas Union for seniors and alumni, a breakfast for the senior class the day of commencement and possible philanthropies. ACADEMIC CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841 0101 808 W 24th clip and save spures Feb. 28, 1982 MASS. STREET DELI 941 MASSACHUSETTS The Deli Reuben Hot Corned Beef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut, Served on Cottage Rye or Russian Rye Served with potato chips and a dill pickle spear. $2.50 Reg. $3.50 Offer good Wed. thru Sun. Feb. 24-28. No coupons accepted with this offer TOPSIDERS + KHAKI Genuine Topsiders/khaki separates by Mister Guy. MISTER GUY THE QUEST OF THE SECRET CITY sweepstakes T C T here's a city in Europe-you could travel there free. So unravel these riddles, and uncover its key. C ART E S F NC 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Name ___ Address ___ City ___ State ___ Zip ___ TO PLAY THE GAME: Answer each of the riddles that will appear here each week in February. Write your answer in the blanks below each riddle. The letters with numbers below them correspond to the letter of the word you fill in the letters of the master key, you will be spelling the name and location of a secret city in Europe. Send us the solution, and you a friend could win a trip there, free. TO ENTER SWEEPSTAKES: ENTER MISSING PASSWORD 2. Grand Prize contest of two regular round-trip economy airlines to the secret city, 30-day Eurasian passage, American Youth Hostel or Swiss hostel. Print your answer with your name and phone number. CT 08652. Cut out master key for use as official entry blank or use a 3" x 3" card. Print your answer along with your name and phone number. CT 08652. The first 1,000 correspondents will receive a poster as an award. 4. All entries must be received by 8/15/18. Enter as often as you want, but each entry must be mailed separately. Dated 2/28/18 by the Highland Group, an independent judging organization whose website contains information o 4 WHAT AM I? I work all day I work all day and through the dark of night, So strong and yet so frail when love does leave, When I stop, I cause alarming fright, I swell with pride and cause a chest to heave. 2 14 11 10,6 (Answer to Week #3 Riddle: TEACHER) GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEES MAKE GOOD COMPANY. $\textcircled{2}$ General Foods Corporation 1982 GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEE Suisse Mocha GF PINE STYLE INSTANT COFFEE BEVERAGE GF GENERAL FOODS GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEE GENERAL TODDY Cappuccino GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEE IrishMocha Mint IRISH STYLE INSTANT COFFEE BEVERAGE GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFees kansas Cafe Vienna AUSTRIAN STYLE INSTANT COFFEE BEVERAGE CAFÉ FRANÇAIS FRENCH STYLE INSPIRING COFFEE BEVERAGE GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEEs union bookstores main union level 2 satellite shop 10 University Daily Kansan, February 24, 1982 Page 11 Jayhawks looking to establish momentum By RON HAGGSTROM Sports Editors The Kansas Jayhawks travel to Norman, Okla., tonight to face the Oklahoma Sooners. Sports Editor Winning at Oklahoma will be no easy task. It will be the Jayhawks last opportunity to win a road game in Big Eight Conference play. Overall, the Jayhawks are 1-4 on the road. Oklahoma, 6-6 in the Big Eight and 12-9 overall, enters the game with a 8-4 at home. Its only loss was to Missouri, the defeated Sooners 60-55 last Thursday. In home victories, the Sooners have "They have been very successful and extremely tough at home this season," Coach Ted Owens said. "The only game they lost was to league champion Missouri, and they made the Tigers earn that victory." defeated their opponents by almost 14 points a game. "Chuck Barnett and David Little are two of the more exciting players in our league and anytime you play them, they'll be concerned with those two," Owens said. The Sooners are led by scoring machines Chuck Barnett and David Little. The two are running one and two and the third is running three and 17.2 points a game respectively. "We had a very exciting game with Oklahoma in Lawrence, and we played pretty good in that game," Owens said. We will need that same kind of effort to win. and Little 16 in the first meeting between their horses. They saw hayhawks camouflaged with 95-89 victorious. Since that meeting, the Jayhawks have lost five of their last six games and assured Owens of having his first win in Big Eight Conference in six years. "It is very important that we establish some kind of momentum in these last two games (the second against Iowa State Saturday)," Owens said. "This team has not quit and will not." THE JAYHAWKS need to establish momentum to take into the Feet-Season Tournament where they're practically playing their opening game on the road. "Obviously, we are going to be playing on the road in the first round of the Big Eight Tournament and we need to come into that game playing the best team." Owens said. "If we can turn things around, we could end up in City and we could end up in Town." City has an opportunity to make it to the NCAA Tournament. JAYHAWK NOTES: Ted Owens will coach his 500th game at Kansas Saturday when the Jayhawks host the Iowa State Cyclones. Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Greek Men Kiappa Kappa Sigma 44, sigma 45 Kiappa Epius 201 Kiappa Pappa 45, Kiappa Phausa 49 and No Greek Letters 49, The Eight Balls 29 Wolfock 38, Sauce Kings 28 Intramurals etc. Independent Men TRASHMan and The Fabulous Freebirds 37. Grace Pearson 35. The Drinks 34, P-Cocks 32 Falling Rocks 64, Longhands 48 The Band-its 37, Scorniele 14 Heroes 2, Bill Vaunet's Bunch 0 Average White Boys 47, Buffalo Bob & The Herd Independent Women Independent Won Rec. A (Playoffs) Sonics 2, Vicious Valurnps 0 Greek Men Boy B The Map 30, Great White Hope 16 Mudhina 27, Lancers 17 Hodder 44, Aristarchus 18 Waggers 43, Armstrong 4 FJ B 30, FJry 17 FJ B 30, FJry 17 Salers 41, Sammy's Machine 28 Independent Men Reg. B Jon Machalek-Tracy Schwartz, winners Steve Wampler-Tom Boogher, runner-ups The Syndicate 97, Busch Leagers 86, Celtics 130, Celtics 83, Sullivan 51, The Attractions 83, The Copps 64, Gonads II) 18 (The Copps 72, Basketball 72), Carpentiers 8, E.M. Blue 77 Racquetball Steve Wampler-Tom Boogher, runner-ups Intermediate The University Daily Proef nobreakkeer John Seidt, winners Darny Dchee Jann Zidd, runner-ups KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer ... Each additional word ... one time $2.25 .02 one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one-two-three-four-five-six-seven-eight-nine- AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online by calling the $5 small business office at 843-6409. ERRORS ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR SALE POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996. tf KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 The Etc. Shop. 10 West and 9th (West of the Candy Store) Wintage and clast contentory clothing-military coats, jacket hats, gloves and labs and lots of other & flings 2-25 MOVING, AHEAD LEADERSHIP PRO- CESSION Making combat resolution on deadlines making conflict resolution on weekdays Wednesday, February 24 7:30 p.m. Walnut Street, Student Organizations and Activities of Student Organizations and Activities 50% off all on clothing in showroom. 20% only Feb 23rd through Feb 27th. Extended hours for this week only. 4-Dues Tuesdays. Wednesdays. Thursdays. Friensdays. Change 691, Kaolai. 8141-226. 693 Seisers/ Paper/Power stone a space 1012*3* Mass 11-6 Tuesday-Sat. in a book, 784-1513 Now playing "Gidget goes to Japan" on the same bill "Woman in white wind and flood FOR RENT Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-500. **tf** PRINCETON PLACE PATIO APARTMENTS. Now available, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, perfect for roommates. feature wood burning fireplace, dryer hookups, fully-equipped kitchen, quiet surrounds. Open house night, free of charge. phone 842-3275 for additional information. IF HANOVER PLACE. Completely furnished, 14th & 16th on Mass. Only 3 blocks from K.U. DON'T DONT. Reserve your apt. 841-1212 or 842-8455. For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-4185. tf Studios atmosphere, International meals, food preparation, equipment looking for six cooperative group num- ber of 70 students UILTIFIES INCLUDED. Large bag ap- port and chestware. Call 814-7622 to check and to安拿。Call 814-7622 to check and to安拿。 ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished downstairs available immediately. Flexible schedules and upgrades are seen! Located on 13th & Ohio. Only two bedrooms. Call 844-725-6111 or 844-725-6112 or 844-725-6113. Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt, carpeted carpeted apartment, electric air- conditioner, kitchen, laundry room, campus and on bus route. $35 per month. MEDAOWNBROOK lodge & Crestell 842-4200. Sublase 2 bedroom apt., gas paid. Complete kitchen carpet plus draps, central air and heat. Call 841-6688. 2-26 For next 2 bedrooms apt. Convenient shipping. On bus route, Complete kitchen, central air and heat. Carpet plus drapes. Call 811-6868. 2:26 1-2 people to share home @ 4th & Mls. $109-150 $106-150 749-3333 2.35 Available immediately Heathered 1 bed- room apt, air, wind, dhuserware 128 (60 sq ft) Sub-lease at West Hills Apts. 1 Br. $220 a month, electricity not included, starting Mar. 1; Call 843-2822. 2-26 3 bd. unfurn. apt. $250. Close to campus. W.D hookup, deposit Call 749- 751 or 841-4201. 3-1 FACULTY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3 br. room, 2712 University Drive. All appitions. 2 car transit. bus route #195, $45/mo. rent @ 824-6360 Ten minute walk from Wescoe. 1 bdm; at modern Redbush apts, 11th and Aptis; low utilities. Call 843-2222 or 842-3097. RENT SALE - Rent, reduced on rooftop in large quiet house I block from Union, smoke alarm, no pets please. Call after 1 483-7642 or secure entrance walk to class fast. 1. Br. Apartment, available now, 1000 block of Miss, Call after 3..831-2623. 2-24 1 Bedroom apartment. Campus. clean. Clear to downstown and Campus. 250.00. Utilities Paid. 842-6141 Sunday thru Thursday. after 5.00 pm. 2-26 Duplex for rent. Great location. 899 Ohio 2-bdm, stove, refrigerator. Available now. $250 a month. 1-786-6833. 3-2 Nice one bedroom house, hardwood floors, close to campus, nice neighborhood. 842- 9917 or 843-147). 2-25 Small furnished 1 bedroom house near campus & downlown. 145 per month + deposit & utilities. No children. cata ok. After 5:00. 811-8897. 2-26 Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale! ScienceNotes.com. Sites that make sense to use them-1) As study guide, 2) In the classroom, 3) New Analysis of Western Civilization, 4) Owad Bookstore, 5) Owad Bookmark, and Owad Bookstore. if Alternator, starter and generator specialists, Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 2900 W. 6th. UF 1975 Open Marta, 2-door, Automatic, Fuel Injection, New Heater, Air conditioner and Interior. $1590.00. 864-2044 or 864-5774. 2-24 BMW Brand new 1982, 320L, two in stock, immediate delivery. Sunder Lincoln-Mercury. 843-6975 or 843-2883. 3-4 Black Fender Musician bass. excellent sound and condition. This is the best short- tuck you have heard. $200. Call 842-6760. 2-25 1978 Honda Hawk 400cc automatic, 80 miles on it. Perfect condition. Call 913-796-6786 after 4 p.m. 3-1 New women's clothes. Jeans-Calli. Straights. T-shirts. Jeans. $75. Good for dress, fashions and awards, all $100). Good for shirts and shoes, all $200). Ventura elec. bass, hard case, cord $125. 842- 8752. 2-26 IBM Selectric TYPEWRITER $250. Call 843- 8347 after 2-30. 2-25 POR SALE. 1975 Flat station wagon, good low mileage condition. $1950.00. 841-2024. 841-5897. 3-3 Pioneer's 12" 4-way speakers assembly in U.S., brand new in box $160/pr., best offer 749-2758 2-26 JVC turntable D/drive w/cartridge and 2 JVC SK 15A speakers 200 input, cheap Call 841-7009 2-26 HP-67 programmable calculator w/card reader, CB radio w/antenna 40, SAVO FM/MC car stereo $25, 843-662 anytime 2-26 72 Monaco $850.00 Excellent cond Ph. 842-6313 Keep trying. 2-26 78 Ford Fiatra 5.4d, spd. front wheel drive, Excellent condition; great gas mileage, fun to drive. Super little car for $310. 843-3988 after 5. 2-26 Opticaion integrated amp. 65 watts/channel, filters, dubbing, provision for moving cell, microphones and amplifiers. Technical cartridge package. $50, $45-308 after 2. $26 Enjoy the spring on a 1972 Yamaha M50 Motorcycle w/new sport training. Electric looks and looks great. Maximum $45-308 after 2. Thousands of comic books, baseball cards, postcards, National Geographic, Playbabs, Penthouses, Oud. Hustlers, Swanky, C. Cool, The Lost Boys, Sunset, Etui, e.g., 811 N.H. Open. Sat. & Sun 10-5. FOUND Qualified lifeguard for summer swimming a-sason. Lakehurst Swim Club, Topeka, Kansas. Contact Terry Ready. 357 758-Linee, Touche Kana6605. 6605-1272. - 1-31 HELP WANTED Stockbroker trainer. College grad—Ecellent intervention and educational individual innovation and exhibitable person. Battzerder, Private Club. Must be Energetic, 842-909-992. Contact Dan at 3-12 842-909-992. Gray, female kitehead with white chest. Tiger stripped tail & green eyes. House trained. Very affectionate. Call 864-3123 or 843-9227 Ask for Bob. Gold watch, unique face, 19th and Kentucky 18 Feb. 841-6492 . . . . . Person interested in doing old house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be capable, studious, have own tools and equipment, in cooperation. Call Calary 841-3838. CRUISERS, RESORTS SAILING EXPEDI- TIONS Europeans, Cruise Europe, Worldwide OVERSEAS EXPEDITION, OPENING OPERATIONS, GUIDE IN CRUISE OPERATIONS 153 Box 8029, OSPrey 3-12 Energetic, hardworking, permanent, waitresses wanted. Must work well under pressure. Hourly wage plus tips, commission. Send resume to Gannon's, Southern Hills Shopping Center. NOTICE Beak Reasonings. Join the Mt. Oread club for $2.50 this week and save up to 10% on flower Surpie and Solwin for 4 months. Call Gene Wee at 864-384-737. 3-9 **OVERSEAS** JOB&-Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer., Auckland, Australia. All Fields $40-$1200. Sightseeing. Free Info. Welcome JAC Bk 58-k-1-GoArena Free Info. PERSONAL Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w/ color. Wells Studio. 749-1611. **tt** PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-4821. Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daly since 1949. Come in and compare. Willard Skillet Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8188. tt ☎ Soviet Jewry Solidarity Day February 24,1982 Information Table: Kansas Union, 11:00-2:00 p.m. Movie: "The Fizer," Dyche Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Admission: $1 Hillel Members $1.50 Non Members Say it on a sweatshirt with custom slik- spinning. It is 1000 shirt by Swet of Bryan G. SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS SKI TRIPS WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERS Economist packages every weekend and school breaks Call Ski Ets. 841-8365 today. The Kegger—Weekly Specials on Kegt! Call 411-8400, 6430-WF COMMUNITY AUCTION 700 N.H. every Saturday 11 am. Accompanies accepted Mon. Tues. Pri. 2-6, 10% commission upc available. 481-2122. Wallets 3-31 THE EXCHANGE A Private Club Fire Place • Videos Great Drinks at Great Prices 2406 Iowa Memberships Available Hawaiian Shirts MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6841. ff Clothes and accessories with a touch of charm. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-3 SUNDAY BIRD HAWAIIAN SHIRT We've got the largest selection of Hawaiian Shirts in town . . . come in and let us fit you for spring break! Top hats, dorby's vizors, 40-50" clothes, stoles, suspenders. Hand Hands: Racine 511, Indiana 842-764, Secaucus 322. Need ride to Denver or Aspen as soon asoon expense. Call 2-560 at 8:00 p.m., 811-240-764; Call 2-560 at 8:00 p.m., 811-240-764. LLIWIN'S 831 Mass. Downtown Lawrence 0 2 3 Looking for a ride everyday to Olathe. Call 782-6391, 782-7179. 2-24 Household Items for apartment Living. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-4748. 3-3 PANTS Dee Cee Dee Cee Painter Pants LTWIN'S We've got 35 brilliant colors to choose from . . . and the right size to fit you! 831 Mass. Downtown Lawrence COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced pregnancy screening; celebration. 1-435 & Ron Overland Park, KS 912-642-3100 tf HELP—I lost my skii mitts in Strong or Summer on降半二, 1 need them. 843-7268. ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS Bible Study Thursday February 25 7:30 p.m. Cork II Union ALL YOU CAN EAT-Stuffed Pijg Sunday Buffet-292-2210-749-7485-2-26 **SPRING BREAK ESCAPES:** 8 days/7 nights accommodations. Welcome party. Sports activities/trainings or motorcort Transportation to Daytona Beach and Daytona Beach-Bahamas-$109. Also, trip for 4 days/nights to Hotels Park-$199. Tournals Tora at Turas 862-668, 6-268 more details WANTED: Ambulatory female over 21 (first time) with a valid medical insurance. Invitation to royal Tower type considered. Be in excellent health. BEARTH concert and dinner to follow. Apply for driving driver - Corridor 2 is required. Live music—The Exchange. Phil Klein on the guitar Wednesday, February 24, 9:30 p.m. 2-24 LOST: Black P-coat at Hatter last Friday. I took blue P-coat by mistake. Please call 843-7590. 2-26 Plain Jane, Fri. & Sat. night at the Pladium. 2.26 50% SALE-All clothing in showroom 5 days only February 23 through February 28. Excludes sale for this week only. 60% Tue-Sat-14. Sale for this week only. 2-35 Change, 619 Kaoln. 841-8123 Wed. night $35 all you can drink at The Pieddium. 2-24 Tired of the high cost and the T.G.I.F. 25 Feb. 26, 2016 - 6-25 pm THE ENTERTAINMENT ALL networks...2-24 Established band seeking BASSIST and KEYBOARD PLAYER Steady work. Serious inquiries only. Call 749-8910 or 842-8484. **SUPPORT** Thursday poor persons night. No. $25 25 pitchers. $7 draw at The Platium. 2-25 Special Ladies Night. Male burlesque, F.I.L. Special Ladies Night. Male burlesque, F.I.L. Special Ladies Night. Male burlesque, F.I.L. Until 12 noon. Show starts at 12 noon. Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 684-0464. 2-26 EVERY CAR IN STOCK $9.95 A DAY FIRST 800 MILE FREE THEN ONLY 80 A MILE Special weekend rates. We are not leasing trucks & vans. We accept Master Card Visa. Located at 705 W. 9th Lease one of our cars, it's the cheapest a bus fare home! Reserve your car now. for Sunday Break! LEASE A BUS 749-4225 LEMON 740-4955 SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in your Dr. prescriptions in existing litter box, prefabricated furniture and loner boxes available. Complete repair service. Open 10-6, M-4214. Free introductory lecture on ECKANKAR shapes of conciergeery, Sunday Feb 28, Friday March 3, Saturday March 4. Special selection of clothing 60% off! Inflation Finder. E # 7 H. Open 12-5:30 M-F WALMERS SAY--If you lost self respect at the Palma Party, we have proof; the party pies are in. Bring proof of your presence at the party night. Wednesday night. Hugger, PJ. Queen (sigh) . Poodlehead and the Rev. Will be in. Poodlehead, ICU. Houchin. Poodlehead, MS. KEV Maryland's it been great. From TV to, like eating crackers in bed I love 2 Nymph. Video Tapes of Rock Chalk-Alkau or video tapes of the 1883 Rock Chalk Rev- iable #842-9224 HOT DOG HAVE lunch downstairs at Phyllis' super- girl's restaurant and polish sushiages served delic- tious from an authenticate YN Vendor's and Mass. Tues.-Sat. (weather 3-12 mutting) RANDY “Weatherwise” Baker. Doing a good job, especially with the good work. Love and Kisses Dave Duffield. *price table* & rack new items added daily *Second Hand Room, Rose 515 Indian* 843-647-490 25 draws with 1.00 cover at iabchob's. 2-24 *STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES*: Share your experiences with us; as a public service to nursing home residents. Our consumer benefits are available in the MENT OF NURSING HOMES, needs your input on questions and queries. We provide confidential write or call us: KINH, 927?; St. #. 21, KS, KS 6048 (103) 927?; or 308-248 or 843-7107 Tonight! Live sax on stage with Blue Plate Special. No cover, 9:30-1:30, 7th Spirit, 842-3549. 2:24 2 for 1 Friday Happy Hour 4-6 at The Ex- 2-5 2406 Iowa SERVICES OFFERED TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 841-0999-ahrye (852) in physics, M.A. in mathematics) or call 846-1749 (ask for M.B.). tf 31/2 3 1/2 $ ^\cdot$ self service copies now at 中国石油天然气股份有限公司陕西销售分公司 ENCORE COPY CORPS CORPS 25th and Iowa 842-2001 Schneider Wine & Keri Shop—the finest wine shop in New York. 1610 W. 23rd St. of strong stroms. 1610 W. 23rd, 8d. Put your best foot forward with a professionally prepared resume from Weisberg Prep. Visit www.weisbergprep.com or call Encore 842-2001, 25th and Iowa. 3-26 Children's Learning Center announces an program at 2 pm to 12:30 pm. Age 6+. Program includes 2.5 hours of activity per day and age 5 ages - 6 yrs. Phone 841-2185 for more information. Jeffrey (chartts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience, competitively priced. Also Script Writing, English and Spanish. WRITING A RESUME? What to say. How to say it. Hit the Stop By the House of Uber and pick up our free brochure on resume services in Massachusetts, 8-4 M-F 9-3 Sat, 0N-3 Sun Stop Smoking With Our Program DIET ANALYSIS—Concerned about your diet, the DIET Evaluation is simple and inexpensive. Call 843-6583 Breathe Easy Smoking Clinics Si The only smoking program that guarantees results. Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available assistance. Assistance Center 3-26 Strong Hall, 844-4064. EXEPET TUTORING: Call homeworks? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 TYING TYPING PLUS: Theses, dissertation, letters, applications, resumes. Associate in composition, grammar, spelling, and/or American foreign student, or Americans. 841-6253 10's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-580 Experienced typist. Theses, term paper, research paper. Selective Call. Call Sam after 5 p.m. 748-918-819 Experienced typing, tying paper, chess, all puzzles, and word searches. Fluency in Bites of Pigs, and will correct spelling, grammar, punctuation, and flow. TIP-TOP TPINGG—experienced typt-BM IBM TIP-TOP TPINGG—Honolulu, Royal-IBM 343. 843-7573. Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IEM Correcting Selectric, Elite or Pica. 842-2644. Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, term papers, mice. IBM correcting electric. Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct. Selectric. Call Elen, or Jean Ann 841-2172. tf FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-4980. tf Experienced (typist will test letters, thesas. Experienced (typist will correct corrections, select Call Dona at 842-2744. Graduate students tend to typing, retyping and printing documents by word processing. Save time and money by word processing with programs like Word 2007. Quality typing and word processing available. Quality Copy Corps, 25th 842-2001. 2-265 Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call evenings, 841- please. tt TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Corp. Selective, full-time ttyping, spelling correction to composition assistance. Emergency service available. 641-2907-308 Professional typing. Dissertations, theses, term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Corp- terning Selectric. Deb 843-8932. 2-26 Would like to type dissertations, thesis, terms papers, etc. Call 842-3203 IRON FENCE TYPEING SERVICE. 842-2507. WANTED Male roommate to share 3 bedroom house 13th & Mass. $108/mo. + 1/3 utilities + deposit. Liberal, smoker okay. 843-6319 Need place to live? 3-bir, house $8.33 + 1/7 Utility Check the cabinets. Prefer female & smoker. 841-797-79. Roommate. Two bedroom home East Lawr- rence $79.50/mo. plus 1/5 utilities. Can assume lease in May 841-797-24. Looking for a non-smoking female room for a dormitory. Call 841-3891. 2-24 $140.00 + calls. Call 841-3891. 2-24 3 Shower room house next to campus. Reasonable. Call for details. 633-482-4521. 2-26 Roommate needed immediately. Nice apartment, 2 cat. own bedroom. $147.50 + $5.00 = $152.50 per week. SCREW THE DORM! Roommate needed: non-smoker, student,旅客; cleanable, room, $127 + 1/3 usable; 2-25 2811. Roommate wanted to share three bed room townhouse $110 + 1/3 usl. Call 81- 456. Fifth female roommate needed for bedroom house near campus $110/mo. + 1/3 814-456. WANTED - 3 TICKETS TO Rampal concert: CALL: Rose 864291 or 841-0825 2- KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS also advantage of this form and save your self time, by entering the information for placing your aid in the Kansas. Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to University Dally Kanan Lawrence, Hawkesville, K 60043. Uses below to figure cost. .assified Heading: Write Ad Here: Name Classified Display Address 1 t x 1 inch $3.75 Phone 12 months 0 times $2.50 16 months 0 times $2.50 24 months 0 times $2.50 36 months 0 times $2.50 48 months 0 times $2.50 60 months 0 times $2.50 --- Page 12 University Daily Kansan, February 24, 1982 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Draft Pick Team W 41 Pct. GB Philadelphia 40 17 372 - New York 45 17 123 - New Jersey 27 28 491 % Washington 27 38 491 % Houston 25 31 466 % Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee 38 15 722 Atlanta 24 15 462 Boston 24 14 145 Indiana 24 11 436 Illinois 24 11 15 % Cleveland 12 11 436 New York 12 11 15 % San Antonio 35 18 660 Houston 25 34 591 5%* Heatland 28 519 574 %* Utah 19 35 362 16 %* Dallas 18 35 362 16 %* City 18 35 327 18 %* Los Angeles 38 17 691 San Diego 38 24 694 1½ Golden State 38 14 694 Phoenix 38 25 638 Portland 38 15 638 St. Louis 38 24 694 23 Atlanta 10, Kansas City 84 New York 113, Milwaukee 110 Washington 186 San Antonio 172 Chicago 128, Portland 127 Houston 109 Philadelphia 115, Denver 129 Philadelphia 11, San Diego 101 Team W 12 L 1 Pct GB Missouri 11 8 1.923 Kansas State 10 6 3.754 Oklahoma State 7 6 5.583 4/4 Nebraska 7 6 5 583 4/4 Tennessee 6 5 5 583 4/4 Kansas 4 8 8 333 1/4 Iowa State 4 8 8 333 1/4 South Carolina 3 10 231 9 FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Free Estimates Patrick Division Hockey NIL STANDINGS Wales Conference Petrick Diricken Team NY Islanders 41 L T L GF GA 19 Pts. 85 NY NL Clippers 41 W T L GF GA 19 Pts. 85 NY Rangers 28 22 10 2022 230 260 Pittsburgh 18 22 10 2022 230 260 Boston 18 22 10 2022 230 260 THE PRESTON MECALL COMPANY 314 N. 3rd 811-6067 Tues - Sat. 12-6 fashion eyeland Technical Supplies 841-8000 Holiday Plaza Balloon-a-Gram "Ride to the Occasion" SAVE A BALLON-A-GRAM P.O. Box 3122 Lawrence KS 60044 9135416444 Meadowbrook Center Tunel. Set. 12-6 fashion eyeland operational company 841-8000 Holiday Plaza Montreal 35 12 19 14 84 284 177 74 Boston 34 12 19 14 84 284 177 86 Buffalo 33 13 19 12 273 181 81 Calgary 33 13 19 11 273 181 69 Hartford 16 10 11 14 106 264 46 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Team W 18 L Pet. GB New York 18 5 573 —% Borough 18 6 139 —% Baltimore 18 14 6521 1% Buffalo 18 13 6521 1% Cleveland 9 12 6303 10% Philadelphia 7 20 3332 10% Campbell Conference Minnesota 25 19 18 262 278 68 Slokas 25 19 18 262 278 68 St. Louis 20 19 18 262 278 68 Winnipeg 20 17 18 224 264 52 Wilmington 30 27 12 224 264 48 Toronto 10 17 12 224 264 52 Chicago 11 17 12 224 264 52 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Quebec 4, Montreal 1 New York Islanders 3, Chicago 1 St. Louis 3, Toronto 2 Detroit 6, Cobras 2 Philadelphia 5 St. Louis 21 16 808 Wichita 16 13 815 Wichita 11 13 9 Memphis 10 18 357 Memphis 10 18 12 Kansas City 8 19 353 Kansas City 8 19 12 Edinburgh 39 13 13 11 341 243 89 Calgary 25 16 16 14 247 289 68 Vancouver 26 23 16 11 217 213 294 Oklahoma 13 13 13 11 215 289 37 Colorado 13 13 13 11 215 289 37 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS All-Star Game West 9.East 5 PETER PARKER Learn how to make up your face...free. MERLE NORMAN' 701 Mass The World is Coming... The World is Coming... Skiing TRAVEL Feb 27th & 28th TRAVEL CENTER Feb.27th & 28th Outlook for the 80'S In Higher Education M monday March 1st T Sigma Delta Chi Journalism Society Forum, Tonda Rush Lawyer for Represents Committee 2014 Heart of America Debate Tournament 9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m., Hall M Symposium of Contemporary Music, 8:00 p.m., Murphy Hall, AURG Legislative Dinner Copyright. The Freedom of Information Act. Symposium of Contemporary Music. 8:00 p.m. Muhall Hall SUA Museum. James Gunn. Science Bottle. 8:00 p.m. Pine Room W alnesday March 3rd Forum on Higher Education in the 80s, 7:30 p.m. Kansas Room Kansas Union. Spring Concert, KJC Concert Band. Guess Solitaire Gary Foster, 8:00 a.m., University Theatre. sday: March 4th riday, March 5th T Saturday, mth eighth layakh Invitation jazz festival. Murphy Hall Higher Education Week S Sunday, March 7th Higher Education Week Banquet. Featured Speaker-Dr. Emily Taylor 6:30 m. Kansas Union Ballpom. Jayhawks lose third straight, 80-69 The KU women's basketball team, trailing by 18 points at halftime, made a run at the Kansas State Wildcats but came up short, losing their third straight game 80-69, in Manhattan last night. By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor Even with the loss to K-State, Coach Marian Washington said that she saw a lot of favorable things during the game. "Our young team finally realizes the things they have to do to win," Washington said. "It's always tough to lose, but this is the kind of game you can accept. I am really pleased with the effort the team gave." It appeared at the outset that the Wildcats would blow the Jayhawks out of the Ahearn Field House. K-State jumped out to a 10-point lead with 14:12 remaining in the first half, and increased it to 17 with 8:11 left. The Wildcats shot a blistering 67 percent from the field in the first half on of 20 30 shooting, Kansas, on the other hand, once again suffered through a cold shooting night. They shot only 38 shots from the field on 11 of 20 shooting. The Wildcats then put the game out of reach, by running through the Jayhawks and building an 18-point lead at baltime. 47-29. But Kansas took control and held the Wildcats to just three points over the next four minutes. In that time, Kansas scored 10 to close the gap to 16, 36-26. The second half saw the resurgence "I're really proud of the team," Washington said. "We out-played them in the second half. Our kids never stopped playing, and they worked real The 15-14 Jayhawks cut the Wildcat lead to 10 three times but could not get any closer to the Wildcats, who now lead them. They have won 13 games in a row. of the Jayhawks. They looked like they did in early December when their record stood at 7-1. The big attraction in the game was not the usual rivalry, since the Jayhawks have fallen on hard times this year, but was at the center position where KU's All-America candidate, Chris Kasper, had been rested, who is one of the finalists for the Wade Trophy, to give the best woman collegiate basketball player. The play of the two players was spectacular, as each led their team in scoring and rebounding. Claxton was the leading scorer and rebounder in the game, but he wasn't the best. She hit on 10 of 21 shots from the field and was on 10 of 19 from the foul line. Romstad, who had 22 points in the teams' first meeting, scored 23 points and had nine rebounds. She shot 10 of 13 from the field and 3 of 4 from the line. Both players played the entire game. Claxton did not have much support from the other team, though they had other trajaytaws scored in double figures. Without Claxton's shooting, the Jayhawks shot 10 of 38 from the field for 26 percent. PRE PHYSICAL THERAPY STUDENTS Application & Interview Process Meeting for KU. Wichita State University Medical Centers BOTH SCHOOL DIRECTORS WILL BE PRESENT When: Wednesday, February 24, 7:00 p.m. Where: Watkins Memorial Hospital Cafeteria GET A HEAD START ON MEDICAL SCHOOL WOMEN'S CENTER OPEN HOUSE 3-5 P.M. FRIDAY, FEB. 26, 1982 THE STAFF INVITES YOU TO DROP BY FOR A CHAT, BROWSE THROUGHOUR MAGAZINES AND BOOKS AND ENJOY BEFREQUENTS THE EMLY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER 218 STRONG HALL 864-35-52 second leading scorer, had a terrible night from the field, shooting 2 of 14. Snider managed only 9 points for the Hawks. Rostadt wasn't in the same banton as Claxton, as she got plenty of help from the K-State team. Barbara Glinore had to make sure that no one was fooling out in the second half, and Priscila Gary added 13 points. Betsy Sloan, K-Sate's point guard, had seven assists to lead the Wildcats in that game, which was as many as the entire KU team had. Chris Stewart FG 3-5 PT REB FT P T Leonard Scott FG 2-4 3-4 4-4 PF T Chelsea Clark FG 19-21 10-10 15 2 30 Angle Taylor FG 1-2 10-10 15 2 30 Angle Sider FG 2-14 5-6 1 5 4 Robbins Smith FG 1-4 2-4 1 5 4 Mary Chireclle FG 0-1 6-0 0 4 Barbara Adams FG 6-1 9-0 14 30 Franklin Crawford FG 95.98 95.98 30 26 69 The Jayhawks will close out their regular season when they host the Creighton Blue Jays on Friday in Allen Field House. Shelly Hagan PG FT REB PF TP Baltimore Gharine 3-14 10-13 9-25 Tammy Remontal 10-13 34 4 43 Ryan Reed 10-13 34 4 43 Betsy Salon 1-14 6-2 0 Jen Rose 1-14 6-2 0 Timberline 1-15 1-2 3 2 Angle Bower 2-4 9-0 2 3 after 9:00 p.m. BELIEVE IT OR NOT Ladies, 2 Free Drinks The Count finally changed the records on THE HAWK JUKEBOX. But is anyone besides The Count old enough to remember those Tonight thru Saturday, 1st Set Starts at 9:30 Everyone, 25c Draws 10-11 p.m. WEDNESDAY IS LADIES NIGHT! songs? LUPE Kings defeated by Hawks, 103-94 By United Press International ATLANTA--Eddie Johnson scored 27 points and had 8 assists last night to carry the Atlanta Hawks to their fifth straight victory, a 103-94 decision over the Kansas City Kings. Simonon was backed by John Drew with 24 points and 13 rebounds and one to Mumlin with 22 points. Auntila with 2 Rolling and 20 rebounds and 7 blocked shots. GAWWONS GAWWONS GAWWONS D. Drawe 7:19:34 16, McMillan 4:24 12, Rollin 34-13, JE 11, 56-7 24, Sparrow 4-9, Pellom 0:1-1, Mackin 1-10, Matthes 2-2, 6:5, Watters 0-10, 9:04 12, 93-10.43 Proudly Presents City 28 28 12 26 94 Atlanta 25 22 22 24-103 point goal grade -14 16 24 foot final round Kansas City 32 Atlanta 30 Technical football Atlanta coach Leongery A -7,452 Kansas City was paced by Reggie Johnson with 20 points and 13 rebounds. Reggie King finished with 19 points and reserve Kevin Loder added 12. E. Johnson 4,02 I, Kine 6-11 1-3, Johnson 4-10 F. Ford 3,4 Sine 9-0, Woodson 4-10 J. R. Johnson 9-23 Loder 3,12 L., Drew 3,12 L., Greffel 4-11, Grunfeld 2-14, Dernier 3-17 Trial 10-25 3-14 GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL March 1st,7:00 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union BUDGETS ARE ON THE AGENDA. Kansas City (94) HIDE Build your own taco . . . and then finish it off with $1.00 Well Drinks and 50° draws Every Wednesday During Happy Hour Happy Hour 4:00-8:00 p.m. $1.00 Margaritas MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th St. 842-7030 Ext. 136 free Mexican Hors D'oeuvres N.Y.C. BALLET & DANCE THE LOVE OF NYC I love you --- THE THIRD ANNUAL SUA THEATRE SERIES TAKEN IN MARRIAGE by thomas babe kansas union OPENING TONIGHT big eight room SCENES from SOWETO RATE by bavee vilmer BY ISRAEL horovitz feb.25.27 RATS smith hall ALL EVENING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00p.m. an evening of one act ALL MATISES PERFORMANCES ARE AT 2:00 p.m. tickets PDB TICKET INFORMATION CALL (913) 864-2477 WITH XORD SUNGLE SHOW 32.50 SUNGLE TICKET 36.00 TICKETS ON SALE AT THE වගින්BOX OFFICE IN THE KANSAS UNION, LAWRENCE KS 80045 GENERAL PUBLIC SINGLE SHOW $2.50 SESSION TICKET $9.00 1 KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, February 25, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 104 USPS 650-640 Committee backs Carlin's faculty pay increase By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter TOPEKA-It may shift the dollars around, but the Senate Ways and Means Committee plans to give faculty at Board of Regents institutions the same salary increase that Gov. John Carlin has recommended, according to State Sen. Paul Hess, committee chairman. "We're going to stay within the total dollars that the governor recommended for faculty salaries." Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday. "We're just going to reshuffle the deck." HESS SAID THE committee would take final action today on the Regents faculty salary increases, enrollment adjustment figures, expenses and graduate student tuition fee waivers. Money for capital improvements and other allocations for individual Regents schools will be made at the discretion of the Board. After the committee makes a recommendation, the budget will be passed to the council. Hess said the committee would probably recommend an 8 percent faculty salary increase. The Regents requested a 13 percent increase, a total of $6 million for KU faculty. Carlin recommended a 10 percent increase. It would be split between an 8.75 increase for all faculty and an extra .125 percent for areas with a high market value—accounting, engineering, computer science, library science and the physical sciences. HOWEVER, CARLIN recommended two changes in other areas of the budget that the company has implemented. If the Legislature adopts the changes, they will result in less money for KU. Carlin proposed increasing the shrinkage factor from 2 percent to 3.5 percent. Shrinkage is the amount of money withheld from the salary budget to allow for faculty turnover. A salary savings results because a position may be vacant for a period of time, and the replacement might be hired at a lower salary than the original employee. A 2 percent shrinkage means that out of every $1 million in salary funds, the University If shirkage were increased to 3.5 percent, the University would receive $855,000 of every $1 million spent. WITH SHRINKAGE subtracted, Carlin's additional dimensions are as follows: Hess said the committee would recommend that shrinkage stay at 2 percent. Carlin also proposed a different method of figuring fund increases for changes in He recommended returning to a formula based on full-time equivalency enrollment figures, but the results have not been reported. FTE is figured by dividing the number of undergraduate hours by 15, the number of graduate hours by nine, the number of student hours by 12 and by adding the three numbers. Carlin's method would use enrollment rates for the four colleges or decreases in money and number of faculty. Last year, the Legislature began using a different approach, called the corridor committee. UNDER THE CORRIDOR method, an institution must absorb an increase or decrease of less than 1.5 percent. One year is used as a base for the next three years, so large changes in the number of faculty would be made every three years. State Sen, Ron Hein, R-Topeka, head of the Ways and Means subcommittee handling KU's budget, said Carlin's proposal would cheat KU out of money it should have received for enrollment increases in 1980 and 1981. Under the corridor method, the current base year is 1979, therefore, KU would not be scheduled to receive large funding increases until this year. But since there was a slight decrease in the budget fall, Carlin recommended cutting $292,722 and 15 faculty positions from the KU budget. "The governor abolished it (the corridor method) to play his political games," Hein said. "He had to do that to pull off what he wanted to do." HEIN SAID HE heped the Legislature would end unstaying with the corridor approach. "I think everyone can assume the corridor is better for everyone," he said. Regents have said they favor the corridor method because it had given them flexibility. He said it was unlikely the committee would Hess said the committee wanted to give universities as much flexibility as possible in managing the salary funds that the Legislature appropriated. allocate an extra salary increase for engineering and other high-market value areas. BOB HARTSOK, executive vice president of the Kansas Engineering Society, said the supplementa In a hearing yesterday morning, a representative from the engineering industry asked the committee for a special $5,000 salary supplement for engineering faculty. It would go to faculty of engineering schools at KK Kansas State University and Wichita State University. He said an assistant professor of engineering with a Ph.D. made about $24,000 a year, and a student just out of college could earn from $22,000 to $23,000 in the private sector. Recent study identifies basic equipment needs "I don't think we're going to do anything in that form," he said. "The mood of the committee is to maintain the flexibility on the part of the committee, not on the salary dollars the legislature appropriates." By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter The University of Kansas needs $4,673,000 for equipment to compete with other universities and private industry for research, faculty, and students, and is the chairman of the university's procurement committee. The committee published a report Feb. 9 to identify the University's equipment needs and to assess its current capabilities. The University routinely checks basic equipment needs, however, said Meyen, who is associate vice chancellor for research and graduate studies. "We really had taken the time to determine the state of the arts for large equipment needs for schools." The report was sent to the office of research, graduate studies, and public service and to University officials, including Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor. "We would hope to present the report to the Board of Regents" *O'Beth* said. He said that Chancellor Gene A. Budig would read the report before the administrators The report lists 48 pieces of major equipment that the University needs, including a logic analyzer, a multi-purpose printer and a supermini computer. Major equipment is defined in the report as costing more than $50,000. Less expensive equipment is funded by means that do not cost more than $50,000; the other operating expenses budget, Cobb said. The University is ranked 89th among research institutions, it's pretty high for a public institution. But with the proper equipment, KU would have the potential to be in the top 25 or 30, he said. "('The equipment) is not what would put research universities there; it's what you do with them." Without the equipment, the University's reputation for research will decline, Meyen said. Faculty quality at the University will also decline if KU doesn't have research equipment that will draw and keep good faculty, Meyen said. "Unless we're able to provide our faculty members up-to-date equipment for their research and teaching roles, we're not going to be in a position to recruit good faculty," he said. The geology department, for example, has had trouble attracting faculty, he said. Proper equipment at the university level affects the entire nation. Meyen said, because the university has a high degree of research activity. "Universities represent a setting for research which isuite different from industry," he said. Industry research is product-and profitoriented, while university research is broader in scope, and not limited by concern for the outcome. Meven said. The federal government has usually funded about 95 percent of the University's equipment. But with quickly changing technology, inflation and budget cuts in federal agencies that have historically funded research, the See EQUIPMENT page 5 Dean claims library study poorly judges space needs Staff Reporter By JULIE HEABERLIN A New York accounting firm's study assessing KU library needs is based on the unprofessional assumption that libraries have wasted construction costs, years, the KU dean of会计 and yesterday. The $100,000 preliminary study, released earlier this month, was commissioned by the Kansas Legislature last spring to assess library requests from several Kansas universities. "I think they approached the problems from a very utilitarian standpoint," the dean, Jim Ranz, said "They have had little experience with educational institutions." Ranz said Peat, Marwick and Mitchell Co. suggested reducing the University's space request almost two-thirds, from 340,000 square feet to 130,000 square feet. The firm did agree that KU needed another major library. Ranz said, which will serve the university's 25,000 students. "When I asked them, they had to tell me reluctantly and very embarrassingly that they'd never heard of a library built on their standards," he said. KU proposed building a $2 million science- technology library near the science military buil- dge. KU's peer institutions, which have similar enrolments, already had library facilities equal to what the study projected for KU by the year 2000. However, State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, said that while she only had time to look at the study briefly, she thought the staff hired the best firm with the available funds. Ranz said that a University study, conducted four years ago, assessed library space needs according to the Kansas Board of Regents set of standards from libraries and architectural firms. Ranz also said that books would extend into the aisles or simply not fit because the recommended shelf dimensions were ridiculously small. CLOUDY "And we have more books now all but one of those universities." Ranzi said. The firm's proposal drastically reduces space for studying, he said, ignoring national standards that university libraries should have seats for one of every five students. See LIBRARIES page 5 Weather Today will be cloudy and colder with highs in the mid-30s, according to the Weather Channel. There is a 20 percent chance of measurable snow. Winds will be light at five to eight. The lows tonight are expected to be in the mid-20s. Friday will be partly cloudy and winter, with temperatures in the high 40s. A black and white photo of a person in a heavy winter coat holding a stick, reaching out to a dog that is standing on its hind legs. The background is a snowy landscape with a blurred horizon. Beth Gormey, California graduate student, and her dog Terrapin romp on a slope east of the Campanile yesterday afternoon. University can't escape high gas bills RvLISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Rising natural gas prices, which have been plaguing private homeowners, have hit the University of Kansas right where it counts—in the pocketbook. The University used $277,383 worth of natural gas in January, Richard Perkins, associate professor at the University. "That's the largest gas bill I have ever seen here at the University," said Perkins, who has been a professor there. Total gas consumption from about Dec. 23 to J. August is 77,250,000 cubic feet, Parking site "We used almost 20,000 feet more in January than in December." he said. Gas prices and consumption for the University have been increasing steadily over the past two decades. In January 1980, KU used $63,731,000 thousand cubic feet of gas, at a cost of $133,392. In January 1981, the University used $173,787 worth of natural gas -65,642,000 thousand cubic feet. ___ Perkins said the price for gas used in January 1982 was higher than any electric bill the company paid. "That's something I thought I'd never see—a gas bill higher than an electric bill," Perkins But total gas prices are only a reflection of the price increase of gas per thousand cubic foot. Gas sold for $2.09 per thousand cubic foot in January 1980 and $2.55 in January 1981. "Last month, we paid $3.85 per thousand cubic foot," Perkins said. "The cold weather not only hurt us, but the rising cost of gas has hurt us." Bob Allison, plant manager for the Kansas Public Service Co., the company that supplies KU with natural gas, said that KU's increased gas bill was the result of increased consumption. "This year we have not curtaled natural gas supply to the University," he said. Allison said that in past years, the amount of gas available to the University was curtailed during the months of December, January and February. "The KU power plant is an interruptible customer," he said. "They have oil tanks from their own wells." That way we can keep high priority See UUTILITIES page 5 Watson lounge turning into wild kingdom Bv BARB EHLI Staff Reporter Dangerous beasts lurk under the first floor of Watson Library and Ranger Rick museum. manganese shaped part of earth The Reader's Louise is becoming a jungle. The breed's courage is becoming a jungle. By spring break, a mural on the west wall of the waterfall of Laurel Park will paint a snake, a zebra, an armadillo, a purple cat, an alligator eating Jayhawk feathers and a black and yellow Cheshire cat among the waterfalls and foliage. Susan Koch, Naperville, III., graduate student, has been doing preliminary drawings of the jungle scene for two weeks and is now drawing portions of her sketches freehand on Carol Chittenden, reference librarian and Koch's boss, provided some of her son's Ranger Rick magazines from which Koch could get ideas. Some of the open magazines scattered across the lounge floor were mirror images of the line art on the walls. Chittenden told the library staff was trying to think what could be done at the least extent. Chittenden said she thought the area needed something to soften and bright it. A jungle scene at the Hilltop Child Development Center caught her eve. Koch said yesterday that she had been working at Watson since October and was still there. "Actually, to have someone come in and do this would cost more money," Koch said. Chittenden said Koch had a "marvelous, "It it just seemed like it would be really colorful," she said. "The idea was to have so much in it, and have it so interesting that people could find something new in it." whimsical imagination," which would add a positive image to the room paintings. "I think it's going to be something to help students learn the area, and if they enjoy it, they're more likely to stick with it." Koch said he had been working an average of 15 hours a week. But, during spring break week, she would work eight hours a day to finish before the resumption of classes. The University paint shop, under the direction of facilities operations, will supply the walls. "We're using regular wall paint because it kears better and sticks to the weller, better," Koch said she hoped her mural would 'add some personality to the study area and make it a better place to be,' although she has had her own interests in mind. "I'd much rather do something I enjoy, or am good at, than waiting tables." Page 12 University Daily Kansan, February 24, 1982 Scoreboard Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Eastern Division Team W 4 L Pet. GB Philadelphia 40 15 74 -2 Cincinnati 15 17 12 2 New Jersey 27 28 28 41% Washington 27 28 38 491 % Houston 25 31 41 464 % Western Conference Midwest Division Milwaukee 39 15 722 Atlanta 38 14 765 Indiana 28 444 14 Increase 24 41 438 Chicago 24 38 436 Chicago 12 41 226 Detroit 12 41 226 San Antonio Houston Dallas Utah Chicago San Diego 35 28 18 669 35 28 18 569 35 28 18 579 19 18 35 352 19 18 35 352 19 18 35 352 35 28 327 16 Los Angeles 38 17 691 691 Seattle 38 17 691 691 San Francisco 28 24 147 7% 8% Phoenix 28 24 538 538 Texas City 28 24 338 338 San Diego 15 20 273 273 San Francisco 15 20 273 273 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 103, Kansas City 94 Newark 113, Milwaukee 110 San Antonio 97, Dallas 102 San Antonio 143, Golden State 123 Chicago 125, Portland 121 Houston 103, Dallas 98 Los Angeles 101, San Diego 129 San Diego 131, San Diego 101 Team W L W L Petz GB Missouri 12 1 1 93 Oklahoma State 7 5 583 4% Oklahoma State 7 5 583 4% Nebraska 6 5 500 4% Oklahoma 6 5 500 4% Kansas 4 3 333 7% Iowa State 4 3 333 7% Illinois 4 3 333 7% FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION fqkjOn Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division THE PRESTON McCALL COMPANY 314 N. 3rd 811-6067 Hockey NIL STANDINGS Wales Conference Patrick Dibbleen Team W 14 L 7 T GF GA Pts. L 34 W 14 L 7 GF GA 196 Philadelphia 11 24 L 7 GF GA 157 NY Rangers 28 22 10 GF GA 232 Pittsburgh 18 22 10 GF GA 230 65 Baltimore 28 12 10 GF GA 231 65 Team W 18 L 5 Pct. GB New York W 18 L 5 Pct. GB Milwaukee 109 769 1/2 Baltimore 14 13 L 692 1/2 Buffalo 14 13 L 692 1/2 Cleveland 9 10 L 619 1/2 Houston 9 10 L 633 1/2 Philadelphia 7 20 L 259 10/13 Tues.-Sat. 12-6 fashion eyeland MUSIC & DEMONSTRATION 841-6000 Holiday Plaza Balloon-a-Gram Attention to Occasion SEND A BALLOON A GRAM! P.O. Box 2122 Lanham, KY 60044 Motorway Preservation Tues. Sat. 12-8 faithOn eyeland (United Kingdom) 841-6000 Holiday Place Montreal 35 12 19 14 84 284 177 74 Boston 34 12 19 28 244 177 86 Buffalo 33 18 10 11 323 180 78 Baltimore 32 18 10 12 267 180 64 Hartford 18 20 13 14 183 184 65 St. Louis 21 16 805 — Wichita 16 10 818 — Kansas City 12 10 825 Memphis 10 18 357 12 Phoenix 9 18 357 12 Gwinnett 8 19 265 13% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS All-Star Game YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Campbell Conference North Division Quebec 4 Montreal 3 New York Islanders 3 Chicago 1 St. Louis 4 Toronto 2 Detroit 4 Colorado 3 Boston 2 Cincinnati 2 Minnesota 25 19 18 18 264 227 68 St. Louis 25 19 18 18 342 368 54 Detroit 25 19 18 18 264 368 54 Winnipinpe 20 17 12 12 224 264 52 Toronto 19 17 12 12 224 264 52 Florida 18 17 12 12 264 264 48 Edmonton 39 13 13 11 341 243 89 Calgary 28 16 15 14 297 269 59 Vancouver 26 23 16 13 211 209 54 Angeles 13 16 13 11 218 204 38 Los Angeles 13 16 13 11 283 269 47 TOMMY BROWN Learn how to make up your face...free MERLE NORMAN The World is Coming... Skiing TRAVEL CENTER Feb. 27th & 28th Outlook for the 80'S In Higher Education M T monday, March 1st Sigma Delta Chi Journalism Society Forum. Tonda Rush, Lawyer for Responders Committee Symposium of Contemporary Music. 8:00 p.m. Murphy Hall AUDITORIAL Dinner. 20th Annual Heart of America Debate Tournament 8:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m., Wheaton Hall SUPP: The Freedom of Information Act. W Symposium of Contemporary Music; 8:00 p.m. Mallah Hall SAU; Journal Gunn, Science Fiction; 8:00 p.m. Done Room Ineadav March 3rd today March 31 Spring Concert KU Concert Band. Guest Solisha-Gary Foster, Music Director T Forum on Higher Education in the 80's, 7:30 p.m. Kansas Room. Kansas Union. v. March 4th saturday, March 6th riday, March 5th F saturday, March 6th Jahwayt Invitational Jazz Festival, Murphy Hall S Sunday, March 7th Higher Education Week Banquet. Featured Speaker-Dr. Emily Taylor. 6:30 p.m. Kansas Union Higher Education Week By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor Jayhawks lose third straight, 80-69 The KU women's basketball team, trailing by 18 points at halftime, made a run at the Kansas State Wildcats but came up short, losing their third straight game 80-69, in Manhattan last night. Even with the loss to K-State, Coach Marian Washington said that she saw a lot of favorable things during the game. "Our young team finally realizes the things they have to do to win," Washington said. "It's always tough to lose, but this is the kind of game you can accept. I am really pleased with the effort the team gave." It appeared at the outset that the Wildcats would blow the Jayhawks out of Ahearn Field House. K-State jumped out to a 10-point lead with 14:12 remaining in the first half, and increased it to 17 with 8:11 left. The Wildcats shot a blistering 67 percent from the field in the first half on 20 of 30 shooting, Kansas, on the other hand, once again suffered through a cold shooting night. They shot only 38 percent from the field on 11 of 29 But Kansas took control and held the Wildcats to just three points over the next four minutes. In that time, Kansas scored 10 to close the gap to 10, 36-26. The Wildcats then put the game out of reach, by running through the Jayhawks and building an 18-point lead at balltime, 47-29. noing. The second half saw the resurgence "I'm really proud of the team," Washington said. "We out-played them in the second half. Our kids never play, playing, and they worked real hard." The 15-14 Jayhawks cut the Wildcat lead to 10 three times but could not get any closer to the Wildcats, who now win 13 games. The defense. They have won 13 garnes in a row. of the Jayhawks. They looked like they did in early December when their record stood at 7-1. The big attraction in the game was not the usual rivalry, since the Jahyahs have fallen on hard times this year, but was at the center position where KU's All-America candidate, Eddie Romstad, and one of the finalists for the Wade Trophy, given to the best woman collegiate basketball player. The play of the two players was spectacular, as each led their team in scoring and rebounding. Claxton was the leading scorer and rebounder in the game. He scored 10 out of 21 shots. She hit on 10 of 21 shots from the field and on 10 of 19 from the foul line. Rormstad, had 22 points in the teams' first meeting, scored 23 points and had nine rebounds. She shot 10 of 13 from the field and 3 of 4 from the line. Both players played the entire game: Claxton did not have much support from her teammates though, as no one was able to catch him in the figures. Without Claxton's shooting, the Jayhawks shot 10 of 38 from the field for 96 percent. Angie Snider, who is the team's PRE PHYSICAL THERAPY STUDENTS Application & Interview Process Meeting for KU, Wichita State University Medical Centers BOTH SCHOOL DIRECTORS WILL BE PRESENT When: Wednesday, February 24, 7:00 p.m. Where: Waxley Memorial Hospital Cafeteria GET A HEAD START ON MEDICAL SCHOOL Where: Watkins Memorial Hospital Cafeteria WOMEN'S CENTER OPEN HOUSE 3-5 P.M. FRIDAY, FEB. 26, 1982 THE STAFF INVITES YOU TO DROP BY FOR A CHAT, BROWSE THROUGH OUR MAGAZINES AND BOOKS REFRESHMENTS THE EMILY TAYLOR'S WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER 218 STRONG HALL 645-750 864-3552 second leading scorer, had a terrible night from the field, shooting 2 of 14. Snider managed only 9 points for the Hawks. Romstad wasn't in the same boat as Claxton, as she got plenty of help from the K-State team. Barbara Glimore had 20 points and seven rebounds before fouling out in the second half, and Priscilla Gary added 13 points. Betsy Shao, K-State's point guard, had seven assists to lead the Wildcats in that category. Her seven assists were as many as the entire KU team had. Ladies, 2 Free Drinks The Jayhawks will close out their regular season when they host the Creighton Blue Jays on Friday in Allen Field House. | | FG | FT | REB | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Chris Newwart | 2.8 | 1.4 | 2 | 0 | 1 | | Leonna Taylor | 2.5 | 1.4 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Heath Hancock | 18.4 | 1.3 | 1 | 0 | 1 | | Angie Taylor | 1.6 | 2.2 | 1 | 3 | 4 | | Angle Sniper | 3.1 | 0.6 | 1 | 1 | 4 | | Robbin Smith | 1.4 | 0.6 | 1 | 0 | 1 | | Robbin Smith | 1.4 | 0.6 | 1 | 0 | 1 | | Barbara Adkins | 1.4 | 0.6 | 1 | 0 | 1 | | 6.98 | 28.42 | 36 | 20 | 69 | after 9:00 p.m. Shelly Haghes PG 48 FT REB 5 PF TP 12 Barbara Gilmore GAM 8-18 FT 2 BAB 9 TF 31 Tammy Rannom TAMM 10-13 FT 9 4 PF 23 Priscilla Gary BED 10-14 FT 9 4 13 Becky Henderson BED 1-14 FT 2 6 Jean Rose JEAN 3-4 FT 2 3 8 Erin Schreiber ANN 1.9-12 FD 12 2 4 Ashley Anderson AHS 1.4-12 FD 12 2 4 WEDNESDAY IS LADIES NIGHT! GAMMONS GNOWW Tonight thru Saturday, 1st Set Starts at 9:30 Tours 3,957-1963 Fouled out: Smith, Holden, Cilmore Technical foals: none Attendance: 2,450 BELIEVE IT OR NOT Proudly Presents Everyone, 25c Draws 10-11 p.m. The Count finally changed the records on THE HAWK JUKEBOX. But is anyone besides The Count old enough to remember those LUPE songs? Kings defeated by Hawks,103-94 By United Press International ATLANTA-Eddie Johnson scored 27 points and had 8 assists last night to carry the Atlanta Hawks to their fifth straight victory, a 108-94 decision over the Kansas City Kings. Johnson was backed by John Drew with 24 points and 13 rebounds and Tom McMillen with 22 points. He scored 20 reboundals and 7 blocked shots. LURE J. Drew 7.10-14.24, McMillan 9.42, Rellins 22, Williams 9.36 P. Lowe 10.22, Mackinat 1.01, Mattick 1.2, Matthews 2.2, Williams 0.0.0. Totals 39.5-34.105. Kansas City 8.0 21 22 28 24-94 Columbus 8.0 21 22 28 24-94 Three-point goal - Lush 1.0, Total foul - Lush 1.0, Total foul - Atlanta coach Lougery A - 7.452 Kansas City was paced by Reggie Johnson with 20 points and 13 rebounds. Reggie King finished with 10 assists and reserve Kevin Loder added 12. E. Johnson 1, 9, 2; Kine 6, 11-13, J. Sohnson 1, 2, Fort 4, 39; Wood 4, 20; R. Johnson 9, 20, 20; Loder 5, 21; L. Drew 4, 21; Grunfeld 8, D. Demarest 3, 7; Totals 39, 15-24. GRADUATE Kansas City (94) GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL March 1st, 7:00 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union BUDGETS ARE ON THE AGENDA. free Mexican Hors D'oeuvres Build your own taco . . . and then finish it off with Every Wednesday $1.00 Well Drinks and 50° draws During Happy Hour Happy Hour 4:00-8:00 p.m. $1.00 Margaritas MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE n 2222 W. 6th St. 842-7030 Ext.136 Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th St. 842-7030 Ext. 136 THE THRILL LIVING SPORTS ❤️ THE THIRD ANNUAL SUA THEATRE SERIES TAKEN IN MARRIAGE by thomas lamb feb 24, 26 mar 4, 6 kansas union OPENING TONIGHT big eight room SCENES from SOWETO & RATS STEVE HOROWITZ © by israel horovitz by steve wilmer feb 25 27 smith hall ALL EVENING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00 p.m. mar. 3.5 an evening of one act ALL MATINES PERFORMANCES ARE AT 2:00p.m. tickets TICKETS ON SALE AT THE 812 BOX OFFICE IN THE KANSAS UNION, LAWRENCE KB 89045 FOR TICKET INFORMATION CALL (810) 664-3477 WITH ELD SHOEHALL SHOW 32.50 SHOEHALL SHOW 60.00 GENERAL PUBLIC SHOEHALL SHOW 39.00 SHOEHALL SHOW 49.00 University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN The University Daily Thursday, February 25, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 104 USPS 650-640 Committee backs Carlin's faculty pay increase By COLLEEN CACY Staff Reporter TOPEKA- It may shift the dollars around, but the Senate Ways and Means Committee plans to give faculty at Board of Regents institutions the same salary increase that Gov. John Carlin has recommended, according to State Sen. Paul Hess, committee chairman. "We're going to stay within the total dollars that the governor recommended for faculty salaries," Hess, R-Wichita, said yesterday. "We're just going to reshuffle the deck." HESS SAID THE committee would take final action today on the Regents faculty salary increases, enrollment adjustment figures, expenses and graduate student tuition fees. Money for capital improvements and other allocations for individual Regents schools will be provided in the next financial year. After the committee makes a recom- mentation the budget will be passed to the State floor. Hess said the committee would probably recommend an 8 percent faculty salary increase. The Regents requested a 13 percent increase, a total of $6 million for KU faculty. Carlin recommended a 10 percent increase. It would be split between an 8.75 increase for all faculty and an extra .125 percent for areas with a high market value—accounting, engineering, computer science, library science and the physical sciences. HOWEVER, CARLIN recommended two budget that the committee would reject. Hess said. If the Legislature adopts the changes, they will result in less money for KU. Carlin proposed increasing the shrinkage factor from 2 percent to 3.5 percent. Shrinkage is the amount of money withheld from the salary budget to allow for faculty turnover. A salary savings results because a position may be vacant for a period of time, and the replacement might be hired at a lower salary than the original employee. A 2 percent shrinkage means that out of every $4 million in salary funds, the University receives all $800. If shrinkage were increased to 3.9 percent, the $1 million salary fund would receive $655,000 of every $1 million of salary funds. WITH SHRINKAGE subtracted, Carlin's sensor increased improved Aperture. Hess said the committee would recommend that shrinkage stay at 2 percent. Carlin also proposed a different method of figuring fund increases for changes in the economy. He recommended returning to a formula based on full-time equivalency enrollment figures, whereas he had chosen the lower figure. FTE is figured by dividing the number of undergraduate hours by 15, the number of graduate hours by nine, the number of student hours by 12 and by adding the three numbers together. The increment figures from each fall to determine increases or decreases in money and number of faculty. Last year, the Legislature began using a different approach, called the "corridor consort." UNDER THE CORRIDOR method, an institution must absorb an increase or decrease of less than 1.5 percent. One year is used as a base for the next three years, so large changes in the number of faculty would be made every three years. State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topeka, head of the Ways and Means subcommittee handling KU's budget, said Carlin's proposal would cheat KU out of money it should have received for enrollment increases in 1980 and 1981. Under the corridor method, the current base year is 1979, therefore, KU would not be scheduled to receive large funding increases until this year. But since there was a slight decrease in the fall, Carlin recommended cutting $292,722 and 15 faculty positions from the KU budget. "The governor abolished it (the corridor method) to play his political games," Hein said. "He had to do that to pull off what he wanted to do." HEAID SAIN HEoped the Legislature would end un staving with the corridor approach. "I think everyone can assume the corridor is better for everyone," he said. Hess said the committee wanted to give universities as much flexibility as possible in managing the salary funds that the Legislature appropriated. He said it was unlikely the committee would Regents have said they favor the corridor method because it had given them flexibility. allocate an extra salary increase for engineering and other high-market value areas. In a hearing yesterday morning, a representative from the engineering industry asked the committee for a special $5,000 salary supplement for engineering faculty. BOB HAKTSOOK, executive vice president of Kansas Engineering Society, thesupplementary editor of the journal It would go to faculty of engineering schools at KU, Kansas State University and Wichita State University. He said an assistant professor of engineering with a Ph.D. made about $24,000 a year, and a student just out of college could earn from $22,000 to $32,000 in the private sector. "The demand for engineers in business has forced faculty to look at alternative ways of making engineering more practical." But Hess said the committee was not convinced of the need to appropriate more money for the program. "I don't think we're going to do anything in that form," he said. "The mood of the committee is to maintain the flexibility on the part of the senator and on the salary dollars the Legislature appropriates." Recent study identifies basic equipment needs By ANN WYLIE Staff Reporter The University of Kansas needs $4,673,000 for equipment to compete with other universities and private industry for research, faculty, and students, according to the chairman of the university's equipment committee. The committee published a report Feb. 9 to identify the University's equipment needs and to address concerns. The University routinely checks basic equipment needs, however, said Meyen, who is associate vice chancellor for research and graduate studies. "We really hadn't taken the time to determine the state of the arts for large equipment needs for the future." The report was sent to the office of research, graduate studies, and public service and to University officials, including Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor. "We would hope to present the report to the Board of Resents." Cobb said. He said that Chancellor Gene A. Budig would read the report before the administrators. The report lists 48 pieces of major equipment that the University needs, including a logic analyzer, a multi-purpose printer and a supermini computer. Major equipment is defined in the report as costing more than $50,000. Less expensive equipment is funded by means that do not exceed the budget, and the other operating expenses budget, Cobb said. The University is ranked 89th among research institutions, high for a public institution," Meyen said. But with the proper equipment, KU would have the potential to be in the top 25 or 30, he said. "(The equipment) is not what would put research universities there; it's what you do with them." Without the equipment, the University's reputation for research will decline, Meyen said. Faculty quality at the University will also decline if KU doesn't have research equipment that will draw and keep good faculty, Meyen said. "Unless we're able to provide our faculty members up-to-date equipment for their research and teaching roles, we're not going to be in a position to recruit good faculty." he said. The geology department, for example, has had trouble attracting faculty. he said. Proper equipment at the university level affects the entire nation, Meyen said, because the campus is located in a densely populated area. *Universities represent a setting for research which is quite different from industry.* No mold. Industry research is product and profitoriented, while university research is broader in scope, and not limited by concern for the outcope. Meven said. The federal government has usually funded about 95 percent of the University's equipment needs. But with quickly changing technology, inflation and budget cuts in federal agencies that have historically funded research, the See EQUIPMENT page 5 Dean claims library study poorly judges space needs Staff Reporter By JULIE HEABERLIN A New York accounting firm's study assessing KU library needs is based on the unprofessional assumption that libraries have wasted construction spending years, the KU dean of library wrestles yesterdays. "I think they approached the problems from a very utilitarian standpoint," the dean, Jim Ranz, said. "They have had little experience with educational institutions." Ranz said Peat, Marwick and Mitchell Co. suggested reducing the University's space request almost two-thirds, from 340,000 square feet to 130,000 square feet. The $100,000 preliminary study, released earlier this month, was commissioned by the Kansas Legislature last spring to assess library requests from several Kansas universities. "When I asked them, they had to tell me reluctantly and very embarrassingly that they'd never heard of a library built on their standards," he said. The firm did agree that KU needed another major library, Ranz said, which will serve the university. Ranz said that a University study, conducted four years ago, assessed library space needs according to the Kansas Board of Regents set of standards from libraries and architectural firms. However, State Sen. Jane Eldredge, R-Lawrence, said that while she only had time to look at the study briefly, she thought the staff hired the best firm with the available funds. KU proposed building a $2 million science-technology library near the military science base. KU's peer institutions, which have similar enrollments, already had library facilities equal to what the study projected for KU by the year 2000. Ranz also said that books would extend into the aisles or simply not fit because the recommended shelf dimensions were ridiculously small. CLARKSON The firm's proposal drastically reduces space for studying, he said, ignoring national standards that university libraries should have seats for one of every five students. "And we have more books now than all but one of those universities," Rana said. See LIBRARIES page 5 CLOUDY Weather Today will be cloudy and colder with high wind conditions according to the National Weather Service. There is a 20 percent chance of measurable snow. Winds will be light at five o'clock. The lows tonight are expected to be in the mid-20s. Friday will be partly cloudy and warm, with temperatures in the high 40s. Beth Gornev. California graduate student, and her dog Terrapin romp on a slope east of the Campanile yesterday afternoon. University can't escape high gas bills Bv LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter The University used $297,383 worth of natural gas in January, Richard Perkins, associate director, Natural Gas Program. Rising natural gas prices, which have been plaguing private homeowners, have hit the University of Kansas right where it counts—in the pocketbook. Total gas consumption from about Dec. 23 to Jimmy's was 77,250,000 cubic feet. Parkins was 64,961,000 cubic feet. "That's the largest gas bill I have ever seen here at the University," said Pernuls, who has been a professor of chemistry for 17 years. "We used 20,000 feet more in January than in December," he said. Gas prices and consumption for the University have been increasing steadily over the past two decades. In January 1960, KU used $63,731,000 thousand cubic feet of gas, at a cost of $133,392. In January 1981, the University used $173,787 worth of natural gas-65,642,000 thousand cubic feet. Perkins said the price for gas used in January was higher than any electric bill the University has charged. "That's something I thought I'd never see—a gas bill higher than an electric bill." Perkins But total gas prices are only a reflection of the price increase of gas per thousand cubic foot. Gas sold for $2.90 per thousand cubic foot in January 1980 and $2.65 in January 1981. "Last month, we paid $3.85 per thousand cubic foot." Perkins said. "The cold weather not only hurt us, but the rising cost of has hurted us." Bob Allison, plant manager for the Kansas Public Service Co., the company that supplies KU with natural gas, said that KU's increased gas bill was the result of increased consumption. "This year we have not curtailed natural gas supply to the University," he said. Allison said that in past years, the amount of gas available to the University was curtailed during the months of December, January and February. "The KU power plant is an interruptable customer," he said. "They have oil tanks from China." That way we can keep high priority See UTLTIMES page 5 Watson lounge turning into wild kingdom By BARB EHLI Staff Reporter Dangerous beasts lurk the first floor of Watson Libraries and Ranger Rick Museum. magical garden, adapted perhaps here. The The Reader's Lounge is becoming a jungle. anhing a snake By the end of spring break, a marion on the west wall of the Reader's Lounge will include a snake, a zebra, an armadillo, a purple cat, an alligator eating Jayhawk feathers and a black and yellow Cheshire cat among the waterfalls and foliage. Susan Koch, Naperville, Ill., graduate student, has been doing preliminary drawings of the jungle scene for two weeks and is now working on one of her sketches freehand on the lounge walls. Carol Chittenden, reference librarian and Koch's boss, provided some of her son's Ranger Rick magazines from which Koch could get ideas. Some of the open magazines scattered across the lounge floor were mirror images of the line art on the walls. Chittenden said the library staff was trying to think what could be done at the least extenuated cost. "Actually, to have someone come in and do this would cost more money," Koch said. Chittenden said she thought the area needed something to soften and brighten it. A jungle scene at the Hilltop Child Development Center caught her eye. Chittenden said Koch had a "marvelous. Koch said yesterday that she had been working at Watson since October and was still working on her research. "It it just seemed like it would be really colorful," she said. "The idea was to have so much in it, and have it so interesting that people could find something new in it." whimsical imagination," which would add a positive image to the room naintines. "I think it's going to be something to help students enjoy the area, and if they enjoy the environment, it will help them." Koch said she had been working an average of 15 hours a week. But, during spring break week, she would work eight hours a day to finish the resumption of classes. The University paint shop, under the direction of facilities operations, will supply "We're using regular wall paint because it keeps and sticks to the wall better," Kearney said. Koch said she hoped her mural would "add some personality to the study area and make it a better place to be," although she has had her own interests in mind. "I'd much rather do something I enjoy, or am good at, than waiting tables." Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 25, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Reagan proposes program of trade, aid in Caribbean WASHINGTON—Saying the United States would not permit "new Cubas" on its doorstep, President Reagan proposed an unprecedented program of trade, aid and investment yesterday for the nearly bankrupt Caribbean and Central American nations. The plan, which Reagan unveiled in a major policy address to the Organization of American States, drew a mixed reception from Central American U.N. diplomats and praise from Democratic and Republican congressional leaders. Reagan said the security of the Caribbean basin was vital to the United States. "Let our friends and our adversaries understand that we will do whatever is prudent and necessary to ensure the peace and security of the Caribbean." Reagan's "Caribbean basin initiative" would permit about two dozen nations to export most of their products duty free to the United States for the next 12 years, provide tax incentives for U.S. investment, and offer technical assistance and training. No money will go to Cuba, officials said. Whether Nicaragua receives assistance "depends on Nicaragua" and how that government conducts itself, according to William Brock, special trade agreement Hiiackers give up after 9 hours BEIRUT, Lebanon—Twelve heavily armed Moslem extremists, holding 106 hostages on a Kuwait Airway Boeing 707, surrendered peacefully yesterday. The surrender ended a nine-hour drama marked by two gun battles that left one person wounded. It was the seventh hijacking by Lebanese Moslem Shites in a bid to find their missing leader, who disappeared in 1978 on a trip to Libya. The hijack ended little more than an hour after a shootout between the gunmen and Lebanese army soldiers. During the gun battle, the hijackers shot at the airport control tower, wounding one man. Airport officials said that no one was wounded on the plane, although the hijackers had said at one point that they had a casualty on board. Shortly after 5 p.m. CST, the gummen allowed buses to drive to the plane and take the hostages, Berut Airport officials said. The Lebanese Army Brezhnev reasserts weapons stand MOSCOW—The Soviet Union is ready to halt production and stockpiling of nuclear weapons and start strategic arms reduction talks with the United States in March. Brezhnev issued his statement in a reply to an open letter also addressed to President Reagan from an Australian disarmament group, according to the newspaper. Although the Soviet leader has offered similar proposals on arms reduction before, his tone sharply contrasted with that of a speech given by Reagan yesterday to the Organization of American States. In that speech, Reagan warned Moscow to stay out of the Western Hemisphere and said "nowhere in its whole sordid history have the promises of communism been redeemed." A State Department spokesman said the United States had no immediate comment on Breznev's proposals. Senate seeks ban on racial busing WASHINGTON - The Senate kept alive yesterday a sweeping amendment that would prohibit courts and school boards from ordering busing to deserts. The Senate rejected 51-40 a motion to kill an amendment by Sen. Slade Curtison, R-Wash., which would forbid assigning any student to a school on the board. Gorton's amendment would go beyond one proposed by Sens. Jesse Helms, R.S.C., and J. Bennett Johnston, D-La., which would prohibit basing students farther than 10 miles, or distances that take more than 30 minutes to travel. The busing amendments are attached to a $2.45 billion Justice Department authorization bill. The Helms-Johnston amendment would restrict court-ordered busing; the Gorton amendment would prohibit any busing for deserteries nurmages. 'Bette Davis Eyes' best 1981 song LOS ANGELES - Rhythm master Quincy Jones picked up four early LOS ANGELES and "Better Davis Eyes" was named song of the year at the "Bette Davis Eyes," written by Jacki DeShannon and Donna Weiss and sung by Kum Carnes, beat out "Arthur's Theme," "Endless Love," "Just the Man." Jones, who received eight nominations, won pre-tecaletawards for best rhythm-and-blues group vocal performance for "The Dude," best arrangement on an instrumental recording for "Velas" and best instrumental arrangement accompanying voices for "Ai No Corrida." Dolly Parton won twice for "9 to 5," which was named best country and western song and best country and western female performance. The Police won Grammys for best rock-group performance for "Don't Stand So Close to Me" and best rock instrumental performance for the song Kissinger released from hospital BOSTON - HElen Kissinger, former secretary of state, was in good spirits when he left Massachusetts General Hospital yesterday—two weeks after a brief illness. Kissinger said he planned to spend five or six days in New York, leave for the rest of the trip. Prime Minister and then he began his big airline schedule. "I feel in fine shape and in great spirits," said Kissinger, a 1973 Nobel prize winner. Kissinger, 56, underwent the triple bypass Feb. 10 to correct narrowing of two arteries in his heart and blockage of another. He said he was still feeling a little pain from the surgery and needed "a little more sleep than my normal four to five hours." Koch criticizes life in the suburbs NEW YORK—Mayer Edward Koch, a candidate for governor of New York, said yesterday he was trying to be amusing in a Playboy magazine interview when he criticized rural life as a "joke" and suburban living as "sterile." Because agriculture is New York state's leading industry, political observers—mindful of Jimmy Carter's Playboy interview during the 1976 presidential race in which he admitted feeling "lust in my heart"—said Koch could not afford to anger upstream residents. His remarks, in the upcoming April issue, about suburban and country living were responses to a question about the dangers and inconveniences of GHG. "Have you ever lived in the suburbs?" Koch said. "I haven't, but I have talked to people who have, and it's sterile. It's nothing. It wasn't wasting your life." In a news conference to explain his remarks, Koch stopped short of retracting his statements, but said that his "humor may have gone away Correction In a story published Tuesday, Feb. 23, John Keightley was said to earn $5,000 a year as KU campus director of the Associated Students of Kansas. The $5,000, in fact, is divided between ASK directors at seven campuses. Keightley earns $810 a school year. Professional development of graduate women is the theme of a program sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource and Career Center, at 7 onight in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Aore Adve. Center plans program The speakers will be Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service; Caryl Stein, dean of student life; John A. Glover, associate professor; English; Kristen Mertes, assistant professor of chemistry; Susan Noakes, assistant professor of French and Italian; Diane McDermott, coordinator of the Women's Studies program; and Dalton, assistant professor of business. Rose Rousseau, graduate assistant in the center, said that seven KU women would talk at the program about the importance of professional development in their fields. Rousseau said the program was designed to bring graduate women together. She said that often there were no women faculty in a department. "We think graduate women have the need for a mentor relationship to see other women who have made it in their field," she said. The Women's Resource Center is also sponsoring an open house tomorrow JERRY HARPER ATTORNEY On the record Horizons HONDA 901 KENTUCKY Suite 204 841-9485 We Can't Who We Ride Parts, Sales & Service 1811 W. 6th 843-3333 equipment sometime between 2 and 7:30 a.m. Tuesday from a residence at 1219 Ohio St., police said. Lawrence police arrested Marion Leroy Alexander, 2235 Louisiana St., Tuesday for two counts of burglary at 409 California St. Neighbors called the police after hearing someone enter the house sometime between 8:13 and 8:40 on Saturday morning. It was missing from the residence. Alexander, 18, is also suspected in a burglary that occurred Monday after the duplex police said. He is being held by the Douglas Count Jail on $3,500 bill. BURGLARS STOLE more than $1.700 worth of stereo and television POLICE REPORTED a burglary sometime between 9 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. Tuesday at the Lawrence High School Extension, 2600 W. 25th "Pilot pens! You have to hold onto them with two hands." Police said burglaries pulled out a screen, forced a window open and stole a microwave oven worth $400, two or three bags of french fries worth $8, five pounds of hamburger and two boxes of burritos worth $34. "I don't get no respect!" I make a deposit ... this guy's making a withdrawal—including my Pilot pen. -Rodney Dangerfield It's almost criminal how people go for my Pilot Fineliner. Why? Its fine point writes through cartons. And Pilot charges only 79¢ for it. People get their hands on it and forget it's my pen. I got no pain. And no respect. People go skate over my Pilot Rozor Point too. It writes with an extra fine line. Its metal coral helps keep the point from going squint. For only 8¢ they should own their own pen—and show some respect for my property. **PILOT** fine point marker pens People take to a Pilot like it's their own. 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Come celebrate the last day of Carnival Saturday, February 27th, Kansas Room, 6th floor Union, $3 admission. GREEK MUSIC & DANCES BEER & SNACKS Tickets available at the SUA office of 842-2218 5PONSORED BY THE HELLENIC SOCIETY Old Carpenter Hall Smokehouse HOG HEAVEN RIB SPECIAL Now thru Sunday Feb.24th to Feb.28th the finest in deep pit BBQ flavor Half Slab Big End $3.95 Half Slab Small End $5.95 Full Slab To go only $7.95 Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer tts 719 Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks. University Daily Kansan, February 25, 1982 Page 3 OMNI 30 - HOUR SALE! We're open extra hours this weekend with special prices every hour on home and car stereo If you're low on cash, remember just $20 holds anything at Omni on layaway! Friday 10 a.m.-11 a.m. Altec 1012 Friday 11 a.m.-12 p.m. Jensen 6x9 Quadaxial JENSEN Full-size 12' , 3-way speaker system. Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 600.00 400.00 350.00 Friday 12 p.m.-1 p.m. Koss Pro 4AA JENSEL CAR AUDIO 4-way car speakers with grills. Koss Pro 4AA Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 149.95 99.95 79.95 Friday 1 p.m.-2 p.m. Empire LTD-500 Full range headphones with coiled cord. Friday 2 p.m.-3 p.m. Clarion EQB-300 POWER Eliptical stereo cartridge. Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 99.95 49.95 39.95 Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 100.00 50.00 40.00 Friday 3 p.m.-4 p.m. JVC JLA-31 Clarion 35 watt per channel car amplifier with meter power and equalizer. Regulator 1 Room Price 1 Sale 1 Price 199.95 129.95 99.95 JVC Direct drive semi automatic turntable with straight tone arm Friday 4 p.m.-5 p.m. Fujitsu DP-7872 Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 160.00 129.95 119.95 AM-FM auto reverse car stereo car stereo with locking fast forward and rewind Blower Price 19.99 Sales 19.99 Price 189.95 149.95 129.95 Friday 6 p.m.-7 p.m. Hitachi DE-10 Friday 7 p.m.-8 p.m. Magnadyne S-640 JVC Saturday 10 a.m.-11 a.m. Alterac4C F AM/FM cassette portable with 3-way MAGNADYME Stereo home cassette recorder with Dolby and metal toe cap capability. Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 89.95 69.95 59.95 Regular Price 169.95 129.95 119.95 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price --- Saturday 11 a.m.-12 p.m. JVC KD-D2 5 1/4" full range door speakers with wire ALTEC LANSING 6x9 conical snackers CD grills. Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 49.95 29.95 19.95 Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 149.95 109.95 99.95 Saturday 12 p.m.-1 p.m. Formula 69.3 Stereo home cassette recorder with Dalby and LED signal meters. Regular 30-Hour Price Sale 1-Hour 199.95 159.95 149.95 Saturday 1 p.m.-2 p.m. JVC RC-363JW Saturday 2 p.m.-3 p.m. Pioneer KP-5500 JVC Saturday 4 p.m.-5 p.m. Magnadyne DOM-41B Saturday 3 p.m.-4 p.m. Scott 325R Saturday 5 p.m.-6 p.m. Clarion 3150R SANITY 1978 Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 129.95 79.95 69.95 PIONEER AM/FM stereo cassette portable with built-in microphones and 3-way power. Price $19.99 30-hour Price $19.99 169.95 149.95 129.95 M/M/FM supertuner indash cassette with nushbutton. SCOTT PLUS LEVEL POWER ON BOOT POWER SUPPLIER MAGNADYNE 20 watt per channel car booster with on- off control pushbutton. Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 189.95 149.95 139.95 Clarion AM/FM stereo receiver with 20 watt DC amplifier and庐索喇叭色 Register $36.99 30-hour Sale $1 hour Regress 249.95 199.95 149.95 Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 39.95 29.95 19.95 AM/FM cassette car stereo with fast Saturday 6 p.m.-7 p.m. Page 201 toward. Regular 30-Hour 1-Hour Price 129.95 99.95 89.95 BOSE 501 BOSE Saturday 7 p.m.-8 p.m. Audio-Technica Pro 11 E Sunday 10 a.m.-11 a.m. JVC RS-11 Direct reflecting speaker system. Sunday 11 a.m.-12 p.m. Pioneer TS-695 图示为机械结构示意图。 audio-technica. DUAL MAGNET CARPETTEER. Dual magnet stereo cartridge. EZR-2010000000000 Sunday 12 p.m.-1 p.m. Sony XR-25 Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 330.00 280.00 250.00 Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 60.00 30.00 20.00 Direct drive semi automatic turntable with straight tighne arm. Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Arm Price 260.00 209.95 189.95 Sunday 1 p.m.-2 p.m. Scott PS-68 PIONEER 6x9 3-way car speakers with 20-oz. BANK OF NEW YORK 1234567890 AUTHORIZED DEPOSIT GRANTING BUSINESS MIDDLE EAST MARKETS CHAMBER OF COMMON PAYMENTS HOSPITALITY SONY. JVC magnetis. Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 149.95 99.95 89.95 SOTT AM - Introduce cassette with auto rewind, bass in midrange and variate high frequency. Beat Rate 0.24 Hour Price $19.95 Sale $19.95 249.95 219.95 199.95 SCOTT Direct drive automatic turntable with strobe for speed control. Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 190.00 129.95 119.95 Sunday 2 p.m.-3 p.m. JVC SK-1000 Sunday 3 p.m.-4 p.m. Akai PM-01 Sunday 4 p.m.-5 p.m. Pioneer UKP-2200 camera Sunday 5 p.m.-6 p.m. Tancredi TC-2010 10 DISCOVERY [Tancrèdi] Deluxe 1'2-way floor standing speaker system. Regular Price Nbr/hr Sale H-rhour 600.00 350.00 300.00 Sunday 6 p.m.-7 p.m. EQL 802 PIONEER Personal taxi player with PM cassette Regular Price 30-Hour Sale -Hour Price 189.95 189.95 159.95 AM.FM indush cascade player designed to fit small cars and imports. Register 399.99 Phrase 169.99 Sale 199.99 199.99 129.99 VOLUME 10 Indash AM/FM cassette player. Sunday 7 p.m.-8 p.m. Pioneer AD-30 Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 119.95 79.95 69.95 BANCO CIVIL 8" 2 way home speaker system with 5 year Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 129.95 79.95 59.95 PIONEER 15 watt per channel booster with aromatic emitters Regular Price 30-Hour Sale 1-Hour Price 129.95 99.95 89.95 Register for $1,000 Omni Gift Certificate to be given away at the end of our 30 Hour Sale! Free DISCWASHER refills all 30 hours! All Maxell tapes $ \frac{1}{2} $ price all 30 hours! KLZR will be at Omni This Sunday from Noon-4 p.m. with special things just for you. $20.00 holds anything on layaway. Just in time for your tax return. We've got a world of entertainment just for you. Special weekend hours: 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday-Saturday-Sunday VTSA* MasterCard 841-1O73 Sale prices and quantities limited to store stock. OMNI ELECTRONICS 6th & FIRESIDE COURT, LAWRENCE, KS ACROSS FROM SUNSET DRIVE-IN Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 25, 1982 Opinion One good man dies On Tuesday, an old man died. His name was Oscar S. Stauffer, and to some, his death might not have deserved the page-one display it received in many Kansas newspapers. But during his life, Stauffer was important both to Kansas and to the University of Kansas. After all, Stauffer was 95 years old, and he had been ill. Five year ago, he said he expected and did not fear, death. Stauffer began his career as a $6-a-week reporter for William White On the Emporia Gazette. When his career ended, Stauffer was owner and chairman of an 11-state newspaper and broadcast group. He helped mastermind Alf Landon's 1932 campaign for governor, and Landon's success in the 1935 Republican primary. have made a better showing against Franklin Delano Roosevelt if all those big city politicians hadn't taken the reins of the campaign away from Stauffer. Later, Landon always said he would Stauffer began his long association with KU somewhat reluctantly. In 1910, White had to fire him and offer him tuition money to convince him to enroll at the University. He served on the Kansas Board of Regents for an unprecedented 26 years. Stauffer did enroll. And he never forgot KU. Over the years, StauFFER helped pay tuition for hundreds of KU students. And last year, he donated $1 million to help renovate Flint Hall. But besides being an important man, and a generous man, Oscar S. Stauffer was a good man. For that, if for nothing else, he deserves recognition. Pancake Tuesday races put competition in perspective "Bong . . bong . . bong . . The parish church bell was ringing for Shrive uday service and unpertun Fanny Pigglesbottom had been to the church. "Crickey!" she exclaimed, "‘Tis time for confessing a ready, an m' my flippin' cakes in the oven!’ She pressed her palms to her cheeks and scrunched her forehead. 'Well I canna leave ‘em to burn, can I now?' she declared. With that, good Mrs. Pigglesboro grabbed the skillet out of the fire with a mitt and scuttered off to the old Norman church. In her rush not to be late she forgot to set the skillet down. Of course the sight of a squat, old woman dashing through the streets of Olney, England. BEN IONES with smock, frock and an occasional cake or two flying, was the result of unaffected earnestness of the air. So the men lingering outside the church doors to share a pipeful and talk crops chorted heartily when Mrs. Pigglesbottom puffed up the path with cakes in pan. And every year from then on, the Oleyn townwomen remembered their dear neighbor by re-enacting her Shrove Tuesday race, to the enjoyment of all. As years passed, the harried sense of obligation displayed toward both hearth and altar by the legendary Mrs. Pigglesbottom (a made-up name; her real one has fallen out of the frying pan of history) grew into one of those local British traditions that honor colloquial characters for their inadvertent absurdity. More than 500 years after that first run, Olinet townwomen still don frocks and bonnets to scurry with their skillets from the triangular shape of the bell-shaped bell. They a praewer book and a buss from the sexton. Since 1951, when the Liberal, Kan., Jaycees president read in a magazine about the race and challenged the vicar of Olney on behalf of their respective townwomen, the two towns have run the race concurrently and exchanged letters. In 1972, a lawyer prayed book, but this year the towns exchanged engraved plates for the race, which was run two days ago. The race receives some good-natured coverage by the national British newspapers, which reinforces a British notion, gotten from "Gunsmoke" and "The Wizard of Oz," of Kansas as the most typical state in the United States. The race also makes a modest but firm link with the popularization of patchwork haphazardry, was made of patchwork haphazardry, and a vivacious steeddaughter of that society. The British are not necessarily more reserved, but their glee must be grounded in convention before they can let go of their day-to-day dignity. The British have a great contest that provides a perfect format for a fête. The culture we inherited from Mother Britain is more full of these nonsensical institutions than we realize. Part of the delight of preserving rituals such as murder race is in reminding us of a liberal ideology. In both countries, the race is a lighthearted remnant of a time when communities invented their own fun, and diversity in entertainment close as the county boundary or the shire border. They were days of yore when participants rivaled onlookers in number. The contests may have been more motley, but they undoubtedly were more fun. As races and other activities grew in stature, the runners and doers dwindled in proportion to the spectators. The shrinking ratio magnified into distortion the importance of competition. Spectators began to over-emphasize a contest's outcome to release their own frustrations at not being in the contest. Athletic events now attain such a fervor that instead of laughing at our mistakes, we are mortified by them. At least in Oiney and Liberal, part of the fun still comes from accidentally dropping the pancake out of the skillet. The citizens who line the streets of the two towns cheer the women with encouragement and enthusiasm. It is difficult to imagine them filling the air with anything like the barrage of obsences and resentment that rained down from old House during the KU-KA-state game Saturday. Sebastian Coe may be a more exciting runner, but we need the bustling Fanny Pigglessbodies of the "Pancake Tuesday" races and other whimsical events just to keep it clear that no ritual is too sacred, no runner's wreath more glorious than the bonnet of an ordinary housewife who has carried her stone-cold pancake to victory on Shrove Tuesday. The University Daily KANSAN (USP56048) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July罢s Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas and July through October each month for a paid monthly fee or 8% year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $4 semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes to the University of Kansas in Flint Hall, Flint Hall, Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60404 Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Natalie Jade Managing Editor Tracey Hamilton Editorial Editor Karen Schiller Associate Editor Jennifer Duffield Associate Campus Editors Jane Neude Assistant Campus Editors Joe Rebein, Rebeena Chayne Assignment Editor Robathan Sports Editor Ron Hanggart Associate Sports Editor Gino Stroppi Entertainment Editor Coral Beach Makeup Editors Lisa Massoti, Lillian Davis, Sharon Appelbaum Live Editor Eileen Markey, Teresa Hurdan, Liam Mansell Photo Editor Ben Higler Staff Photographers Jon Hardney, John Hamkammer, John Elisee Bob Greenspan, Tracy Thompson, Mike McDonald Retail Sales Manager John Hornerberg National Sales Manager Howard Shuklinny Campus Sales Manager Perry Beal Classified Manager Sharon Burton Product Management Larry Leongman Tearasheet Manager John Egan Retail Sales Representatives Batha Burns Law, Phamaster, Susan Cookey, Lily Molcahn, Katryn Myers, Robin O'Banyan, Mike Pearl, Sewaney, Wenderson Campus Interns Sales and Marketing Advisor John Ohernan Sales and Marketing Advisor John Oberman General Manager and News Advisor Rick Mussel ©1982 MIAMI NEWS The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include his class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters. Letters Policy THE TRICK IS TO STAY IN SHALLOW WATER! EL SALVADOR © VERNON M. HANKS U.S. wastes time on 'radwaste' plan Nuclear plants have been, and are probably will continue "on line" no matter how many days we take off work to stand in front of the gates of places like Diahlo Canyon, waiting only for disappointing and sometimes physically threatening rebuits. The more serious question, but less heartening one, is the problem of the "disposal," or isolation from the biosphere, of high level radioactive wastes. But so far, the process of solving this problem has been complicated and slow. Radioactive waste comes in two types: spent fuel and reprocessed waste. Both start as uranium-oxide pellets sealed in metal tubes. The pellets contain uranium, the spent fuel — presently 8,000 tons worth — is either kept in storage pools at the reactor site, or reprocessed to extract isotopes such as plutonium for military weapons production. The mostly liquid defense wastes — 75 million gallons — in steel tanks at three nuclear power plants in West Valley, New York. Twenty-two million gallons of that defense waste, generated by the E. i. Du pont de Nemours and Company-operated Savannah River Plant in Aiken, South Carolina, will be the Department of Energy's "guinea pig" for its efforts to use its multibarrier mined-repository strategy. Du Pont, the DOE, NRC, EPA and multiple other factions are increasingly involved in research and discussion—including internationally-on what disposal strategy is both adequate and feasible. They immediately ruled out such exotic radwaste disposal schemes as burial in the polar ice caps or on a subantarctic shelf in a new space. The DOE has officially endorsed the mining of deep geological vaults, the mined-repository strategy. The DOE's timetable calls for sinking exploratory shafts at three selected sites during One site, the DOE's Hanford Reservation, astride the Columbia River in Washington State, lies on a basalt syncline—basis is a dense, dark-colored volcanic rock. The Cold Creek syncline contains a 50-meter wide basalt bed about 1,000 meters below the surface. However, water-bearing layers above and below the basalt, and the irregular formation basalt formations take, has caused discussion about either potential channels of water flow exist. The second site is on federal weapons-testing land in Southern Nevada, about 80 miles north of Las Vegas. Leakage There the vaults would be mined in Yucca Mountain area tuff, a light-colored rock of compassive fragments and ash, which Welded tuff is a high density rock that dissipates heat well, and non-welded tuff is a low-density ion-collecting rock. Some researchers believe a repository mined in a welded tuff formation surrounded by non-welded tuff could cool the hot waste and form a barrier capable of absorbing migrating radionuclides. But that region of the country is geologically complicated; additional research is needed to understand the conditions. W.J. ANDREWS stability, and the tuff's response to continuous heating by waste products. Yet, studies at the Nevada Test Site have instead speded up to meet the new DOE schedule. Haste for waste. Salt has always been a candidate for rad waste disposal, especially since its plasticity makes it less susceptible to fissures and other corrosion. The ware created by evaporation of prehistoric sea ice. But salt is susceptible to fresh water and brine inclusions. At one test drilling site a brine pocket surprised engineers. It was located just below a proposed repository bed and contained 1.1 million gallons of fluid, though the fluid was found to have been stagnant—no new fluid had entered or left the pocket for at least 800,000 years. There is concern that undetected brine pockets could encroach and weaken a salt repository. As yet, geophysical sensing techniques can detect only features where brine pockets might have occurred, causing scientists concern over which pockets are and what their effect might be. Salt talks. So now, instead of concentrating on testing known sites of these selected rock types, scientists are gathering data in other areas, with the beds capable of sustaining a mined repository. But after the exploratory shafts, a test evaluation facility will be built, and the "guines pig" defense wastes are scheduled to be placed in it by 1980. The waste itself will be melted together with borosilicate glass and placed in special canisters. These "hot packages" will then be sealed within the mined repository. The borsilicate medium won out—unofficially—over SYNROC, a synthetic rock which requires extra technology for practical use. It is also needed to melt the waste and SYNROC together. However, this process of "hot package" burial is viable only for wastes that have been reprocessed, such as defense waste. The reprocessed washes have a reduced remaining "hot" life of 250 to 1,000 years, whereas unreprocessed spent fuel has an extended "hot" life of 300 years depending on the specific waste; for example, Plutonium 239 has a half-life of 24,000 years. We haven't even a process yet to stabilize the not-so-hot waste. But the French do. Since 1969 France has been vitrifying wastes—metting them into the borosilicate glass—with a pilot plant, and in 1978 opened its full-scale AVM vitrification facility. The French vitrify their waste, and plan to store it in air cooled wells until the waste can be safely buried. This eliminates the danger of extended heating that could occur if many hot water tanks were not used. It also gives them a longer lead time to research and prepare an adequate geologic repository. Belgium, West Germany, and the United Kingdom have all decided to buy the French process. But not the U.S. We still have to wait for that. The U.S. is eager to overate the aggressively marketed SYNROC. But while the DOE picks their glass, time is running out. According to a recent General Accounting Office report, some defense wastes have been stored for thirty-five years, already outlasting, and in some cases leaking from their obsolete storage tanks. And by the year 2000, the 8,000 present tons of commercial waste will have increased ninefold to almost one million cubic feet. What are they going to do with it all? It's obviously going to take a long time to mine and engineer a repository, even if everything goes right. Why not look at what's at hand, like the French, and safely store the waste that we do have, at least isolating it from the biosphere temporarily? Why doesn't the United States buy the French system, the AVM, as our western allies have dope? The French are already six years ahead of us on paper; they plan to complete their repository by 1992. And now we are fourth in line, even if we do buy their system. We are ironically wasting waste time. I can almost hear the DOE's apology now, "Sorry we were doing it wrong." Yea, we know . . . drip, drip, drip. Letters to the Editor Reagan at least trying different approach To the Editor: In a letter in the Feb. 18 University Daily Kansan, Harry G, Shaffer, professor of economics and Soviet and East European studies, told us about President Reagan's State of the Union address last month. I was quite glad that he outlined the address because, frankly, I missed it. I'm not sure about his economic comments, however. Although I am not an authority on economics, as I'm sure the professor is, it is rather apparent to me that the economics that he has been teaching in his classes have not done any good reviving the American economy for several years. I agree with Shaffer on his comments about the poor—initially riggana's economic policies are good, but he doesn't understand them. I wonder if Shaffer believes that established economic rules are the only ones that can work, just as there is only one way to prove a geometric ream. Reagan is trying something that hasn't been done in American economics since he invoked Velvet was president. He's trying something new! Clayton J. Samuelsen, Prairie Village junior is going to be tough all over. I would say that the social(ist) programs that help the poor are being misused all over the country and need to be cut. I doubt if Shaffer would agree, so I won't say it. In a final comment, I can only take a quote of Reagan's from earlier this month. "Put up, or lie." To the Editor: Choice is simple I was thoroughly lifted by the poor journalism in her column about the decimated Iranian boy. Now, once again, I was raised from the murky shallows of uncountess to learn that Secretary Clinton had given us gas and oil. In the process, he is saving the most important animal of all—man. I read Jolyne Waltz's columns with a craving and eagerly await the next issue of the University Daily Kansas so I may flip through the pages to read her hard-binding satires. I don't believe either of her columns would have been written had they been better researched. In regard to her latest journalistic work, there are two serious points that need to be brought out. First, lands used for oil and gas production are no longer the dirty oil gushers of the past. The wells are clean and are barely noticed by the ecology after they are in place. Granted, the land may be partially harmed, but not to the extent that it can't be repaired. Second, everyone has two choices. Next time they are home they can turn off all appliances that have even the slightest connection to oil or heat, and leave them on in the kitchen, eating cold TV dinners in front of a cook proclaiming that they're doing their part to oppose Watt and his policies. Or, everyone can use all their appliances, keep quiet and work around them. And that are both cheap and non-deterrimental to nature. Take your pick. Andy Bynum, Leavenworth freshman be t— ock the ge" been the ing the un- the naas the ing gate its to be ex- not tch ced cah ait is eng een ete 000 wee oic to if it's the me the us eir in an y, could stricter d to are the and ent tme eares or eng, TV, to work both **anw** University Daily Kansan, February 25, 1982 Page 5 Equipment From page 1 University must look for alternative sources of funding, Meyen said. funding, Meyen said One is the state "The University) will have to, in some way, interpret for the state Legislature, the meaning of instrumentation for research and for teaching." Mewen said. He said the committee's report should help do this. Also, the University should encourage individuals and industry to give major pieces of their own work. The new federal income tax law includes in industries to support universities, measured as Another source for funding could be cooperatives with industry. Meyen said. Utilities customers, like residential customers and hospitals, supplied." From page 1 As a result of an additional KPS pipeline this year, the supply of natural gas was greater this year. Allison said the rising gas prices, a product of deregulation, would probably follow the same pattern that gasoline prices followed a few years ago. "People will stop using so much at these high prices and a surplus will occur," he said. Even if natural gas prices decrease in the near future, chances are still great that the utility will have to ask the Kansas Logistics department supplement funds to pay their fiscal utility bills. "They say we can get $5 percent of our books on 8-inch shelves," Ranz said. Libraries That just is not the way books come, especially the larger literature volumes, he said. From page 1 Narrower airlines also would create a problem for students passing in the open stacks, he said. Ranz also said students might be forced to request library books and wait a night before receiving them because books would have to be stored in basements and downtown storage. "It is not a matter of us being uncooperative or things differently, it just wouldn't work," he said. State Sen. August Bogina, R-Leneca, said he supported the study, and said it would have a large impact on the Legislature's funding for the proposed science library. "The Legislature is paying more than $100,000 for this preliminary draft and I think we should stick pretty close to it," said Bogina, a member of the Senate Ways and Means KU subcommittee. "It's a total waste of money otherwise." Another concern KU officials have is that the independent auditor building contains feet between beds. State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, agreed that the study would have a strong impact on the state because that he knew nothing of its violating a state code. Hess said that funding a Wichita State University library was a priority in the Legislature right now, and that KU's science library might not be built for two or three years. "That doesn't mean we don't think the situation at KU is important," he said, "but there may not be any planning on KU's library this session." Ranz said that even if the Legislature did approve money for the building this year, it would take a year to draft a plan, and two more years to construct the building. "We've got enough space for three more years and then we have to start placing books in stores." The New York firm suggests that inadequate facilities are now satisfactory, he said, and that the "spartan" allocation of space leaves no room for future improvement. "The new library would look like a Motel 6, striped, tight and uncomfortable." Ranz The University of Kansas Black History Month February 1982 Afro-American History Blueprint for Survival THE OFFICE OF MINORITY AFFAIRS PRESENTS KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY EBONY THEATRE IN --- BLACK AND BLUES FEBRUARY 26,1982 8:00 p.m. KANSAS ROOM KANSAS UNION The University of Kansas Afro-American History Blueprint for Survival Black History Month February 1982 THE EBONY SILHOUETTES Presents A TRIBUTE TO THE BLACK WOMAN SPECIAL GUESTS: Rochelle Hill Dereck Rovaris Anthony Thompson DATE: February 25,1982 FEATURING: Cheryl Jones Browny Lucas Karla McField PLACE: Forum Room, Kansas Union TIME: 7:00 pm. ADMISSION FREE Sponsored by: Office of Minority Affairs BANQUET Featured Speaker: Dr. Emily Taylor Retired Director, Office of Women in Higher Education, American Council on Education, and former Dean of Women at KU. March 7, 1982, 6:30pm, Kansas Union Ballroom Reception to follow Call 864-3710 for information and reservations. General Public $6.75 Students $3.50 Higher Education Week FISK JUBILEE SINGERS THE MUSIC BELIEVERS MARCH 1,7:00 P.M. Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont FREE Admission ponsored by: Executive Vice Chancellor's Office Office of Minority Affairs SUA KU Black Alumni Committee Plymouth Congregational Church Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 25.1982 Med Center to sponsor nutrition program By TOM HUTTON Staff Reporter KANSAS CITY, Kan. — A program to help dieters and other people concerned with the content and effect of food will begin next week and continue through all of March at the University of Kansas Medical Center. The outpatient division of the dietetics and nutrition department will begin next Monday, the start of National Nutrition month, to inform people about daily nutrition needs, health relations related to diet and how to lose weight. Using films in the Med Center cafeteria and an information booth in the lobby, the program will show how food affects daily life, Beth Schindler, dietetic intern and chairman of nutrition month, said yesterday. Films will be shown 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. The workshop will be open Mondays only. Next week the outpatient division will show "Tomorrow We Shall Diet" and also calculate the calorie intake of volunteers at the Mid Center, Schinder Using a food nomenogram, which was first developed by the Mayo Clinic, the dieticians will calculate how many calories are necessary for adequate nutrition. The nomogram uses height, age to determine ideal caloric intake. The quickest way to ruin a diet and calorie intake is by eating junk food, Jeanette Whitney, director of outpatient dietetics, said. in Med Center vending machines, by dietetic interns, supports Whitney. A report on the caloric content of food According to the report, a 48% ounce fruit pie contains more than 400 calories and a Milk Way bar has 240 calories. A Pumpkin Pie requires 170 calories required to lose weight. Whitney said. The second week of the program, the slide presentation "Eating Slim," will be shown. This presentation will deal with how much food is needed, Schindler said. "Most people don't realize how much they eat," Schindler said. "What we'll do in the booth is measure how much the people have been eating and then show them how much is really needed. Usually, they are really surprised." The third week of the program will show "Eat to Your Heart's Content," which is supposed to show the harmful effect of some foods on the cardiovascular system. A test will be given at the booth to see how much people eat food and their heart, Schindler said. The fourth and final week of the school year, when the teacher's labels and how to interpret them. Besides handling the nutrition month, the department of dietetics and nutrition's outpatient division handles the other areas of the hospital, Whitney said. This division designs diets for overweight people ordered by physicians to lose weight, diabetics, people with hypertension, cancer patients and people with low blood sugar. on campus TODAY There is a 5 P.M. ENTRY DEADLINE for the Recreation Services Racquetball Mixed Doubles Sign, Up in 206 Robinson center. THE STUDENT SENATE SERVICES COMMITTEE will meet at 4 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. THE KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH AFRICA will sponsor the film "Generation of Resistance" at 7:30 p.m. at Templin Hall. THE UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union. TOMORROW THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. THE LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY AND THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will sponsor a panel discussion on the issue of Population Control" 7 p. in the Jawkway Room of the Union. --by Bass COUPON HARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKET STREET, 8th FLOOR W/8 WONDER LAT BUY ONE CORN DOG, GET ANOTHER FREE Limit 5 orders per coupon. One coupon per customer. Not valid in combination with any other offer. Vista RESTAURANTS Coupon effective 2/25 - 2/28 1527 W. 6th --by Bass Footlights Presents: A FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Estimate THE PRESTON MICALL COMPANY ILLN, NY 11260 811-666- Tie InWithUs Recreation Services Slow-Pitch Softball FULL COLOR ORIGINAL ITALIAN ART PRINTS Footlights 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza Managers meetings for slow-pitch softball will be Tuesday, March 2 in Robinson Gym No.1. Team managers must attend these meetings in order to enter a team. Trophy League—6:00 p.m. ($10 entry fee) Rec. A —6:45 p.m. ($5 entry fee) Rec. B —7:30 p.m. ($5 entry fee) Co-Rec.-7:30 p.m. ($5 entry fee) Entry forms are available in the Rec. Services office, 208 Robinson. For more information call 884-3548. Mera IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEEDS * MIRORRS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy. 843-9803 MASS. STREET DELI 941 MASSACHUSETTS The Deli Reuben Hot Corned Beef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut, Served on Cottage Rye or Russian Rye Served with potato chips and a dill pickle spear. $2.50 Reg. $3.50 Offer good Wed. thru Sun. Feb. 24-28. No coupons accepted with this offer MASS. STREET DELI 941 MASSACHUSETTS R $2.50 Reg. $3.50 Offer good Wed. thru Sun. Feb. 24-28. No coupons accepted with this offer LAWRENC TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENC TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENC TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWR TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842 2191 1954 master charge WE KEEP YOUR TOYOTA CHEAP·2·KEEP PARTS AND SERVICE TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA LAWRENCE AUTO PLAZA 842/1911 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up ALIGNMENT SPECIAL $18.00 All Japanese Imports Includes: - checking and adjusting toe ... - checking and adjusting of caster (and camber where applicable) - examination of shock absorbers for leaks - inspection of tires for cuts and proper air pressure 4-wheel drive and mag wheels slightly higher All Japanese Imports Electronic Ignition $29.95 TUNE-UP SPECIAL (included all parts and labor-6 cyl. models slightly higher.) We'll • install new spark plugs • set engine to recommended manufacturer's specifications • adjust carburetor • inspect operation of choke • insert fuel filter/Mazda and Toyota only - rotary engines not included JAWRENCE AUTO PIAZA 842/1911 Coupons must be presented at time of write-up TOYOTA LAWRENCE MAZDA DA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA $36.95 Standard ignition (included all parts and labor-6-cyl, models slightly higher.) We'll * install new spark plugs * replace point and cond. * replace head, fuel injection * manufacturer's specifications * adjust carburetor * inspect operation of choke * inspect fuel filter/Mazda and Toyota not included * rotary engines only LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA LAWRENCE TOYOTA/MAZDA Here come the Sunjuns. ... Summer comfort for your feet in a cool, cushioned sandal. as. Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-347O Hrs. M-Sat. 9 OO-5,3O Thurs. til 8,30 BKC Available in Lilac, Navy, Red and Beige Fabric Navy and Cinnamon Leather --- University Daily Kansan, February 25, 1982 Page 7 SALE! EVERYBODY RUNS 'EM THE GRAMOPHONE SHOP'S EVERYDAY PRICES BEATS 'EM. • 76 Lines of Quality Audio • Complete Service • Discount Prices • Mail Order Selection, Price, Quality, Service... Three "State of the Art" showrooms; two large mass manufacturers showrooms; one budget manufacturers area, as well as, our mail order facility and wholesale warehouse. --- 10 40% off ALL JBL maxell ½ off is too much! A maxell 90 LN-C-90 reg. $42 $198 Dealers must pay sales tax Acculab 440 --- 1/2 off is too much! reg. $9900 limit $250 ea. 1st 10 PIONEER SPECIAL MACHINE MUSIC RADIO SHURE reg. $250 $18700 SHURE 1/2 off is too much! reg. $24 $2450 The Snake 25' Headphone reg. Extension Cord $299 The Snake 25' Headphone reg. Extension Cord $299 LISTINGS RECEIVERS RECORD VALUES AKAI AAR21 269.95 198.80 AKAI AR31 359.95 169.40 Fisher RS-220 249.95 164.50 Fisher RS-240 399.95 248.80 Harmon/Kardon HK-460i 329.95 225.95 Harmon/Kardon HK-570i 399.95 249.95 Hitachi HTA-5000 499.95 319.95 JVC RS-11 260.00 169.50 JVC RS-77 560.00 349.88 Kenwood KR-710 259.00 158.88 Kenwood KR-725 349.95 228.88 Onkyo TX 2000 259.95 199.00 Onkyo TX 4000 497.95 299.00 Pioneer SX 4 250.00 186.50 Pioneer SX 5 280.00 199.88 Scott 325R 229.95 129.88 Sony STR VX3 330.00 269.00 Sony STR VX4 499.95 319.95 Yamaha R-300 260.00 248.88 Yamaha R-1000 700.00 560.00 and many more deals 220 125.00 ea. 59.00 ea. 320 175.00 ea. 74.50 ea. L-700 189.95 ea. 130.00 ea. L-620 189.95 ea. 130.00 ea. 4 249.00 ea. 129.00 ea. 6 349.00 ea. 175.00 ea. S-75 380.00 ea. 250.00 ea. MS-150 1000.00 ea. 795.00 ea. 301 190.00 ea. 110.00 ea. 601 325.00 ea. 162.00 ea. 208 100.00 ea. 49.50 ea. RSe 179.00 ea. 129.00 ea. 5 150.00 ea. 118.00 ea. 7 150.00 ea. 118.00 ea. NS 6 160.00 ea. 138.80 ea. NS-690III 400.00 ea. 280.00 ea. Acculab Acculab ADS ADS Altec Altec B&O B&O Bose Bose Essex Infinity Polk Polk Yamaha Yamaha SPEAKERS PLUS many more MAIL ORDER TERMS- KIEF'S DiscKeeper DiscKeeper ½ off $76.00 $38 2. A 10% service charge for change or cancellation of order. 3. Normal delivery time is two hours. We assume no responsibility for unavailable delays, from shipies, manufacturers' emails, etc. for unavoidable delays, freight strikes, manufacturers delays, etc. 4. All units are subject to manufacturer's warranty terms. Mail order unit 5. Manufacturer's warranty service center; it will 4. All units are subject to manufacturer's warranty terms. Mail order units must be serviced at the manufacturers' warranty service center; it will be the customer's responsibility to transport his unit to a service area. GRAMOPHONE shop Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 25, 1982 2 KU debate teams receive bids for nationals BY VINCE IIESS Staff Reporter two KU debate teams received automatic bids to the 1982 National Debate Tournament, making this the 10th consecutive year for the University of Kansas to have two teams at the tournament. A 13-member committee selected the KU teams of Mark Gidley, Houston junior, and Zac Grant, Manhattan senior; and Paul Leader, Derby junior, and Rodger Payne, Sand Springs, Florida; and Ronald Brady, elected 16 teams from 1,800 eligible, Donn Parson, director of forensics, said yesterday. "I WAS VERY pleased because there's very tough competition in the country, but both teams had very good years." Parson said. "No matter where we went, they did well. Sometimes a team does well only in one region. All of our 'games' are 'road games.' The National Debate Tournament will be April 14 at Florida State University in Tallahassee, Fla. Parson said the Heart of America tournament, Feb. 27-March 1, would attract most of the nation's leading teams and six-times have made reservations. The Gidley-Grant and Leader-Payne teams will compete in the preliminary rounds, Parson said, but not in the finals because KU is hosting the tournament. KU WILL HOST the District 9 tournament March 5-6 during which five teams will be selected to compete in the National Debate Tournament. Twenty teams from the six-state district will compete, Parson said. Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas. The six states in the district are No teams from KU will compete in the district tournament since KU already has the maximum two teams in the Debate Tournament. Parson said. Schools may enter a maximum of two teams in the district tournament, but only those teams thought to have a chance to win are entered. Tournament are entered, Parson said. Parson compared the selection of teams for the National Debate Tournament to the selection of teams for the NCAA Division I men's athletic Association basketball tournament. THE TOP 60 debate teams in the nation participate in the National Debate Tournament, he said, and 16 of these receive automatic bids based on their records. District tournaments, such as the one at KU, determine 36 other participants, and the selection committee picks eight more teams. The national topic for 1981-82 collegiate debate is, "Resolved: that the federal government should significantly curtail the powers of labor unions in the United States." Parson wrote that he felt "significantly," and which unions were included, made the topic more complex than it appeared. Debaters research the topic from the time it is announced, usually in July, until they are finished competing, Parson said. Debate tournments take place from the last week of September to the first week of April. THE ONLY OTHER year KU has had two automatic bids to the National Debate Tournament was 1976, Parson said. In the other years that KU has had two teams in the tournament, at least one of the teams qualified for the tournament by winning in a district tournament. Three of the KU debaters to compete in the National Debate Tournament this year have competed in previous tournaments, Parson said. Grant participated last year and in 1806, during the elimination rounds both times. LEADER AND PAYNE were 69-32. They won 16 awards. The teams are the 41st and 42nd teams to represent KU at the National Debate Tournament, Parson said. No team has received an absent as many teams to the competition. The Gidley-Grant team this year compiled a record of 82 wins and 17 losses. The duo won 24 awards as a team and for individual speaking. CONVERSE Entry Deadline for the Recreation Services intramural racquetball mixed doubles tournament is 5:00 p.m. today in 208 Robinson. 9E In the last 12 years at the National Debate Tournament, he said, KU earns placed first in 1976 and 1977; second in 1978 and 1979; and fifth in 1972, 1974, 1978 and 1981. Tired of the high cost of T.G.I.F.? 25c Draws 2-6 p.m. Friday, Feb. 26 $1.00 Cover at The Entertainer 8th & Vermont 25c Applications for 1982-83 STUDENT ORGANIZATION OFFICE SPACE IN THE KANSAS UNION ARE NOW BEING TAKEN, ANY STUDENT ORGANIZATION MAY APPLY Pick up Information & Applications at the SUA Office, 4th level, Kansas Union Deadline is March 26,5 p.m. Applications for Student Senate Spring '82 Budget Hearings Now Available in Senate Office Deadline for group application: 1 March at 5 p.m. (no late applications accepted) 10 SKI MARY JANE Spring Break Mar. 12-17 or Breckenridge, Keystone, Copper Mountain March 17-22 With Ski etc... $1.25 Bar Drinks all night long! 25c Draws 10-11 p.m. Four full days All lifts Rentals Lodging Transportation by sleeper bus only $245 Space is limited! 841-8386 GAMMONS SNOWMAS Proudly Presents LUPE Tonight thru Saturday, 1st Set Starts at 9:30 GAMWONS GAMWONS STUDIO DESIGN ❤️ --- TAKAMA NATIONAL FESTIVAL OF MASKS THE THIRD ANNUAL SUA THEATRE SERIES TAKEN IN MARRIAGE by thomas babe feb. 24, 26 mar 4, 6 kansas union big eight room & SCENES from SOWETO RATS by stave wilmer by israel horovitz feb. 25, 27 smith hall OPENING TONIGHT mar. 3.5 an evening of one-acts ALL SUNNING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00 p.m. ALL MATINES PERFORMANCES ARE AT 2:00 p.m. The World is Coming TICKETS ON SALE AT THE KANSAS BUSINESS IN THE KANSAS UNION, LAWRENCE KS 60445 PONCT TICKETS CALL 817-234-3477 The World is Coming... Europe TRAVEL CENTER Feb.27th & 28th RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR Study ... our excellent wine selection! Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor A New Concept That's Long Overdue Southwest Plaza Shopping Center Located behind Hardie's and next to Foodbarn 23rd & Iowa m. 842-0089 9:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. Presents SVA FILMS NOTICE "Polyester" canceled The distributor has canceled POLYESTER at the present time. However, we are proud to present in its place John Water's original masterpiece of unspeakable revulsion. . . PINK FLAMINGOS starring DIVINE the most disgusting movie ever made (don't say we didn't warn you) NO ONE UNDER 18 AMMITTED 12:00 MIDNIGHT $2.00 Friday & Saturday February 26 & 27 Woodruff Auditorium University Daily Kansan, February 25, 1982 Page 9 Snow's song calling students as break beckons Lodge accomodations going fast By DEBBIE DOUGLASS Staff Reporter The snow is great for students who want to ski in Colorado or New Mexico during spring break, according to ski lodge managers in those areas. Most ski areas in the Rocky Mountains have four- to five-foot snow bases, according to managers in the area. But if lodging reservations are not made soon, it is unlikely that ski beds will find even a corner in which to sleep. Cross-country trails in the Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado are also in excellent shape, according to park officials. Whether skiing cross-country or on slopes, an introductory lesson might be worthwhile for people who have never skied before. The introductory lesson can cost from $14 to $30, depending on how long the lesson lasts. Lodging in or around ski areas can cost as little as $12 or as much as $100 a person a night. Prices are usually based on room occupancy, however, and go down when split among more people. Lodging reservations in the ski areas may be hard to obtain, but the Colorado ski areas of Keystone, Cooper Mountain, Arapaho Basin and Breckenridge are within a few miles of the towns of Dillon, Frisco and Silverthorn. Lodging reservations in these towns can be made through Lake Dillon Resort Association Central Reservations In Dillon, Frisco or Silverthorn, a one-bedroom condominium will range from $45 to $85 a night; two-bedrooms from $120 to $160 a night; three-bedrooms from $130 to $160 a night. Hotel rooms in those towns range from $45 to $75 a night. Dorms are from $14 to $80 a night, and private houses (attendance fees) available from $170 to $170 a night. In Aspen, hotel rooms range from $15 to $85 a night, dorms are from $17 to $20 a night and private houses are from $100 to $130 a night. condominium ranges from $80 to $100 a night; two-bedroom, from $120 to $140 a night; three-bedroom, from $140 to $160 a night. In Winterpark, a one-bedroom Hotel rooms in Winterpark range Hotel rooms $60 a night and dorms are $12 a night. In Taos, N.M., hotel rooms in the city range from $50 to $70. The four ski areas in Summit County, Colo., are offering four-day ski packages, which include ski rental and lift tickets, for $68. Otherwise Keystone ski areas rent skis for $11 a day and sell lift tickets for $18 a day. Ski areas in Aspen rent skis for $11 on The Count finally changed the records on THE HAWK JUKEBOX But is anyone besides The Count old enough to remember those songs? BELIEVE IT OR NOT the first day and $8.80 thereafter. Lift tickets are $22 a day. Winterpark ski area rents skis for $18 a day. In Estes Park, skis rent for $8 a day and lift tickets are $10 a day. Ski Valley in Taos rents skis for $11 the first day and $ thereafter. Lift tickets are $13 a day. songs? Most ski areas offer a free shuttle bus service traveling from surrounding towns to, and among, the ski areas. Some areas have places for ice skating, sledding, tubing and snowmobiling. There are several local organizations that are sponsoring trips during SEEK!'s program. Student Union Activities is offering a trip to Tao, March 13-19, for $303, which includes transportation, lodging, meals and meals. The students are still available, according to SUA. Ski Eltc, 1407 Kentucky St., is offering two trips for $245 each to Winterpark and Summit County. The first trip is March 12-17; and the second, March 17-22. The costs include transportation, lodging, ski rental and lift tickets. Visit the Sunflower Travel Service, 803 Massachusetts St., still has some spots open on its trip to Summit County March 13-17. The trip is $25 and includes transportation, lodging, ski rentals, lift tickets and two meals a day. Cafe'Eldriage for Affordable Fun Dining 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Mondays-Saturdays 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Mondays-Saturdays 749-0613 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Sundays 7th & Massachusetts the KEGGER COORS LONGNECKS $7.00 841-9450 !Openings for Student Senate Budget Subcommittee! Applications Available in Senate Office Membership Closes: 1 March,5 p.m. Sunflower also is offering a $85 round-trip bus fare for people who are interested only in transportation to Summit County and Winterpark. "SYRIA TODAY" borgen's LIQUOR STORE 917 Iowa 842-3990 An analysis of the background and events taking place in Syria A lecture by Mr. Adnan Barakat, A lecture by leading group in opposition to the present regime in Syria Representative of the Islamic Front in Syria—the 8:00 p.m. Friday Feb. 26 Sponsored By M.S.A. Everyone is Welcome Forum Rm. Kansas Union The Grinder Man Has the makings for a great meal! 25 varieties of sandwiches potato salad, italian salads baked beans potato chips and pop. WE DELIVER Sun.-Thurs. 11-10 p.m. Fri., Sat. 11-10 p.m. dine-in 11-a.m. drive-thru WE DELIVER campus living groups only Sun.-Thurs. 5-10 p.m. $5.00 min. 27th & iowa 842-2480 UNDERCOVER Hours: 21 W. 9th LILY OF FRANCE LINGERIE Paris nights, for example; a lovely vision of white ... Elegant and simple. Underwire bra, bikini, and matching garter belt available in a full range of sizes. Get the Lily of France feeling at— Undercover. You've asked for them and we've got them . . . I am not sure if the text is part of the image. It appears to be a decorative or stylized representation of a woman in lingerie. However, without additional context or clearer visual elements, it's hard to provide an accurate description. If you can provide more details or a different view of the image, I would be happy to help with that. PARIS NIGHTS GET THE LILY OF FRANCE* FEELING MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW Varsity Downtown 843-1085 ADM. 3.00 OPEN AT 11:30 The World is Coming ROULETTE Las Vegas TRAVEL CENTER Feb. 27th & 28th SUMMIT TOUR Las Vegas SPRING BREAK DAYTONA BEACH-$99/$119 FORT LAUDERDALE-$139 PADRE ISLAND-$109/$129 - 8 days/7 nights beach front accommodations - NASSAU, BAHAMAS—$169 - Poolside welcome party - Sports activities - All taxes - Optional Party Bus available FOR RESERVATIONS CONTACT SUMMIT TOURS 842-6689 6-10 p.m. LAST YEAR OVER 4,000 SATISFIED BEACH LOVERS! D (*Vulnerable Coupon—Clip And Sere*) **THIS AIN'T NO DISCO!** FREE LIVE MUSIC 5 NIGHTS A WEEK TONIGHT TERRY EBELING PANDEMONIUM NIGHT—PANDEMONIUM PUNCH A GLASS ALL NITE. HAPPY HOUR WED.-SUN. 6-1 $1 Highballs 70* Boers The AID WORTH FREE SNUGLE DRINK OR BEEP EEE 24-FEB. 24-7 LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PERSON PER NIGHT 7th SPIRIT 642 MASS. 842-9549 (Valuable Coupon) CAMP JOBS Counselors & Specialists— continuities Positions Available: CAMP SABRA OF THE ST. LOUIS JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTERS ASSOC. (located at the lake) (books) Parents&Others waterskiing sailing swimming tripping Unit Heads. Interviewing: Monday, March 11 University Placement Center 223 Carruth, 8:30 am - 4:30 pm Contact: Bob Gummers --- DID YOU KNOW? FOUNDATION FOR CHRISTIAN SELF-GOVERNMENT. John Wycliffe wrote in the forward to his translation of the Scriptures that . . . "This book is for the government of the people, by the people and for the people." Verna Hall, p. 320-384 December 1981 KATHARINE HEPBURN HENRY FONDA On Golden A UNIVERSITY PICTURE PGC Fri, 10 a.m. & 11 a.m. Sat, 2 p.m. COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-5798 PG VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1065 JACK NICHOLSON THE BORDER R 司 HILLCREST 1 914-730-8404 TEL AND IOWA 1-866-555-2222 Entrailing... CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Feb. 16, 2015 Mon. Mar. 5, 2015 Mid. Feb. 5, 2015 HILLCREST 2 9TH AND 10WA TELEPHONE 642-8400 Eve. 7:30 & 9:30 The French Neutenants Woman HILLCREST 3 4TH AND IOWA RAGTIME PSI - 7.42 a.m. Mon. 2:40 JAMES CACAEY 8 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS BEST BEST PICTURE CINEMA 1 137 AND IOWA TELPHONE 942-6400 "Just portage hered," a starting performance." Sani HELD OVERI STUMMING JONI LASSMAN ONLINE Joni Company Adapted CINEMA 2 Windwalker TREVOR HOWARD 1901 HOT DOGS Friday at 7:00 & 8:25 Weekend Mat. at 2:00 Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 25, 1982 Officials to visit D.C. By STEPHEN BLAIR Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Officials from Lawrence and other cities will discuss the impact of President Reagan's 'new federalism,' when they attend the National League of Cities 1882 CongressionalCity Washington, D.C. this week. Delegates at the Feb. 27 to March 2 conference will also set the agenda for the League's other annual conference in November, when the League's policy statements will be finalized. Lawrence Mayor Marci Francois said recently THE LEAGUE'S Human Development Policy Committee will prepare a statement that takes into account any changes resulting from Reagan's new program, Francisco, a member of the committee, said. An important part of past league conferences was the local official's opportunity to lobby for their congressmen, but under Reagan's new program, less federal legislation affects the cities, she said. "It may become less necessary for local leaders to talk with national leaders" Francisco said. In January, Reagan announced that he would be transferring $47 billion in federal programs to the states. The conference will cost the city from $1,000 to $2,000 in registration fees, hotel rooms and transportation costs, hotel services and assistant city manager said vesterlain. Wilden and Francisco will attend the conference with City Commissioners Toni Gleason, Barkley Clark, John Holmes and City Manager Huford Watson. FRANCISCO SAID the meetings were valuable to her because they helped her learn how Lawrence was progressing compared to other cities. "Lawrence is on track and, in some ways, ahead of other cities," Francisco said. Rather than building a housing project that concentrates low-income people in one complex, subsidized housing in Lawrence is scattered throughout a neighborhood and blends in with it, she said. Talks with officials from other cities have helped start projects in Lawrence, she said. "At one of the League of Cities meetings I met the mayor of Rolla, Mo., and was invited to tour their recycling plant," Francis said. The result of her visit to Rolla was a program started by the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department for five years, being going to the city dumbo, she said. Tues. Sat. 12-8 fashion eveland INSTITUTIONS 841-8000 Holiday Plaza A WAREHOUSE for the recycling program is being built, and that also originated from the visit to Rolla, she said. Another issue to be discussed is the way other cities enforce nuclear transportation ordinances, Wildgiven said. In January, Lawrence adopted an ordinance requiring transporters of some types of radioactive materials to limits within a month after it occurs. nowhere, the local law conflicts with a federal law that went into effect Feb. 1. Commissioner Don Bins, who is not attending the conference this year because of schedule conflicts with his teaching job at Lawrence High School, said the League meetings had been helpful. "There's been some legal battles on the East Coast, and I want to see where those are going," Wilden said. "I THINK the knowledge we get makes us all better commissioners," he said. "We got funds to build the four-lane highway from 23rd and Iowa streets to Clinton Lake." "It helped me a great deal," Binns said. "I went one time and that was to lobby for the Clinton Parkway and we said it, so it was successful. Talks with officials from other cities have given Lawrence officials ideas that have saved tax money. Binns said. After hearing that maintenance on diesel trucks is 25 to 50 percent less than that of gasoline-powered trucks, the city had diesel trucks do most of the garbage collection in Lawrence, Binns said. THURSDAY DRINKATHON $1.00 at the Door 25¢ DRAWS 8:12 PM, Michaels It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK Students who wish to be considered for campus-based financial aid should apply for by March 1, Jerry Rogers, a student financial aid, said yesterday. By ANNE CALOVICH Staff Reporter March 1 is not the final deadline, no Rogers said, "we usually have enough applicants by that time that would encumber all our money." Staff Reporter Deadline for campus financial aid nears Rogers said students should apply for financial aid even though the Reagan administration has requested cuts in aid to students. Campus-based aid programs are National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, University Scholarships and Health Profession Loans. "There are several proposals under consideration at the federal level to change either the student eligibility guidelines or the funding levels, but nothing has been finalized," Rogers said. The forms should be filled out and send it arrive at ACT by March 1, RSB said. Students who want to apply for aid should pick up an American College Testing financial aid application at the office of student financial aid in Strong Hall. 1340 Ohio "Even if students are unsure about whether they are eligible for financial Rogers said his office would find out in March the tentative amount of aid available for students. He said this amount may be much less than the amount of money available, but that this year it might not be so reliable. Students will find out their actual aid, they should go ahead and apply for the 1982-84 academic year." that this year it might not be so reliable. Students will find out their actual awards in May. Rogers predicted that all awards would decrease slightly. "But in 1983-84, it could be gungunsters, but the "basic grant program might be cut the point where it will really cut out a lot of hearts." In 1981-82, governmental educational funding to KU was cut by $25,000. But more than $2,000 KU students applied for a full-time school year, an increase over last year. There was $7.5 million in financial aid given to KU students this year in the form of grants, loans, work-study and scholarships. Students are eligible for various forms of financial aid. Pell grants, formerly the Basic Educational Opportunity Grants, are supplied by the federal government and do not need to be repaid. There was $2.8 million to KU students this year, a 6.7 percent decrease from last year. Students who wish to apply for Pell grants can use the new application for federal student aid available in the financial aid office. TACO BELL EVERY Thursday Tacos 49¢ each 1408 West 23rd St. good only at this location Sunday-Thursday 10:00 A.M.-1:00 A.M. Friday and Saturday 10:00 A.M.-2:00 A.M. Bring in your Rock Chalk ticket stub after the show and get a free draw. foresite at Mr. Bill's GAMMONS SNOWMAN and FREE BEER AFTER ROCK CHALK! The Entertainer ONE NIGHT ONLY $3 ALL YOU CAN DRINK 8-12 Also available are National Direct Student Loans, long-term loans that are interest free until six months after graduation when 5.9 percent interest must be paid. Rogers said the NDSL program was cut about 10 percent this year, and KU students received $1.3 million. Another form of aid, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, do not have to be repaid either, and the $450,000 of aid awarded this year was a slight increase from last year, Rogers said. Students also are automatically eligible for University scholarships when they apply to ACT. Rogers said there should be slightly more than the $1.5 million given out this year in college and graduate students in fine arts, education and engineering should see their schools for separate scholarship applications. Student Loans provide KU students with the most aid because the loans are dispersed by private lending institutions, Rogers said. Students must apply for GSLS through lending institutions, and since last Oct. 1, they also must demonstrate financial need. Registering with ACT is not required. The students pay 9 per cent interest on the loan six months after registration, and pay an initial percent of the loan at the time it is awarded. The college work-study program is a form of aid that allows a student to work at an approved part-time job on behalf of the institution, specific federal subsidy amounts. For junior and senior pharmacy student. Health Profession Loans and Scholarships But students will not be able to apply for the GLSs for another two months, Rogers said, because family connections need for next year are not available. Of all aid programs, Guaranteed Rogers said students could apply for student financial aid after the March 1 priority date. He said that the office was still processing applications for the current school year and that some small awards were being made. Rogers said that the new financial need requirement would cut down on the volume of the loans. If a proposal that makes graduate students ineligible for loans is passed, the volume also could be cut by about $6 million, he said. ANNIHILATION NIGHT TONIGHT. **TIME OUT** IS GOING ALL OUT!!! ITS THURSDAY NIGHT AND WE'RE READY TO PARTY WITH THE BEST ALL YOU CAN DRINK DEAL IN TOWN. 3:30. 7:00. 9:30 p.m. Thief United Artists TIME OUT TONIGHT IS $1.50 7:30 p.m. CORRECTED BY RICHARD MURRAY FRIDAY & SATURDAY $1.50 Take SUA FILMS WE STILL HAVE A LONG WAY TO GO. Free Doughnuts and Coffee Presents TONIGHT For further information contact Barbara Ballard, 864-3552. BRING YOUR IDEAS AND CONCERNS TO THE ARRIVATIVE ACTION ADVISORY BOARD ALL-CAMPUS WORKSHOP. "Swept Away..." How can we attract more individuals to campus who have unique contributions to make from the perspective of their sex, race, nation of origin? $3.00 ALL YOU CAN DRINK ALL NIGHT! JOIN US FOR THE NEW "ANNILHILATION NIGHT" AT TIME OUT! How can we better retain those whom we do attract? How can we maintain a diverse group of speakers and visitors invited to campus who have these unique perspectives? TIME OUT 'They are Popeye and Olive Oyl locked in passionate combat' —Victory Court The New York Times How can we reduce discriminatory practices that affect faculty, students, staff? T We don't know all the questions We need everyone's ideas Come share your thoughts with us. A film by Lina Wertmuller M onday March 1st. Outlook for the 80'S In Higher Education THE PLACE TO PARTY sunday March 24th Music Composer, Contemporary Music; 8:00 p.m., Murphy Hall, AURGIC Administrative Dinner nnesday, March 3rd sunday, March 1st 26th Annual Heart of America Debate Tournament, 8:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m., Wesco Hall Sigma Delta Chi Journalism Hall Forum, Tonda Rush Lawyer for Reporter Committee Topic: The Freedom of Information Act W SATURDAY, March 6th Jazzway Invitational Jazz Festival. Murphy Hall Friday, March 3rd Spring Concert KU CUV Band. Grant Solent-Gary Foster Christmas Theater - day, March 4th Karolyn Martin MSc Symposium of Contemporary Music; 8:00 p.m., Murphy Hall. SUA Forum; James Gunn. Science Fiction; 8:00 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union Higher Education Week friday, March 4th Forum on Higher Education in the 80's, 7:30 p.m. Kansas Room, 1022 W. Harrison Ave. F S Sunday, March 7th Higher Education Week Banquet Featured Speaker-Dr. Emily Taylor 6:30 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom --- BRING YOUR CONCERNS AND IDEAS TO THE AFFIRMATIVE ACTION ADVISORY BOARD ALL-CAMPUS WORKSHOP WE STILL HAVE A LONG WAY TO GO HOW CAN WE REDUCE DISCRIMINATORY PRACTICES THAT AFFECT FACULTY, STUDENTS, STAFF? HOW CAN WE ATTRACT MORE INDIVIDUALS TO CAMPUS WHO HAVE UNIQUE CONTRIBUTIONS TO MAKE FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF THEIR SEX, RACE, NATION OF ORIGIN, AGE, OR DISABILITY? HOW CAN WE BETTER RETAIN THOSE WHOM WE DO ATTRACT? HOW CAN WE ENCOURAGE AN INCREASE IN THE NUMBER OF SPEAKERS AND VISITORS INVITED TO CAMPUS WHO HAVE THESE UNIQUE PERSPECTIVES? WE DON'T KNOW ALL THE QUESTIONS WE NEED EVERYONE'S IDEAS COME SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH US. SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1982 9 a.m. to NOON BIG EIGHT ROOM-KANSAS UNION FREE DOUGHNUTS AND COFFEE FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT BARBARA BALLARD. 864-3552 University Daily Kansan, February 25, 1982 Page 11 KU swimmers go for eighth straight title By MIKE ARDIS Sports Writer Another Big Eight title When the Kansas women's swim team begins the Big Eight swimming meet today in Arnes, they will compete for their eighth straight Big Eight title. The meet runs through Saturday with two swimming sessions each day. The preliminaries are at 11 a.m. and the finals are at 7 p.m. each day. As long as Kansas has had a team, they have won the title, and this year looks as if it will not be an exception. In a poll of the Big Eight coaches, Kansas is the unanimous choice to take the title. "We're the only one who knows how to win the meet." Coach Gary Kempf said. "It's not an easy meet to win. We've beaten anyone though." Kansas is 7-1 in dual meets this season with their only loss to Southern Methodist. They have beaten everyone in the Big Eight. "It woke us up. I never want to be asleep again." Besides winning the Big Eight meet, the jayhawks should pick up more national qualifying times. Already qualified are Jenny Wagstaff and Andy Miller in junior events, and three relay teams. Wastafall has qualified in the 2020-yard freestyle, 100 butterfly, and the 100, 200 and 400 individual medley. She is a world-class swimmer, and the 200 and 400 medley teams. Thomas qualified in the 50 and 100 freestyle and as part of the relay teams. Completing the 200 and 400 medley teams are Mary Kay Fitzgerald and Michael Sisas. Susan Schauer and Cerry are the other members of the 400 freestyle team. Kempf said his goal for the team this year is to finish in the top 15 nationally. Last year, the Javahwks finished 17th. "We'll take it one step at a time," Kempf said. "We have a lot of untapped talent. We don't have any glaring weaknesses." "We'll be lucky to get 10." Kempf said. "We had seven last year. The better teams have to 12." Kempf said he wanted to take a team of eight to ten to the national meet. Kempf said that the Nebraska and Oklahoma will be the Jayhawks' biggest threats at the Biz Eight meet. "We know what it takes," he said. "I just want to see it done. I think we're as ready as we'll ever be." Wayne Gretzky sets record with three-goal performance BUFFALO, N.Y.-Wayne Gretzky, breaking a record once considered unapproachable, scored his 77th, 87th and 90th goals of the season. At night, to give the Edmonton Oilers a 6-8 victory over the Buffalo Sabres. The first of the three goals enabled Gretzky, the 21-year-old Edmonton center, to surpass the mark of 76 goals set by Phil Esposito. By United Press International Gretzky skated past defenseman Richie Dunn, who attempted a futile stick check, and beat goaltender Don Edwards with a 10-foot wrist shot into the far corner of the net with 6:36 remaining in the game to break the record. Following Gretky's record breaking goal, the game was halted and Esposito, who had set the record when Gretky was only 19 years old, was escorted onto the ice where he would play. The crowd of 16,433 at the Memorial Auditorium stood and cheered for five minutes. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one year two three four five six seven eight nine ten months or fewer $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00 $3.00 $3.00 ten months or fewer $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00 $3.00 $3.00 ten months or fewer $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00 $3.00 AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Pound items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be made to the same business office at 14305 NW 26th Street, Washington, DC 20007. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996. tt The Kanas will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. The Ec Shop 10 Week 9th (West of The Caddy Store) Tips and classic contemporary clothing--military coats, jackets, hats for guys & gals and lots other fun clothes for women. Scholar's Paper/Store an artist's space 1001 Mai. 11-6 Tuesday, *San &* Bay. 760-4515 Now playing "Gidget goes to Japan" on the sauce bill "Bun. Women in white and wind" 12:30pm Why wait for April 15? Den's Tax Service calls you immediately if you call them. Short form $760 terminated $15 and up. All services include phone calls. Call 841-6933. Limitary calls: 3-8 FOR RENT Mast see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. Nø pets. Phone 841-5500. tf HANOVER PLACE. All furnished, furnished, studios, and 2 bdrm. Applied. Between k-drum units. 3 bdrm. 1 KU. DBLAY. Reserv your room. DBLAY. Reserve your room. mat-weather. 841-1212 or 842-4455. PRINCETON PLACE PAYTO APARTMENTS. for roommates, features wood burning fireplaces, 2 car garage with electric open fire, kitchen, quiet surroundings. Open house 8:35-10:30 at 200 Room Bldg. or 8:32-10:30 at 822-283-7941. For rent to mature male student. Quiet, comfortable efficiency apartment. Private room for the Union. Reasonable 842-4185. Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt. with kitchen, living room, kitchen, kitchen, heat and water included. Close to campus, and on bus route. $35 per month. MADEHOP LEAVEN #1 & Credilite 84-4200. Skidmore atmosphere, International meals, food preparation, equipment, looking for six cooperative group num- bers. UTILITIES INCLUDED. Large house ap-+ partment. Call 814-7622 Campus or campa- ly. For rent 2 bedroom apt. Convenient shopping. On bus route. Complete kitchen, central air and heat. Carpeted plus draps. 841-8685 2-26 Sublease 2 bedroom apt, gas paid. Complete kitchen carpet plus drapes, central air and call. Hail 481-8088. 2-26 ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished townhouses available immediately. Flexible financing options. Located on 13th and 18th. Only two rooms in the Union. Call the Union. 842-744- or 841-3255. 2- people to share home @ 4th & Miss. $100-150 + share of unil. 749-393. 2-26 Available immediately Heatherwood 1 bedroom apt, cent. air, W/D, dishwasher. 842- 492 and 841-5500. 2-26 Sub-lease at West Hills Apts. 1 Br. $220 a month, electricity not included, starting May. 1; Call 843-2822. 2-26 3 bd. unfurn. apt. $260. Close to campus. W/170' hookup, deposit required. Call 749-1730 or 841-4241. 3-1 RENT SALE-Rent reduced on rooms in large quiet house a block from Union, smoke alarm, no pets phase. Call after 6 843-2501 for information. Secure security 3-monight walk to clean fast. FACULTY PREFFERED FOR BENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3. br.kwr. house, 2712 Drive. All appliances. car garage. ks. bus. rode. $459/mo. 84-26 or 85-630. ROOMS FOR MALE STUDENTS. Pursuited, shallow bear. Center 14 & Kentucky. Walk to cammino. With separate kitchen. Available on-site. Gas bill: 89-7205 or 841-3210 or 841-3218. 3-10 Tq minute walk from Wecego. 1 bdmr, modern at Bedog audits, 11th and Missions. Low utilities. Call 843-3222 or 832-3597. 1 Bedroom apartment, Spacious, clean Close to downtown and campus. 500-Utilities Paid. 842-6114 Sunday thru Thurs. after 5:00 pm. FOR SALE Small furnished 1 bedroom house near campus & downtown. 145 per month + deposit & utilities. No children. cats 0. A/for 500. 811-8897. 50% off all on clothing in showroom 5 days only on Feb. 23 through Feb. 27th. Excited hears们 for this week only. 4-Tues- sdays only. $19.99 per adult. Change, 601, Kasold. #841-226. $29.99 Nike one bedroom house, hardwood floors, close to campus, nice neighborhood. 842- 919F or 843-1471. 2-25 Dixlex for rent. Great location. 899 Ohio 2-4drm. stove, refrigerator. Available now. $250 a month. 1-796-6833. 3-2 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! 1. Prepare a study guide to use them-1). As study guide. 2. For class presentation, use exam preparation- 'available analysis of Western Crit.' The Book-100 Hardcover Bookstore. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. ALTERNATOR AND GENERATOR SPECIALISTS ATOMOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-906-9900 $990 ALTERNATOR AND GENERATOR SPECIALISTS ATOMOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-906-9900 $990 BMW Brand new 1982, 3202, two in stock. BMW Brand new 1985, 3202, two in stock. 843-6097 or 843-2833 3-4 Black Fender Musicmaster bass Excellent pickup you have heard $200 Call 842-8750 Pick up you have heard $200 Call 842-8750 IBM Selectic TYPEWRITER $250 Call 843- 8342 After, 2:30. Ventura elec. bass, hard case, cord $123. 842- 8752. 2-26 Pioneer's 12" 4-way speakers assembly in U.S. brand new in box $160/pr., best offer. 749-2758 2-26 JVC turntable D/drive w cartridge and 2 JVC SK 15A speakers 200 input, cheap! Call 841-7699 2-26 HP-67 programmable calculator w card readen 8C radio w antenna 540M Savoy PMF wireless 8C radio w antenna 540M Savoy PMF 72 Monaco $80.00. Excellent cond. Ph. 84-623. Keeping. 1-2-6 78 Ford Fiat 4.3d, front wheel drive. Excellent condition, great gas mileage, fun to drive. Super little for $3100. $43-3988 after 5. Thousands of comic books, baseball cards, postcards, National Geographics, Playbios, Penthouse, Oui. Hustlers, Swanky, Coke, game, etc., NIU Open. Sat & Sun. 10-5. Game, etc., NIU Open. Sat & Sun. 10-5. Surprise jeeps and trucks available at www.caridermaster.com. Pak 3264 for information on how to put injeep. Bookcases, Stereo Cabinets, Cedar Chests, to hold our needs. Michael couch. 303 W 131 St. Superior Performance V-Rated tubeless Performance V-19.45 x 18 inch Year Mounted: 642-300 SMITT-CORONA 2200 electric typewriter Great shape. Used little. Extra ribbons, rea- des. FOUND 1973 Mazda RX-3, new exhaust system, radial tires, AM-FM stereo, automatic transmission, insured $475.00 841-9475 2-26 HELP WANTED Energetic, hardworking, personable waitresses wanted. Must work well under pressure and in an environment that is incivile and进取 base. Apply after 5 pm to Gammon's, Southern Hills Shopping Center. Watch- Identify make, day & place. Call 841-1430. 3-1 Golo. *stuh.* une face, 13th & Kentucky 18 Feb. 841-6492. Found pencil case, call to describe. 2-25 Set of keys in 900 block of Indiana. Knives Owner may claim at Hoeh Lost Found. 2-25 Keys and on case for Wheel Wesoc. Call 4-2201 to identify. 2-26 Gray, female kitten with white chest. Tiger Very affectionate. Call 864-3123 or 843-0927 Very affectionate. Call 864-3123 or 843-0927 Health: ideal mug size & days. Stockbroker Trainee. College grads -Exkut- ration and ambition, and equitable individual Res- ources. Must have a Bachelor's Degree in Ac- tivities or equivalent. CRUISES, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDI- CATION Counselors Europe, Caribbean, Worldwide COURSE OFFERS TION OPENINGS, GUIDE TO CRUI- SE WORLD, 153 Box 602, Basement, 8-12 OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. Field满足 $1200 monthly, Suiting满足 Del Mar, CA 92623. Box 23-1, 3-1-3 Del Mar, CA 92623. Qualified绞筏geral for summer swimming in the Chesapeake Bay. Contact Terry Hardy, 877-532-1100. Kansas. Person interested in doing odd house jobs in exchange for rent this semester. Must be willing to participate in own tools and be willing to participate in cooperative training. Call Carryl 841-838-9867. Beat Reasonings. Join the Mt. Oread club for $250 this week and save up to 19% on flowers, including the flower Surplur and Schism for 6 months. Call Gene Wee at SU44-8674. 3-9 NOTICE PERSONAL Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Wells Studio. 749-1611. tf PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-4821. JEWISH FLAG Skillet's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Wilfred Skillet Eudaly. 1906 Mass. 843-8186. † KU Hillel sponsors Soviet Jewry and Services Shabbat Dinner MICROSCOPE Friday, February 26 5:30 p.m. L. J.C.C. 917 Highland COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced pregnancy testing; gynecology; contraception 1-435 or Rose Overland Park 942-631-2000 Say it on a sweatshirt with custom dlk- screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swelle 749-1611. tf SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, WINTERPARK, DILLON, AND OTHERS Economical packages every weekend and school breaks. Call Ski Etc. 841-8386, too. HELP—I lost my ak mittens in Strong or Summerfield on 2-4, I need them. 843-7286. 2-25 For Reservations Call 864-3948 by Thursday, February 25 ALL YOU CAN EAT - Stuffed Pig Sunday Buffet 8:29 - 9:21, 10:28 - 10:48, 2:26 The Kegger-Weekly Specials on Keggs!! Call 841-9450-1610. W 23rd. ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS Bible Study Thursday February 25 7:30 p.m. Cork Union MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. tf Clothes and accessories with a touch of charm. Barb's Second Hand Rose. 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-3 MOIT O - Student & Faculty Travel* * Childcare Services* * Family Vacations* * Group Travel* * Group Tour* * Motorsport Tours* * Nordney Plans* * Hospitals Holidays* * Weekend Get-a-way* * Weekend Get-a-way* * Air Hotel Packages* * Destination Tours* * Excited & Independent Tours* Household items for apartment living. Barb's Second Hand Rose. $15 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-3 Top hats, derby's, visors, 40's-50' s clothes, cummerbunds, bow ties. Barb's Second Hand Rose, 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-3 TRAVEL CENTER TRAVELING! HAPPY TWENTY-FOIST LOVE ALWAYS, SHIFTA "HOME OF THE NEON PALM TREE" 1601 West 23rd St SOUTHERN HILLS CENTER 9-5:30 Mon.-Fri. • 9:30-2 Sat. 1601 West 23rd St. Need ride to Denver or Aspen as soon as possible. Will share expenses. Call Janet at 8:00 p.m. 841-2070. 2-26 841-7117 COMMUNITY AUCTION 700 N.E.M. every Saturday 11 AM. Conjugations accepted Mon. Tues. Fr. 2:16-5:00 commissions available. Bid 841-221. Will be sold. Would you like $31-$41? FREE PARKING The Etc Shop Vintage & Classic Contemporary Cottage Style Linda & Linda 10 Worth St Lawrence Kane 60044 913, 843, 9108 LOST: Black P-coat at Hatter last Friday. I took blue P-coat by mistake. Please call 843-7590. 2-26 96% SALE- All clothing in showroom 5 days 20% February 23 through February 27. Extended hours for this week only. 90-600 € fitted, $185.00. Delivery. Change, 601 Karlson. 841-101. 2-26 Tired of the high cost of T.G.I.F? 25r DRAWS this Friday, Feb. 26, 2-6 pm, at THE ENTERTAINER. THE EXCHANGE A Private Club Fire Place • Videos Great Drinks at Great Prices 2406 Iowa Memberships Available Established hard seeking BASSSET and inquiries only. Call 748-0991 or 842-8841. Inquiries only. Call 748-0991 or 842-8841. **SPRING BREAK ESCAPES:** 8 days/7 nights accommodations. Welcome party. Sports activities. Outdoor activities (air and motorcade transportation to Daytona - $499 & $119). Fort Lauderdale - $139 ($129 for air and motorcade) for 6 days/5 nights to Winter Park - $199. Call Summit Tauras at 842-6288, 6-10 pm for a ticket. DEE DEE DEE PANTS We've got 35 brilliant colors to choose from . . . and the right size to fit you! Dee Cee Painter Pants LITWINS 831 Mass. Downtown Lawrence 831 Mass. Downtown Lawrence Plain Jane, Fri. & Sat. night at the Pladium. 9-24 Thursday poor persons night. No cover. $2.25 pitchers, 75r draws, at The Pladium. 2-25 2 for 1 Friday Happy Hour 4-6 at The Exchange, 2406 Iowa *Special Ladies Night*. Male burgle. Fri. March 5. All you can drink from 7-8:30. ladies only until 9:30. Show starts at 7:30 At the Piazza. Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064. 2-26 SPECTRUM OPTICAL. Bring in your Dnr prescryption or we can duplicate present materials for display and monitor and层 frames available. Complete repair services. Open 10-45, M-841 N. Free introductory lecture on ECKANKAR state of conciliance. Sunday, Feb 28 states of conciliance. Sunday, Feb 28 HOT DOG Have lunch downstream at Phyllis Fabulous Robins. All-bee franks, super- delicious from an authentic YN Vendere's delicious from an authentic YN Vendere's & Mass. Tues.-Sat. $12-$15 mating.) Hawaiian Shirts FLOWER PALACE SHIRT We've got the largest selection of Hawaiian Shirts in town . . come in and let us fit you for spring break! LTWINS 831 Mass. Downtown Lawrence Video Tapes of Rock Chalk—Audio or video recordings of the 1982 Rock Chalk Review. Call 842-923-0. 3-2 RANDY "Westersewish" Baker. Doing a damn good job out in Lawrence. Keep up the good job. Love and Kisses Dave Dinkl. 2-25 In-price table & rack new items added daily in-price table & rack Hand. 505 I India- 843-4768 Special selection of clothing 50% off. In- flation Fighter, B E. 7th. Open 12-5:30 M-F 10-5:30 Sat. 3-3 Reagoniesn got you down? Go underground to the Seventh Spirit Cellar. Drink specials 8 nights a week and free live music. 442-3549. 2-25 Terry K. Barb B. John B. Nancy S. Lori Brian B. M. Dane B. Brian B. Marina D. Tim S. Jane B. JACK Birmingham gang-'s get a physical one to see the great pictures of the two too much champagne, rep pally, fire alarms, too much champagne, cleaning moleskine, hokey pokey, live dancin, ley roads, etc. Please join us also in ciebern and Nancy S. who after their quick think-that Friday you all for the active weekend enabling them to be physically fit in order to do it well, we all see whose stinks and Friday and we'll all see whose stinks and Native couple from Hawaii would like to meet others from Hawaii to form Hawaiian Club. If interested call collect: Meriden 1-786-2306 2-26 Natural Way. Chinese Shoes-5.00. Winter clothing 20% off cotton Daniskin. 812 Mass. 841-100. 3-10 THE PARTY is here. 8:00 this Friday at Our Place. Party hardy friends!! K.E. C.S. S.F. 2-26 FRESHMEN: BUILD A TRADITION. Intro- ductory Meeting, Thursday, February 25, 9 p.m. Robinson 203. KANSAS RANSA Cliff Elliott, Coach, 841-5857. 2-25 GREEN'S CASE SALE, OLD STYLE $6.99 BUDWEISER $8.99. GREEN'S, $6.98 WEST 23RD. 3-5 I need a ride to Steamboat Springs. Spring Break. Will share expenses. Call 749-2031. Chandler, Jeff, and the rest of the Betas—good luck. We can't wait for the first water fight. 2-25 Hey DU Duck—How 'bout avuoba and ancea getting together under the scope? Fun times—Saturday night! Love ya. Thedas 2-25 POKESTITE. tonite 9-12 pm. The Entertainer. All the beer you drink—$2.00. What more could you ask? 2-25 Congratulations Kim Bracken. We're proud of you! Love and Loyalty—McMahon, Feller, Wolters and Ault. 2-25 Margaret Kremer—You are one hell of a gal, good luck! 2-25 Fairy Knight, born under happy starry, is a lovely girl. She had claimed rooms and your dailray at the crossroads. Two had not the pleasure of meeting you. One was tall, air, same time & plums tree, air, same time & plums tree. SERVICES OFFERED TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS COMPUTER SCIENCE. Call 641-4099 anyone (b.S. in physics, M.A. in mathematics) or call 864-4157 (ask for Robert). tft Schneider Wine & Keg Shop—The finest selection of wines in Lawrence—largest supplier of strong kegs. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212. Stop Smoking With Our Program Breathe Easy Smoking Clinics Sn Put your best foot forward with a professional printed resume from Encore. We can write it, type it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-200, i2dw and I-26 - 9:26 The only smoking program that guarantees results. Children's Learning Center announces an extension of its hours with an evening event, 2:30 pm to 4:30 pm for elementary age. Ageway 6:45 am to 6:00 pm and 7:30 pm. Phone 841-214-980 more information. Drafting (charts, maps, etc.) 6 years experience, competitively priced. No longer than 1924 Sears. WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How to say 17 to say 12. Stop by The House of Uber and pick up our FREE brochure on resumes. Meet us in Manhattan, 8-4-M-F-3-S-L. NOON. ENLARGEMENTS Another Encore exclusive: محمد بن محمد الحسن المهدي الناصرية الدكتوراه في التربية والتقويم جامعة كليبير DIET ANALYSIS—Concerned about your health and nutrition? Get a comprehensive Diet Evaluation. It's simple and inexpensive. 842-2278. 2-26 Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa 842-2001 Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall. 604-4964. 2-26 EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 TYPING It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clear, Typing, 843-5820. tt Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting. Selective Elite or Piea, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-5845 Mrs. Wright. Experienced typist. Thesis, term paper, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selective II; Royal Correcting 500 300. 843-5675. ti For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. tt Experienced typist will type letters, thesus, and dissertations. IBM correcting selectic. Call Donna at 842-2744. tf Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, m-correct. Selectric. Call Eilen or Jean Ann 841-2172. tt Experienced typist- Thesis, dissertations, temporary papers, misc. IBM correcting selective. Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric, Elite or Pica. 5644. 2-26 Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and rewriting your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 842-2001 for more info. 2-26 Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps, 25th and Iowa, 842-2001. 2-26 Professional typing, quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call evenings, 841 please. tf TYPNING-EDITING-GRAPHICS. IBM Corp. Selectric, full-time typetr, spelling correction to composition assistance, Emergency service available. 841-2907. Professional typing. Dissertations. theses. term papers, resumes, legal, etc. IBM Cor- poreal. papera, etc. Call 842-3203 3-4 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE 842-3507 WANTED Male roommate to share 3 bedroom house: 12 & Maas. Hotel $108/mo. + 1/3 utilities + deposit. Liberal, smoker okay. 845-6519 Need place to live? 3-br. house $83.33 + / 1/2 ult. Close to campus. Prefer female & non- smoker. 841-9779. 3-12 3 share room house next to campus. Reasonable. Call for details 843-692-412. 2-26 Roommate need immediately. Nice apartment, 2 cats, own bedroom. $147.50 + .50 SCREW THE DORM! Roommate needed: non-smoker, student, reasonably clean Private room. $137 + 1/3 utilities 749- 791! 2.2% Roommate wanted to share nine three room townhouse $115 / 3/ upl call 843 +1/3 call. Call 812. Fifth female roommate required for five bedroom houses near campus. $110/mo. to WANTED 3 JACKETS To REMAIN CONNECT. WANTED - 3 TICKETS To Rampal concert - Cantor Rose 86421 or 841-0825. 3-2 Page 12 University Daily Kansan, February 25. 1989 Javhawks come close, but fall to Sooners By GINO STRIPPOLI Associate Sports Editor They came close, but in the end the Kansas Jayhawks lost their seventh straight conference road game, dropping a 79-76 decision to the Oklahoma Sooners in Norman, Okla., last night. The Jayhawks, who now stand 4-8 in the Big Eight and 13-12 overall, led most of the game and had a shot at the victory. After an Oklahoma turnover, the Jayhawks held the ball for one shot. After a time out with 21 seconds left, Kansas worked the ball inside and Lance Hill passed to a wide open Jeff Dishran, Dishman, who had hit for the Jayhawks, missed a wide-open shot to seal the Jayhawks' fate. "Jeff Dishman played such a good Owens said. "I am disapplaused for him." For the longest time, it looked as if the Jayhawks would get their first Big Eight road win of the season. The Jets and the RU defense were able to hold Oklahoma's fine junior forward, David Little, to just 6 points in the first half. The jury found half proved to be a different matter though, as Little fired in 23 second half points to lead the Sooners comeback. Little, who finished the game shooting 10 of 17 from the field and 9 of 9 from the foul line, was not the only Sooner to have a good game. Chuck Barnett, the Big Eight's leading scorer, scored 19 points, 8 in the second half, with two two's two feet thrown in the final seconds that laced the game for the Sooners. The Oklahoma defense, however, was the main cause of the Jayhawks' problems. The OU full-court press forced Kansas into 21 turnovers. Another surprise for the Sooners was the play of Raymond Whitley. Whitley, who sat out last season with an injury, started in place of point guard Bo Overton, who was sidelined by the fla. He scored 10 points and had 9 assists. "We made a lot of mistakes," Owens said. "Those in the last minutes really stand out now." But even in the loss, Owens was pleased with the way the team responded. It was probably the best performance by the Jayhawks on the road, since they played in the Holiday Festival in New York City. The Jayhawks were led by senior captain David Magley, Magley, who going into last night's game was second in rebounding, scored a team-24 head etc. Intramurals Basketball BASKETBALL YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Greek Men Rec A (Playoffs) Phi Kappa Sigma 29, Pi Kappa Phi 23 No Greed Letters 4, Wolfpack 40 Independent Neu Rec.A(Plavoffs) TRASMAN Hat and The Fabulous Freebirds 34 Average White Bats 20 The Drunks 32 Heroes 34, Doorknobs 32 Doorknobs 31. The Have Nots 29 Miller Time 1. F, J, F, 3 Miller Time 2. Run and Gun #1 22 Greek Men New Selling something? The Bushman 43, The Maribarite 52 The Lager and the Gower 29 Lerger and the Gower 45, Cunningham Lists 17 Lakers 42, The Tahtawasers 8 The Commando 61, THE F Wootbegging 16 The Commando 61, THE F Wootbegging 16 Mawell's Dermens 43, The Run and Guns 25 Mawell Adult Inhibition 53, Mendon-Gero 62 Red Riders 40, "Yorkshire Thunder Herd 40, Me's Maupersader 35 841-0101 808 W24th Vanilla Thunder 26, Vodoo Nuns 19 Gobblers 20, Wizards 19 Heary E's 31, The Scholings 27 ACADEMY CAR RENT a rental car for $8.95 day $60.00 wk $225.00 mo 25 FREE miles per day. Balloon-a-Gram "Rise to the Occasion" KNO1 8443 LQCH 00NM Place a want ad. points and collected a game-high 11 rebounds. Call 864-4358. P.O. Box 3122 Lancaster, KS 60044 MasterCard MasterCard "David played a fine all-around game," Owens said. $ 3^{1/2} \mathrm{c}$ COPIES COPIES Service Beyond Duplication The World is Coming... South America HOUSE OF USHE: HOUSE OF USHEN 838 MASS. — 842-3610 TIMEL CENTER Feb. 27th & 28th Tony Guy, who has been suffering from shin splints of late, had a good game, shooting 4 of 6 from the field and 6 of 7 from the foul line for 14 points. The team is also recovering from an injury, having a good game as well with 11 points. Except in the turnover category, the Jahayhaws outplayed the Sooners. Kansas shot aremainance of 62 percent compared to 52 percent compared to 48 percent by the Sooners. "We played well enough to win. " "I was able to keep my eye to perfection and I just didn't go down." The KU figure is even more remarkable since Kansas has been shooting 45 percent from the field in conference rames. Kansas also outrebounded Oklahoma, 28-26. Magley and Dishman collected 20 of Kansas' 28 rebounds. "After this game, the team has to feel capable of winning on the road," Owens said. "Oklahoma is a tough place to win. The Jayhawks will close out the regular season on Saturday against the Iowa State Cyclones. Tipoff has been moved up to 1:05 p.m. "The team should feel good going into the post-season." | | FG | FT | REB | TP | PP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Jeff Dishman | 9-8 | 3-7 | | | | | David Magalway | 11-20 | 7-10 | | | | | Mike Madison | 12-6 | 3-9 | | | | | Tail Boyle | 3-5 | 0-6 | 1 | 5 | 1 | | Tatoy Guy | 3-4 | 6-7 | 1 | 1 3 | 1 | | Kevin Martin | 4-6 | 6-7 | 1 | 1 4 | 1 | | Mark Sumneris | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | | Lance Hill | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | | John Crawford | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | Portland beats Kings, 123-111 Darryl Allen...94 David Little ...10-17 Dawid Devine...12-17 Raymond Barnett...17-16 Chuck Barnett...7-16 Larry Hendrix...8-2 Larry Hendrix...12-2 Valentine Pinser...14-2 Cavin Pierce...34 Fouled out: Boyle Technical Foul;s: Oklahoma coach Tubbs Kansas 35 35--78 Oklahoma 37 43--79 Okay State Boyle By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Jim Paxson, Mychal Thompson and Calvin Natt combined for 75 points as the Portland Trailblazers ended a five-game losing streak with an 123-111 victory over the City Kings last night in Kemp's Arena. Kansas City held a 57-56 lead at halftime, and the Trailblazers ran over the Kings in the third quarter, out-sounding them 35-24. Paxson, a 6-6 guard, fueled the VALID ID CARDS instantly. Laminated. Color available at I-DEV SYSTEMS Room 114A Ramada Inn 841-5905 Trailblazers' burst in that quarter, scoring 12 of his 25 points. His 8 consecutive points broke a 75-75 tie and gave Portland an 83-75 lead. Natt, a 6-6 forward, and Thompson, a 6-10 center, had 25 points each to lead the Trailblazers. Guard Phil Ford, who has been in a season-long slump, led the Kings, scoring 25 points. Rookie Eddie Johnson chipped in 21. The loss, which was the third straight for the Kings, dropped Kansas City's record to 18-37, last in the Midwest Division. THURSDAY DRINKATHON $1.00 at the Door 25c DRAWS It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK 1340 Ohio GO Professional Hairstylist for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters 111 W. 9th 843-2138 GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL March 1st, 7:00 p.m. Forum Room Kansas Union BUDGETS ARE ON THE AGENDA THE AGENDA. Outstanding [ΨΣ] Freshmen - Lambda Sigma, sophomore honor is now taking applications for 1981-82 membership. - Pick up your application in Room 220 Strong or in any living group. These must be returned with references to 220 Strong by March 12, 1982. - Don't Delay—this is your chance to guarantee a fun sophomore year! Scoreboard Basketball NRASTANDINGS Don't forget FRIDAY NIGHT SHRIMP PEEL Only $1.50 per 1/4 pound Special Drink Prices 4 p.m.-8 p.m. Also 95c Drinks 8-12 Thursday is Ladies Night at Mingles 2 for 1 from 8 to 12 MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE MINGLES LOUNGE 2222 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Ks. 842-7030 Ext. 136 THURSDAY SPECIALS From 9 p.m. to Midnight MEN'S NIGHT 25¢ DRAWS FRIDAY SPECIALS Spiced Broiled Shrimp $1.50 1/4 lb. FREE Hors D'oeuvres 4-7 SATURDAY SPECIALS From 10 p.m. to Midnight HOUSE DRINKS $1.00 SUNDAY SPECIALS From 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. 75¢ PITCHERS 60 OUNCE SUPER SCHOONERS for only $1.75 Reg. $2.75 Anytime Sunday MONDAY 50¢ PITCHERS From 7 p.m.-Midnight $1.00 Bar Drinks Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. 1401 West 7th 843-0540 THE SANCTUARY NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Division San Antonio 35 18 680 Houston 35 18 660 Houston 28 17 694 Utah 19 19 345 Utah 19 19 345 King City 18 18 321 17½¹ King City 18 18 321 17½¹ Team W 4 L 1.74 GB Philadelphia 40 15 P.ci. — Charlotte 38 15 I.17 — New Jersey 27 29 P.ci. 482 14 Washington 25 28 P.ci. 482 14 Houston 25 28 P.ci. 482 14 Milwaukee 40 15 727 Atlanta 80 12 763 Dallas 20 31 444 Detroit 24 30 444 Chicago 20 34 155 Houston 14 42 272 Los Angeles 38 17 692 1% Seattle 38 17 692 1% San Francisco 57 44 18% Golden State 29 24 547 8% Golden State 29 24 547 8% Portland 25 40 87 23% Manhattan 15 40 87 23% Western Conference Midwest Division Team W| W L | Pct. GB Missouri 12 | 9 | 28 Mississippi 9 | 6 | 92 Nebraska 7 | 6 | 538 Okahanna State 7 | 6 | 538 Cottonwood 7 | 6 | 538 Kansas 4 | 9 | 308 Iowa State 4 | 9 | 308 Illinois 11 | 11 | 78 Boston 132, Utah 180 Milwaukee 113, New Jersey 106 Indiana 95, Wisconsin 84 Denver 110 Philadelphia 121, Cleveland 97 Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI ranking. 1. Oklahoma State 00 UPI TOP 26 RESULT. Nok! Number in parentheses rank (1) 58, Mississippi (2) 56, Nebraska (3) Colorado 57, Iowa State (4) Oklahoma State 66 Virginia (18) 84, Wake Forest (20) 66 North Carolina (27) 77, Georgia Tech 54 Maryland (30) 76, North Carolina West Virginia (6) 82, Pittsburgh 77 Kentucky (67) 91, Mississippi State Tennessee (67) 91, Arkansas Arkansas (15) 54, Southern Methodist 53 Alabama (16) 44, Alabaster (27) Tennessee (27) 77 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS SANCTUARY Edmonton 40 13 13 13 347 241 261 95 Vancouver 23 18 18 18 347 215 95 Calgary 22 28 19 19 347 261 260 95 Montreal 22 28 19 19 347 261 260 95 Columbia 13 13 13 13 19 19 19 347 Team W 18 L 5 Pct GB New York 18 5 783 -1% Newburgh 18 8 764 -1½% Baltimore 18 8 692 1¼% Buffalo 14 13 692 1¾% Cleveland 9 10 390 10% Gary县 9 16 369 10% Philadelphia 7 20 169 13% Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division Hockey NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Patrick Division Team W L W T GF GK PA Pts. Miami 14 12 7 60 180 69 68 NY Rangers 21 14 7 60 180 69 68 New York Jets 31 25 3 64 241 67 Philadelphia 31 25 3 64 241 67 Pittsburgh 18 34 3 243 241 67 Boston 18 34 3 243 241 67 Hartford 4, Boston 3 Iowa 4, Mamaroneck 4 Edmonton 6, Minnesota 7 Toronto 5 Winnipipe 4, Philadelphia 2 Washington 1 Montreal 35 12 12 14 84 274 171 73 Boston 34 12 10 8 287 173 86 Buffalo 33 19 10 11 276 194 81 Hartford 17 32 10 11 276 194 68 Hartford 17 32 10 11 276 194 68 St. Louis 21 16 808 - - Chicago 18 15 837 - - Detroit 13 14 458 - - Memphis 10 18 357 - - Phoenix 10 18 357 - - Philadelphia 9 16 904 12% - San Francisco 9 16 904 12% - Campbell Conference Norma Division Minnesota 26 19 18 17 273 232 70 St. Louis 26 19 18 17 273 232 70 Detroit 26 19 18 17 273 232 70 Wilmington 21 27 17 13 230 264 54 Toronto 21 27 17 13 230 264 54 Rochester 21 27 17 13 230 264 54 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. THE FILM MASTER TAKE A GYRO SANDWICH BREAK ALI BABA OF LOUZENCE mio-east fine foods TAKE A GYRO SANDWICH BREAK ALLBARA IS NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH OPEN DAILY NOON TO 10.00 P.M. C 8th ANNIVERSARY SALE! ALL MENUITEMS AT LOW PRICES ALL MENU ITEMS AT LOW PRICES BORDER BANDIDO for example. TEXAS BURRITO #1 HERE THINGS TASTE THEY USED TO AND WERE WIPPING IN FLIPBATION BY BOLLING IN THEM. $2^{09}$ $1^{39}$ Choice of all meat or a combination of triples and meat rolled in a 10" flour tortilla with lettuce and covered with sauce and cheese. TACO Delicious meat, lettuce, and cheese in a crisp folded corn tortilla ALL DINNERS 30% OFF 75¢ 45¢ REGULAR BURRITO An 8* version of our Jamous Texas Burrito S135 79¢ SOFT DRINKS 40¢ 60¢ 70¢ 25¢ 35£ 45£ ONE DAY ONLY. THIS SATURDAY, FEB. 27th! 1528 WEST 23rd across from the --only 69° Offer good thru Sun. Feb. 28 342-8861 Where "Being at college is the first time I've ever really been on my own, away from home. And boy... things sure aren't like home around here. Sometimes I lay awake at night thinking about all the differences... then I start missing my Teddy Bear." SPECIAL Fish Sandwich When youre away from home, come to. Buckys 2120 W. 9th GB - $^{1}k_2$ $1^{1}k_3$ 6 10 $10^{1}k_3$ 13 - 5 9 12 $12^{1}k_3$ $13^{1}k_3$ KANSAN The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Friday, February 26, 1982 Vol. 92, No. 105 USPS 650-640 Hyatt report may be crucial factor in lawsuits From Staff and Wire Reports A federal report on Kansas City's Hyatt Regency Hotel skywalk collapse could become important evidence in litigation, an attorney has said, moving more than 20 of the victims said recently. Max Foust, a Kansas City, Mo., attorney with Morris & Foust, said the report "is a very critical piece of evidence because it was done by an independent, disinterested firm." The National Bureau of Standard's report, released yesterday in Washington, D.C., said the two 32-km skywalks that collapsed at the hotel, a property built barely able to support their own weight. The report said that a change in construction design—which doubled the load suspended on the 6th-floor walkway—compounded the problem. Because of the change, the skywalks were able to support only 27 percent of the load standard set by the city. The study made no judgments about whose work led to the failure. THE SKYWALK collapse occurred during a popular Friday evening tea dance July 17. A fourth-floor skywalk, loaded with people swaying to the strains of Duke Ellington's "Satin Doll," fell atop a crowded second-floor skywalk directly below. The accident injured at least 121 persons and spawned billions of dollars in lawsuits. Foust, who already has settled two Hyatt cases and won each plaintiff at least $3 million in damages, said the government report would strengthen the plaintiffs' cases. Foust said the report "confirmed what experts I hired already said." He commissioned his own study in anticipation of the official NBS investigation. However, a Lawrence attorney said that the government report may not be admissible into court. "This is a very possible result," said John Lungstrum, of Stevens, Brand, Lungsturm, Golden & Winter. LUNGSTRUM said that a number of government reports were not admissible because of statutes limiting their use. "But it provides a solid basis for plaintiffs to conduct the groundwork for their inquiries." Tom Deacy, an attorney for the Hyatt Corp., said there was no question that the government study indicated the cause of the collapse as a part of the company's attempt on the corporation's part to cut costs. "Although we deeply regret this deep tragedy, we really didn't have anything to do with the design of or construction aspects of the building," he said. "It was tendered to us as a first-class hotel, and we accepted it as such and believed it so to be." "In that aspect, our corporation was just as much a vietnam as the others." Barney Berkowitz, an attorney for Stinson, Mag & Fizzell, one of 15 firms representing the hotel, refused to comment on the report's possible legal implications. BUT A Lawrence victim of the disaster said that the government report "doesn't really change anything at all." Rachel Hanson, a lawrence minister who had been a victim of 7 disaster, the said 340-paper study did not say any impact. Hanson, who had been at the hotel only 10 minutes before the collapse occurred, is involved in a class action suit against the building's owners, the Crown Center Development Corp., and a host of design, architectural and construction claims, than 200 claimants are involved in the action. "It doesn't really change my feelings about what happened," said Hanson, who found the study was similar to other commissioned by the Kansas City Star. In looking for a probable cause, NBS researchers simulated collapses with skywalk mock-ups and subjected thousands of pounds of steel and concrete debris from the actual collapse. Kansas City Mayor Richard Berkley requested the NBS study, which has cost taxpayers more than $250 million. A FORMER KU professor, commissioned by the Kansas City Star, said yesterday that a study he did for newspaper last year determined the same cause at a fraction of the cost. B. O. Kuzmanovic, a former KU engineering professor who now works for Beiswenger, Hoch and Associates in North Miami Beach, Fla., said in a report "was completely as I had predicted it." "Under even partial deadload (the weight of the skywalk alone), the stresses in the suspension connection were far above local standards," said Kuzmanovic. Kuzmanovic admitted there was a difference between what was constructed and what was designed. But he said that the blame for the collapse did not lie on one party alone. "In almost every disaster, there are always two or three errors that make up for a big mistake." Kuzmanov said the study's price tag was much too high, but he said that the investigation required an even higher price. authorization. Somebody said to it, "It's most unfortunate that so many people perished, but you just can't say that one thing caused the disaster." 13 JOHN EISELE/Kensan Staff "I wasn't even allowed to look through debris," he said. "The study had to be done by some organization that had official authorization. Somebody had to do it." Rob Mabry, Overland Park sophomore, carries his backpack over one shoulder, as many students do. Medical experts say the uneven weight can cause back problems. Book-ladened pack might lead to out-of-whack back By LISA GUTIERREZ Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Backpacks. They're everywhere on the KU campus. "Several doctors have found that they can cause rather moderate to severe muscle pain," Martin Wollman, director of Student Health Services, said yesterday. Blue ones, red ones, green ones. Their zippered bodies on many students' backs=mobile depositories of books never read and pennies never spent. Students stuff and oversize them tighter than the leading heavy-duty trash bag, and they are very likely to break. Jean Hiebert, supervisor of physical therapy at Watkins Memorial Hospital, said students could experience spasms in the upper back or shoulder area and muscle strain in the lower back if they wore packs improperly. The problems range from muscle pain to sway-back and can be avoided if students use a proper chair. Wollman said that overstuffed backpacks, in northeastern could cause physical problems. the weight of the pack to be unevenly distributed. Backpacks should be worn high on the back and snug, according to Mike Sullivan, co-owner of Sunflower Surplus, 804 Massachusetts St. THE BIGGEST problem, she said, is that students try to carry too much in their backpacks, or they don't know how to wear their backpacks properly. "If they get the backpack too low or too heavy, they get sway-back," she said. "To compensate for that, the head usually juts forward." "If you see a lot of students, they wear them on one shoulder." "Hiebert said." "Sometimes I see them too low at the back," Sullivan said. "Backpacks should be worn up higher so that the main body of the pack is between the shoulders." "If they're worn the way they should be, it would be with both shoulder straps on." Hiebert saw sway-bac occurred when students didn't wear packs correctly. He said backpacks that hung away from the back could cause continuous pressure on the The amount of weight carried in the pack, if excessive, could cause physical problems, he By COLLEEN CACY See BACKPACK page 5 The 7.5 percent recommendation is lower than the Reents' request for 13 percent. Salary boost wins tentative approval The committee voted to grant Regents schools about the same number of dollars recommended Staff Reporter The Senate Ways and Means Committee voted on all the Regents budget issues except faculty salary increases, which it will take final action on next week. But it changed the method of allocating funds for changes in enrollment, transferring $2 million from the faculty salary fund to the enrollment adjustment fund. THIS METHOD of enrollment adjustment would allocate to the University of Kansas $688,000 more than the governor's proposal, and thus increase your enrollment increases since the fall of 1979. But if the Legislature adopted the method recommended by Carlin—a method that allows a certain number of faculty positions based on the number of students enrolled, which was dropped several years ago—KU would lose $292,722 and have a slight decrease in enrollment last fall. The committee voted to reject Carlin's enrollment adjustment proposal and return to the "corridor concept" that the Legislature began using last year. Under the corridor system, an institution would not receive more or less money or faculty positions if enrollment increased or decreased less than 1.5 percent. One year is used as a base to measure changes for the next three years, so enrollment changes are taken into account. COMMITTEE Chairman Paul Hess, R-Wichita, said the $2 million being transferred would allow schools more flexibility in determining where to spend their money and hired in how they distributed salary funds. In adopting the corridor method, the committee rejected Carlin's proposal to use full-time equivalency enrollment figures to adjust funding. Full-time equivalency is figured by dividing the number of undergraduate hours by 15, the number of graduate hours by nine and the number of law student hours by 12, and then adding the three numbers. Carlin's method would use the enrollment figures from each fall to determine increases or decreases in money and in number of faculty. Capital improvements and special requests from individual schools will also be considered in committee. After the committee recommendations, the budget will pass to the Senate floor. Hess said the committee would make its final recommendations for salary funding next week. "It is important that we stick with the corridor system." Hess said. "It's a more accurate measure of what's really happening on that campus." THE BOARD of Regents request a 13 percent salary increase, a total of $6 million for KU. The 7.5 percent increase the committee discussed applied to all faculty and did not include students. Carin had recommended an 8.75 percent increase for all faculty, and an extra 1.25 percent for areas with a high market value—including the arts, science, library science, and the physical sciences. Hess said that because Carlin had recieved $2.5 million in a proposed proposal amounted to an 8 percent increase. See BUDGET page 5 Spencer bequeaths $1.5 million to KU Mrs. Spencer, who was in her late 70s, died Feb. 15, possibly of a heart attack. The Kansas University Endowment Association was notified Wednesday that the University of Kansas would receive $1.3 million from the estate of Halo Foreman Snapper. Mrs. Spencer was the philanthropist who donated the money to build the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art and the Kenneth A. Research Library on KU's Lawrence campus. "We were totally surprised and very happy about it," said Doug Tilghman, assistant director of administration at Spencer Museum. "We had nooking it was going to happen." "Mrs. Spencer has made a lasting impact on the quality of life at the University of Kansas," Chancellor Gene A. Budig said yesterday. "Her presence will touch the lives of countless people. HER WILL, designated that $1 million go to the SpongeBob Museum Art and $500,000 to the Spencer Museum Art. "We are indebted to her and her far-sightedness. She will never be forgiven." Mrs. Spencer's will, which was signed on Oct. 12, was admitted to probate Wednesday in Jackson County Circuit Court in Kansas City, Mo. Tilghman said Mrs. Spencer had already He said that Mrs. Spencer, in her will, also gave the name Ming Dynasty decorative screen from D.A. D.160. contributed most of the money used to build the $5 million museum. Mrs. Spencer's bequest will be used for art acquisitions, Tilghman said, including paintings, sculptures, drawings and decorative arts from States, Great Britain, Europe and the Far East. Spencer Library also will use its gift money for acquisitions. ALEXANDRA MASON, Spencer librarian, said she did not know all the stipulations of the bequest, but that the money designated for acquisitions would be used "to strengthen and expand the existing scholarly resources of books and manuscripts." "We were not aware that anything was contemplated," she said, but it was a charac- ture of her own. Mrs. Spencer was the wife of Kenneth A. Tambora and died in 1945. Mr. Bao based Spencer Chemical Co. who died in 1968. Mason said Mrs. Spencer also had contributed the money to build the $2 million research facility. She said Spencer Library would receive Mrs. Spencer's personal papers and books. Irene E. See SPENCER page 5 Mrs. Helen Foresman Spencer Weather COOL TURKEY It will be partly sunny today with a high of 40 to 45 and southern winds of 5 to 15 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Tonight will be fair with a low of 25 to 30 degrees. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and mild with a high in the low 50s. KUSA requests legislation Staff Reporter By KEVIN HELLIKER Staff Reporter TOPEKA-The KU Committee on South Africa yesterday appealed to Kansas lawmakers to support the divestment of state funds from South Africa. Calling the state of Kansas a traditional vanguard in human rights, members of the KU group said it was inconsistent for the state to declare that 80 percent of the South African people. KUSA MEMBERS also called for investment out of Poland, but apparently no significant impact. Through the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System alone, more than $55 million has been invested in companies that deal in South Africa. "Kansas investors would have been skeptical to "invest in Nazi Germany," said Laird Okle, a Lawrence graduate student, "and they should be similarly skeptical to invest in South Africa." However, State Rep Norman Justice, D-Danawas City, who is sponsoring a bilingual calling for the governor to be elected, tries, urged the House Pensions and Investments Committee to approve this request on principle. "Oppression and captivity breed the same." he said. "When they are found in one spot in the world, the rest of the world is not safe until these horrors are stamped down beyond submission." If the bill is passed, KPERS and other state agencies would be required to divest funds from such companies as General Motors, Champion Spark Plug, Johnson and Johnson and the Coca-Cola Co., all of which have operations in South Africa. The Kansas University Endowment Association and similar private corporations would not be affected. But Todd Seymour, Endowment Association president, said earlier this year that if the bill was passed, Endowment Association should discuss whether they would conform to state policy. ALTHOUGH JUSTICE produced statistics of U.S. companies that support the minority white regime in South Africa, one KU student, Eric Gumbi of South Africa, said he did not need evidence to convince him that oppression occurred there. "Living in South Africa is hell, if you are a See AFRICA nare5 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 News Briefs From United Press International Federal Reserve head says large deficit to stall recover NEW YORK—The president's chief economic adviser predicted yesterday that the worst of the recession would end by late March, but Paul Volcker, Federal Reserve Board chairman, warned that large budget deficits would stall recovery. Speaking to a conference board meeting of about 1,000 business executives, Vanderuerg urged Congress to make even deeper cuts in government spending. He warned that large deficits could conflict with the Fed's fight against inflation, which involved monetary growth targets that he admitted posed a risk. Murray Weidenbaum, chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, asserted in an earlier speech that the projected deficits, when measured relative to the size of the entire economy, were not as large as in 1976 and would not force interest rates up or abort the expected recovery. Although President Reagan has backed off from projecting a timetable for recovery, Weidenbaum predicted that the first quarter would prove "the bottom of recession," with increasing signs of an upturn during the April-June period. Accused killer found incompetent KANSAS CITY, Kan.-The man charged in the death of two people gunned down in the University of Kansas Medical Center's emergency room was declared incompetent to stand trial yesterday and was ordered to receive more treatment at a state mental hospital. in the Lee J. Moroney, Wyndgate County administrative judge, said that he supported Larned State Hospital's funeral service this month found son of a resident to stand in court. troom is charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the March 20, 1981, shootout playoff. In 1983, a 25-year-old resident at the troom was arrested and a hospital visit hospital, and the receiver. The judge ordered that Boan be returned to Lared State Hospital for more treatment and evaluation for a period not to exceed 90 days, after which another competency hearing will be held in district court. Testimony ends in Williams trial **ALIANA** - Testimony ended yesterday in the murder trial of Wayne B. Williams, mother insisting that prosecutors failed to prove her son killed by her brother. "Wayne's character has been drug through the mud, his daddy's character has been drug through the mud and I been drug," Williams' mother, Faye, testified. "In fact they have ruined the Williams family and they lie to lie and, but they have not produced evidence my son is a The defendant's 64-year-old mother was the last witness in the 9-week-long trial. The case should go to the jury today. Following, Mrs. Williams' testimony, defense attorney Al Binder moved for a directed verdict of acquittal, but the motion was denied. Leaders laud Caribbean aid plan SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico—most Caribbean and Central American leaders lauded President Reagan's Basin initiative yesterday, and four prime ministers said they would meet with Reagan in April to stress their specific needs. Reagan unveiled his long-awaited initiative, which includes a proposal for about $300 million in aid in an address Wednesday to Washington-based unions. However, the State Department said Nicaragua would not benefit from the aid plan unless it changes its foreign and domestic policies. Otto Reich, administrator for Latin America of the State Department's Agency for International Development, also indicated that panel that discussed the potential for the agency to be not lifed. Committee cites Watt for contempt WASHINGTON—The House Energy Committee voted yesterday to cite Interior Secretary James Watt for contempt of Congress for refusing to provide 11 subpoenaed documents for which President Reagan has claimed executive privilege. The resolution, introduced by Rep. Albert Gore Jr., D-Tenn., refers to the full House of Representatives Watt's refusal to comply with a Sept. 18, 2001 resolution. The issue arose when a House oversight subcommittee subpoenaed 31 documents in an effort to learn whether Canada's new energy policy discriminates against American investments, and Watt's reluctance to bar Canadian firms from U.S. oil leases in retaliation. Hasty action by the House appears unlikely. Congressional aides said it could take weeks simply to prepare the report for the House. could take a week simply to prepare the letter for the envelope. Watt has said he was willing to go to jail for the principle. Asner says remarks' style 'a goof' HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — An unrepetent Ed Aser admitted yesterday that he "goofed" in the style of his recent call for medical aid for leftist rebels in 2016. However, Asner stressed that he stood by the substance of his controversial remarks. "I feel I have an obligation of justice and human rights to speak on as civil servant," she said, playing a tough city editor on the new government series, told a new commentary. But Asner, president of the powerful Screen Actors Guild, said he erred when he failed to stress that he was speaking as a private citizen, not as president of the 55,000-member union. "It was a slight goof, an honest mistake," he said. Falwell hit by pies at convention FORT WORTH, Texas—Moral Majority leader the Rev Jerry Fallowell protested his stand against abortion by two nightly bjections by women protesting his stand against abortion. Police said the two women escaped a group of angry delegates attempting to forcibly remove them from Will Rogers Memorial Auditorium. One man was roughed up by more than a dozen delegates who surrounded the women, officers said. The women hurled the pies during Falwell's speech to the Bible Baptist Fellowship's annual convention. Police said Lawrence Bolman, 21, of Hurst, Texas, northeast of Fort Worth, was placed in protective custody after delegates pulled his hair, kicked and pinched him when he intervened between the delegates and the two women. Fawell declined to seek charges against the women. Legal question stalls Hinckley trial WASHINGTON - A federal judge yesterday set March 9 as the trial date for John Hinckley Jr. in his 1972 murder case, but within hours, an appeal court blocked the beginning of his trial. Acting at the request of federal prosecutors, a three-judge appellate panel postponed the trial at least until April 9 to give prosecutors time to decide whether to appeal an order barring the use of illegally obtained evidence at Hinckley's trial. The delay was a hint, but not firm evidence, that prosecutors will seek to win court approval to use contested statements made by Hinckley hours after President Reagan was shot nearly one year ago. Kansas telephone rate hike approved by KCC Because of the increase, customers also will have to reach for a quarter instead of a dime when making calls from a pay telephone. The KCC granted the 15-cent increase, saying the 10-cent rate had been in effect for almost 30 years. TOPEKA-Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. customers can expect to pay 95 cents more on monthly bills for basic service because the Kansas Corporation Commission decided yester- day Bell a Bell $4.67 million rate hike. However, the 25-cent rate can be use only on pay phones that Bell has converted to the 'Dial tone-first program', which allows customers to call and receive calls is only to make emergency calls or to charge local or long-distance calls. In deciding for the rate increase, the KCC sliced off a large chunk of the company's original request of $40.5 value from the balance granted. Granted Bell the full request, customers would have had to pay $3.70 more on monthly bills. FINEST BODY WORK & AUTO RESTORATION Estimate THE PRESTON NACAL COMPANY 311 N. 4ed 814-606-007 GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL March 1st, 7:00 p.m. Forum Room Kansas Union BUDGETS ARE ON THE AGENDA. SNEAKERS Tie In WithUs Recreation Services Slow-Pitch Softball Managers meetings for slow-pitch softball will be Tuesday, Trophy League—6:00 p.m. ($10 entry fee) attend these meetings in order to enter a team. Rec. A —6:45 p.m. ($5 entry fee) March 2 in Robinson Gym No.1. Team managers must Rec. A — 0:45 p.m. ($5 entry fee) Rec. B — 7:30 p.m. ( $5 entry fee ) Co-Rec. — 7:30 p.m. ($5 entry fee) Entry forms are available in the Rec. Services office, 208 Robinson. For more information call 864-3546. Tues.- Sat. 12-6 fashion eyeland special department 841-6000 Holiday Plaza KEGGER the KKUGER Nestlé Yankees Lancaster, PA 9Rr the KEGGER COORS LONGNECKS $7.99 841-9450 TGIF at THE HAWK TGIF at THE HAWK New Prices First Pitcher—Regular Price Refills 12:30 1:30 $0.50 1:30 2:30 $0.75 2:30 3:30 $1.00 3:30 4:30 $1.25 4:30 6:30 $1.50 New Prices First Pickup - Regular Price Refills 12:30-1:30 ... $0.50 1:30-2:30 ... $0.75 2:30-3:30 ... $1.00 3:30-4:30 ... $1.25 4:30-6:30 ... $1.50 It Could Only.Happen at ... THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO SALE! EVERYBODY RUNS 'EM THE GRAMOPHONE SHOP'S EVERYDAY PRICES BEATS 'EM. • 70 Languages Quality Audio • Soundproof Nestery • Sleeping Nestery • Max Deck ALL JBL Selection, Price, Quality, Service ... Three "State of the Art" showrooms,two large mass manufacturers showrooms,one budget manufacturers area, as well as, our mail order facility and wholesale ware house. PARKING LOTS ALL JBL 40% off 40% off maxell 1/2 off is too much! maxell ½ off is too much! LN-C-90 reg. $1.98 Dealers must pay sales tax Acculab 440 1/2 off is too much! reg. $9900 limit $250 ea. 1st 10 Acculab 440 JL 1/2 off is too much! reg. $9900 limit $250 ea. 1st 10 PIONEER 11 reg. $250 $18700 maxell ½ off is too much! LN-C-90 reg. $1'98 Dealers must pay sales tax SHURE 1/2 off is too much! reg. $24'50 The Snake 25' Headphone Extension Cord reg. $2'99 SHURE 1/2 off is too much! VOLTAGE SHURE 1/2 off is too much! reg. $24.90 The Snake 25' Headphone reg. Extension Cord $2.90 The Snake 25' Headphone reg. Extension Cord $2.00 LISTINGS RECEIVERS RECEIVERS AKA1 | AAA21 | 289.85 | 198.00 AKA1 | AAA21 | 289.85 | 198.00 Fleiber | BS-20 | 249.85 | 198.00 Fleiber | BS-20 | 249.85 | 198.00 Harmon/Kardion | HB-460 | 390.85 | 246.50 Harmon/Kardion | HB-460 | 390.85 | 246.50 Harmon/Kardion | HB-570 | 390.85 | 246.50 Harmon/Kardion | HB-570 | 390.85 | 246.50 Hitachi | ES-15 | 400.00 | 191.95 JVC | ES-17 | 400.00 | 191.95 JVC | ES-17 | 400.00 | 191.95 Kenwood | KE-710 | 350.00 | 188.88 Kenwood | KE-710 | 350.00 | 188.88 Kenwood | KE-725 | 359.85 | 220.88 Oshiya | TX-7400 | 295.85 | 290.88 Oshiya | TX-7400 | 295.85 | 290.88 Pioneer | SX4 | 280.00 | 189.88 Pioneer | SX4 | 280.00 | 189.88 Eantt | 828R | 320.00 | 128.88 Sony | STR VX3 | 330.00 | 128.88 Sony | STR VX3 | 330.00 | 128.88 Yamaha | R-300 | 200.00 | 248.88 Yamaha | R-1000 | 700.00 | 560.00 and many more deals SPEAKERS KIEF'S Acculab 220 125.00 **ee** 99.00 **ee** Acculab 320 175.00 **ee** 74.50 **ee** ADS L700 189.95 **ee** 130.00 **ee** ADS L-620 188.95 **ee** 129.00 **ee** Ades 4 248.00 **ee** 130.00 **ee** Ades 6 248.00 **ee** 129.00 **ee** Adesc 6-773 380.00 **ee** 250.00 **ee** BAO MS-150 (10000 **ee** 798.00 **ee** BAO MS-150 180.00 **ee** 130.00 **ee** Bose 301 323.00 **ee** 162.00 **ee** Bose 601 323.00 **ee** 162.00 **ee** Bose 238 170.00 **ee** 129.00 **ee** Infinity RSe 170.00 **ee** 118.00 **ee** Poll 5 150.00 **ee** 118.00 **ee** Poll 7 150.00 **ee** 118.00 **ee** Yamaha NS 8 160.00 **ee** 138.00 **ee** Yamaha NS-690III 400.00 **ee** 280.00 **ee** PLUS many more EMAIL ORDER TERMS 1. Payment in full with order 2. A 10% service charge for change or cancellation of order 3. Normal delivery time two to four weeks. We cannot respond immediately for availability 4. Normal delivery time one month 5. All orders are not subject to a warranty period. Mail order costs shall be incurred by the manufacturer and may include the customer's responsibility to transport his mail for a fee Disc Keeper ½ off $78.00 $38 GRAMOPHONE shop CH227 University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 Nelson's is celebrating with a gigantic End Of The Month Sale. Come join the party...and save up to 50%! T.G.F.O. Thank Goodness February's Over (well, almost!) ANGERZ. C++ // C++ function prototypes FC40E --- marantz PIONEER Pioneer Receivers digital readouts Des S349.95 Now $269.88 Marianz Receiver The SR-1000 25 watt receiver with power meters Rea$ 299.99 Now $199.88 The SX-5 3O watt receiver with digital readouts SAMSUNG The SX-6 45 watt receiver digital readouts $449.95 Now $349.88 FISHER Sony Receiver Marantz Faualizer The ST18-V4X 40 watt digital receiver receives Auto Sweep tuning. Memory Scan and has eight station presets It's the EQ-10 equalizer with 10 bands Reg $199.95 Now $149.88 A Marantz Deck with Dolby NR The $7.800 also has features like Tape EQ and Bias Control Reg $199.95 Now $149.88 Pioneer Cassette Deck The CT-7P cassette deck is Pioneer's top-of-the-line. Rea $495.99 Now $399.88 Panasonic 8-track deck The RS-856 completes your 8-track recording in 8-track recording capability. Rep. $19.99 $ Now $19.88 JEFFREY Pioneer Turntables PIONEER² Pioneer lumtables The PL-2 is a semi-automatic belt-drive with graphite arm RIA 5129.8 $Now 109.88 The Pioneer PL-7 is a quartz drive, fully automatic turntable with graphite arm. $149.88 maraniz. A Sonv Turntable The Pioneer PL-1800 is a quartz drive, fully automatic direct drive tangential tracking turntable with low mass graphite arm and cartridge Dau $49.99 Now $399.88 SONY Sony Speakers The exciting PS-X 600 Horizontal/Vertical Biotracer is Sony all the way! Reg. $399.95 Now $349.88 PIONECK The SSI-35 two-way speakers have an 8- woofer and are rated at 30 watts. Priced by the pair. Reg. $149.90 Now $129.88 PIONEER Fisher Home Speakers Fisher Home Speakers The $11.95 50w watt speaker is a 3 way with a 10" woofer The ST-920I a 90 watt 3-way speaker with a 12" wooster Ran $390.05 N$249.88 Pioneer Centuri Series Home Speakers The SP-1230 is a 200 watt 3-way speaker with a 12" wooster The Centun 8 is a 40 watt 3-way home speaker with an 8"ower (per pair) Reg. $339 90 Now $199.88 The 2200 features integrated ampere tuner, fully- automatic tunable stereo sounders and speaker monitors and audio jack Marantz The Pioneer Series Now S1095.00 Reg. $399.95 Now $269.88 Pioneer Syscom 4400 has 45 watts per channel stereo amplifier, preset tuner, direct drive turntable cassette deck and flip up and flap control controls. 3-way speakers and muku rock TREND MASTERING Now $1495.00 audio-technica. KOSS 2319 Louisiana Lawrence 841-3775 Panasonic Koss Headphones Koss Headphones The HV-X open-air phones feature dynamic drivers The KSP mini-phones are ultra lightweight HONDA SPECIAL EDITION 80-306 Now $34.95 SPEED CONTROL Now $69.95 Mini-Headphones Power MUSIC PROJECTION CENTER stereo phones Reg $29.95 Now $24.88 Bass speaker --- 1 Panasonic Headphones Try the EAX-S3 for private listening in the mini-camera category New $49.05 AT-Point Three Req S49.95 NowS44.88 Marantz 00 Car Stereo by Sanyo The FT-60 under dash mini cassette deck has auto-reverse, fast looking fast forward and more Now $49.88 Open Air Headphones The AT-ATH1 'Gram Cracker Phone Reg $29.95 Now$24.88 me FT-C6 AM/FM in dashcass mits fast foreign and small cars and has auto reverse, locking fast forward and rewind, autopreet reg $29.95 Now $99.88 phone category Now$44.95 The Sanyo FT-CEB AM/FM/ iDash cassette mounts either horizontally or vertically AMSS system and FF, auto reverse and more $129.88 Now PIONEER Sanvo FT-C12 in-dash AM/FM cassette with LED digital frequency and time display, FF resolution, SI9495 $Now$14.98 $N9495 Req. $99.95 Now $69.88 Reg $159.95 Now $129.88 CD-ROM The FT-C15 AM/FM in-dash cassette with Automatic Music Select System and advanced FM circuitry Stereo JENSEN 3.14159267 JACKETS JENSEN The FT-9 AM/FM cassette is an in-dash with reverse AUTO-reverse AMS and push button tuning. Reg S209 95 Now $169.88 SANYO NW Security Reg S179.95 Now $179.88 Marantz in-dash Cassettes The CAR-322 AM/FM in-dash cassette in dash Cassettes The CAR-340 AM/FM in-dash cassette has Dolby NR, fast for- cassette New $240.88 - - - - - Jensen Boosters ward and rewind and more Reg $349.95 Now $329.88 The EQA-3000/34 watt. 5-band equalizer/booster Reg $79.95 Now $89.88 power booster Reg $99.95 Now $49.88 Concept Power Booster The EQ-B807OG 50 watt booster with 7 band equalizer Reg $19.95 Now $69.88 Equalizer/Boosters The AD-30 TO 30 watt, 5 band equalizer booster with three 2.4 GHz channels. Desk mount. $109.99. NOW $189.99. Pioneer The EQ-400 15 band para metric equalizer 50% off! Reg S12995 Now $64.88 The 50 watt AD-50 equalizer /booster with LED readouts Reg. $199.95 Now $198.78 JENSEN Small Car Speakers marcanlz Sanyo SP-40.4" 30 watt coaxial speaker with 8 oz. magnet Reg $59.95 Now $49.88 Sanyo SP-709 4" 10. watt speaker with 5 oz magnet Reg $29.95 Now $19.88 8 master charge Limited to in-store stock. Some items may not be displayed in all stores. JENSEN JENSEN BASIC SAFETY TECHNOLOGY VISA* O marantz Now $119.88 S Jensen J-1279 6%' 75 watt trai- tal speaker with 16 oz. magnet $149.95 Now $74.88 Car Speakers SANYO CAR SPEAKERS Jensen J-1201/50 watt 16 oz 6 1/2" coaxials 100 O Marantz SS-825 6" 6O watt 3-way speaker with 20 oz magnet *reg $19.99 Now$59.88 BOOMBOX The Sanyo SP-412A 30 watt speaker speaker with 15 oz magnet phone number With $79.88 Reg $99.95 Now$79.88 The Jensen J-1130 5O watt triaxial speaker Ric$19.95 Now $149.88 The Marantz SS-169 60 watt speaker with 20 oz. magnet Reg $79.95 Now $99.88 Sanyo SP-758/55" x 7" front load coaxial Reg $6.995 Now $49.88 VOLKSWAGEN Marantz SS-649 60 Watt 4-way speaker with 20 OZ, magnet Reg $139.95 Now $79.88 Sanyo SP-778 30 watt triaxial speaker with 20 oz magnet Reg. S109-95 $Now $89.88 PIONEER Jensen J-I037/1OO watt 6" x 9" coaxials Reg I29.95 Now $99.88 A Panasonic 'Walkma ELECTRONIC BOOKMARKING SYSTEM M the 99829 AM/FM stereo cassette has AMSS system, LED meters adjustable carrying strap, much more $22988 1012537879147 Sanyo Portable Stereos The M-9975 AM/FM cassette recorder/player with 2-way speakers Rep $249.95 Now $199.88 A Panasonic 'Walkman' The RQ-J6 mini-cassette recorder with mini phones. Reg $19.759 Now $159.88 Panasonic. INFORMATIONAL CALCULATOR Pandora 100% The RP-5445/AM/FM portable radio with HI/O tone control Req $39.93 Now$29.88 Panasonic The Ultimate Portable from Pioneer CARRERAUTOS S.A. DE C.V. 0912673485011 E-MAIL: info@carrerautos.com TEL.: 0912673485011 FAX: 0912673485011 The RC-M70 JW/M/FM cassette portable with Hi- Power and 220 capability power supply $390.80 4' speakers Reg. $99.95 Now $39.88 SONY- JVC Portable Cassettes The RC-MoO-JM/A/MF/MM The RC-MoO-JM/A/MF/MM Hi-Power and 220 capability (reg $49.50) $49.889 MD The RM-5I-100 has wake to buzzer alarm and more Reg $49.95 Now $39.88 PHONE·MATE t's the 5K-400 'low profile' AM/FM cassette stereo portable direct source selec- keyboard retractable keyboard retractable handle and mix can control reg $249.95 Now$229.88 Sanvo Clock-Radios AUTOVIDEO The IMM-0321 has wake to music alarm Reg $39.95 Now $19.88 Parasanic Clock-Radio The RC-55 features "button, buzzer alert and more" Reg $4.49 Now $9.88 SAMSUNG Specialty Calculators by Texas Instruments The Business card model with reg $49.95 Now $29.88 The Investment Analysis 8-digit CDC's memory stores data reg $49.95 Now $54.88 reg $49.95 The Ti-551l has 10 user-access memories & is programmable New $44.88 Panasonic The TI-58C has over 17O functions and up to 60 memories with 48O program steps Printing Calculators The JE-1830P portable printing/display calculator Reg $92.95 Now $49.88 Panasonic JVC The JE-18OIP portable printing/display calculator Req $9.95 Now $59.88 Panasonic. The JE-182OP IO digit desktop display and printing calculator Reg. $19.99 Now $69.88 The JE-2812 P 12 digit desktop printing/display calculator Reg. S199 95 Now $79.88 VICOM Panasonic Calculator An inexpensive 12 digit desk Jet-2634U features full display Reg $99.95 Now $34.88 PhoneMate telephone Answers The 920 with C-VOX feature and 2 cassette capability Reg $19.95 Now $149.88 The 905 with 1 cassette and remote Reg $199.95 Now $149.88 the '930 with deluxe V-COX feature and remote Reg $299.95 Now $219.88 The 925 with 2 cassettes and remote Reg $239.95 Now $179.88 Radar Detector The Speedmatic Speedi- has transmitter and horn Reg $379.90 Now $199.88 Sony Video Casette Recorder The SL.500 BETA VCP has 5 speed, capability and Forward Scanning Reg $1295 Now $795.00 Panasonic VUS Video VHS Video Cassette Recorders The PV-1300 Records up to 6 hours New $24.99 Reg. $1195 Now $795.00 The PV-1400 has multiple day programming and records up to 6 hours. Reg. S2195 Now $895.00 JVC Video The HR-6700V VHS video cassette recorder is programmable and records up to $99.15 Now $95.90 Panasonic Projection TV the CT-6000A 60" projection TV Now $2495 The CT-45DOCA 45" projection TV Reg $3495 Now$2822.71 NELSON'S TEAMELECTRONICS Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 Never hurts to look During the next two weeks, some KU student leaders will take a long-overdue look at KU's membership in the Associated Students of Kansas. KU joined ASK, a statewide student lobbying group, in 1978. Since that time, Student Senate has dutifully allocated money to pay the annual membership fee—$14,522 last year—and, in the opinion of some senators and Senate officials, has not seen or heard much in return. The evaluation, conducted by David Adkins, student body president, is the first organized effort by KU's student leader to gauge the group's effectiveness. Adkins and David Welch, student body vice president, will contact legislators, lobbyists, administrators, students and ASK's past and present leaders to collect information about the lobby's past performance. They will also ask the group's current directors to outline ASK's future goals. The Student Senate will then use the evaluation to determine if continued membership in ASK is a wise investment of student activity fee money. The evaluation may prove, as ASK leaders say, that the group is a valuable student voice in Topeka. Or it may show that the money spent on ASK could be better used elsewhere. Whatever the outcome, the evaluation is a responsible move to investigate concerns expressed by some students over the use of their money. Even if nothing is wrong, it won't hurt to take a look. Graffiti writing a dying art on walls of KU's campus My first memory of graffiti (although I didn't know that what it was called until several years later) is a visit to the restroom during my second year of grade school. A friend of mine gasped and pointed to a four-letter word carved into the wooden bathroom stall. I gassed up, but only because I didn't want Sharla to know that I didn't know why she was gasping. I sure was I hadn't seen the word in our "Dick and Jane" reader_however. So, I painstakingly memorized every letter recently recited them to my mother at lunch. She gasped too. She gasped too. Since then I've read a lot of bathroom walls and my four-letter reading vocabulary has expanded remarkably. But graffiti (the expression comes from the Italian word for scratching), has undergone a lot of changes. About the time I was reading my first graffiti, the art of graffitit had a great surge of popularity. TERESA RIORDAN A. M. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. psychiatrist's report concluded that people heeded to the urge to write graffiti for one of five a) to prove themselves ("Betas are gods") b) to be inconclastic ("Hugh Hefner is a" **conclusive** c) to sexually excite others ("wanted: passionate female") passive remote d to communicate an opinion ('KU is a hole in one') e) to be humorous ('If the opposite of pro is con, then the opposite of progress must be correct') Unfortunately, today we have an abundance of category "c." Most of KU's writing on the wall resembles what I found in my grade school exercise. Except it goes into more explicit detail. In fact, the most profound graffiti I've found during my three years at the University of Kansas was one that said: "A college kid's vocabulary consists of two words: I*** and J***." What ever happened to the classics of the '70s, such as: "To do is to be—Nietzsche Do be do be do—Sinatra Do be a do bee—Miss Romper Room Do be or not do be—Hamlet with a cold Do me do me do me - Linda Lovelace. Or bits of practical profundity, such as: "I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy." or social comment on issues such as Vietnam: "News overseas, or what father should be." Perhaps the best graffiti of that era came in the form of graffitico commenting on the graffiti. "If I get her the wool will she make me one too?" "My mother made me a homosexual." Instead of such irreverent insights, precious wall space at KU is cluttered with obscenities about dormins, obscenities about Greeks, obscenities about apartment dwellers, obscenities about professors and obscenities about life in general. However, a few glimmers of rationality and even cleverness do manage to shine through all "Support your right to arm bears—Smokey the R." And a few KU grafficiandos have mastered the art of graffiti comment: "Pot has power "Pot has power It's a magical wood. It's a magical weed Fills my eyes with lust And greed And greed. Wish you could know Wish you could know the depth of my need? "I also apologize if this poem you read." But the walls around Lawrence yield little more than boring repetitions of names, clumsy pornographic drawings and roughly rhymed poetry. "There ain't no bones in ice cream." Graffiti writing has regressed so much recently that it's hardly worth going to the bathroom, or the study cubicle, as the case may be. Graffiti is an art form that dates back to Pompeii. The 60s and the 70s brought us a long way from "Kilroy was here" and "Yankee go home." A quick study of the library walls indicates that this decade is the Dark Age of graffiti writing. It's time that we picked up our pens and took to the walls for a graffiti Renaissance. IT'S FLOORED NOW... ARE WE MOVING?... New amendment blitzes free speech This is a story of a congressman with commises in his constitutency, the law he wrote to force them off their jobs, and the rights of free speech we lost in between. Caution: This tale could upset those who've ever questioned our system of government and said so out loud. Before discussing this column, check your tongue and ears nearby. Now, story hour: Dorothy and Allen Blitz live in the small mining town of Martinsville, Virginia. Dorothy used to work for the Budd Company. Company. Allen worked for Stanley Furniture. In the summer of 1980, the Blitzes drove to Greenbens to demonstrate peacefully against the Ku Klux Klan. Two cartridges of Klansters, one in a bulletproof vest and another opened fire, and killed five of the demonstrators. The next day the Blitzes went to work as usual only to find that they'd both been fired. The problem, you see, was that the demonstration was sponsored by the Communist Workers Party. Dorothy is a member and her husband sympathizes with the party. Evidently, even communists have to eat, and the Biltz enrolled in a job training program at Patrick Henry Community College. The two each earned $1.30 an hour for the 35 hours a week they spent learning carpentry and brick masonry. The federal government paid their salary through what remains of the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act. In November, the news that Uncle Sam had two Communists on the payroll reached the top of his mind. The next day he rose on the House floor, flaming as if the Blitzes had doused George Washington's teeth in gasoline and ignited them. Daniel promised to sponsor legislation to "prevent the employment of such persons" in CFTA programs. vocate the violent overthrow of the federal Government or a war within the past five years. The measure he concocted would bar spending CETA funds on "individuals who publicly ad Due to a sluggish Congress, Daniel had to wait until October, 1981 to push for his proposal. His bill the Blitz Amendment, was probably the most blatant affront to free speech offered seriously on the house floor in decades. The House responded by passing it unanimously, as did the Senate. President Reagan signed it. The Blitz Amendment is now law. Here, where the story ends, a few of our rights begin to look a little sickly. Today, any one of the 4 million people in CETA positions can lose their pavements and their PETER BROADWAY JEFF THOMAS changes for a better job tomorrow only by speaking the right wrong words. Or should that be the wrong right words? Evidently, that is the point of view, which is the trouble with the law. The Blitz Amendment is a frank prohibition of expressing certain beliefs. Only words, with no action behind them, are necessary to raise the government'sire. ...jumping restrictions on speech, the Supreme Court has consistently distinguished limits on expression from those on action. Generally, the rule of no jumping is not a set of actions against the government, but not words. Justice Louis Brandside wrote in the 1927 case Whitney v. California that "even advocacy of violation by the law" is not a justification for enforcement of the law. The Court emphasizes that speakers the freedom to call for violations of The Court has left us free to talk of storming the White House, say, until we strap on the bus and go home. law, unless the government can prove that the government can pass a bill to assault the government and subject itself to law. Under the Court's rulings, the Biltitz creature should collapse. Thanks to Daniel's Amendment, a CETA worker doesn't have to arm himself, reach for his son's pellet gun, or even load a sling shot to lose his position. All he needs to do is speak up. Putting into belief what has become private Of course, the Blitz Amendment should be fought as the assault on free speech that it is. It comes up for renewal on March 31 and already has been approved again by the full House and a Senate committee. The last chance to stop Blitz II will he on the Senate floor. But beyond the First Amendment worries, there's more to the fiasco. Daniel has given us an unfortunate opportunity to glimpse some of the stuff Americans are evidently made of. The view Is what Daniel saying much different from what the Department of Labor is saying today? Hardly. The minds in both governments are narrow, fearful of opposing views. The only difference is the convictions the men hold dear; the treatment of criticism is frighteningly similar. In 1938, the chief Soviet prosecutor of his day, Andre Vishinsky, wrote: "In our state, naturally, there is and can be no place for freedom of speech, press, and on for the foes of Americans have no monopoly on open minds. The most we can do is to keep our own house clean, to safeguard our freedom of expression. For now that means flushing the Blitz Amendments, which impose new rules on this country won't be much of anything special but if we forget about the right to say otherwise. Pot Shots Newspapers have a reputation for only reporting bad news. "You only read depressing stories about the stingy Legislature, irate faculty and worthless student organizations," exclaim the Kansas's critics. "Isn't there anything positive to be said?" Yes, yes, yes is the answer. And after almost three semesters as a crepe-hanging Kansan edition columnist, I feel compelled to spread a little sunshine. Therefore, here are my nominies for the first (and probably last) 'What's Swell About KU Award,' which I will appropriately call the "Burial:" - The KU operators. 864-2700 at any hour, and a courteous and helpful person will davidchenny cheerfully give you the needed number. Unlike Bell Telephone operators, who usually act as if you're doing them the favor, a KU operator will unfailingly check every possible spelling. If the object of your romantic desire is a girl, these women are worth their weight in gold. - The University Arts Festival. In the course of four weeks, a world famous flutist, string quartet, theater troupe and soprano will have performed at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill own fine arts departments are presenting top class exhibitions and performances. - The view of the Kaw River Valley from the main floor of the Spencer Research Library. The panorams is spectacular and, in particular, a perfect place to visit after reading a newspaper. Sometimes I still feel it. My neck tingles a bit, and the hands quiver. The sting came when my last "CS" project wouldn't run. And then it still wouldn't run. In fact, the computer offered me a list of my program's syntax errors, those button pushes magnified by the electronic hum that kept my commands from being understood. The inadequacies were hammered home in milliseconds. The Honeywell 66/60 dared tell this Jayhawk that one of his was a fatal error. That's PASCAL for tragic flaw. Othello, Creon and others, likewise. Was my error (read flaw) a failure to grasp the parlance that seemed cotton candy for classmates? Maybe it was something about me, a deeper error. Maybe I shouldn't say. In the white-lit, accomunal Fraser Hall terminal room, while the lucky frolicled outside in the warm sun, I fell. My display screen could only tempt with the solace of a "Temporary escape" to a different mode, but you always have to go back. Satt Jant I have some extra tickets for the computer bandwagon I'd like to sell -cheap. No one's buying though, and why should they be? I paid for them, so I must make the runs. There are other data files to read, other "if then" conditions to test. People, this computer stuff is good—a new literacy. I warn against it, however, because now self-discovery is plug-in and painful. Remember that a computer can't be your friend. Please don't sign on. A lot of us folks have about it with the nambay-pamby, bleeding heart liberals who oppose increased defense spending. Who do they think are they? I'll tell them. They're Americans, that's who, and they ought to measure up. Listen, it's tough all over, but someone's got to make the scarfise necessary to keep the Communists scared. The more bombs we have, the safer we are. They sob. "But people are out of work and need the money more than the Pentagon." Ours is a country built around the concept of strength. And strength, as any red-blooded Tom Bontgen Yankee Doodle will point out, means raw physical power, not the use of the muscle, maudlin's right hand. The U.S. of A. didn't get to be No. 1 by looking out for anybody but No. 1. Besides, our president only asked for an extra $33 billion for next year, which is not very much at all if you look at it properly. Those unemployed will probably get jobs when the next war starts, anyway, so why are they complaining? The hallmark of our great nation is that it uses its wealth wisely, to create ever more complex, efficient, awesome—and yes, intelligent instruments of destruction, all for its own good. Letters to the Editor To the Editor: Punk music vehicle of rebellion Although the heart of punk music is with the lower class, punk has also become a vehicle of rebellion for the middle class in this country. In my opinion, the middle class has much to complain about the implications of punk on the front page of the Feb. 15 University Daily Kansas. The middle-class society that I grew up in seemed to perpetuate an apathetic, anti-involvement and general negative attitude toward life—a don't-think-for-yourself, don't-trock-the-boat, don't-express-disenchantment attitude. This type of society breeds unhappy, obtuse individuals who have few positive feelings For me, the American pseudo-punk, which has continued to thrive in this country despite the death of core English punk, represents the efforts of young Americans to destroy the mediocrity which has made them unhappy. At response to the world, these people are trying to rouse themselves from the most treacherous and sense-numbing nightmare of all—mediocrity. Judy Wart, Lawrence senior A logical move To the Editor: Now might be a good time for the University of Kansas to think once again about moving Uncle Jimmy to the law school. From what I know of it, the attorney general stopped the move of the statue in 1978 because of historic preservation laws. Walking to class the other day, I looked at and started thinking about the Jimmy Green statue. It seems rather silly that he sits in front of a building—Lippincott Hall—that no longer bears It seems logical that what is most important to "preserve historically" is the memory of the founder of the law school. If the statue sits much higher than without a law school, that memory will be lost. Darcy Bouzeos, Oak Brook, Ill., senior The University Daily KANSAN The University Daily (USPS $654) #Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July on Saturday, Sunda and Tuesday on Friday. Subscriptions are $15 for each month or $625 for 6048 subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $35 year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $13 per month. Postmaster; Send changes of address to the University of Kansas, 120 Fifth Floor, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66803. Editor Business Manager Vanessa Herron Natalie Julian Manager Managing Editor Tracey Hamilton Campus Editor George Campbell Campus Editor George Campey Campus Editor Joe Rebeen, Reece Campey Assistant Campus Editors Joe Rebeen, Reece Campey Assignment Editor She Robren Entertainment Editor Gerry Stirring Associate Sports Editor Luis Massee, Coral Beach Entertainment Editor Sharon Aperium Retail Joe Manager Hairtowerer National Sales Manager Howard Shalkynow Sales Manager Larry Caddison Certified Manager Larry Caddison Ticketmaster Agent John Egan Retail Sales Representatives John Bam, Retail Sales Representatives Susan Cooksey, John Bam, Retail Sales Representatives Jeri Grentz, Amy Jones, Mather Langan, Philippine Myers, Robin O'Donnell, Kaburry Myers, Mike Mauney Stephan Jawed, Jane Wendrert Salary Marketing Attorney Natalie Julian News Advisor Job O'Brien* the ent ing the ure nre elf, ising isme be it idy aiz esan new ay, te, ean of on y? only agly ds. on. nil if University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 Page 5 Budget From page 1 Shrinkage is the amount withheld from the salary budget to allow for employee turnover. A salary savings results when a position is vacant for a period of time, and a replacement is hired. THE COMMITTEE voted to keep shrinkage at 2 percent. Carlin proposed increasing shrinkage from 2 percent to 3.5 percent. This means that out of every $1 million of salary funds, a school receives $80,000. Under Carlin's recommendation, a school would receive $65,000 out of every $1 million of salary money. Hess said the committee recommended a "flat rate" of 7.5 percent to give administrators more choices in hiring school members. He said it was important to give schools as much flexibility as possible. "They can hire new faculty, or not hire them and pay the others more," he said. But Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, suggested an "enrichment fund" to provide more money for those areas with a high market value. "I feel very strongly about an enrichment he said, "I think we should pursue it pluggedly." He said the fund would be allocated to the board of Regents, and each school would make the same budget. Doyen said he would have details of the amount of an enrichment fund for the committee. The committee voted to approve most of the recommendations for the Rangers budget. These were - a 6 percent increase in the operating expenses budget, or $12,000 for KU. The Regents asked for an 11 percent increase, or $1.5 million for KU. and KU. - a 12 percent increase in utility expenditures. This will be an increase of $80,498 for KU, KU-6 and KU-7. The governor recommended an 8.75 percent increase in student salaries, raising the minimum hourly wage from $3.35 to $6.99. The committee did not make a decision on student salaries, when it agrees to wait until Monday or Tuesday, when it takes final action on faculty salary increases. Africa From naze 1 black man," Gumbi said, "I am 40 years old, now, but I will always be a boy in South Africa. "My father was a boy. My grandfather was a boy. In South Africa, you have to be told who you are." Gambwi saw his wallet before the committee and said it held an important document in his hand. He asked the committee to send it. "It tells me where I must be born, where I must live, which school I must attend, who I must marry, where I must reside and where I must get a job," he said. BABACAR TOURE, a graduate student from Senegal, in west Africa, agreed that South Africans were beginning to look toward the Soviet Union for help. Gumbi said that American transactions with the minority leadership in South Africa were "driving the black man into the arms of the Russians. "You are going to lose all the investments you have in South Africa," he said. Other states that have partially or entirely invested funds from South Africa are California, Colorado and New Mexico. Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Oregon and Wisconsin, as well as the District of Columbia, according to Gall Morrison, an associate of the American Committee on South Africa. Spencer From page 1 In her will, Mrs. Spencer left $3.1 million in her will and $50,000 in foundation in Kansas City, Mo., will receive $200,000. In 1949, she and her husband founded the Kenneth A. and Helen F. Spencer Foundation and began dispersing millions of dollars to artists and art groups throughout the Midwest. Mrs. Spencer financed the Kenneth A. Spencer Memorial Lectures in 1960, the Kenneth A. Spencer Memorial Chapel on the University of Kansas Medical Center campus in Kansas City, Kan., and donated her home in Mission Hills as a host to the executive vice chancellor of the Red Center. Backpack From page 1 ALTHOUGH IT MAY be of little comfort to a KU student who must lug an eight-pound biology book to class, soldiers in World War II, suffered similar shoulder pain caused by knapsacks, or "rucksacks", according to Carole Zebas, director of Kinesiology/Biomechanics Lab and associate professor of Health, Physical Education and "A lot depends on how long the pack is worn and how far," she said. Zebas conducted a study two years ago that analyzed the various effects that occur when people wear backpacks while walking on different surfaces. "The initial results show that when you wear a backpack, your pelvis rotates forwards." She said when the pelvis rotated forward, the shoulders were drawn back and the head was turned. dropped off the SHE SAID students who wore their backpacks on one shoulder risked posture problems. WHAT'S THE WORLD COMING TO! Male Strippers Mud Wrestling Julian X-Rated Movies Burlesq AND NOW MINGLES ANNOUNCES ITS ppers Burlesque MINGLES CES ITS T Wingles Friday Night 95' Well Drinks from 8:00 to 12:00 Saturday Night 2 for 1 from 8:00 to 12:00 FRIDAY NIGHT SHRIMP PEEL ONLY $1.50 PER 1/4 POUND SPECIAL DRINK PRICES 4 PM-8 PM RATED: XXX TREMELY GOOD NO CAMERAS PLEASE! MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE MINGLES LOUNGE 2222 W. 6th St. Lawrence, Ks. 842-7030 Ext. 136 SYMPOSIUM THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS PRESENTS PERFORMANCES OF NEW MUSIC 10:00 M. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 7 UNIVERSITY THEATRE 12:30 & 8:00 M. NONDIA MARCH SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL FEB.28 MAR.12-3 MURPHY HALL UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 10:30 A.M. & 8:00 M. TUESDAY, MARC 2 SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL 10:30 A.M. & 2:30 & 8:00 M. WEDNESDAY, MARC 3 SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL Aths Festival ALL EVENTS ARE FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC THE A MUSGRAVE GUEST COMPOSER IN-ROOM MOVIES * WATERBEDS * MIRRORS AIRPORT MOTEL 24-40 Hwy 843-9803 HEARVEST RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine IN THE MARKET LAS LOS ANGELES - 817-529-6400 - W. NORTH ST. Fertilize Your Lawn Prevent Crabgrass Use ferti-lome Crabgrass Preventer Plus Lawn Food NOW! Only $9.95 5000 Sq. Ft. All ferti-lome Products available at these locations THE GARDEN CENTER 15TH AND NEW YORK 843-2004 GARDEN CENTER WEST 914 WEST 23RD ST. 842-1598 ferti-lome CRABGRASS PREVENTER Plus Lawn Food The World is Here This Weekend! First Annual Saturday Noon-6p.m. Sunday Noon-5p.m. South America Travel Show '82 Cruises Skjine Europe Caribbean TGV Mexico Saturday Noon-6p.m. Sunday Noon-5p.m. South America Cruises Skiing Europe Caribbean TGV Mexico TRAVEL CENTER Southern Hills Center (in the Enclosed Mall) 1601 West 23rd Street Travel Show '82 After a long cold winter, it's time to think travel, make your summer vacation plans, or maybe just Get Away on a spring break fling. Travel movies will be shown throughout the show, so you'll know exactly what to expect on your trip. TWA, United, Continental, Ozark, Viasa Airlines, Amtrak & French National Railroads, Princess Tours, Passport Travel, Presley Tours, Johansen Royal Tours, Brendan Tours, Adventure Tours USA, Island Holidays Westtours and Cruises. Come Early — Enter & Win — Prizes Given Throughout Both Days KLZR Sun Rush, Grand Prize—Airfare Around the World and an Unlimited. Mileage Airfare Pass throughout the Continental United States. roundtrip Air Travel for Two from K.C. to Las Vegas from Continental Airlin - Roundtrip Air Travel for Two from Lawrence to Chicago via Amtrak * Roundtrip Travel for Two from Lawrence to Chicago via Amtrak - Luggage packed full of New Clothes from J. Michael's Department Store - Luggage packer package in Los Angeles from Passport Travel, Hawaii from Island Tours * Hotel stays in Las Vegas from Passport Travel, Hawaii from Island Tours - Replace from OU $200* * Travel Flight Bags — Travel Posters* $500 in Travel Gift Certificates - 8 Tickets to Waldo Astoria or Tiffony's Attic Dinner Playhouse Page 6 University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 Spare time KU's Mr. Rock Chalk IBAs still going strong By JEFF LEIGH Staff Reporter "Mr. Rock Chalk" has been "in the spotlight" for the past six years to help produce the longest running hit show on Jayhawk Boulevard. "I really enjoy making people happy by doing a good enjoyment," Beauford K. Woods, a Good Enjoyer. "The crowd's applause has always been the most gratifying reward for me. I've always had the desire to perform. I guess that's what got me interested in Rock Chalk." Woods, dubbed "Mr. Rock Chalk" by friends, has been involved with the annual KU revue for six years, and is now completing his seventh. Two of those years he was in the show itself, for three he headed the In-Between Acts, or IBAIs. He was also choreographer and director of the entire show. Although he has worked with virtually every aspect of Rock Chalk, Woods' true love is the IBAs. As a result of his interest and work, IBAs commonly changed since Woods took charge of them. "They are more professional now," he said. "The quality and material of the IBAs has gotten much better. The group has evolved from being a traditional talent show to a semi-professional team. "The whole reason I got involved with the IBAs was because of the frustration I felt watching this group of college students, knowing they needed some guidance." Guidance is exactly what Wools has given to the IBAs. "I have tried and changed many things with the IBAs over the years—with the hope of making the show the best it can possibly be." I'd like the IBAs to be shiny and electric—a real show, "Wools said." "Most of my ideas have come from past experiences. One summer I worked at Worlds of Fun, and I've been in many KU productions. I work with Chalk to be new and innovative." The KU-Y organization, which sponsors Rock Chalk, nominated Woods as one of America's Outstanding Students in 1976. And in honor of his dedication to Rock Chalk, he was presented a framed poster of the 1978 show at the final front of a capacity crowd at Hoch Auditorium. "It has been enjoyable participating in extracurricular activities at KU. "I've been involved with many organizations on campus--everything from marching band to residence hall government." Having gained much experience in his extracurricular work, Woods hopes to put that experience to work for his career. He plans and dreams of making it on Broadway. That dream almost became a reality last spring when Woods made it to the final call-back auditions of the hit show "Ain't Mis'behavin" in New York. "New York is where I've always dreamed of company or at other parks around the country." "I'd like to star in a show, of course, but I'd also enjoy directing or choreographing one," he said. Aside from being a singer, dancer, director and choreographer, Woods is also an actor. He has been in two movies: "Linda Lovelace for President" and "Suicide." Today, Woods is here in Lawrence, keeping his hopes alive of becoming a Broadway star. "I really look at life with a lot of hope," he said. "If people would work together like actors do on stage—then we would all end up with standing ovation." M. K. WILLIAMS Beauland Woods, known to friends as "Mr. Rock Chalk," supervise the dress rehearsal Wednesday night of the Rock Chalk Revue's In-Between-Acts entertainers. TRACEY THOMPSON/Kansan Staff Rock Chalk pleasant, but problematic BV KATHRYN KASE Staff Writer The 2nd annual Rock Chalk Revue opened at Hoch Auditorium last night and proved that an amateur variety show could be good entertainment. As always, the skirts relied upon inside jokes, daytime television rurs and bad puns for humor. But if it is remembered that the revue is an amateur show, the production can be enjoyed. Carrying the show were the In-Between Acts Players, whose exuberance got them much well-earned applause. The band also shone, playing the bass and snare, and elicited the one week of practice they had had. But this year's Rock Chalk has its low points, too. Last night's production was marred by missed lighting cues, a crochetty sound system and opening night jitters, which meant muffled lines and cardboard-stiff smiles. In fact, technical execution overall was well managed; last night was the first time the show had been run from start to finish without stoping. But the nature of these problems are such that the revue can only improve with repeat perusal. This is because it makes the performance technical crews. Overall, Rock Chalk isn't a way to spend an evening, and it keeps improving, it might be worth the $a-$aheader ticket price for the Saturday night performance. Speaking of Saturday night, that's the evening the best show will be announced. If last night was any indication, the Kappa Alpha Theta-Delta Upsion production is a strong contender for first place. Titled "Potion Predicament, or, Is Your Love Life on the Slide", the skirt combines a simple plot, good staging and creative costuming into an engaging performance. A close contender for first place is the Pi Beta Phi-Phi Gamma Delta's "Budig is in the Eye of the Beholder, or, Better Late than Neva" Designed as a spoof of Chancellor Gene A. Budig and facets of KU life, this act's highpoint is the "Steam Heat" number. The only weak spot in "Potion Predicament" was the "Workin' It" out musical number. The song's arrangement doesn't flatter the voice of Sally Hady, who plays Dr. Anita Goodman. But Voice 1 is much better when the cast, dressed as molecules, forms a chorus line, complete with Rocket-style sticks. Last night, the song didn't steam, but merely puffed, thanks to technical problems and a lack of music. however, which would make the whole skit more competitive. Good singing was no problem with the Beta Theta Pi-Chi Omega's "Beast of the Feast" skit. Scott Roulier and Grace Willing, who star in the song, sing a duet whose sound transcends the song's subject matter. Another positive factor is that their voices seemed suited to one another. "A Beast of a Feast," did its problems last night, though, perhaps with the same purpose. It showed lines and a general Review stiffness pervaded the performance, which wasn't helped when the wireless transistorized microphones did not work. The skit has promise, though, and could be a real contender if the cast Good choreography was the hallmark of the Sigma Ch-Gamma Phi Beta "An Exchange of Ways" skit. Their show began with a neatly executed dance number with just the right degree of restraint for a stock exchange, where the story is set. And it is the dancing that consistently makes the skirt look classy. Also of note is the closing song, which has lyrics that sound like a cross between an anthem for the business school and EAST STUDIO. Overall, the skirts are good, although their humor is a little trite. Several intended jokes were ignored by last night's audience, who at times seemed to tire of the continuous puns. But the IBA's had no such problem with audience response during a tribute to Duke Ellington called "Salute to the Duke." While the IBA's handy danced to some shimmy-and-rolls, the band let loose with Ellington's "It Don't Mean a Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing." Later in the evening, the IBA's introduced an audience sing-along to "Old MacDonald Had A Farm," and, surprisingly, the audience loved it, singing "E-I-e-i witho-ju." But the IBA's reached their peak with a number titled "One Mo' Time," which included songs from the Broadway show "Ain't Misbehavin'" Part of the credit for the IBA's success must go to the band, especially the trumpet section, which executed some wonderfully expressive solos. The band's only problem, and a small one, was the saxophone, which tended to become too enthusiastic and drowned out other musicians and the singers. on campus TODAY THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB THE UNDERGRADUATE BIOLOGY CLUB of the Sunflower Room of the Kansas University Latin American Solidarity and the Commission on the Status of Women will sponsor a panel discussion on "STERILIZATION ABUSE" at the Wisconsin State Fair in Madison, U.S., on the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. THE CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will sponsor a discussion on "The Search for Happiness" at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW THE SIMULATIONS GAMING GROUP will within two to four, m. to 4 p.m. in Corr II of the Kansas Union SUNDAY SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP will begin at the Sacred Clemente Christian Minister's Center, 1204 Irene Road. The Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center will sponsor a SUNDAY EVENING SUIPPER at 5:30 p.m. at the center. Square dancing will follow the meal. THE KU CIRCLE K CLUB will meet a 7 p.m. in 641 Mallot Hall. THE ALL-SCHOLARSHIP HALL CHRISTIAN SCHOOL GROUP will meet at 3:30 p.m. in Dunbar. Risbeck posters questionable as art form By SHAWN McKAY Contributing Reviewer Once delegated to the walls of countless student lodgings, the poster is now emerging as an art form. It has been removed from the category of decorative advertisement and placed in the millie of, somewhat less than limited, limited editions. Whether it can be accepted by the academic art world as desirable acquisitions for private and public collections has yet to be firmly decided. However, the poster exhibit at the Art and Design Gallery leaves the viewer with one impression—at least it's trying. "Posters by Phil Riskeck: A Fifteen-year Retrospective," chronicles the artist's fascination with the poster medium. Running through March 5, as a University Arts Festival event, the exhibit offers a look into Riskeck's promotional work for Colorado State University and community organizations. A GRADUATE of the University of Kansas, Risbeck uses his experience in the print and photographic media to his best advantage. He has created a pleasing juxtaposition of the real and the imaginary, the graphic and the painterly, and the classical and the abstract. This mixture demands the viewer's attention and captures one's interest. THE SUCCESS OF THE Riscke style can be seen in his design for the Rocky Mountain Dance Theatre Series. Here he has frozen the joy of dance into a flickering, sequence of moments—like the antiquated movodias that blured and blurred the individual movements. costumed artist, with poised palette and brush, is lost in the bright array of color that represents the artists' own imagination and creativity. Riabeck's feel for color and design can be felt in his poster for the GSU Art Faculty at University of Oklahoma. Arts Festival And, they have been popularized by the college students who have found them an economical way to decorate the stark walls of a dormroom or apartment. POSTERS HAVE INTERESTED collectors since the turn of the century. Posters designed by Toulouse-Lautrec were peeled off and placed on their way into impressive museum collections. No matter how striking or popular, the poster can hardly be placed in the categories of museum art, bookish illustrators and vestors. While available to a market similar to the ones catered to by popular engravers such as Durer and Rembrandt, there purpose is not to make artistic works available to the middle class. Their purpose is to sell an event that generates high diminishes soon after the last ticket is sold. One 1970 CSU graduate expressed the fondness of Risebuck's art on the college campus when he said, "I spent four years here and have only five Risebuck posters. Other students constantly 'ripped them off' before I could get to them." The choice of the Art and Design Gallery for the exhibitions residence reflects the view of the modern poster. It is relegated to the world of graphic design, and a number of tightly guarded artistic conceptions must be altered before it can be granted a home in a more traditional gallery like the Spencer Museum of Art. EVEN RISBEE ADMITTED. "Like it or not, the poster has a short informative life." Family Fun stressed at Spencer open house Clowns will give the children balloons, mimes will wander through the galleries, a harpist will set the tone and puppets will dance under the hands of Charlotte Mason, 1 N. Michigan St. Sally Hoffmann, coordinator of programs and visitor services at the museum said Wednesday. There will be something for everyone from 3-year-old to 83-year-old at the Spencer Museum of Art Sunday when the museum presents Family Fun Day. "It's kind of an open house in a lighthearted vein for people who have supported the museum." IT IS ALSO a way to introduce children to the art museum. Included in the program is a story teller, a "sharp eyes" tour and a treasure hunt with clues found from paintings in the galleries, all designed to get children acquainted with the museum. "We hope that it will be a pleasant and informative afternoon," Hoffmann said. "It's closer to an arts festival for children and with the activities that we have, you could find something interesting from three to four years of age on up." THE PROGRAM WILL begin at 2:00 p.m. and run until 4:00 p.m. Sunday and is free of charge. There will be a photographer at the museum to take pictures but there will be a slight charge for the pictures. Revue judging changed; show's tension reduced By JAN BOUTTE Staff Reporter The house lights dim, the curtain goes up, and the audience—except for ten people scattered throughout Hoch Auditorium—settle back for an evening of entertainment, Rock Chalk style. For the ten judges, however, the task of rating the productions has just begun. Although anonymous before the production, the judges are a bit conspicuous the night of the was chosen for the panel as a token audience member, Dereh said. Dreher and John Best, director of Rock Chalk, said that many students of judging had been tried for insulting the judge. LAST YEAR, judging was split between night performances, with five judges essentially With the Thursday night performance used to iron out any kinks in the acts, the groups should be ready for the judging Friday night. They will then have a Saturday night performance without 'They all have good seats, but they have flashlights, so it kind of gives them away.' Marthe Dreher, Rock Chalk producer performances, Marthe Dreher, producer of the Rock Chalk revue, said. "They all have good seats, but they have flashlights, so it kind of gives them away," she This year, the judges will cast their ballots for the categories after the Friday night performance. THE JUDGES ARE CHOSEN from different backgrounds. Drother said, but they all have one thing in common. "They all have seen a Rock Chalk at one time or another." she said. Dreber, Shawnee Mission senior, said that seeing a prior show was important because the judges needed to understand the spirit of Rock Chalk. This year's panel includes three out-of-town judges who participated in earlier interviews and are not affiliated with any of the fraternities or sororities involved. Two are KU students who do not belong to the participating houses and three are from the The tenth judge is a Lawrence resident who the strain and pressure of the competition, Best said. "Then they can go out Saturday night and just enjoy it." Best said. Another important reason for the change, Best said, was to avoid the delay of tailing the scores on the playoffs. "It's not a bad thing," he said. He said that the crowd should not be kept an hour after the last act, and that the wait put an unfair burden on the performers in between acts to keep the audience entertained. AWARDS WILL BE given for best overall production, best original song, best performers, best script, best production number and most effective use of sets and costumes. Dreher said that best actor and actress would be awarded on merit only, so the judges may decide there is not a best actor or actress in the four acts. To determine the best overall production, the judges rank each act on a 1-10 scale in five categories: precision, strength and performance; imagination and innovation; appeal and impact on the audience; music and choreography; and sets and costumes. Best just Bestorest an t an accts most build may the the per-peal beal and University Daily Kansan, February 20, 1902 Page / 7 Committee will decide future of recall petitions Members of a committee that completed a petition drive to force an election to recall Lawrence City Commissioner Tom Gleason will vote Monday night whether to submit the petitions. The election is necessary to determine whether committee volunteers are willing to campaign if a recall election is scheduled, Marnie Argersinger, a member of the group, the Lawrence Committee, said yesterday. The committee collected more than 4,000 signatures in response to the disclosure Feb. 6 that Gleason had written a letter asking Lawrence City Manager Buford Watson to resign or face the possibility of being fired. However, Gleason did not move to fire Watson after an evaluation of Watson's job performance last week. The committee circulated a petition that said Gleason had violated city law by acting unilaterally in writing the letter. GLEASON'S FAILURE to ask for Watson's removal has had no effect on the committee's decision to let their chairman be removed and a committee spokesman Fred Pence. "Gleason broke the law. That is the consequence." he said. Gleason was not available for comment. There were about 300 volunteers in all at the meeting. Persons in no manner might not be at the meeting. The meeting will be open to the public, but the time and place has not been set, he said. The 4,000 signatures collected exceeds the 3,760 needed. Pence said. Even if the committee votes not to turn in the signatures, it would not be the end of the committee, Argersinger said. The recall drive was organized by another group that included Pence and former Lawrence Mayor Ed Carter, but not the governor. Gleason wrote the letter, she said. "They had a small group who were meeting and looking for candidates for a year from now," she said. "We couldn't have organized without this group, so our knowledge there was not a group looking for something to pounce on." up and save ACADEMY CAR RENTAL a rental car for $8.95/day $60.00/wk $225.00/mo 25 FREE miles per day. 841.0101 808 W 24th offers exp. Feb. 19, 1992 Use Kansan Classifieds Get more out of your last 2 years of college. If for some reason you missed taking Army ROTC in your first two years of college, you can still take it in your last two. But only if you apply while you're still a sophomore. In order to make up for the years you missed, you'll have to attend a special camp in the summer before your junior year. You'll earn up to a tuition fee of $150 per program. You'll get a management experience. And you will get a commission as an army officer along with a college degree. SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE! TGIF at THE HAWK New Prices First Pitcher - Regular Price Refills 12.30 1.30 $0.50 1.30 2.30 $0.75 2.30 3.30 $1.00 3.30 4.30 $1.25 4.30 6.30 $1.50 It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK 1019 OHIO For more information call Captain Claudia Akroyd 203 Military Science Bldg. 864-3311 It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO CAMP JOBS CAMP SABRA OF THE ST. LOUIS JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTERS ASSOC. (located at Postonla available) Nurse, Counselors&Specialists- waterskiing sailing swimming tripping nit Heads. Interviewing: Monday, March 11 University Placement Center 223 Carruth, 8:30 am - 4:30 pm Contact: Bob Gummers PETER BROOKS You'll Love Our Style. Headmasters. 809 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas 66044 SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS AND SENIORS We will pay you over $1,000 per month for your last two years of college. ★ You have taken one year of calculus and one year of Physics. ★ You desire graduate level training in nuclear physics, chemistry, thermodynamics, radiological fundamentals and electrical engineering ★ Your academic performance is above average. Other benefits include a $3,000 bonus immediately upon entry into the program, a $3,000 bonus one year after graduation and a starting salary that is second to none. For details on how you can investigate this opportunity-contact BOB MILLER Navy Recruiting 2420 Broadway Kansas City, MO 64108 or call Toll free 1-800-821-5110 DOMINO'S PIZZA Weekend Special! DOMINO'S PIZZA Good on Friday. Sunday or Sunday only. Use this coupon toward mouthwashing pizza this weekend. Plus get 2 free cues of Pepa with any pizza purchase. No coupon necessary, just ask Hours: 4:30-1:00 Sun, Thurs 4:30-2:00 Fr & Sat 9:55 Our drives carry less than $10.00. Limited delivery area. We use only 100% real dairy cheese. $2.00 $2.00 off any 15 item or more pizza One dinner pie 9 p.m. (8) 300 Good Friday Saturday or Sunday only. Fast. Free Delivery Good at locations 1986/1601 DONINO S PIZZA FISK JUBILEE SINGERS THE SCHOLARSHIP GROUP MARCH 1, 7:00 P.M. Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont FREE Admission ponsored by: Executive Vice Chancellor's Office Office of Minority Affairs SUA KU Black Alumni Committee Plymouth Congregational Church PAPER BORDER BANDIDO CITY Dinners 2 3 Enchiladas Refried Beans & Spanish Rice 2.59 1.75 4 2 Enchiladas & 2 Tacos Refried Beans & Spanish Rice 3.20 2.15 3 Tacos Refried Beans & Spanish Rice 2.69 1.75 3 Taco, Enchilada & Tamale Refried Beans 2.69 & Spanish Rice 1.75 5 Taco, Tostad, Enchilada & Tamale Refried Beans & Spanish Rice 3.20 2.15 Burritos 1 Enchilada Sauce (spicy tomato sauce) 2 Chili Cream Gueso (cheese sauce) 3 Extra Cheese 4 Chill Texas Burrito with sour cream & black olives 2.89 1.39 2.89 1.89 3.09 1.69 3.09 2.19 2.68 1.64 2.74 1.94 3.08 2.14 3.08 2.44 Regular Burrito with sour cream & black olives 1.98 .79 1.98 .1.29 1.78 1.09 2.89 1.59 1.88 1.04 2.04 1.34 2.04 1.84 A La Carte Taco .25 .45 Soft Taco .25 .55 Toastade With Meat .79 .79 Taco Lover .25 .45 Enchilada .25 .45 Tamale .25 .45 Spanish Rice .25 .45 Refried Beans .25 .45 Hot Dog .75 .75 Chili .1,000 .75 Temple Spread .1,000 .1,29 Toastade .25 .45 Salads Super Salad .2.49 2.19 Taco Salad .1.49 .99 Guacamole Salad .1.49 1.09 Extras Chips and Cheese .1.49 1.09 Cheese Nacho .85 .45 Chill Con Queso Dip .1.49 .99 Gucamoe Dip .1.49 .99 Beverages Soft Drinks Coke, Spite, Mr. Pibb, Tab small reguler large phaser .25 .35 .45 1.50 Beer draught .40 .40 .picter-2.00 .40 .40 .1.50 load Tea Coffee Milk .35 .25 .25 .30 1528 W. 23rd across from the post office 842-8861 MASS. STREET DELI in 941 MASSACHUSETTS The Deli Reuben Hot Corned Beef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut, Served on Cottage Rye or Russian Rye Served with potato chips and a dill pickle spear. $2.50 Reg.$3.50 Offer good Wed. thru Sun. Feb. 24-28. No coupons accepted with this offer Page 8 University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 Senate objects to cuts By ANN LOWRY Staff Reporter The Student Senate last night passed two resolutions, objecting to President Reagan's budget cuts and to the student campus privilege fee, as well as a petition calling for a change in the Senate code. The budget cuts resolution stated Senate's objections to cuts in Guaranteed Student Loans, Pell Grants, campus-based aid such as Supplemental Education and Supplemental Education Week-Study Grants and grants under state matching grants, graduate fellowships, veterans' benefits and Social Security benefits. He said that Jerry Rogers, KU director of financial aid, had said Reagan's proposed cuts could drastically crunch financial aid at KU. THE RESOLUTION will be sent to Kansas' two senators and five representatives in Washington, D.C. 1 the student campus privilege fee resolution stated that the Senate objected to the $4.50 that students involuntarily paid to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation to support intercollegiate athletics. John Keightley, KU Associated Students of Kansas campus-director, said that 14,000 KU students paid for his leadership education with financial aid medical. The resolution also stated the We Know Why You Ride We Know Why You Ride Horizons HONDA Parts, Sales & Service 1811 W. 6th 843-3323 Senate's desire to promote good relations with the new athletic director and the student body by establishing an athletic department and an athletic department officials and faculty. enough four students serve on the KUAC board, the resolution stated that the Senate opposed the manner in which the campus privilege fee was instituted without an effective solicitation of student opinion. In other business, the Senate voted to endorse a letter that the Graduate Student Council intended to send to legislators protesting Reagan's cuts in budgets for graduate and professional school student loans. In a letter to the Senate, Tom Berger, executive coordinator of the GSC, said, "There is no realistic possibility that our program would be replaced by state or private funds." Before the meeting adjourned, Keighley gave cards to all senators to fill out with their home addresses, state representatives and districts. Keightley said that when ASK received news of issues affecting students, it would send informational letters to KU senators from certain districts so they would know about issues and write to their congressmen. Trailridge Studios, Apts., Townhouses 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 The petition to amend the Senate code, which now will go to the University administration, asked to allow members of the Senate to serve three successive terms on the University Council. The code now allows senators to serve only two terms. Bring in your Rock Chalk ticket stub after the show and get a free draw. GAMMONS GAMMONS FREE BEER AFTER ROCK CHALK! The Lawrence City Commission passed the fee ordinance to pay for a storm water runoff study by Burns & McDonnell of Kansas City, Mo. KU students who are registered to vote in Lawrence may be asked to decide whether they want to pay a fee or water fee when water费 with their water bill. for a Better Government Committee. A group of Lawrence citizens, which includes KU students, collected 2,000 signatures to force a lawsuit against the定理 that would impose the fee. Group calls for referendum on storm water runoff fee The city doesn't need a study by a firm from outside Lawrence, said E.R. Zook, a member of the Citizens The group turned in the signatures to the county clerk yesterday, Jeff Freeman, chairman of Citizens for a Lower Government Committee, said. "I don't believe that a town 128 years old doesn't know where the water runs, and I don't know why someone from outside of town to tell us." Use Kansan Classifieds A judge declared the fee invalid because it was not published twice by the city and there was not a 60-day protest period. Public opposition to the fee began when Zook sued the city last August to protest the ordinance that imposed the fee. The city commission responded by passing a second ordinance that goes into effect March 8 unless the county clerk finds that the group has submitted 1,138 valid signatures, Freeman said. Applications for Student Senate Spring '82 Budget Hearings Now Available in Senate Office Deadline for group application: 1 March at 5 p.m. (no late applications accepted) Offer good 4 p.m. to close Cash only Buy one dozen Rolls or Donuts and get one dozen No phone orders Carol Lee Donuts 1730 W. 23rd Open 5 a.m.-6 p.m. M-F FREE! 5 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat.-Sun. Pabst Blue Ribbon. Pabit Blue Ribbon Pabit Blue Ribbon VALID ID CARDS Instantly laminated. Color available at I - DENL.SYSTEMS Room 114A Ramada Inn. 841-5905 © 1962 Publ Brewing Company Milwaukee Wisconsin A MESSAGE FOR YOU After a real thrilling first date... cuddle up with the real taste of beer. ken's bizzza 843-7405 27th & Iowa Lawrence FREE PIZZA FREE COUPON Clip this coupon. redeem at any Ken's Place or When you buy one Ken's Plaza you will receive the next size smaller of equal value FREE. No Charge On Carry Out Orders Void With Other Promotions Offer expires March 4, 1982. Other express march 4, 1862. Ken's Offers You More For Less 30¢ Refills on any size soft drink $1.20 Refills on pitcher of soft drinks An Everyday Special drink offer good on dine-in only. Dr Pepper The World is Coming... Travel Show '82 This Weekend! Saturday Noon-6 Sunday Noon-5 You're going to like us Europa EUROPE THE MIDDLE EAST TWIL EGYPTIAN REUNION MELAND TWIL EGYPTIAN REUNION HOWLANDS TWIL EGYPTIAN EUROPE TWIL EGYPTIAN THE LOST PAST TWIL EGYPTIAN EUROPE TWIL EGYPTIAN GREECE PAPERBACK EDITION EUROPE GREECE Southern Hills Center (in the Enclosed Mall) 1601 West 23rd Street TRAVEL CENTER Feb.27th & 28th NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA AND VIDEO GAME CENTER All New All New TURBO is Here All New Present This Coupon And Receive Two FREE VIDEO GAME PLAYS Expires 2/28/02 Limit one coupon per person The No. 1 Race Car Game COUpon COUPON1 Present This Coupon COUPON Present This Coupon And Receive And Receive ANY SIZE PIZZA $1.00 OFF Expires 2/18/07 Limit one coupon per person COUPON Regular Pizza Prices LARGE Double Cheese '4.95 MEDIUM Double Cheese '3.95 SMALL Double Cheese '2.95 TINY Double Cheese '1.95 Additional Meat or Garden Topping 75' ea. 65' ea. 55' ea. Large Medium Small 45' ea. Tiny OPEN DAILY 10 a.m.-11:45 p.m. SUN. Noon-11:45 p.m. No other Coupons accepted with this Offer ENJOY Coke Enjoy Coke University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 Page 9 Page 9 Seniors offered discount for alumni membership The board of directors of the University of Kansas Alumni Association last week approved a special alumni membership rate to be offered to graduating seniors. Accredited alumni, the University of Kansas Alumni Association secretary-brewer. "For each membership sold, $2 will be given to the 1982 class gift fund," Wintorme said. He said the annual membership fee was regularly $20, but said it would be $12.50 for KU graduates for the first year. Wintermorte also said the Alumni Association board nominated six people to run for three of its five-year positions. He said they were LaVerne Fliss, Johnson; Walter Hierstierer, Fairway; Dorothy Wohlgemuth Lynch, Salina; Richard Shields, Russell; Judith Duncan Stontan, Prairie Village; and John Trombrol, Solana Beach, Calif. DURING APRIL and early May, paid members of the Alumni Association will vote by mail on these nominees and others who might be nominated by petition, Wintermote said. Election results will be announced at commencement, and the winners will take office July 1. Wintermute said Fiss was both a lawyer and farmer in Johnson. Fiss, he said, was also a past president of the City Development Corp. and United Way. Hierstierer, he said, was executive vice president of Tension Envelope Corp, Kansas City, Kan., and was also non-alumnus ever to be nominated. There are about 4,000 non-alumni who support the University and who are members of the Alumni Association, Wintermote said. Wintermute said Lynch had been the director of J. Lynch and Co. grain firm and served on the advisory board to USD #305. Siemens, he said, was president of Shields Oil Producers and Drilling Co. He said Stanton was active in the Junior League and the Johnson County Bar Auxiliary. Trombold is a physician and director of the Cancer Center at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, Calif., Wintermute said. The board also elected the Alumni Association president, executive vice president and three area vice presidents, Wintermote said, but their names could not be released until those elected were notified. FRI & SAT $1.25 Bar Drinks 75c Draws ALIVE AT ELEVENI 11 p.m.-12 a.m. 75c GAMMONS SNOWMAN GREEK CARNIVAL! Come celebrate the last day of Carnival the way only the "real" Greeks know! Saturday, February 27th, Kansas Room. 6th floor Union, $3 admission. GREEK MUSIC & DANCES BEER & SNACKS Tickets available at the SUA office of 842-2218 SPONSORED BY THE HEELEN SOCIETY G Professional Hairstyling for Him and Her Gentleman's Quarters 611 W. W. Blvd. 841-2138 Balloon-a-Gram Here is the Occasion SEND A BALLOON A GRAM! P.O. Box 2122 Laurence, AK 62044 Manufacturer Theresa Schmidt Announces the Opening of: with Lee Lane and Mary Traul Elniff. the hairst --place in Syria The haircut is located at 810 W. 23rd. We are open 10 a.m to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Hair cuts are by appointment only. Please Call now at 843-2696 for your appointment and every day you'll say your hair. Looks good. Feels good." the haircut "Looks good, Feels good" ... 81O W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas (913) 843-2696 Selling something? Place a want ad. Cafe'Eldridge Affordable Fun Dining For fun dining at an affordable price, dine at the Cafe' Eldridge. Choose from the many delicious homemade dishes prepared daily by our Chefs. Most meals at the Cafe' Eldridge cost between $3.50 and $5.00. An extraordinary price for a fun meal served in the pleasant atmosphere of the Cafe' Eldridge. During February and March the Cafe' Eldridge features 99c cocktails from 9 pm-11 pm. The Cafe Eldridge is open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week. From 11 am to 11 pm, Mondays Saturdays and 11 am to 9 pm on Sundays. You can even call in for carry out. Whether it is a special occasion or you just want a delicious homemade meal, dine at the Cafe Eldridge 749-0613 7th & Massachusetts Top Sirloom Steak 6.25 Brand of Chicken Almondine 4.95 Baked Lasagne 4.95 Humble Pie 4.25 Eggs Benedict. 3.95 Monte Cristo 3.50 British Burger 2.95 Chili Supreme 2.50 Crock of French Onion Soup ... 2.50 Special Coffee Drinks A lecture by SUNNY SUNNY Footlights Presents: 8:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY "SYRIA TODAY" 8:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON SATURDAYS HOURS AT THE BRANCH WILL BE: Mr. Adnan Barakat, Representative of the Islamic Front in Syria—the leading group in opposition to the present regime in Syria WE ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF OUR BRANCH OFFICE LOCATED AT 2212 IOWA HERE IN LAWRENCE, KANSAS! THE DOORS WILL OPEN AT 8:00 MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 15, 1982, AND YOU ARE ALL INVITED TO USE OUR NEW FACILITY AT YOUR CONVENIENCE! WE WILL HAVE AN OPEN HOUSE TO CELEBRATE OUR NEW BRANCH ON SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1982 FROM 2:00 P.M. TO 4:00 P.M. AT THE BRANCH OFFICE. AT THAT TIME WE WILL HOLD A DRAWING FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE DOOR PRIZE!...$100.00...DEPOSIT IN YOUR SHARE ACCOUNT. HOURS AT THE MAIN OFFICE at 101 CARRUTH WILL REMAIN THE SAME AS THEY HAVE BEEN, 9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M., MONDAY THRU FRIDAY. An analysis of the background and events taking TO ENTER OUR DOOR PRIZE DRAWING YOU NEED TO PICK UP YOUR TICKET THE BRANCH OFFICE BETWEEN FEBRUARY 15, 1982 AND MARCH 6, 1982. FULL COLOR ORIGINAL ITALIAN ART PRINTS $ THANK YOU FOR ALL OF YOUR SUPPORT AND CONCERN FOR YOUR CREDIT IN THE PAST, and WE WOKE NOW THAT WE CAN HELP SERVE YOU BETTER WITH A BITMORE SPACE!! Friday Feb.26 Everyone is Welcome 25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza KU Federal Credit Union established 1962 Telephone 913/864-3291 footlights Sponsored By M.S.A. NOTICE: TO: MEMBERS OF KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION AND OTHER FACULTY AND STAFF OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION K Forum Rm. 101 CARRH O'LEAHY THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MAIN CAMPUS, LAWRENCE KANSAS 66045 8:00 p.m. RE: OPENING OF NEW BRANCH OFFICE AT 2212 IOWA Kansas Union RZR Sun Rush, Grand Prize — Airfare Around the World and an Milestone Airfare Pass throughout the Continental United States The World is Coming... Travel Show '82 This Weekend! Enter & Win! Prizes Given Away Both Days Of The Show Saturday Noon-6 Sunday Noon-5 - Roundtrip Air Travel for Two from K.C. to Las Vegas, from Continental Airlines, Register During Even Travel Movies - Luggage packed full of New Clothes from J. Michael's Department Store - Roundtrip Travel for Two from Lawrence to Chicago via Amtrak - Hotel Stays in Las Vegas from Passport Travel. Hawaii from Island Tours, Acapulco from Go-Go Tours. - Travel Flight Bags—Travel Posters—$500 in Travel Gift Certificates from The Travel Center. - 8 Tickets to Waldo Astoria or Tiffany's Attic Dinner Playhouse - Flower Bouquets From Southern Hills Floral - Helium Filled Balloons Southern Hills Center (in the Enclosed Mall) 1601 West 23rd St. TRAVEL CENTER Must be 18 years and over to Register, Information available at the Travel Show Feb. 27th & 28th The University of Kansas Black History Month February 1982 Afro-American History-- Blueprint for Survival Soul Food Dinner Saturday, February 27,1982 6:00 p.m., Ellsworth Hall Sponsored by the Ellsworth Hall Black Caucus For more information on admission charges contact the KU Office of Minority Affairs. 324 Strong Hall, 864-4351. Publicity for this event paid for by Black Student Union, funded in part by student activity fees. Page 10 University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 Spring trips possible on $100 Students who watch their pocketbooks and think cheap while they pack their bags should not have problems planning the vacation they desire. Cynthia Lagnasi, a Kampgrounds of America employee in Brownsville, Texas, said there were several ways she could get Kansas could cull their travel expenses. "If students are willing to conserve their money, they can get by on a spring vacation without spending more than £100." she said. 'I've talked to many students who've traveled for $100 and less. The reason why most students spend so much money is the obvious one—parties. "Students on vacations aren't willing to give up their beer—that's why they end up spending exorbitant amounts of money." Lagnosi said that if students would limit the money they spent on food and beer to just $30, they should be able to spend less than $1.00 for spring break. She said that a typical week's stay in a campistle would cost about $20. Gas for a car, with an oil change thrown in, should cost about $50, for a total cost of $100. One cheap way to be by carpool. Lit Day, Lenexa junior, said she traveled in a car pool to South Padre Island, Texas, for only $30. "We averaged $30 for gas down there and back, and about $85 in food and other necessities," she said. "We broached our own tent and camped on the bench." But Day said that camping on the beach had its drawbacks. "We had to drive a half of a mile to the shower facilities, which were located on another part of the bosch," she added. "grubby until she opened the facilities." Day said that she wished she had found a KOA Campground on the island, because she heard that the team they were working with that they offered closer shower facilities. Car pooling isn't the only way that students can travel cheaply over spring break. Certain travel agencies offer discount rates for trips. Summit Tours is sponsoring a trip to Winter Park, Colo., with six days and five nights of lodging for $199 a person. BRIHist of Summit said that the trip included three full days of lift tickets, three full days of ski rental and a ski party. Swimming pools and a sauna will be available, be said. The KU Sailing Club is sponsoring a trip to the Bahamas for $261, which includes seven days on a 41-foot yacht and all the food one can eat. Summit is also sponsoring trips to Padre Island for $109 and $129, which include accommodations for eight days. The prices vary with location. SUA has a trip planned to Padre Island for $250, which includes transportation. Gene Wee, program adviser and the response had been great so far. BURGLARS STOLE about $300 worth of equipment from Room 104 Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art sometime between 5 p.m. Feb. 17. The burglaries, who may have entered the room with a key, stole the Kodak slide KU police reported the theft of two dogs worth $1,250 sometime between 12:30 and 1 p.m. Wednesday. Two Doberman pinschers were untied and taken from a tree on the south side of Murray Hall, police said. There are no suspects. KU officials are reviewing a 200-page report, received last week, that identifies security weaknesses at the Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. However, the findings of the report will not be disclosed until a complete review of it is finished and possible corrective security actions are taken, Rodger Oroke, director of support services, said recently. Report spots security lapses at Med Center The security firm that compiled the report, Dale Simpson and Associates of Dallas, was hired after many security problems arose at the Med Center. The Med Center report was to have been completed in December, but was delayed because of new information, a Dale Simpson employee said. The purpose of the report was to outline the clinical care needed tightening at the Med Center. Oroke met last week with Jack Pearson, director of the Med Center police department, to discuss the content of the report. Pearson and Oroke are the only KU officials who have seen the report. projector and an extension cord, police said. There are no suspects. After several assaults and thefts, the controversy reached its height March 20,1981 when a gunman shot and killed Marc Beck, 26, a second-year resident at the Med Center, and Ruth Rybolt, 4a, a visitor. The shootings took place in the emergency room at the Med Center. KANSAS CITY, Kan., police later arrested Bradley Boan, 24, of Kansas City in connection with the shootings. Officers at Larned State Hospital this week said Boan was mentally incompetent to stand trial. Police never found a motive for the shootings. Oruke said he would meet with Pearson again to discuss the content of the report during the next two weeks. Already, security at the Med Center has been improved, Pearson said, because several security programs in 1977-78 have been implemented. New door security systems, closed circuit television monitors and police call boxes are among the recent improvements at the Med Center. LAWRENCE POLICE reported the theft of $283 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at 1144 Rhode Island St. sometime between 11 p.m. Tuesday and 11 a.m. Wednesday. Burglar entered the locked door on the driver's side, possibly using a coat hanger, and stole an equalizer, a pair of prescription glasses and a pair of sunglasses, police said. There are no suspects. On the record 841 DIET How To War At The Lost Glove DIET CENTER It's a Natural! RDI-1011 BURGLARS also stole $279 worth of stereo equipment from a parked car at Give him Something SPECIAL this year Great selection of Jack Daniel's gift items. Jack Daniels OID NO.7 OLD IN BREWERY WHISKEY Over 500 types of pipes Famous brand pipe tobacco Large selection of CIGARS Jose Melienda Colombo Valencia Avenida Blanca Bordeo j Vallet Bordeo j Vallet SCHRADE pocket knives 1 yr. guarantee for loss SAVINELLI quartz pipe lights Tobacco Leaf 842-7152 MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY The Bookmark's PIPE & TOBACCO SHOP In the Malls Shopping Center 021-3500 MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW Varsity ADM. 3:00 OPEN AT 11:30 Varsity Downtown 843-1065 The World is Coming Travel Show 82 This Weekend! Announcing Honda's Second Chance Sale Cheaper thrills. Honda's Second Chance Sale is happening this month, but the price to drop the price on prior year Hondas that are still new and still in our hands makes you bike your Saturday Noon-6 Sunday Noon-5 always wanted. For even less than its original suggested price. So you may get that bike you've Southern Hills Center (in the Enclosed Mall) 1601 West 23rd Street See the Location Plan to Visit On Your Summer Vacation or Spring Break Getaway. Shows Built by Travel Representatives From Around the World. Ready to Answer Any Travel Question. MC30 MOTORBIKE TRAVEL MOVIES Just look for the bikes tagged Honda Second Chance Sale. And hurry. Before your second chance becomes your last chance. TRAVEL CENTER Feb.27th & 28th NOW EXPRESS Now Only $395.00 OPEN Tues.-Fri.-10:00-6:00 Sat.-10:00-4:00 and Monday... 1811 W 6th Lawrence, KS. 843-3333 Horizons HONDA NC30 C70 $695.00 Continuously Now Only $395.00 OPEN 1811 W 6th Tues.-Fri.:10:00-6:00 Sat.:10:00-4:00 and 843-3333 Horizons HONDA Sunday Noon-5 FREE Horizons HONDA THE THIRD ANNUAL SUA THEATRE SERIES --- SUPER HEROINES Love 心 TAKEN IN MARRIAGE 20 big eight room SCENES from SOWETO & RATS by israel horovitz. reb.25,21 smith hall maran.3,5 an marent of one-acts ALL EVENING PERFORMANCES ARE AT 8:00 p.m. LIMESTINE PERFORMANCES ARE AT 2:00 p.m. by thomas babc feb 24, 26 mar 4, 6 kanea union TICKETS ON SALE AT THE פונקציית BOX OFFICE IN THE KANSAS UNION, LAWRENCE KS 86045 FOR TICKET INFORMATION CALL (912) 864-3477 ----Pyramid Pizza---masterpiece of unspeakable revulsion. . . . Weekend Special! $2.20 in cash off any 16" 2 or more item pizza. OR Get any one item 12" pizza and 2 large cokes for only $5.40 Good thru Mon. Mar. 1. Free Fast Delivery 842-3232 507 W.14th open til 1:00 a.m. A Pyramid Pizza WE PILE IT ON! SVA FILMS 1510 Kentucky St. sometime between 7 p.m. Monday and 11:30 p.m. Wednesday, police said in a call into the car and stole a cassette deck. There are no suspects. Presents NOTICE "Polyester" canceled The distributor has canceled POLYESTER at the present time. However, we are proud to present in its place John Water's original PONK FLAMINGOS starring DIVINE MAKING BODY CONTROL FOR A LEGAL PURPOSE the most disqusting movie ever made (don't say we didn't warn you) NO ONE UNDER 18 AMMITTED BURGLARS STOLE $150 worth of auto equipment from the Lawrence High School shop, 2017 Louisiana St., sometime between 3 p.m. Feb. 19 and noon Feb. 22, police said. Burglars may have entered the shop with a key. A four-speed transmission was stolen. There are no suspects. 12:00 MIDNIGHT $2.00 Friday & Saturday February 26 & 27 Woodruff Auditorium $ 3 \frac{1}{2} \mathrm {c}$ COPIES HOUSE OF USHE: 838 MASS. — 842-3610 DID YOU KNOW? Harvard College 1642 . . . Rules and precepts that are observed in the college ... "Old South Leaflets" taken from letter dated Boston, Sept. 26, 1662 Let every student be plainly instructed and earnestly pressed to consider well the main end of his life and studies is, to know God and Jesus Christ which is eternal life. Let Christian in the bosom as the only foundation of all knowledge and learning. THE CHRISTIAN HISTORY OF THE CONSTITUTION Verna Hall Page 241, 1987 It's specially priced and ready to take home with you right now You've worked hard all week. So treat your to our Friday Flower Brunch, a bright weekend. Our feature will make it even brighter. TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. SPRING BOUQUET $5.00 cash & carry Flower Shoppe 1101 Mass Open 841 0800 B30-530 Mon-Sat COMMONWEALTH THATFREE GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 803-51790 KATHARINE HEPBRUN HENRY FONDA On Golden Pond A UNIVERSAL PICTURE PG 10 AM - 6 PM PG VARSITY DOWNTOWN VARSITY COLLEGE OF SCIENCE TELEPHONE 1-800-253-9688 What happened to him should happen to you. Amate lessons EK 7-10 A.M. 11 AM SAT SUN 2-15 HILLCREST 1 9TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE #423-8400 Entralling... CHARIOTS OF FIRE PG Feb 7-15 & 9-30 Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 2 19TH AUGUST AND 2ND SEPTEMBER THE REAL HEART & SINES, AMSTERDAM VICE SPRAF MAY 31TH BUILT 2 19:30 HILLCREST 3 1ST AND TWIRD TELFONE REVERSED RAGTIME PSL 7.45 am Mar 2 06 JAMES CAHENY HILGEST 3 PHONE NUMBER 84300 RAGTIME 8 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE PG = 7.45 only. Mat. 2.00 JAMES CAINNE CINEMA 1 1ST AND 2ND FESTIVAL OF THE WORLD NIGHT CROSSING & OTHER SCREWS CINEMA 1 NIGHT CROSSING a true story U.S. EVE 7 25 & 9 20 Weekend Mar at 7:00 CINEMA 2 He found a line within himself JACKETTON THE BORDER U.S. Weekend Mar at 7:00 Elevation 7:00 8:25 He found a place within himself. JACK NICHOLSON THE BORDER Weekend March 20 R University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 Page 11 KU ends season against Creighton The KU women's basketball team will close out its 1981-82 season tonight when they face the Creighton Blue Jays in Allen Field House. The two teams met earlier in the season in a game the Jayhawks won, 65-31. In Omaha, Neb. In that game, the Jayhawks were led by All-America candidate Tracy Claxton, who scored 18 points, collected 18 rebounds and had 7 shots. He then took over 11, and Barbara Adkins 10. Adkins 10 points are a career high. The Blue Jays, who trailed the Jayhawks in every category except rebounding, were led by Ruth Beverhelm's 10 points. The Jayhawks, who after eight games stood at 7-1 and since have lost 13 of 21, must win to push their record above the .500 mark. No matter what, however, the Jayhawks, coached by Marian Washington, will have their worst record since the 1976-77 season. Leonora Taylor, KU's lone senior, will end her career at Kansas tonight. Jayhawks picked to win indoor title By DAVE McQUEEN Sports Writer For those who believe in polls of coaches, the KU men's track team would seem to be an overwhelming favorite to win its third straight Big Eight indoor title. Five of the conference's coaches picked the Jayhawks to finish first. Two others tabbed them to take second. But KU track coach Bob Timmons doesn't take stock in coaches' polls. To him, the Big Eight indoor championship, which will be decided for both teams, will be played in the Davenay Sports Center in Lincoln, Neb. is still for grabs. "WE DON'T" pay a lot of attention to polls, "Timmons said. 'We've been in it long enough to know that polls don't mean anything at all." "But if the rest of the coaches want to think that way, that's OK." The other coaches have good reason to think that way. The Jayhawkes have had a strong indoor season. They have played in five of the five in five events: Tyke Peacock in the high jump, Greg Johnson in the triple jump, Leonard Martin in the 800-dash dash. But what matters more to Timmans than how the team looks on paper is how they'll perform in the meet. "It's the individual performances that will decide the meet," he said. TIMMONS SAID that this year's indoor featured some of the toughest competition in the country. The field is full of All-Americans, including Oklahoma State spinner James Butler, shot-putters Joe Staub of Nebraska and Randall Niles of Oklahoma State and miler Yates Ondiek of Iowa State. and Rodney Bullock in the 490 and 600. In addition, KU has 21 other athletes rated in the top five in their events and is undefeated in darts this year. But the most exciting competition should come in the pole vault. Three of the top five vaulters in the country will be there, including KU's Jeff Couch, freshman Joe Dial of Oklahoma State, and Kansas State's Dandy Lutle. "Without a doubt, it could be one of the best events I any meet in the country," she said. Last year, KU won the indoor title by taking first in five events and scoring 89 points. However, none of last year's face决赛 are back on the team. "I wouldn't want people to think that we were writing off this season," Timmons said. "There is a lot of effort on this team to do it in their own right." TO COMPENSATE for the loss, the team has become more balanced and enthusiastic, according to Timmens. There is also a lot of enthusiasm on the women's team, according to women's head coach Carla Coffe. "The girls are excited about the meet," Coffey said. "I don't think the rankings really make a difference," Coffey said. "Last year, we were ranked fifth and we finished third." Coffey isn't a big fan of coaches' poles, either. Although she agrees with the seven other coaches that picked Nebraska to defend the women's indoor title, she thinks her team will do better than its predicted fifth-place finish. Coffeie said she expected her team to do well in several events. In the sprints, Donna Smitherman is ranked third in the conference in the 60-yard hurdle, and Lorna Tucker is ranked third in the Jayhawks also are strong in the NCAA track season. McKnight and shot-putter Sine Lerdahl are both ranked in their events. SUA FILMS Presents SUNDAY "WONDERFUL! Brilliantly made, warm, intelligent... Marvelous!" "HUGFLY ENTERTAINING!" BIGGING OVER IN CHINA United Artists Classics *PLEASE EEE SEE THIS MOVIE! It won one Oscar.* it deserved two — the second for making you feel sweet. Gene Shall The Today Show NBC TV FROM MAQ TO MOZART: ISAAC STERN IN CHINA 2:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium $1.50 United Artists Classics --one two three four five six seven eight nine ten $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $6.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $6.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $6.50 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer ... Each additional word .. AD DEADLINES ROOMS FOR MALE BUILDINGS, Pursued. share bath, Corner, 14th & Kentucky. Walk to canyon. With separate. $100. $120. For a bedroom. $80. For a gas bill. 841-2105 or 841-3180. - 3-18 Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online by calling the **Econ business office** at 414-7588. POKER AND CHESS LESSONS. 841-0996. tf Duplex for rent. Great location. 809 Ohio 2-bdrm, stove, refrigerator. Available now. $250 a month. 1-790-6835. 3-2 KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Must see to believe. Furnished rooms with utilities paid near university & downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf Selsiorx/Paper; Stone an artist's book 100 lbs! Mail: 11-6 Tuesday-Sat. 7, mail: 849-1513 Now playing "Gidget goes to Japan" on the same bill "Woman in whitein and flood" Slim furnished 1- bedroom house near campus & downtown, 145 per month + deposit & utilities. No children. cata.sk. After 59. 811.-889. 2-26 Why stay for April 157 Don's Tax Service is offering a discount on tax return for 2015. Save $36, $50, $56, $105, $150, $15 and all services to $3. Call 414-6983. Applied call: 414-6983. Ten minute walk from Wescow. 1 bdm. modern at Redbud ads, 11th and Missis- pica. Low utilities. Call 843-3222 or 842- 3974. 1 Bedroom apartment. Spacious. Clear. Close to downtown and campus. 2500. Utilities Paid. 842-6114 Sunday thru Thursday, after 5:00 p.m. 2-26 PRINCETON PLACE FAITO APARTMENTS. For comfortate, features wood burning fireplace, weather dryer or fireproof insulation fully-equipped and 36 hours daily at 2008 Princeton Blvd., or 11 hours daily at 2009 Princeton Blvd. or 11 hours daily at 2010 Princeton Blvd. Studious atmosphere, International meals, involved in learning and work, looking for six cooperative group men- tions to be formed. FORMULATIONS INCLUDED. Large business and laundry. Call 861-7692. Close For rent to mature male student. Quiet. comfortable efficiency apartment. Private kitchen. Close to the Union. Reasonable price. 842-1855. **tf** Available now. Two bedroom spacious apt, carpeted, carpeted & electric furnishings. Campus is on a campus, and on bus route. $35 per month. MADRIDBOOK 180 & Crestline 482-430. ON CAMPUS. New completely furnished bownomia homes available immediately. Flexible rentals available. $15,000/day! Located on 13th & 18th. Only two rooms from the Union. Call 842-4545 or 841-3255. FACULTY PREFERRED FOR RENT OR LEASE PURCHASE 3 br. house, 2712 University Drive. All appliances. 2 car bus. must be road. rv#/mwr 80, mwr 42 or 62-6300. Sublease 2 bedroom apt., gas paid. Complete kitchen plate plus drapes, central air and heat. Call 841-6888. 2-26 **RENT SALE--Rent reduced on rooms in large large quiet house 1 block from Union, smoke on pets in room Call after 5 at 438-262-1900 1200 Hoola Secure environment walk to class fast. 3 bd. unfurn. apt. $250. Close to campus. W/D hookup, deposit required. Call 749- 1750 or 841-4241. 3-1 1-2 people to share to @dls & Miss. $100+150 + share of tell. 749 - 363暮. 2e-26 Available immediately Heatherwood 1 bed. 693 and 841 Wid., AID, dishaber 2e-26 693 and 841 Wid., AID, dishaber 2e-26 For rent 2 bedroom room. Convenient shopping. On bus route. Complete kitchen, central air and heat. Carpeted plus draps. Call 841-6588. 3-26 Sub-lease at West Hills Apts. 1 Br. $220 a month, electricity not included, starting Mar. 1. Call 433-8223. 2-26 FOR SALE 50% off on all clothing in showroom, 2 days only Feb. 23rd through Feb. 27th. Excludes houries for this week only. Weekend hours: Monday-Wednesday. Westbridge Change, 601 Kasdil. 840-212-6 2-26 Alternator, starter and generator specialists, Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3800 W. 6th. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! New York Times. Says "Makes sense to use them-1". As study guide. "Makes sense to use them-1". As study guide. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" "New Analysis of Western Civilization" "Bookmark, and Ouville Bookmark." "If BMW Brand new 1982. 320I, two in stock immediate delivery. Sanders Lincoln-Mercury. 843-669-0 or 843-2883. 3-4 1978 Honda Hawk 400ee automatic. 80 miles on it. Perfect condition. Call 913-796-6780 after 4 pm. 3-1 Ventura elec. bass, hard case, cord $125. 842- 8752. Pioneer's 12" 4-way speakers assembly in U.S., brand new in box $160/pr., best offer. 749-2758. 2-26 FOR SALE, 1975 Flat station wagon, good low mileage condition, $150.00, 841-2024, 841-5897. 3-3 JVC turntable D/drive w/cartridge and 2 JVC SK 15A speakers 200 input, cheap! Call 841-7069 2-26 HP-67 programmable calculator w/card reader, CB radio w/antenna $40, Sany FM/ cass. car stereo $25, 843-6629 anytime. 2-26 72 Monaco $850.00 Excellent cond. Ph. 842-6313 Keep trying. 2-26 78 Ford FiatA, 4 spd. front wheel drive. 78 Ford Focus, 4 spd. front wheel drive. To driver. Super little car for $314, 500-248 to driver. Super little car for $314, 500-248 Thousands of comic books, baseball cards, postcards, National Geographics, Playbags, boutiques, High School, High School, High School, High Society, Club, Pub, "ame. cete. 811 N. Open Sat. and Sun. 10-5." Ortonics integrated amp. 65 watts/channel. Ortonics integrated amp. 120 watts/channel. Also AAR manual handle w/Acoustic handles. Enjoy the spring on a 1972 Yamaha 650 Motorcycle w/near sporting car. Electric start, low miles, looks and runs great. $725. 834-398 after 5 days. 2-26 Fantastic Programmable calculator-254 SJM and 32 memoris stores up to 10 separate calculators. The devices are stored on a cassette tape. Value $16,99 new, sell for $100. Call Jay at 76-281-5880. Bookcases, Stereo Cabinets, Cedar Chest Stoves, 305 W. 13th, Michaels, Michaels, Sough. 305 W. 13th, 843-8989. Superior Performance V-Rated Twints, 3.5 x 19.2 x 18 rear. Never Mounted. 842-9380. SMITH-CORONA 2200 electric typewriter, large shape ribbon. Extra ribbon. Call 841-0229. 1973 Mazda RX-3, new exhaust system, radial tires, AM-FM stereo, automatic transmission, inspected $475.00, 841-9475 - 26. T.V for sale. Black(white) 12", excellent condition. $20. Call 841-5829, 8:10-9:00. Qualified lifeguard for summer swimming season. Lakata Swim Club, Topka, Tennessee. Lakeview Swimming Center, Topka, Tennessee. Kansas 6605, 1672-152. Person intermitted in doing odd house hooks. Will be capable of being capable, be capable, have own tools and students, participate in cooperative learning. Call Carol Bickman at (314) 896-2471. CRUISSES, RESORTS, SAILING EXPEDI- TIONs Counselors Europe, Carrierbear Worldwide Counselors Europe, Carrierbear Worldwide TION, OPENINGS, GUIDE to CRUISSE- WORLD, 135 Box 6024, Sacramento, 3-18 NOTIC OVERSEAS JOB'S - Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer., E. Asia, Australia. Astra AllFields, Pty Ltd. monthly. Lightning. Info. Write MA Box 8x-24. I-3-5MA. Corridor MA C02252. PERSONAL Beat Reasonings, Join the M. Orlade club for $2.50 the week and save up to 10% on all meals. For $30, Sunflower Surprise and Schwimn for $30. Call Gine Wee at SAU 864-3477. 3-9 Instant passport, visa, ID, & resume photographs. Custom made portraits b/w, color. Swells Studio. 749-161. FOUND SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI TRIPS, SKI WINTERPARK, DILLON AND OTHERSS Economical packages every weekend and school break. Call SKi Eci Kk 814-8386 today. Say it on a sweatshirt with custom silk-screen printing 1 to 1000 shirt art by Swells 749-1611. tf Skillie's liquor store serving U-Daily since 1949. Come in and compare. Willfried Skillier Eudaly: 1906 Mass. 843-8186. tf HELP WANTED The Kegler-Weekly Specials on Kegls!f Call 841-9450-1610 W. 23rd. www.keglerweekly.com Keys and case on 4th floor Wesco. Call 4-220 to identify. 2-26 Stockbroker trainee. College graduates-Exciting opportunity for hard work, honest, ambitious and enthusiastic individual.Reply P.O. BX 157 Red Bank, N.J. 0701-8. Watch- Identify make, day & place. Call 841-1430. 3-1 MARY KAY COSMETICS—Full-time beauty consultant. 842-6641. **ff** Jewish Graduate Students Household items for apartment living. Second Hand Rose 515 Indiana 842-744-7648 Clothes and accessories with a touch of charm. Barret Second Hand Hair. $33 Barefoot sandals. $28 שָׁה Dairy Pot Luck Dinner Gray, female kitten with white chest. Tiger, stripped tail & green eyes. House trained. Very affectionate. Call 864-3123 or 843-0297 Ask for Bob. Sewing machine found at Stouffer Place—Call to identify 843-5019. 3-2 COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES Free pregnancy testing; early and advanced out patient abortion; gynecology contra- nals; and B. Ross Overland Park, TN (912) 623-5000. COMMUNITY AUCTION 700. N.H. every Saturday 11 am. Containages accepted Mon. Tues. Fri. 2-6. 100 commissions. Pack available. 841-2212. We sell everything. Rabbi Marc Fitzerman Top hats, derby's, visors, 40'-50'-s clothes, cumbershirts, bow ties. Barb's Second Hand Rose. S15 Indiana. 842-474-6. 3-3 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT, 843-4821. If For more Information call 864-3948 Sunday February 28 6:00 p.m. Video Tapes of Rock Chalk—Audio or video recordings of the 1982 Rock Chalk Review. Call 842-9224 3-2 Need ride to Denver or Aspen as soon as possible. Will share expenses. Call Janet at 8:00 pm. 841-2070. 2:26 **SPRING BREAK ESCAPES:** 8 days/7 nights accommodations. Welcome party. Sports accommodations/air or motorcoach transportation to Davenport - $99 & $119. For Leland Station - $360 & $459. For 6 days/5 nights to Winner Park - $199. Tours at 4a-6p; 4-6p more details. ALL YOU CAN EAT-Stuffed Pig Sunday Buffet-$2.99--2210 Iowa-749-2885. 2-26 Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Hall, 844-604. 844-604 2-26 Special Ladies Night. Male burlesque Fri. March 5. All you can drink from 7-9,30 ladies only until 9:30. Show starts at 7:30 at The Plodium. Bien Anniversaire Monsieur le Dr. Monsieur L'Ombre des Ocres **SPECTRUM OPTICAL.** Bring in your Drs. Prepare 200 prescriptions in existing lenses. Free adjustment and later frames available. Comment on application. Open 160 - M-F, 1113, A, R, T, 704 36% SALE--All clothing in showroom 5 days only February 23 through July 27. Exclude hours for this week only. 9:00-4:00 AM Monday-Friday, 8:00-12:00 PM Change, 61 Kasol. 841-6122 2-36 Established band seeking BASSIST and XYBOARD PLAYER Steady work. Serious inquiries only. Call 749-0891 or 842-8841. LOST: Black P-coat at Hatter last Friday. Wanted: Black P-coat by mistake. Please 843-7509 DON AUNIVERSAIRE MAPITTE LAPINE EVERY CAR IN Stock $9.95 A DAY FIRST 50 MILES FREER THEN ONLY 80 A MILE Special weekends rates. We are now leasing trucks & vans. We accept Master Card. Located at 705 W. 9th Lease one of our cars. Please call us a bure fare now! Reserve your car now. LEASE A LEMON 749-4295 Free introductory lecture on ECKANKAR Friday, Feb. 28 at the University of states of conneciveness, Sunday, Feb. 28, at 10 a.m., The University of DOT HOG DIVE lunch downwards at Phyllis' Fabulous Franks. All-belch franks, super- delicious ice cream, delicious from an authentic YN Vender's deliquefied from an authentic YN Vender's & Mast-, Tua-Tsat, 'weather' 5-12 mittening.) Plain Jane, Fri. & Sat. night at the Pladium. 2-06 ½-price table & rack new items added daily. Barb's Second Hand Hand, Rose 515 Indiana. 842-4746. 3-5 Special selection of clothing 50% off. Infation Fighter, 8 E.7. Thn. Open 12-5-30 M-F 10-5-30 Sat. 3-3 Terry K. Barb B. John B. Naney S. Lori B. Robert A. Manning B. Brian B. Brian B. Daimon T. Jane J. Bank-O Birmingham gang-'s get physical one day, then call the governor and instruct Janice B.1.-let's call the governor and instruct all the fun crutations-Do'n's a 430, stings too much champagne, pep rally, fire alarms, cleaning molars, hokey pokey, ljive dancin, bending the microphones, bringing the miraculous survival of Lori L. and Nancy S. who after their quick think-kick-back will all be for the active weekend They thank you all for the active weekend You should accomplish this great escape. Be there and we'll all see whose sinks and whose Native couple from Hawaii would like meet others from Hawaii to form Hawaiian Club. If interested call collect. Meriden 1-876-2306. 2-26 Natural Way. Chinese Shoes-5.00. Winter clothing 20% off cotton Danskin. 812 Mass. 841-1040. THE PARTY is here. 8:00 this Friday at Our Place. Party hardy friends!! 2-26 GREEN'S CASE SALE. OLD STYLE $8.99. BUDWISER $8.99. GREEN'S $8.98 23RD. 3-5 I need a ride to Steambank Springs, Spring Break. Will share calls. Call 749-203-6518. Siu Lamma Chi Alpha house, I'm sorry we couldn't get together last week, hopefully we can now soon. Love Diana .25 I can't be too happy about that. I am really happy because I can't be here on your special day. Thank you for all the special moments we spent together. 2-26 2-28 All Lambda Chi Alpha 'Thank you for making me feel at home and one of the guys I miss you all, your Lambda Chi Alpha '12 Sia Julie. 2-26 **FREE BOOK, "Your Right to Know," by Darwin Gross. Topics include: Death—I'll Illusion. The importance of attitude. Books available at free introductory lecture on ekakarani 'A way of life Sunda.' Feat. call 814-1922 or phone 814-1923. Book TGIF at iabchob's: 1.00 pitches from 2-4. 1.50 pitches from 4-6. 2-26 Attention KU Wallers. My friend and I will be back soon. We'll be at the place between 12 and 6 show you around our room, where we can meet but we have never met you. You'll recognize me and I. I have the bird, she will love me and I. TUTORING MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS, COMPUTER SCIENCE. CALL 841-499-069 (time IBS in, physics MA, in mathematics) or call 841-476-147 (ask for M.A.) tf SERVICES OFFERED Schneider Wine & Keg Shop - The finest selection of wines in wine-laws - largest supplier of strong kews. 1610 W. 23rd. 843-3212. Put your best foot forward with a professionally printed resume from Encore. We can write it, try it, and print it for you. Call Encore 842-2001, 250i and Iowa. 2-26 ENLARGEMENTS Another Encore exclusive: Encore Copy Corps 25th & Iowa 842-2001 SUN SCHOOL OF HUMANITIES Children's Learning Center announces an expansion of services with an evening center for 4-12 year olds, 6-15 year olds, 16-18 year olds. Daycare 8:45 am to 6:00 pm,午间 yr. Phone 812-218-3000 more information Drafting (charts, mups, etc.) 6 years experience, competitively prized. Also Script Lettering for certificates. 841-7944. 3-8 Stop Smoking With Our Program call 843-6583 Breathe Easy Smoking Clinic S The only smoking program that guarantees results. WRITING A RESUME? What to say? How? Meet the Uberer. Meet the Uberer and lock up our free brochure House of Uber, 838 Massachusetts 8-8 M-F- 9-3 Sat, NOON-Sun. tf DIRT ANALYSIS—Concerned about your food diet Evaluation. It's simple and inexpensive. It evaluates Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064. 2-26 EXPERT TUTORING: Math homework? CS projects? Call 841-7683. 3-10 TYPING It's a Fact, Fast, Affordable, Clean, Typing, 843-5820 11 TYPING PLUS: Thems, dissertation- scribes, letters, applications, resume. Asistance with composition, grammar, spelling, writing skills. Foreign student (or Americans): 814-654-824 Experienced typist. Thesis, term papers, etc. IBM Correcting Selectric. Call Sandy after 5 p.m. 748-9818. tf Experienced typist. IBM paper, thesas, all macellaneous. IBM Correcting. Selective Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9545 Mrs. Wright. If TIP-TOP TYPING—experienced typist—IBM Correcting Selictrite II; Royal Correcting SE 5000 CD. 843-6575. tt For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myr. 841-4890. 1f Experienced typist will type letters, thesis, and dissertations. IBM correcting selective. Call Donna at 842-2744. tf Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, m&-correct. Selective. Call Ellen or Jean Ann B41-2172. tf Experienced typid - thesis, dissertation, term papers, misc. IBM correcting electric, Barch. after 5 p.m. 842-3210 tfr Experienced typid . Foulless Experienced typist. Excellent typing. IBM Correcting Selectric, Elite or Pica. 842-5644. 2-26 Graduate students tired of typing, retyping and retyping your thesis or dissertation? Save time and money by word processing it at Encore! Call 642-2061 for more information. 2-265 Would like to type dissertations, thesis, term papers, etc. call: 842-2203 2-14 IRON FENCE TYPEING SERVICE. 842-2507 Quality typing and word processing available at Encore Copy Corps. 25th and Iowa. 842-2001. 2-26 **TYPING-EDITING-GRAPHICS.** IBM Corp.'s TYPING-EDITING GRAPHICS correction to composition assistance, Emerging Information Technology, Professional typing. Dissertations. themes, text papers, resume. IBM Corp. 850-392-6988. PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Quick, reasonably priced, paper supplied. Call enquiries or early mornings. 841-7915. 3-17 WANTED Male roommate to share 3 bedroom house 13th & Mass. $108/mo. + 1/3 utilities + deposit. Liberal, smoker okay. 842-6319 3/2 Need place to live? 3-br. house 83.33 + 1/3 ult. Cult to campus. Prefer female & non- manual. 841-9779. 3-12 Share 3 bedroom house next to campus. Reasonable. Call for details. 843-4842-2, 2-26 Roommates need immediately. Nice apart- ment. Booking room. $1475.00 utilities. 843-3591- Roommate wanted to share nice three bed- room townhouse: $115 + 1/3 use. Call 841- 6506. 2-26 Fifth female roommate wanted for five bed- room, house near campus. $110/mo. + 1/5 util. 642-4456. 3-2 WANTED -3 TICKETS TO Rampal concert Call Rose 8642-4291 or 841-0825. 3-2 BUY, SELL, or FIND your pot of gold with a KANSAN CLASSIFIED Just mail in this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansas, 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got selling power! Classified Heading: Write Ad Here: Name:___ Classified Display: Address:___ 1 col. x 1 inch—$4.00 Phone:___ Dates to Run:___ to___ 1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 15 words or less $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 Addition 1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times 15 words or more $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 Additional words .02 .03 .04 .05 .06 --- Page 12 University Daily Kansan, February 26, 1982 'Hawks face Cyclones The Kansas Jayhawks' game tomorrow against the Iowa State Cyclones in Allen Field House will determine who finishes sixth in the Big Eight Conference. Tipoff has been moved up to 6:58 p.m. It will also be the last home for two KU seniors. Co-captains Tony Guy and David Magley will be making their final appearance in Allen Field House. The two have achieved some outstanding accomplishments. GUY HAS SCORED 1,469 points in his career, fifth on the all-time KU scoring list. He needs 27 points to move past Bad Sidwall into fourth place on the Also, Guy has played in 115 games in his career, which is second to Darnell Valentien, who played in 118 games. Guy played the best game of his career last year in the NCAA tournament against Arizona State. In that contest, he was named NBC Player of the Game, scoring 36 points and hitting 13 of 15 shots. etc. Intramurals Basketball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Independent Men (8) Falling Rocks 44, Träumstrass 31 Miller Hapf Life 29, The Band-Is 15 The Orange House 19, Greek Men Ax Men 41, Harlocks Hopsers 24 Orange House 44, Triangle 19 Phi Pi Life 27, Skakens 19 The Orange House 34, Tau Tac 19 Gladius House 63, Cowhands 32 Independent Men Re. B Shooting Stars 20, Independent Men Ecobugs Face John 27 Weak Tact 10, Independent Women Re. B Clarkes Wenders 12, Salleri 24 Smil Hillbusters 53, Salleri 24 Magley ranks 10th on the all-time rebound list and needs just three rebounds tomorrow to pass Ken Keenigs and move into the ninth position. He is also just two rebounds behind Ed Ealny in the Big Eight. Magley's 990 career points rank him 17th and he is only 17 points away from the No. 15 position. IF MAGLEY scores more than 10 IF points against Iowa State, he would become only the sixth player in Kansas for a single game. He would score points and grab more than 500 rebounds. Another milestone will be reached in Saturday's game, but it will not be by a player. Kansas Coach Ted Owens will be coaching his 500 game for the Jayhawks. In his 19th season as head coach, he played with a career record at KU of 334-164. JAYHAWK NOTES: Gate Tyke Peacock will leave immediately after the game and be flown to Lincoln, Neb. Peacock will fly at the Big Eight indoor track meet. Comets lose, 9-4 By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo—Carl Rose scored at 82 of the third quarter last night to ignite a six-goal barge and lead the St. Louis Steamers to a 9-victory over the Kansas City Comets in an NCAA home win streak for the Comets. But the big turning point came at the 10.2 mark of the same quarter, when Steve Pecher took a shot from 40 yards out. Enzo DiPilee, the Comet's goaltender, was knocked down by a shot from the ball in the net untouched. Kansae City's bench erupted, but the referee allowed the goal. Yilmaz Orhan was the star of the game, though, as he scored three of the four Comets goals. Val DeSouza got the other goal for the Comets. —FRIDAY— Spiced Broiled Shrimp $1.50 1/4 lb. Free Hors D'oeuvres 4-7 -SATURDAY 10 p.m.-Midnight House Drinks $1.00 —SUNDAY SPECIALS— 75' PITCHERS from 1 p.m.-5 p.m. 60 OUNCE SUPER SCHOONERS for only $1.75 Reg. $2.75—Anytime Sunday— -MONDAY- 50' PITCHERS from 7 p.m..Midnight $1.00 Bar Drinks We invite all Club Members & Their Guests. Memberships Available 1401_West 7th 843-0540 the SANCTUARY The World is Coming Travel Show '82 This Weekend! Sunday Noon-5 Saturday Noon-6 EUROPE AMERICA & NEW ZEALAND Come to the greatest show on earth! Contiki have been showing Europe to the 18-35s on a budget for some 21 years now, so we really know what young people want. Action, fun, . . . as well as the famousights, of course. Now Contiki have a superb range of tours in America and New Zealand, too, all with the same Contiki ingredients and all great value for money. join us and we'll show you what we mean. We'll show EUROPE, AMERICA NEW AND E have the ability to help you to oneyear travelling, and answer your questions. Friends welcome, too. Contiki: all the fun in learning. CONTIKI DJ MIXER An altogether different experience for the 18-35's. Southern Hills Center (in the Enclosed Mall) 1601 West 23rd Street TRAVEL CENTER Feb.27th&28th Basketball Scoreboard NBA STANDINGS Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Team W 4 W 1 L Pct. Grip Michigan Bluehawks 19 15 74 1% Boston 20 17 38 1% New Jersey 27 29 482 14% Cincinnati 25 29 482 14% New York 25 32 439 1% Milwaukee 10 15 727 Atlanta 40 15 727 Chicago 38 15 727 Detroit 24 31 436 Chicago 24 31 436 Chicago 24 31 436 Chicago 24 31 422 Western Conference Midwest Division Los Angeles 20 17 896 San Francisco 20 17 896 % Golden State 30 354 8 % Phoenix 29 354 747 % Portland 29 457 8 % Seattle 25 407 747 % San Antonio Houston Texas A&M Ukah Dallas Kansas (OK) 36 18 18 667 18 21 27 667 18 27 27 667 19 18 345 19 18 345 19 37 323 19 37 323 19 37 323 YESTERDAY A RESULTS Golden State 106, Dallas 104 San Antonio 119, Detroit 116 Los Angeles 104, Seattle 98 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS BIG 8STANDINGS Team W W L Pct. GB Missouri 12 2 8 .692 Rocky Mount 8 2 8 .692 Nebraska 7 6 6 .538 Okahanna State 7 6 6 .538 Oregon 7 6 6 .538 Kansas 4 9 4 .308 Iowa State 4 9 4 .308 Illinois 3 11 214 9 *Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI* **Iowa** (7, 79), Wichita minn. 55 Tulsa *10*, 13, 42 Fremont *12*, 13, 53, Pacific 43 Memphis *5a*, 13, 64, Tulane *62* Omaha *10*, 13, 64, Memphis *62* UPI TOP RESULTS Note: Number in parentheses indicates UPI Hockey Montreal 35 12 15 8 289 181 85 Boston 34 12 15 28 247 181 76 Buffalo 33 19 10 12 280 194 76 Charlotte 32 19 10 12 298 197 68 Hartford 17 10 14 12 107 168 50 Team | W | L | T | GF | GB | ACE | Pts. Hawks | 49 | 12 | 7 | 68 | 192 | 83 | 118 Nuggets | 29 | 15 | 1 | 10 | 243 | 243 | 67 Philadelphia | 21 | 25 | 1 | 10 | 243 | 243 | 67 Washington | 19 | 34 | 1 | 10 | 243 | 243 | 67 NHL STANDINGS Wales Conference Patrick Dibble Minnesota 36 19 18 18 273 322 70 St. Louis 35 11 19 24 274 570 75 Washington 35 11 19 24 274 570 75 Winnipig 37 17 12 230 260 664 75 Toronto 17 17 12 230 260 664 75 New York 17 17 12 230 260 664 75 Campbell Conference Nortris Division SNIA FILMS Edinburgh 40 13 15 11 347 296 210 Calgary 23 16 11 15 287 61 61 Vancouver 23 27 13 17 241 82 74 Los Angeles 13 17 13 141 287 387 San Diego 13 17 11 141 287 37 Tonight, his take-home pay is $410,000... tax fee. YESTERDAY'S RESULT Washington, D.C. 1 Louis Quartet, 4 Montreal New York Islander 4, Pittsburgh Calgary 11, Vancouver $1.50 Soccer MISL STANDINGS Eastern Division YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Team W L P Cat. GB New York 18 5 187 burgh 18 5 729 Baltimore 18 8 692 Buffalo 18 3 692 Cleveland 9 12 360 New Jersey 9 12 360 Philadelphia 18 20 259 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New Jersey 4, Wichita 3 St. Louis 9, Kansas City 4 St. Louis 22 15 815 Wichita 16 11 605 Delaware 11 11 468 Detroit 10 18 357 Phoenix 9 18 353 12% Houston 9 18 353 12% Columbus 6 10 405 Presents FRIDAY & SATURDAY Thief United Artists 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium No Refreshments Allowed Rent it. Call the Kansan When being at college is the first time I've ever really been on my own. away from home. And boy... things sure aren't like home around here. Sometimes I lay awake at night thinking about all the differences. then I start missing my Teddy Bear." SPECIAL Fish Sandwich only 69¹ Offer good thru Sun. Feb. 28 "When youre away from home, come to Bucky's 2120 W. 9th Women take early lead The Kansas women's swim team, to no one's surprise, is ahead after the first day of the Big Eight Championships in Annes, Iowa. Kansas leads the meet with 237 points, with Iowa State in second at 170. Nebraska and Oklahoma are then at 158 and Missouri is last with 83 points. "It was a good day," Coach Gary Kempf said. "We picked up some national qualifying times." The 200 medley relay team of Jackie Among those getting national times were Susan Schaefer, Celine Cerry and Jenny Wagstaff in the 100-yard butterfly. Wagstaff, who won the 100 butterfly, also qualified in the 200 individual medley, which she won with a vote of 2.168. B. Cery qualified in the 200 second with a second-place finish at 2:07.4. Lesiecki, Mary Kay Fitzgerald, Mary Freathy and Tammy Thomas won and qualified for nationals in 148.4. one dayjayhs also had a first-place finish in the 800 freestyle relay with the team of Schaefer, Michelle Compton, Stephanie Raney and Sliey Black. Fitzgerald came in second in the 58 breaststroke, just missing the nation. Kempf said he had expected Nebraska and Oklahoma to be Kansas' strongest threats, but he said he wasn't surprised by Iowa State's showing. "We had a couple of disappointments. I was a little surprised with Missouri. They still could come back, though." "They've got a team at their home pool, and that helped," he said. "I knew they had the potential. There's going to be more." He added that he will dictate the face of the meet, though. !Openings for Student Senate Budget Subcommittee! Applications Available in Senate Office Membership Closes: 1 March, 5 p.m. TAKE OFF ON A CAREER AS A NAVY PILOT. Be part of the Navy aviation team - a Navy pilot. As a Navy pilot, you'll fly some of the most sophisticated aircraft in the world. You'll gain early responsibility thanks to advanced technical training. And you'll have the chance for world wide travel. QUALIFICATIONS: Minimum BA/ BS degree (summer graduates may inquire). 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